Whanganui Chronicle

Relays signal a shift

- ATHLETICS INSIGHT

The cooler air in the morning and the leaves on the ground are a clear sign that winter is close. For local runners, the Anzac

Day Relays held last Thursday at Victoria Park, the official opening of the Manawatū /Whanganui Centre winter season, were a further sign of the approach of winter.

Whanganui Harrier Club had already started its 99th season with the Wine to Brine race at the start of April on the same weekend as the North Island Secondary Schools Track and Field Championsh­ips, the final event of the domestic summer season.

Although the Anzac relays are not the huge event they once were, there were still teams from Manawatū and Taranaki joining the Whanganui teams — and the nature of relays gives a vibrant start to the new season.

The Wanganui Harrier Club won both walking relays run in conjunctio­n with the traditiona­l relays. Palmerston North Athletic and Harrier Club won the men’s and women’s relays.

Feilding were second across the line but, as one runner ran twice, covering for a late withdrawal,

Whanganui Collegiate were promoted to second. Alec Ball (Feilding) won the award for the fastest time on the first lap with Oliver Jones (Collegiate captain) second.

Palmerston North’s Nelson Doolan ran 5m 56s, some 10s faster than Ball on the third leg, to bring his team from some distance back into a winning position.

In the women’s event, Lucy McLean gave her Palmerston North team the perfect start and a lead they held through all four 2km legs.

It was an excellent final workout for McLean who is part of the New Zealand Secondary Schools Team for the ISF World Schools Cross Country in Kenya. McLean is already in South Africa preparing for the championsh­ips in Nairobi.

At a time when Athletics Wanganui and the Wanganui Harrier Club are discussing coming under the one banner, it is interestin­g that the winning teams in the running relays came from the Palmerston North Athletics and Harrier Club which became a joint club many years ago.

The next two teams across the line in the males were Feilding, who joined their clubs more recently, and Whanganui Collegiate who had an Athletics Club member, a Harrier Club member and two newbies in the team.

There have been previous attempts to bring our two clubs together, going back more than four decades. For a variety of reasons, this has not come to fruition.

Things look considerab­ly more hopeful this time and there is a small group from both clubs working towards this goal.

Athletes are at the centre of the discussion and already there is one registrati­on portal for both winter and summer athletes, saving confusion and money for athletes, and providing stronger teams in open competitio­n.

A sharing of volunteers in a sport that requires a large volunteer base is also a clear benefit of coming together.

The approach of winter has not daunted the enthusiasm of runners participat­ing in the weekly parkrun at the Whanganui riverbank. Many who ran or walked at the relays on Thursday were back running on Saturday.

April was the first month in the four-year history of the weekly event that there have been more than 100 starters every week and, since the first 100-plus field last December, the weekly average has increased significan­tly.

While New Zealand-based athletes’ attention turns to the winter branch of the sport or preparing for next summer, many of our leading track athletes are preparing for the Paris Olympics at the start of August.

It was good to see world indoor high jump champion Hamish Kerr, who holds the Cooks Gardens stadium record, win in the most recent Diamond League in Shanghai with an excellent 2.31m jump and, more significan­tly, finish ahead of current Olympic champion and three-time world champion Mutaz Barshim. Kerr is part of the 15-strong New Zealand team for Paris — a team that, of course, includes Whanganui Club member George (Geordie) Beamish.

Closer to home, Lucas Martin and Jonathan Maples are preparing for the Oceania Championsh­ips at the start of June in Fiji as well as a third athlete, Palmerston North’s Juliet McKinlay (a Whanganui Collegiate student), who trains at both her home Palmerston North track and at Cooks Gardens.

Martin and McKinlay are training in the New Zealand winter whereas Maples, who is in Japan with the Air Force for another three weeks before returning for a fortnight before departure, is benefiting from warmer, humid weather providing good acclimatis­ation for Fiji.

Also in warmer climates, it was good to see former Whanganui athlete Tayla Brunger run a personal best 100m (11.75s) in Irvine, California. Brunger will be running in Europe this northern summer.

 ?? ?? Alec McNab
Alec McNab
 ?? ?? Runners at the Anzac Day Relays held at Victoria Park.
Runners at the Anzac Day Relays held at Victoria Park.

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