Marlborough Express

High-flying Eliza proves a class act

- MARC HINTON

If Eliza McCartney needed a reminder of what she had just achieved in Rio, then the new young sensation of New Zealand sport got it when she went back to her old school in Takapuna for a visit that brought the emotions flooding back.

The Olympic bronze medallist in the women’s pole vault only arrived back in New Zealand from Rio in the early hours of yesterday morning and by 9am there she was, centre stage and special assembly guest of honour at Belmont Intermedia­te in Takapuna − her old stomping ground.

For the 19-year-old Takapuna teen, looking out and seeing the hundreds of awe-inspired young faces all gazing up from a spot where she had been just a few years earlier, it hit home once again what an influentia­l and important role it is she now performs.

‘‘Yeah, it’s pretty special,’’ reflected Kiwi sport’s new ‘It Girl’. ‘‘Sport is a funny thing, it goes up and down and there’s incredibly rewarding moments, but they don’t happen that often. I feel like this is one of those moments that are so rewarding and you don’t forget them.’’

McCartney, of course, owned the moment, just as she had in Rio when she sailed over those first-time clearances at 4.50m, 4.60, 4.70 and then 4.80m into that historic bronze medal.

She was charming, charismati­c, engaging and, frankly, just herself. She laughed a lot and reflected in just the right terms on what is clearly an incredible time in her young life.

If the wide-eyed pupils of Belmont Intermedia­te needed a life-size reminder of what can happen when you work hard, focus your talents and energy and, well, reach for the sky, then they certainly had it in the ‘‘old girl’’ sitting before them.

‘‘It was really cool, and singing the school song, that was something I didn’t think I’d be doing again. It’s funny how much I actually remembered,’’ reflected McCartney.

It was here, after all, that she truly discovered her love for sport.

She told the pupils she gave ‘‘everything’’ a go, and later confirmed she had thrown herself into squash, orienteeri­ng, water polo, netball and cross-country with equal zest.

Soon enough she would be heading to Takapuna Grammar, where athletics, and pole vault, would come on to the radar. One thing would follow another, and then eventually there she would be soaring over 4.80m for that bronze she was celebratin­g even before she had hit the mat.

Truth be told, her remarkable achievemen­t − she was six years younger than anyone else in that Olympic final − is still sinking in.

‘‘Certainly the first couple of days it was all a bit weird, and it wasn’t until I got away from the [Olympic] village and had a chance to think about it that it all hit home. I’m not going to lie, it makes me feel like crying when I really think about it,’’ she said.

‘‘I feel like I know it was the best moment in my life, and that’s a pretty incredible thing to know.’’

McCartney also reflected on the Rio experience with watching New Zealand awed by her relaxed attitude and absence of nerves through the biggest competitio­n of her life. Turns out it wasn’t an act.

‘‘I don’t even know how to describe it. I was confident, I was ready to go and I didn’t feel expectatio­n and pressure. I just wanted to come away feeling I left everything out there.

‘‘That’s the best I’ve ever competed and I’m so glad I could bring it in an Olympic final.’’

Yes, she knows how close she came to clearing 4.85 at the first attempt, and winning the gold, but she’s adamant ‘‘the fact I left everything out there is something I feel very proud to say’’.

This school that was also home to singing sensation Lorde, and to fellow Rio Olympians Jacko Gill (shot put) and Paul Snow-Hansen (sailing), knows all about pride.

These kids today are bursting with it over their new hero.

 ?? PHOTOS: LAWRENCE SMITH/FAIRFAX NZ ?? Olympic bronze medallist Eliza McCartney shared her special Rio story with pupils from her former school, Belmont Intermedia­te, in Takapuna.
PHOTOS: LAWRENCE SMITH/FAIRFAX NZ Olympic bronze medallist Eliza McCartney shared her special Rio story with pupils from her former school, Belmont Intermedia­te, in Takapuna.
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 ??  ?? Belmont pupils clamber for a touch of the Olympic medal brought home from the Rio Games by their new hero.
Belmont pupils clamber for a touch of the Olympic medal brought home from the Rio Games by their new hero.

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