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Team GB shooter’s bronze medal at first Olympics ‘incredible’ achievement

Team GB shooter Matt Coward-Holley’s bronze medal in the men’s trap at the Tokyo Olympics is an “incredible” achievement, the headmaster of his former school has said.

The Chelmsford-born athlete, now living in Salisbury in Wiltshire, shot 33 of 40 in the final to secure third place, finishing behind the Czech duo of gold medallist Jiri Liptak and silver medallist David Kostelecky.

The 26-year-old was a pupil at the independent Felsted School, near Braintree in Essex, from the age of 11 until his mid-teens.

The school’s headmaster, Chris Townsend, said he was “so proud” of Coward-Holley’s achievements at what was his first Olympics.

Matt Coward-Holley in action
Matt Coward-Holley in action (Mike Egerton/PA)

“To see him out there competing at the absolute pinnacle for his country, I just feel so proud and so pleased for him, so pleased he’s got a medal to bring home with him,” he said.

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“It’s fantastic news and I look forward to cheering him on to gold in a few years’ time as well.”

He said that “lovely lad” Coward-Holley had been a keen rugby player until he injured his back and was forced to give up the sport.

“He wasn’t someone who at the time he was at school you would have picked out as a future Olympian,” said Mr Townsend.

“He struggled with injuries, he had some bad back injuries which stopped him playing rugby which he quite enjoyed and at that point he turned his hand a bit more seriously to shooting, and obviously the rest of it is a pretty extraordinary story.”

Matt Coward-Holley celebrates his bronze medal  win
The Team GB shooter celebrates his bronze medal win (Mike Egerton/PA)

He said Coward-Holley showed “nerves of steel” in the “brutal” format of the final, and believes there will be “lots to look forward to” from him at future Olympics.

Coward-Holley’s partner, Augusta Rose Campos-Martyn, said his family and her are “immensely proud of his achievement”.

“What an amazing Olympic debut,” she told the PA news agency.

“Matt definitely has such a long career ahead of him and he is now looking forward to the mixed team event on Saturday.

“We all wish we could’ve been in the grandstand cheering him on and giving him a hug after his medal… but we will all be in the airport waiting for him to arrive to greet him and congratulate him in person.”

Campos-Martyn, who is also a professional shooter and competes for Puerto Rico internationally, said ahead of the final that Coward-Holley is an “immensely driven athlete”.

“He is never content, constantly striving for perfection, and more success,” she added.

“But he is also incredibly modest and down-to-earth.

“When he’s not training himself he is helping out other young athletes that are coming up through the sport.”

Ms Campos-Martyn, who is not in Tokyo due to Covid restrictions, said she cheered on her partner from their home in Salisbury, Wiltshire, with their dog Fig.

Coward-Holley had ambitions of being a professional rugby player but he was forced to give up the sport after he broke his back twice as a teenager.

He had stopped shooting at the age of 12 to concentrate on his rugby career, but returned to the sport aged 16.