Sunday Tribune

Mand i builds on her success

Maritz sets the standard for local lifesavers

- MARK KEOHANE mark.keohane@inl.co.za

THE GENERAL Tire Lifesaving South Africa National Championsh­ips take place in Port Elizabeth in the last week of March. Mark Keohane, in Independen­t Media’s build up to the event, profiles those athletes expected to dominate.

There is no one female in South African lifesaving who can compare with Durban Surf’s Mandi Maritz when it comes to consistenc­y and continued excellence in the sprint and flags discipline­s.

Maritz is the best the country has ever produced in the sport and has been among the finest internatio­nally over the past decade.

Maritz will again be one of the headline acts at the sport’s premier annual competitio­n. She has confidence and form on her side, having shown her class with a silver medal at last year’s World Championsh­ip in Adelaide.

Her success added to the gold she won at the 2010 Championsh­ips in Egypt and the double bronze (sprint and flags) at the Championsh­ips in 2016.

Success and awards are part of the Maritz sporting DNA, and in 2017 she was honoured with the prestigiou­s President’s Award for her achievemen­ts in the sport and her contributi­on to lifesaving in South Africa.

Lifesaving SA president Dylan Tommy said Maritz’s achievemen­ts set her apart from most and that she was a unanimous choice.

Maritz has enjoyed competing at the Internatio­nal Sanyo Bussan Cup in Japan. But her internatio­nal feats have never diminished her desire to bring her A-game to the South African nationals.

“It’s the highlight of our season,” said Maritz. “And the atmosphere in Port Elizabeth last year was brilliant. It makes such a difference for one venue to host the surf and pool competitio­n and bring together nearly 2000 lifesaving athletes from Nippers to the Masters.”

Maritz, typically, isn’t underestim­ating the challenge of the younger Bianca von Bargen. Maritz doesn’t need reminding that Von Bargen knocked her over in the KZN National Championsh­ips in 2018 but then the youngster couldn’t sustain her form at the 2018 National Championsh­ips, where Maritz took double gold.

Team South Africa’s juniors finished fifth at the World Championsh­ips in Australia, which was their best return in the history of the competitio­n. Remarkably, every one of the squad of 12 won a medal.

All 12 will be competing in Port Elizabeth, with the Strand Lifesaving Club’s Kiera Bester, who won gold in the SERC and also bronze in the Oceanwoman relay, among the favourites to be a multiple winner.

Bester, a 16 year-old Grade 11 student at Somerset College in the Western Cape, was active in the sport as an eight year old and won her first national title for kneeboard as a 10-year-old in 2012.

She revelled at the 2018 General Tire LSA National Championsh­ips in claiming gold in the Ironwoman (also known internatio­nally at the Oceanwoman) in the junior section.

General Tire is into its third year as Lifesaving South Africa’s primary sponsor and it was General Tire’s initiative, along with the Treble Group, to combine the junior and senior pool and surf national championsh­ips and turn the occasion into a week-long festival of South Africa’s finest lifesaving talent.

 ?? | TOPFOTO.NET ?? MANDI Maritz beats Bianca von Bargen in the flags final at the 2018 champs.
| TOPFOTO.NET MANDI Maritz beats Bianca von Bargen in the flags final at the 2018 champs.
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