Sunday Tribune

Quick feet, and a quicker head

Mandi Maritz has shown her real life-saving skills on many occasions

- MARK KEOHANE

MANDI Maritz does nothing slowly. She runs fast and thinks even faster. She’s a World Champion Beach Sprinter, consistent­ly the fastest on sand in South Africa and always on the alert when it comes to water safety and the fallibilit­y of people who make the wrong decisions in water and the lunacy of those who fail to respect the power of water.

She’s been a lifeguard for 18 years, having enrolled in Lifesaving South Africa’s Nipper programme as an eight year old with the Summerstan­d Club.

The outdoors is her passion. Training is as much a passion. The ocean and beach are her playground and her sporting arena. It also her sanctuary and for the last 18 years has been more a home than a retreat because of her commitment to Lifesaving South Africa.

Maritz is a life saver and a world champion. Hers is a story that should have been told over and over. She is a good news story, as a person and as an athlete.

She is an inspiratio­n and she’s another of those proud young South Africans who enhance the country’s image by extension of SAND QUEEN: Mandi Maritz beats the competitio­n to claim another title her personalit­y and performanc­e. She’s athletic cover material, but somehow the country’s sporting media messengers have failed her and the sport in which she is sprinting royalty.

Maritz headlines the women’s Beach and Flags sprint at the General Tire/lifesaving South Africa National Championsh­ip at Camps Bay (March 29-April1).

She’s the best in the country and among the best in the world. She took gold in the 2010 World Championsh­ips in Egypt and in 2016 won double bronze in the Beach Sprint and Beach Flags.

She’s been dominant as a track athlete but it is on sand where her legs have powered her sustained success. There’s no South African woman faster on sand over 90 metres, although the understate­d nature of the sport means minimal exposure and there is always the possibilit­y of a new kid arriving at a competitio­n and cleaning up.

Maritz has triumphed despite the obvious funding restrictio­ns. Traditiona­lly there hasn’t been commercial investment in the sport on a grand scale. Competitor­s are self funded and those who travel to internatio­nal inter club competitio­ns do so with their own cash or through club fundraiser­s.

Just maybe the alignment of corporate heavyweigh­t General Tire with Lifesaving South Africa, as an Organisati­on and as a Sport, will ease individual financial strains and create the necessary awareness and environmen­t in which local lifeguards can aspire to the tangibles of being the best in their sport.

There are no complaints from Maritz about perceived athletic financial hardships. Equally there is no expectatio­n that her sprinters’ golden touch will now translate to gold bars.

She’s committed to serving the organisati­on she has known all her life. Lifesaving South Africa is in her DNA. The sacrifice and the life lessons are integral to her growth as a women and a young leader who is ambitious in everything she does, but also grounded because of what she has chosen to do.

Maritz delights in her sporting achievemen­ts, but there is no equal to having saved another’s life. She remembers her first lifesaving experience when a baby fell into a pool. The mother, she says, hadn’t even noticed, so quick was the baby’s crawl and fall. Maritz also saved the life a man who was drunk at a party, went into the water, went under and stayed under.

She wasn’t on duty, but was alert and schooled enough to know immediatel­y he was in trouble.

“He wasn’t breathing when I got him out of the water and everything that I had learned as a Lifeguard came into play and

Competed for South Africa at the Sanyo Bussan Internatio­nal Lifesaving Cup 2007 – Japan – National u/23 team: Gold – beach flags (individual event under23)

Selected for SA National Team to take part at the Worlds Rescue Challenge in Egypt October 2010 Flags -3rd Beach Sprint-3rd Inter Club – Beach Sprint – 1st – WORLD CHAMPION Inter Club – flags -4th

Selected for SA National Team to take part at the Worlds Rescue Challenge in Australia Sept 2012 Flags -2rd Beach Sprint-2nd Inter Club – Beach Sprint – 2nd

Australian National Champs – April 2013 Beach flags – 5th

Selected for SA National Team to take part at the Worlds Rescue Challenge in France October 2014 Flags -3rd Beach Sprint-5th Inter Club – flags -3rd

Selected for SA National Team to take part at the Worlds Rescue Challenge in Netherland­s 1st – 18th September 2016 Beach flags – 3rd Beach sprints 3rd fortunatel­y the story had a good ending,” recalls Maritz.

“Lifesaving has taught me so much, in a social and sporting context. I have learned that anything is possible when applying a powerful mind and that talent is fed by endless commitment through ongoing training, and that my vision of achievemen­t will become a reality when I combine skill, motivation, energy and passion.”

General Tire recently committed in excess of R5 million to a three-year investment in Lifesaving South Africa to complement their road safety initiative­s with the crucial need for water safety.

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