Ryan Patti | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com • Apr 25, 2024
Photo Credits: NJ.com
PHILADELPHIA – You didn’t even have to look at the circle to know it was her turn to throw. All you had to see was everyone with their phone out. Old Tappan senior Layla Giordano put on a show in the girls discus championship at Thursday’s Penn Relays, launching a season-best 167-10 on her third throw to win the state’s first gold medal in the event since 2004. Delsea’s Jocelyn White threw a 157-3 for N.J.’s first-ever discus title.
“Giordano etched her name in history with an even more towering toss.”
Giordano came into the meet with considerable momentum numbers-wise.
Giordano ended last spring with her PR 170-4 to win at New Balance Nationals, which is held at none other than the Irving “Moon” Mondschein Throwing Complex – the site of the Penn Relays. The familiarity with the circle was important and it got the 2023 NJSIAA Meet of Champions gold medalist into the throwing style she has thrived in of late. In each of her last two trips to Philadelphia, she has decided on the fly what she wants to do in the circle. That skill been part of what has turned her into an elite thrower.
“Every time I’m here, I always end up not switching or doing a reverse,” Giordano said. “That’s what I’ve been working on lately and what has helped me advance my technique. “You don’t have to rep it a million times with her because she has such good body control,” Dunn added. “She’s able to pick things up quickly. It’s a good sign.”
Giordano has her eyes set on the state record – a 182-flat thrown by Donovan Catholic great Alyssa Wilson in 2017. She’s closing in on it both in practice and competition. Dunn wanted Giordano to post a number on Thursday with a ‘nice and easy’ throw and then let it rip with five more. She fouled the first one, then made sure ‘nice and easy’ became ‘down the middle’ on her second throw, which it was via a 151-6.
If Giordano opens meets on her first or second throw with a number like that, it gives her plenty of opportunities to chase history the rest of the spring.
“That’s the biggest goal I have right now,” Giordano said of the state record. “At the bigger meets, I’m thinking about it, but I think it will be more in my head at the end of the year.”
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