Whanganui Chronicle

Maples eying third straight title

Most of the NZ team from Glasgow will be in Wellington

- Opinion Alec McNab

After the excitement of the World Indoor Championsh­ips attention switches to Newtown Park in Wellington for the Jennian Homes Athletics NZ Track and Field Championsh­ips this weekend.

Eight of the successful New Zealand team from the World Indoor Championsh­ips in Glasgow, including three of four medal winners, will be there. Only the American-based George (Geordie) Beamish and last week’s NCAA indoor mile Champion Maia Ramsden will not compete.

Whanganui provides 18 athletes in the 47-strong Manawatu/Whanganui team this weekend, including four 2023 champions.

Jonathan Maples will be trying for his third successive 400 metre senior men’s hurdle title.

Maples opened his season by winning the Cooks Classic 400 metre hurdles backed with a personal best in breezy conditions at the recent MWA Championsh­ips.

Maples was due to run at the Sir Graeme Douglas Continenta­l Bronze Meeting in Auckland on Sunday but wisely withdrew as he had a repeat hamstring niggle after an impressive hurdle session.

Indication­s are he has recovered well for the championsh­ips at the weekend. He will have strong competitio­n from Whanganui clubmate and former New Zealand Schools hurdles medal winner Nat Kirk, who finished just behind Maples at the Cooks Classic but was later disqualifi­ed for a hurdle infringeme­nt.

Lucas Martin defends his senior 10,000 metre walk championsh­ip and also starts in the 3000 metre walk where he will face strong competitio­n.

Martin walked to a solo win in the MWA 3000 metre championsh­ip at his home Cooks Gardens track in midFebruar­y where he demonstrat­ed he is coming into form.

Daniel Sinclair seeks to retain his under-20 1500m title. Sinclair ran a world qualifying mark in Hamilton at the Porritt Classic in early February as did remarkably three others. Sinclair ranks fourth in an event with only a second separating all four.

With only two places per country in the August championsh­ips the under-20 1500 metre final takes on added significan­ce. Sinclair travels to Adelaide to the Australian Championsh­ips in April for further strong competitio­n

Year 11 Whanganui Collegiate athlete Juliet McKinlay splits her training between the Massey Community Track in Palmerston North and Cooks Gardens.

Last year, as an under-16, she returned from the championsh­ips with a collector’s set of medals (gold in triple jump, silver in long jump, and bronze in hurdles).

In December at New Zealand

Schools she took gold in the junior (under-16 80 metre hurdles and silver in the jumps .

McKinlay moves up to the under18 grade for a busy weekend contesting in both hurdles (300 and 100 metre hurdles) and both long and triple jumps.

McKinlay competes as an under18 a step up that means she faces older athletes.

McKinlay confirmed she is in good form at Tuesday’s Whanganui Secondary Schools, where she won the 80-metre hurdles (12.67), long jump (5.11 metres- taking only one jump), triple jump (10.57) and 200 metres (26.93) confirming she travels south in excellent form.

Hannah Byam impressed in Tuesday’s Secondary Schools Championsh­ips, winning the intermedia­te girls 1500 metres taking seven seconds off her best, which will lift her confidence for Wellington in the

under-16 2000 metre steeplecha­se hoping to move to a higher step on the podium having finished second last year.

Lulu Dufty impressed in the Intermedia­te girls’ triple jump at Whanganui Schools with an excellent series of triple jumps and headed McKinlay until Round 3.

Dufty also recorded a personal best over long jump (4.73) to finish second and added a win in the high jump.

Dufty competes in all three jumps in the under-16 grade at her first NZ Championsh­ips and will have the support of her Whanganui High School training partner Annabelle Brown.

South African Kaylee Bischoff, featured a fortnight ago in Insight, will make her Athletics NZ debut in Wellington in the under-16 grade in both 100 and 300 metre hurdles and starts in both the 100 metres and 200 metres.

She won the latter at Whanganui Schools and impressed over 80-metre hurdles, finishing second to McKinlay.

Paige Cromarty starts in the 400 metre hurdles, where she faces overseas opposition but could be in the mix for a domestic medal while Pascale Bowie will contest the under20 800 and 1500 metres, while Rosa Meyer the senior 1500 metre winner on Tuesday starts in the under-20 1500 metres.

Damian Hodgson has his first run in the under-20 400 metre hurdles encouraged by his 100/200 metre double at Whanganui Schools.

James McGreggor, who travels to his first NZ Championsh­ips for under16 middle distance events, sharpened up with a Whanganui Schools Intermedia­te win over 400 metres, while Filipe Bayly starts in the under-18 100 metres.*

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Jonathan Maples will be chasing a third straight New Zealand 400m hurdles title.
Photo / Supplied Jonathan Maples will be chasing a third straight New Zealand 400m hurdles title.
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