Oldest athlete wins last-gasp lawn bowls gold
Australia’s Hanson, 68, made history with stunning final bowl to help team snatch victory
Ken Hanson made history as he became Australia’s oldest Commonwealth Games gold medal winner yesterday. But to do it, the 68-year-old had to produce the shot of his life.
The Victorian lawn bowler, along with teammates Josh Thornton and Tony Bonnell, were a shot behind New Zealand in the men’s B6/B7/B8 gold medal match at Broadbeach Bowls Club, with a single roll remaining.
Hanson stepped up and blasted away two Kiwi bowls, giving the Australians a last-gasp win. He is the oldest Australian athlete at the Games and now the oldest ever gold medal winner. Dorothy Roche was 61 when she won gold in the lawn bowls at the 1990 Games.
“I admit I feel like I’m 78, but happy to be a gold medallist at any age,” Hanson said afterwards.
“Although I carry a little weight, I keep myself fairly fit. I do a lot of walking. I consider myself fit enough to compete against these younger guys.
“It’s hard to describe my feelings. I have never been in this position before or never thought I would be, so I soaked it in, looked at my family and looked at the rest of my teammates and enjoyed the experience.”
Gold in volleyball
A Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast wouldn’t be complete without Australian gold won on the iconic coast, and it was delivered in thrilling style by the men’s beach volleyball pair of Chris McHugh and Damien Schumann at Coolangatta beachfront.
McHugh and Schumann won a heartstopping victory in three sets, taking the decider 18-16. At one point in the final set, their Canadian opponents, Samuel Pedlow and Sam Schachter, led 12-9 — a three-point lead and just three points from victory.
But the Australians, the pre-tournament favourites who had not dropped a set coming into the final, countered to take the match to sudden-death.
“You little beauty. So proud,” McHugh said. “We didn’t start great [in the third set], we had to hang in there the true Aussie way. We got there, they cracked, we took the opportunity.
“It’s a really pinching yourself sort of moment to have a home crowd and win gold the first time volleyball has ever been at the Commonwealth Games. If you didn’t have goosebumps in the stadium during that match you probably weren’t alive.”
The women’s pair of Taliqua Clancy and Mariafe Artacho Del Solar play for gold later.