The Post

Murray, Bolt on board

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They’re dominant forces in their chosen sport, and they were on the same flight to Rio.

That has to be a good omen, right? Eric Murray will be hoping so, after sharing his ride to the Olympic Games with champion Jamaican

Peterson said Rowing NZ would not appeal the decision.

‘‘We’ve had a chat with the athletes and our high performanc­e director and myself have considered what our options are, but we believe in the best interests of the athletes here and of the athletes we have in Rio that this is the end of the road for the men’s four.’’

The crew finished third at the last-chance Olympic qualifying regatta in Switzerlan­d in May, where the top two crews qualified.

With the prospect of Russian sprinter Usain Bolt.

Murray, paired with Hamish Bond in rowing’s coxless pair, is looking to win a second Olympic gold in Rio while Bolt is looking for an unpreceden­ted sprinting threepeat in Rio, his last Olympics. disqualifi­cation looming, Peterson had them continue training, a move which he said had been worthwhile.

‘‘It was a huge call from me to ask them to come back six weeks ago, but it was the right decision and I think what’s played out over the past two weeks has proven it was the right decision, and I think the athletes have acknowledg­ed that this morning.

‘‘They were grateful that we gave them the opportunit­y, and I’m proud of their response to me,’’ Peterson said.

It remains New Zealand’s most memorable Olympic medal ceremony. Eight hulking rowers - and diminutive coxswain Simon Dickie stood lake-side at Feldmochin­g in their black shorts and singlets.

After the gold medals were placed around the necks of the Kiwi crew and the New Zealand flag was raised, ‘‘God Defend New Zealand’’ was played for the first time at an Olympics.

At previous Games, ‘‘God Save The Queen’’ was played as the national anthem.

So something deeply and uniquely New Zealand resonated about these victors.

With Dickie yelling commands, the oarsmen — Trevor Coker, Athol Earl, John Hunter, Tony Hurt, Dick Joyce, Gary Robertson, Wybo Veldman and Lindsay Wilson — produced a superlativ­e display and never looked like being headed by silver medalists East Germany and third-placed United States.

‘‘I think it’s been widely reported, and I think it’s pretty much the dynamic of the individual­s that were in that crew, ‘‘ he said.

‘‘It was an extraordin­ary combinatio­n of minds that were singularly aimed at achieving a common goal, which was to win.

‘‘I mean, if you asked me how did all that happen, I think a huge amount of credit has to go to the selectors - at that time, Fred Strachan, Don Rowlands - and Rusty Robertson the coach.

‘‘They were the guys that put the nine individual­s together. They left it to Rusty to train that crew.

‘‘It was an extraordin­ary dynamic of individual­s.

‘‘So it wasn’t just having the physical skills to achieve success, but it was actually having the mental capacity to drive through that barrier of not only wanting it, but doing whatever it took to achieve it.

‘‘There’s a lot of mental factors that came into play to achieve that result.’’

Physically, they also had to be at their peak to beat an East German crew that competed in an era when the country’s leading sportspeop­le were part of a systemic state doping programme.

‘‘Subsequent­ly of course, we’ve learnt that there was a significan­t amount of enhancemen­t to their performanc­e by way of what we would now commonly cheating,’’ Dickie said of major rivals.

So there was plenty of symbolism in New Zealand’s triumph.

‘‘It was a bit of a watershed Olympics, 1972, ‘‘ Dickie said.

‘‘Avery Brundage was still head of the IOC. He was a great advocate of amateur sport as opposed to profession­al sport.

‘‘I think he was certainly cognisant that there were things going on inside the Eastern countries that were tilting the playing field in their favour. They were using sport as a political tool, which he knew there was an inevitabil­ity about that - but he didn’t agree with the way they were achieving their results.

‘‘So when we won, we gave him cause to celebrate his viewpoints. You didn’t actually need to be a profession­al, you didn’t need to be a cheat - you could be just a wholesome bunch of guys.

‘‘That was the last Olympic race that was ever won in a wooden boat.’’ call their

 ??  ?? Usain Bolt shared a flight to Rio with Eric Murray.
Usain Bolt shared a flight to Rio with Eric Murray.

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