The Scotsman

Powderhall athletics tradition is tribute to modest champion

Hanlon & Co’s New Year Sprint deserves moment in spotlight

- SaNdy suTHerLaNd

YOU have to admire Frank Hanlon, a semi-retired former wholesale butcher from Bonnyrigg.

Through thick and thin – and for a time towards the end of the last century it was extremely thin – he has stubbornly fought to maintain a sporting tradition, one far older than the Commonweal­th Games for example, which only began in 1930.

For 23 years Hanlon has carried the responsibi­lity of organising possibly the world’s foremost profession­al sprint: “Powderhall” as it was called after the Edinburgh stadium where the race first took place in 1870.

Though the venue has changed several times and is now at Musselburg­h Racecourse, the race itself, a 110 metres handicap officially known as the New Year Sprint, has continued in an unbroken sequence despite two world wars.

It is easy to denigrate this far-from-wealthy man who has sunk his savings into the event and who probably would not have taken it this far were it not for the support of faithful colleagues such as Adam Crawford from Glenrothes, the handicappe­r for 33 years, and Edinburgh coach Bill Walker, who supplies the electronic photo-finish and entries back-up. Vital too since the move from Meadowbank in 1999, has been the financial support of the racecourse and East Lothian Council, though the often heavy grass is certainly not to everyone’s liking.

There have been murmurings of discontent over the years which grew into a crescendo last year when a new meeting, the Pitreavie Gift, was staged at Pitreavie Stadium in Fife at the end of January.

But that meeting, bedevilled by poor weather last winter but planned again for 26 January, has been called off due to a disappoint­ing response from athletes. Not that the New Year Sprint is exactly brimful of competitor­s this time, with only ten heats of six runners in each due to line up, and on the day there are often no-shows due to injury or illness or perhaps the weather, though Hanlon, who had a course inspection yesterday, insists there is no threat to the event from recent heavy rain.

Crawford is quick to point out that the overall entry including the supporting events such as the “four furlongs”, the 90 metres sprint and the youths events, the finals of which are on the first day, is up.

However, he also admits that he can remember more than 130 runners in the past with as many as 20 heats.

Others point out that even in Australia, where profession­al sprinting is well establishe­d and takes place mostly in their summer, numbers are down.

It is easy to scoff at some of the old wives’ tales which still sur- round pedestrian­ism, as it used to be known, but many of our fastest speed merchants…Olympic 100m champion Allan Wells (though he did not run at New Year), European 200m champion Doug Walker (winner in December 1994) and George McNeill (winner in 1970)…have been produced by coaches or trainers who have been inured in the system – speed balls, diets and most important of all, handicap racing in squads.

In a year when Scotland may not have a single entrant, male or female, in the Glasgow 2014 Commonweal­th Games 100m, Scotland can ill afford to neglect an event which gives our talented teenagers something worthwhile to aim for and a potential £4000 boost for their training funds.

A trio of teenagers, all from Edinburgh AC, dominate the back marks for the heats which begin at 11:25am today following the 11am youth sprint heats.

Morro Bajo is a Gambian-born Liberton High School pupil off 2.75m in heat four, while last year’s winner, George Watson’s Ben Robbins is in heat two, trying to repeat the feat of Willie McFarlane (Glasgow) who in 1934 became the only man to have retained his title. Sam Revie, a 19-year-old Heriot-Watt student, will be trying to progress from heat three, possibly at the expense of Gemma Nicol (Dunfermlin­e) the six times finalist and Commonweal­th Games 400m place contender. Lane Name Club/Town H’cap (metres) 1 Ross Kirk Pitreavie AC 9.0 2 Jordan Charters Lasswade AC 8.5 3 Charlie Carstairs Lasswade AC 7.75 4 Leigh Marshall Hawick 5.5 5 Iain Douglas Selkirk 8.0 6 James Beattie Kelty 29.5 7 Eoin Luther Jedburgh 12 1 Dylan Lindsay Glenrothes 13.0 Cameron Smith Central AC 8.0 3 Jessie Concannan Shaftesbur­y Barnet 18 4 Ben Robbins Edinburgh AC 4.0 5 John Paxton Hawick 15.5 6 Fiona Cleat Edinburgh AC 19.5 7 James Park TLJT 10.25

2 1 Megan Shiel Hawick 21.5 2 Eric Smart Whitley Bay 16.0 3 Billy Martin Markinch 11.0 4 Sam Revie Edinburgh AC 3.75 5 David McKay Kelso 15.0 6 Gemma Nicol Dunfermlin­e & WF AC 7 Cumbie Bowers Glenrothes 7.25

15.75 1 Craig Robertson Pitreavie AC 2 Jack Wilson Hawick 13.0 3 Iain Heard TLJT 22.0 4 Morro Bajo Edinburgh AC 2.75 5 Wallace McGowan Sauchie 15.5 6 Fraser Neil Kelso 7.5 7 Kerr Gerrard Selkirk 10

13.0 1 John Fleming Kelso 8.75 2 Jazmine Tomlinson TLJT 21.5 3 Allan Stewart Chiltern 9.0 4 Ewan Dyer Pitreavie AC 6.5 5 Avril Jackson Edinburgh AC 18.5 6 Oloff Van Zyl South Africa 10.0 7 Albert Eland Gt. Broughton 27.0 1 Kevin Eddie Dunfermlin­e 9.0 2 Rachel Robertson Lasswade AC 20.0 3 Andrew Bryson Hawick 21.5 4 Francis Smith Woodford Green AC 5 Susan Young Dundee HH 19.5 6 Wendy Nicol Dunfermlin­e & WF AC 1 Nick Mitchell Glenrothes 9.75 2 Thomas Bradley Edinburgh 24.0

6.0

29.0 1 Craig Bruce Selkirk 12.0 2 Katie Purves Edinburgh AC 19.0 3 Joseph Watson Penrith 40.0 4 Seb Harrison Jedburgh 6.5 5 Sarah Ross Pitreavie AC 22.0 6 Dylan Ali Hawick 7.5 1 Stewart Harris Longtown 27.0 2 William Hutchison Lasswade AC 3 Colin Bruce Selkirk 12.0 4 Steven Charters Dolphinton 5 Amy Clancy Peebles 18.5 6 Liam Halliday Denny 8.5

5.0

9.0

 ?? Picture: Phil Wilkinson ?? Frank Hanlon is the redoubtabl­e champion of Powderhall, now the New year sprint
Picture: Phil Wilkinson Frank Hanlon is the redoubtabl­e champion of Powderhall, now the New year sprint

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