The Press

Kiwis still a force on the water

- Ian Anderson

The year following an Olympic Games is traditiona­lly a transition one for rowing, but Rowing New Zealand probably didn’t expect 2013 to be as turbulent as it was.

Yet despite some unforeseen upheavals, the organisati­on still emerged with five medals at the world championsh­ips and a healthy eye on more success at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

Juliette Haigh was the most high-profile retirement following the 2012 London Olympics, while fellow bronze medallist Storm Uru chose to further his academic career.

Mahe Drysdale, the gold medal winner in the men’s single scull, took an extended break that eventually proved more costly than he first thought, while Joseph Sullivan, who teamed up with Nathan Cohen to win gold in the double sculls at Eton Dorney, took a shorter hiatus that also spelled bad news.

Drysdale returned to training mid-year in an attempt to retain his title at the world championsh­ips in Chungju, South Korea in September. But a lack of conditioni­ng, and a cycling accident in training shortly before the regatta, which produced a broken rib, meant he was unable to advance past the quarterfin­als.

Sullivan was ruled not fit enough to be part of the New Zealand team for the opening World Cup regatta of the year, in Sydney, in March. He was later named as Drysdale’s substitute for the next two World Cup events in the single scull, but struggled horribly before announcing that he would sit out the world championsh­ips in an attempt to regain his focus for 2014.

Cohen was part of the New Zealand men’s quad this year, which was off the pace before he suffered a heart problem that forced him to withdraw from the boat after the heats at the world championsh­ips. It left him pondering how to fix the problem and continue his career.

Rowing NZ still produced new world-class crews at short notice, however, with the women’s double sculls combinatio­n of Fiona Bourke and Zoe Stevenson and their men’s counterpar­ts, Michael Arms and Robbie Manson, making big impression­s.

In their first year together, Bourke and Stevenson began with a win in Sydney and were pipped for gold by their Lithuanian rivals by just 0.02 seconds at the final World Cup regatta, in Lucerne.

The Kiwis looked poised for revenge at the worlds as they led in the dying stages of the final, only to be agonisingl­y run down in the last strokes by Lithuania.

Arms and Mason took over where Sullivan and Cohen left off, winning all three World Cup events, but their perfect season ended in Chungju, where they could only manage sixth in their final, after Arms had been hampered by a back injury for the previous month.

Peter Taylor, who won bronze in London with Uru in the lightweigh­t double sculls, switched to the lightweigh­t four this year and, along with Curtis Rapley, James Lassche and James Hunter, won all three World Cup events before capturing silver at the worlds.

The new women’s pair combinatio­n of Rebecca Scown and Kayla Pratt capped a fine first season together with bronze in Chungju, while women’s single sculler Emma Twigg shone to win silver.

Amid the changes, there was one predictabl­e constant – the dominance of the men’s pair of Hamish Bond and Eric Murray.

The London Olympic gold medallists easily won the two World Cup events they contested and then crushed their rivals at the worlds to claim a world record of 16 consecutiv­e victories for any boat at Olympic, world championsh­ip and World Cup level.

The gold medal-winning performanc­e of the Kiwi men’s eight at the world under-23 championsh­ips capped the most prolific year yet for Rowing NZ crews at world U23 and junior championsh­ips, providing a further boost for plans to contest every Olympic class in Rio.

 ?? Photo: GETTY IMAGES ?? All class: Eric Murray and Hamish Bond react after winning the men’s pair final at the world rowing championsh­ips in August.
Photo: GETTY IMAGES All class: Eric Murray and Hamish Bond react after winning the men’s pair final at the world rowing championsh­ips in August.

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