Bay amputee now a world champion
Youth worker tells of his journey from accident victim to champion on the water
Eight years after losing a leg in an accident, Hawke’s Bay’s Peter Cowan is a two-time world champion. A youth worker with Te Kupenga Hauora Ahuriri, Cowan, 23, returned home yesterday from the world waka ama championships in Tahiti with two gold medals, a silver and two fourth placings. Cowan, who was one of three Hawke’s Bay paddlers in the 13-strong Kiwi para contingent in Tahiti, lost a leg after the bicycle he was riding while training for the IronMaori triathlon in 2010 collided with an oncoming car in Hastings.
“These medals were a real confidence booster. While I’m making my mark, it’s humbling at the same time seeing what can come of my journey,” Cowan said.
He took up waka ama when he was a student at Hastings Boys’ High School in 2013. The Haeata Ocean Sports Club paddler had a two-year spell from the sport while on a Mormon mission and returned to it two years ago.
Cowan and his clubmate, NickyLee Epps, who is partially paralysed down one side after a stroke experienced 11 years ago, were in the Kiwi V6 1000m crew which captured gold. Epps, Cowan and Te Rau Oranga O Ngati Kahungunu paddler AJ Macdonald, who is vision impaired, were in a Kiwi V12 500m crew which won gold.
Epps, 23, and Cowan were in a Kiwi V6 500m crew which won silver. Cowan’s fourth placings came in his V1 250 and 500m finals.
“That my first time as an individual paddler at world championship level so I’m stoked with that. There’s this one really good guy but the rest of us weren’t too far behind him ... I know what I have to do before the next sprint worlds, which will be in Hawaii in 2020. It’s all about getting better and better,” Cowan said.
“I’ll be back out on the water tomorrow [today]. We’ve got the longdistance nationals in Napier in October and it won’t be long until the sprint nationals at Lake Karapiro in January again,” he said.
Cowan heaped kudos on his coaches, Hawke’s Bay’s multiple world champion Maika Nuku and Rotorua’s George Thomas.
At last year’s long-distance world championships, Cowan was in a sixperson New Zealand adaptive crew which finished second to Australia in their 18km race.
Third-year paddler Macdonald, a solo mum with three boys who has a job with the Napier City Council and teaches self defence to youngsters, won gold in her V1 500 and 250m finals. Macdonald, 33, is no stranger to winning gold at world championship level.
She won gold and silver medals at her previous world sprint championships in 2016. Macdonald had to withdraw from last year’s world long-distance champs after donating a kidney to her father.
She was confident of being in the medals prior to departure.
“My last sprint worlds was a lastminute decision for me because the team was short. This time we’ve had a bit more preparation . . . we’re a bit more of a serious team,” Macdonald said last month.
Fourth-year paddler Epps took up the sport in an attempt to become more active after her stroke. She was also inspired by her nanny, Violet Gear, who still paddles at golden masters level.
The Hawke’s Bay-based para manager for the Kiwi team, Honoria Ropiha, was thrilled with her team’s haul of seven golds, five silvers and two bronze medals.
“The V12 500m crew, which had all three of our Bay paddlers, produced an amazing race to win their gold,” Ropiha said.
Before the team left New Zealand, Ropiha rated them as real contenders for medals and the paddlers backed her up big time.
I know what I have to do before the next sprint worlds, which will be in Hawaii in 2020. It’s all about getting better and better. Peter Cowan