Taupo & Turangi Herald

Ice cream an early motivator for champ

Maxwell world under-23 women’s champion

- Milly Fullick

Taupō is not short of mountain bikers, and now it’s also home to the world under-23 women’s champion. The first-place cross-country finish at the UCI Mountain Bike World Championsh­ips in Scotland last month was hardly the first time Sammie Maxwell has stepped up to the podium.

The latest gold medal will join a host of other accolades for the local 21-year-old, including having participat­ed in five cross-country Olympic national under-23 championsh­ips and a national cross-country marathon as well as garnering short track and eliminator wins, and she has a total of five World Cup under-23 finishes in cross-country Olympic and short track races.

Maxwell now lives in Wellington, where she works as a biomedical lab researcher, but she has received a profession­al cycling contract and hopes to become a more familiar sight on local tracks in the near future.

Her passion for cycling started in Taupō when she began tagging along with her dad and brother on rides at Craters Mountain Bike Park, although she admits their traditiona­l trip to McDonald’s for ice cream afterwards was a factor in her interest.

About the age of 12, Maxwell took part in the Day Night Thriller event with Taupō Intermedia­te School and realised she had caught the biking bug.

She got involved with Taupō Road Cycling Club and the Mountain Biking Junior Developmen­t Squad, which allowed her to train alongside local riders.

“They really helped drive my passion for the sport and helped me become surrounded by the amazingly supportive community of people associated with it — I just never looked back!”

Although Maxwell admits to having a fierce competitiv­e streak, the first few years of biking were hard-going.

“I think because the sport is so challengin­g technicall­y and physically, you can see how much you have to learn, from wanting to ride a hard technical section to climbing up over obstacles.

“These smaller goals were what came to the fore of my mind when thinking about developing in the sport, not racing or competing.”

By the time she had a few local

races under her belt, she started to daydream about the world stage — a dream realised several times since, including most recently at the world championsh­ips in the UK.

For this race, though, she said winning was not in her mind as she arrived at the event.

“I was pretty nervous because it’s a long time to train, and everyone’s fitness can change a lot in that time.,” she said.

“I was lucky enough to go in without too much pressure, but I had some solid results that gave me confidence also that I could fight for the podium.

“But I never even thought about winning.”

In the moment, it all came together.

“The race was just a dream come true. Even now, thinking about it gives me goosebumps [and] raises my heart rate a bit.

“I loved the course and was mentally so ready for a fight that when I found myself riding alone at the front, it was a bit of a shock to my brain.”

“It wasn’t until I was riding along the finish straight, with the finish line 10 metres ahead of me, that I knew I had done it.”

Maxwell won’t be taking much downtime to celebrate her win; races in Paris and the USA are calling, before she tackles the Whaka 100 endurance event in October and the Lake Taupō Cycle Challenge in November.

 ?? Photo / Cameron Mackenzie ?? Sammie Maxwell took gold in cross-country at the UCI Mountain Bike World Championsh­ips last month.
Photo / Cameron Mackenzie Sammie Maxwell took gold in cross-country at the UCI Mountain Bike World Championsh­ips last month.
 ?? Photo / Charlotte Kohler ?? Maxwell wasn’t sure she’d won until the race was almost over.
Photo / Charlotte Kohler Maxwell wasn’t sure she’d won until the race was almost over.

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