Herald on Sunday

Dunham has silver lining

-

New Zealand have won their first medal at the rowing world championsh­ips through Matt Dunham and will have eight more boats lining up for more.

Dunham unleashed a breathless finish to claim silver in the lightweigh­t men’s single sculls in Sarasota, Florida, yesterday (NZT).

Fifth going into the final quarter, he stormed past three rivals but failed to beat Irishman Paul O’Donovan.

“I was coming from behind, and in the last 500m, I knew I was going to pass out anyway, so I just went for it all the way to the bubble line,” Dunham said. “I was already happy to make the A final, so really pleased with this.”

It is the first world championsh­ip medal for the Cambridge-based 23-year-old, who has burst on to the elite stage after being unused as a reserve for the lightweigh­t four at last year’s Rio Olympics.

He finished nearly two lengths behind O’Donovan, with Norway’s Kristoffer Brun third.

The number of remaining New Zealand finalists swelled by three as Robbie Manson (single sculls) and the double sculls combinatio­ns of Olivia Loe and Brooke Donoghue, and John Storey and Chris Harris all achieved their top-three semifinal requiremen­ts.

The preregatta favourite, Manson once again trailed home some key rivals. He was third behind Cuban Angel Fournier Rodriguez and four-time world champion Ondrej Synek of the Czech Republic.

Manson, who dominated at two World Cup regattas this year, was second in his heat and third in his quarter-final.

The 27-year-old is either preserving energy in the relentless Florida heat or possibly paying the price for a buildup spoiled by a rib injury. There were no problems for Loe and Donoghue, who also won twin golds at both World Cups entered this year. They dominated their semifinal and were the fastest qualifiers, nearly a second quicker than the other winners, Meghan O’Leary and Ellen Tomek of the United States.

Storey and Harris were runners-up in what was easily the faster semifinal, finishing just under a second behind French winners Matthieu Androdias and Hugo Boucheron.

Single sculler Hannah Osborne’s sixth placing in her semifinal means four of New Zealand’s 13 boats failed to qualify for A finals.

The three finalists chasing medals today (NZT) are women’s pair Kerri Gowler and Grace Prendergas­t, men’s pair James Hunter and Tom Murray and women’s double scullers Jackie Kiddle and Zoe McBride.

 ?? Matt Dunham photosport.nz ??
Matt Dunham photosport.nz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand