Long service to athletics rewarded

Yvette Corlett
Yvette Corlett
In sport, they call it ''a long time between drinks''.

Yvette Corlett, named Otago Sportsperson of the Century, has received a second honour, 57 years after being awarded an MBE.

That was a year after her stunning long jump efforts in Helsinki in 1952, when she became the first New Zealand woman to win an Olympic gold medal.

Famously, she trained on the sandhills at St Clair beach, and had to overcome two no-jumps in the final in Helsinki.

The Companion to the NZ Order of Merit (CNZM) now recognises her contributions to athletics over the following half-century.

Mrs Corlett (nee Williams) capitalised on her sporting achievements - she also won Commonwealth Games gold medals in the long jump (twice), shot put and discus, she played basketball for New Zealand, and she was twice named New Zealand Sportsman of the Year - by throwing herself into voluntary work.

She founded the Pakuranga Athletic Club in the early 1960s. The club is now the largest in New Zealand, and counts Olympic shot put champion Valerie Adams among its members.

Mrs Corlett also served for 40 consecutive years on the selection panel for the New Zealand Herald junior sports awards, was on the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame board from 1990 to 1995, and was the patron of Counties-Manukau Sport from 1994 to 2009.

She continues to volunteer as a coach at the Panmure Young Citizens Centre.

Mrs Corlett (81), a former teacher who lives with husband Buddy in Auckland, visited Dunedin a year ago for the opening of the Otago Girls' High School Olympic honours board.

She is one of 11 Olympians from her alma mater.

She has been recovering from years of ill health, including a stroke and operations for a brain abscess and bowel cancer.

 

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