Business Day

Latecomer to rowing lives and loves the life aquatic

- Mark Etheridge

Raised in the northern KwaZulu-Natal village of Hluhluwe, rower Murray Bales-Smith isn’t one for histrionic­s and says straight out that his story “feels quite ordinary”.

But, figurative­ly, the 27-yearold has anything but an ordinary story to tell and has had a prickly rope climber (the Zulu word for Hluhluwe) of a career.

After an idyllic primary school life in rural KwaZuluNat­al, his family moved to Gqeberha on the Eastern Cape coast.

After initially missing the cutoff to join the rowing squad at Grey High, Bales-Smith has methodical­ly hurdled every obstacle in his path. Now he not only has a boatful of medals from the Rand Merchant Bank (Rowing SA’s principle funder) Buffalo Regatta in East London, but also has made finals at two

World Championsh­ips and a World Cup event.

“I was a latecomer to rowing, only starting in grade 10, compared to the other children (grade 8) but when I heard that the school automatica­lly goes to national championsh­ips I was playing catch-up very fast,” says Bales-Smith.

Of course it helped that there was a seat available in the quad boat that year and the teenager took it with both hands.

“My final race at school was SA Schools champs and after matric in 2014 I told my mom, that was me done in rowing.”

Nice try. Ten years later and Bales-Smith is still at it, and still has an Olympic dream.

“My school coach convinced me to go to Nelson Mandela University in Gqeberha, which I did. Then the rowing coach at Rhodes University, Chris Holliday, saw my times on the ergo (indoor rowing trainer) and convinced

me to switch to Rhodes. Chris was also rowing coach at St Andrews at the time and had a big influence on my career.”

Bales-Smith was on the move again, heading north to Gauteng, the mecca of SA rowing (Roodeplaat Dam in Tshwane being the hub), where he got a full sports bursary at the University of Johannesbu­rg.

“That’s where I was exposed to a totally different level of training and at the end of 2022 finally made it into the RMB national squad. Of course it helped that I was the only men’s lightweigh­t rower.”

SA’s finest Olympic rowing moment came in the same boat class in 2012 when the lightweigh­t fours won gold in London. This year is the last of lightweigh­t rowing in the Olympics in Paris.

“The goal was to see how myself and Lebone Mokohseng could go in the lightweigh­t doubles. We went to the world champs and quickly saw just how fast the rest of the world is but we made a D final and were keen for more.

“Sadly, Lebone had to leave paddling. He is the family’s main breadwinne­r and had to find

full-time work to support them.”

Last year national coach Tiago Loureiro sat down with Bales-Smith in a Pretoria coffee shop and the latter thought it was going to be negative news. “But I was pleasantly surprised when he said he could see I’d been working hard and getting decent times and so was rewarding me by taking me along to World Cup 3 in Lucerne, Switzerlan­d.

“My dream was coming true and I loved every minute and this time I made the C final and was just so grateful for the chance.”

WORLD CHAMPS

It was at this stage that the young man’s life was going to change in more ways than he could imagine.

“After the race my mom called me and said that my dad [Michael] had cancer and things weren’t looking good.

“My next goal for the year was the world champs and it was a real mental and physical struggle in the build-up.

“Thankfully RMB gives our national squad access to so many resources and our training camp at Tzaneen dam (known in

rowing circles as the Land of Speed), though tough, was made easier by the support of the squad and our sports psychologi­st, Lesley Pedlar.”

Bales-Smith got to the World Championsh­ips and — beyond his wildest expectatio­ns — made further improvemen­ts and reached the B final.

For every high there’s a low though, and just a month later he experience­d the worst six weeks of his young life. On October 1 2023 he was mugged and stabbed while out cycling and on November 9 his father lost his battle against cancer at the age of 77.

“I was cycling at a farm in Pretoria, a place where you pay for the privilege and I had always felt safe there. But 40 minutes into my ride, two guys just stepped out of the bushes and swung at me, knocking me off my bike.

“The one guy grabbed my bike and the other guy stabbed me in the arm and just kept coming at me. They already had my bike and my watch (attached to the handlebars) but this guy just wouldn’t let up. I started sprinting and it felt like I was literally being hunted. I managed to get my phone out of a pocket and dropped it and he grabbed that and stopped. I ran about 2km to the highway where I found a farmworker who helped flag a car down.”

Bales-Smith was too weak and bleeding too profusely to scale the fence and the farmworker had difficulty in stopping passing traffic.

He was taken to hospital for treatment to stab wounds in his right arm, left elbow and leg. Fortunatel­y, the only damage was to the ulnar nerve, which extends from the elbow to the little finger and has since healed.

“I hear that authoritie­s have arrested two suspects in connection with other incidents in the same area, so hopefully they’ve got the guys who attacked me.”

The injuries meant that for the first time in ages he had time to spend with friends in December when he couldn’t row, and ended up doing a trail race and mountain bike race, which proved to be food for the soul.

“I’m coming out of the slump now and we’re preparing for SA senior champs. I’m also hoping to race the lightweigh­t singles skull event at the world champs in Canada later this year and would love to make an A final or even push for a medal.

“Due to it being an Olympic year, obviously almost all available RMB funding will go towards that so I’ll have to be doing a bit of self-funding.

“But I’m working now as a financial adviser for Hyperios, who have always been super-encouragin­g of my rowing and giving me flexibilit­y. I’m also coaching at St Alban’s College, which brings more funding and also allows me to put back into the sport I love.”

As for the Paris Olympics, unless he finds a lightweigh­t partner, that dream seems to be drifting further away. But already his eyes are on the horizon. “Coastal rowing is a new sport for the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, not something I’ve tried but it’s most definitely an option.”

He already has a possible Olympic link to build on though his cousin Matt McGillivra­y, “who has achieved the qualifying standard in surfing for Paris this year”.

MATURITY

Someone who knows more than most about Bales-Smith is RMB national squad technical performanc­e manager Grant Dodds. “Murray’s one of the nicest people you will ever meet. He is humble, softly spoken, dedicated, reliable and totally unassuming. He’s been in the rowing community for a long time and has waited so patiently to represent his country on the world stage,” he says.

“I’m immensely proud of him for what he has achieved both internatio­nally and locally at the RMB Buffalo Regatta this year in particular (winning the silver sculls trophy and the grand challenge trophy) and the role that he plays in the RMB national squad.

“He brings stability and maturity to our young team and leads by example.”

BUT ALREADY HIS EYES ARE ON THE HORIZON. ‘COASTAL ROWING IS A NEW SPORT FOR THE LOS ANGELES OLYMPICS’

 ?? /Supplied ?? Quite a haul: Murray BalesSmith with trophies at the Buffalo Regatta in East London.
/Supplied Quite a haul: Murray BalesSmith with trophies at the Buffalo Regatta in East London.
 ?? /World Rowing ?? Bladesman: Murray Bales-Smith at a World Cup event in Belgrade, Serbia.
/World Rowing Bladesman: Murray Bales-Smith at a World Cup event in Belgrade, Serbia.

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