Hogan looking to land more big fish on way to Paris

Meet Victor Hogan, a 140kg, 1.99m man mountain by day, a gentle giant by night. He was Team South Africa’s first athletics gold medallist in Accra, Ghana, and continued the country’s impressive line of performances in the discus event at the African Games.

Hogan is now 34, and his 62.56m effort, in conditions that weren’t perfect for the discipline – there was a tailwind which forces the discus down – mirrored the 62.60m that won him silver at the 2011 African Games in Maputo.

Team SA’s impressive record in the event at the Games means that they have now won men’s discus medals in seven of the eight competitions from 1995. In total they have collected 10 medals over that timespan, and Hogan’s was the third gold, following Frantz Kruger in 1999 and Russell Tucker in 2015. Their respective winning throws were 61.02m and 60.41m. So, he has bragging rights on that score too. The only blank for Team SA in discus at the Games was in 2019.

However, Hogan isn’t one to brag. The gentle giant’s demeanour comes through when chatting to him a day after winning the gold medal. There’s very little ego and in fact if you ask him to describe whether or not he gets a bigger thrill from winning African Games gold or landing a 15kg cob, he might well answer the latter. Spoiler alert: I didn’t ask him.

However, he loves fishing and there’s a distinct change in the tone of his voice when we start talking about his favourite hobby. It might even be more a lifestyle than hobby. “I grew up in the little fishing village of Velddrif on the West Coast and both my grandpas fished and I learned how to fish from my dad. It’s a real passion of mine.

When I was about 10 years old we moved to Kleinmond and I haven’t looked back. I am a rock and surf angler and it really helps me to clear my mind. You’ve got to know your story though, keep tabs on the weather and the best conditions when to fish, and everything that goes with that.”

He even has his own YouTube fishing channel – his handle is saltaholic – and proudly says that he has some 8,000 subscribers. On the channel he unashamedly proclaims, “in general I don’t like talking about athletics. Fishing is in my blood. I still remember the days I couldn’t go with my dad, crying, watching him packing his tackle and driving off to the river.”

However, he has bigger fish to fry, in an athletics sense.

Armed with that gold medal in his pocket, he returns to South Africa where he will have his next assignment at the Nationals, a compulsory event for those with ambitions of representing Team SA at the Paris Olympics in late July. “After that I’ll be competing in a Grand Prix meeting in Johannesburg and I’ll be going to Europe in mid-May. We have until the end of June to get the job done.”

That job entails throwing 67.20m to qualify to represent his country at the Olympics, something which is a burning ambition for him. “I’ve been to five World Championships’, but always seemed to have missed out on the Olympics. My coach (John Smit) and I are working hard on a programme for me to peak in time for Paris.

That made getting gold in Accra even more satisfying, given it was the first competition of the season for me. I actually used the event as part of working on my technique with each throw. I found myself behind after three throws, with the Algerian (Khennoussi Oussamma) in the gold medal position with just under 60m. I said to myself, ‘concentrate hard, work hard. Throwing 60m is not all that hard. You’ve done it so many times before’. And then I pulled out a 62.56m for gold.”

The winning distance isn’t a personal best for Hogan. That came in Budapest, Hungary, last year when he threw 66.14m. He knows he has to add a metre to his PB to qualify for Paris.

We have a programme and we’re on track for that,” he reassures. “I actually have thrown 67m, and it came at a Diamond League meeting in New York in 2014. I foot-faulted though so obviously it doesn’t count. But last year I had about 10 sessions where I threw 67m, so I know I can do it. There’s no such thing as the perfect throw, but working hard on technique helps get closer. And that’s what I’m doing.”

Explaining the gap between that silver medal in Maputo in 2011 and gold in Accra in 2024, Hogan simply says, “There were a lot of good throwers around at the time and I was also younger.” Indeed, he was still 21 at the time and finding his way in the sport. “The difference here in Ghana was that when I was behind after three throws in the final I was able to use my experience to fall back on and get it right with my fourth throw. Mentally, it’s like having a magnifying glass and working through your own technique each throw. You look for, and feel, where you can make the next throw better.”

And while he travels the country, and indeed the world, looking for the throws that will see him fulfill a long-held dream of competing in the Olympics, he will also be seeking to land more big fish. He’s particularly proud of a 11kg cod he pulled in from the beach at Struisbaai. And then he adds. “landing a fish like that makes it look quite impressive. “I catch galjoen (the national fish of South Africa) regularly, but when holding it and having the photo taken, it looks quite small.”

And you can understand why. Think of the Springboks. Think of the weight of Frans Malherbe and the height of Pieter-Steph du Toit, That’s Victor Hogan for you.

Photo by Roger Sedres in Accra