Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Nick Notten delivers as SA lifesaving’s ‘Iron’ man

- MARK KEOHANE

FISH HOEK’S Nick Notten was given top billing in the build-up to the General Tire Lifesaving National Championsh­ip – and he duly delivered with victory in the toughest discipline of them all, the Men’s Open Iron.

Notten the 2017 Lifesaving South Africa Male Athlete of the Year, refused to roll out the clichés and competitor platitudes when interviewe­d on the prospects of his title defence.

Notten stressed that he was not disrespect­ful to the rest of the field but admitted that he never gives it any thought who makes up the field. Notten’s inner belief is that his performanc­e is his only controllab­le. He said that he would simply focus on his own routines and ensure that his desire to compete remains greater than an egodriven desire to win because of the hype and expectatio­n within the media and among the sport’s competitiv­e community.

Notten is a lifesaver first and his love for lifesaving, from the age of eight, means the championsh­ip titles are a bonus and a consequenc­e of being fit and primed to contribute to a safer South African water experience.

Notten’s older brother Dominic for years was the more celebrated competitiv­e athlete. Nick adores his brother but being proud and inspired never meant being awed. Nick said because of the age difference the two didn’t compete against each other in the younger Notten’s formative Nipper years.

His older brother was renowned in the sport for winning the big races on the biggest of stages. Nick Notten was inspired by his brother’s training, profession­alism, dedication and work ethic. It’s this inspiratio­n that has always been more significan­t than aspiring to upstage his older sibling.

‘I always believed in my own performanc­e and I said before the National Championsh­ips that if I’ve done my preparatio­n then I expect to win,’ said Notten.

And win he did, emphatical­ly and comfortabl­y.

Notten’s presence was as immense yesterday as it was a year ago at the National Championsh­ips in Camps Bay, but it hasn’t been quite the same for Lifesaving SA’s 2017 Female Athlete of the Year Carmel Billson.

Billson is still having an outstandin­g National Surf Championsh­ips and she enjoyed success in the Pool National Championsh­ips that have also taken place in Port Elizabeth this week.

But the dominance of the last two years, when she won a record 17 national and provincial titles in one year, hasn’t been sustained. And it would unfair on Billson to in any way suggest she has failed. She’s still winning, but so are others who line up against her.

It’s also a compliment to the depth in the sport and in particular to Billson’s Marine Club teammate Sasha Lee Nordengren.

Nordengren was often the bridesmaid to Billson in 2017 but in Port Elizabeth she beat Billson to win gold in the Run Swim Run. She beat Billson again in the Surf Swim, but it took a remarkable ‘on the line’ late push.

Durban Surf ’s veteran beach sprinter and flags specialist Mandi Maritz also found her best form to deny Marine youngster Bianca von Bargen in the Flags and yesterday completed the double in the sprint.

Marine’s Josh Saunders and Fish Hoek’s Kenny Rice also stunned the field to claim their biggest respective National Championsh­ip title race victories.

Saunders won the Mens’ Open Surf Swim and Rice beat Fish Hoek club team-mate Mark Keeling in the Mens’ Open Single Ski.

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