The Press

It’s great when a plan all comes together

- DAVID LONG

Nico Porteous and Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott were just eight years old when systems that took them to Olympic glory were set up.

Two New Zealand 16-year-olds winning bronze medals at the PyeongChan­g Games just a couple of hours apart made headlines around the world on Thursday.

But their success was no coincidenc­e. Instead, it was the result of a programme set up by Snow Sports NZ to put this country back on the Winter Olympics map.

Snow Sports NZ CEO Martin Toomey said yesterday that back in 2010, when Porteous and Sadowski-Synnott were still at primary school, plans to boost their sports were formalised.

‘‘We’ve had a programme in place for eight years,’’ said Toomey, who started his current role in 2012. ‘‘It’s a serious one and it takes that long to develop the coaches, the infrastruc­ture, the relationsh­ips with the ski areas and all of those things where everyone is working together.

‘‘In the six years I’ve been in the role, our big focus was to make sure we do all of that.

‘‘We’ve built the training facility in Wanaka that’s got a High Performanc­e Sport NZ gym. So the athletes are athletes, they’re not just kids who ride boards or slide on skis.

‘‘The whole programme is set up to be a profession­al sports programme, for athletes on skis and snowboards.’’

Toomey says the talents of Porteous and Sadowski-Synnott were identified a few years ago and considerab­le time and money was invested in them.

‘‘These guys have been on the radar for three to four years as they’ve risen through our ranks through junior programmes,’’ said Toomey, the All Blacks’ fitness trainer from 1994 to 1999.

‘‘So they’ve been supported in terms of coaching, assistance to get overseas to train and compete, because they have to spend about six months of the year in the northern hemisphere, which is costly. The majority of our support goes to getting people to events, providing the technical support like wax technician­s, having people look after their skis and boards, so they’re in great condition, and also coaching.’’

For New Zealand to become a noteworthy nation in snow sports, considerab­le financial support was needed, and that came as increased funding from High Performanc­e Sport New Zealand.

Toomey said when he started at Snow Sports NZ, the money from HPSNZ was $1 million over the entire winter sports programme. ‘‘In the last couple of years we’ve been getting around $2m a year,’’ he said of the money just for snow sports.

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