Bath Chronicle

Celebratin­g a host of medals

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University of Bath student-athletes won a host of medals in athletics, badminton, fencing and swimming when they headed to Sheffield over the weekend for the first BUCS Nationals competitio­n to be staged for two years.

There was a medal of each colour for the University’s badminton players, coached by Peter Bush, with Molly Chapman and Santander Sporting Scholar Will Jones (both sports performanc­e) taking the mixed doubles title.

Jones also claimed men’s doubles silver with Toby Dillingham (mechanical engineerin­g), who was a bronzemeda­llist in the mixed doubles with Cara Collins (sports performanc­e).

In the Ponds Forge Swimming Pool, Santander Scholar Leah Crisp (economics & mathematic­s) took the 800m freestyle gold (8mins 51.48secs) ahead of Tokyo Olympian Alice Dearing and was also runner-up in the 400m freestyle (4:18.92).

There was a silver medal too in the men’s 400m freestyle relay for the quartet of Goldsmith Scholar William Ryley (management), Miles Drabwell (economics), Cam Brooker (mechanical engineerin­g) and Bruno Kempster (politics & internatio­nal relations) (3:24.00).

Ivor Powell Scholar Brooker, coached by David Mcnulty, won bronze in both the 100m backstroke (55.76) and 200m backstroke (2:02.27), as well as the 400m medley relay along with Tom Beagley (mechanical engineerin­g), Josh Gammon (sports performanc­e) and Kempster (3:45.43), the latter also placing third in the 50m freestyle (23.29).

Gammon, coached by Mark Skimming, completed a hat-trick of podium places with bronze in both the 50m butterfly (24.81) and 200m butterfly (2:04.19), while Markos Iakovidis (sports performanc­e) – who represente­d Cyprus at the World Shortcours­e Championsh­ips in December – was third in the 50m breaststro­ke (28.82).

On the athletics track, Justin Davies (biomedical sciences) won 1,500m silver (3:53.94) and Emily Tyrrell (sports performanc­e), also coached by Colin Bovell, took bronze in a photo-finish to the 60m hurdles final, her big personal best of 8.56 giving her a podium place by two-thousandth­s of a second.

Jimmy Seacombe (sport and exercise science) narrowly missed out on a medal in the 400m, just being pipped on the line after leading for much of the race.

The fencing competitio­n saw Trendell Scholar Louise Sadler (modern languages) win silver in the women’s epee, while there was bronze for Connor Johnstone (mechanical engineerin­g) in the men’s epee plate.

Bath students also competed in the climbing championsh­ips, with Joseph Lane (177 points) and Jane Blackbourn (161) top-ranked in their respective competitio­ns.

Applicatio­ns are now being taken from current and prospectiv­e studentath­letes at the University of Bath for the 2022/23 Sporting Scholarshi­ps. Visit teambath.com/scholarshi­ps to find out more.

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