New Zealand's beach sprinters added some sparkle to an
otherwise sombre weekend at the Australian surf lifesaving
championships on the Gold Coast.
With water events cancelled following the drowning on Friday
of 19-year-old New South Wales ironman Saxon Bird, all
attention was focused on the sand.
Kiwi flyers Paul Cracroft-Wilson, Morgan Foster and Chelsea
Maples scooped triple gold in the beach relays, with
Cracroft-Wilson and Foster helping their Australian club
Kurrawa to a third consecutive open men's title.
Maples anchored the final leg as the Kurrawa women's team
also scooped gold in their race, backing up from her
second-placing in the open women's beach sprint.
Cracroft-Wilson then snared silver in the last event on the
programme, finishing agonisingly close to Northcliffe
champion Simon Harris, who secured a record-breaking eighth
open men's beach flags title.
"We've had this rivalry for seven years now and he's the best
- it's as simple as that," Cracroft-Wilson said, after
finishing ahead of beach sprint champion Tom Nolan.
"He lived up to the occasion and proved how amazingly
consistent he is."
The Taranaki sprinter was the last man to beat Harris for the
Australian title in 2007 but he couldn't manage the
35-year-old's fiery start.
Harris announced his retirement from the Australian titles
after his win, although the pair may meet again in October's
world championships in Egypt, with Cracroft-Wilson picked in
the New Zealand squad last week.
"I'd love to line up against him again at worlds if he comes
over - we're probably the two best in the world at the moment
and it would be a great stage to meet him again."
Ironically, it's Cracroft-Wilson's second consecutive
runner-up finish - he was upset by Fitzroy rookie Steve
Harris for the New Zealand title a week ago.
Foster, 34, was an early casualty in the men's competition,
while a stumble also cost Maples a place in the women's flags
final.
The other Kiwi medal today was from Mount Maunganui's Jamie
Banhidi, who picked up silver behind Benjamin Mispelhorn,
representing host-club Kurrawa.
Banhidi has made great strides from last year, when he was
knocked out in the Australian titles in the under-17 division
before the quarterfinals.
Gisborne's Toby Harris (Wainui) was the only other New
Zealand finalist today, just finishing out of the medals in
fourth in the under-17 final.
Midway's Mike Janes also picked up a bronze on the opening
day in the 2km beach run.
Australian authorities, meanwhile, have promised a full
investigation into Bird's death, which was the first at the
national championships since a young surf boat rower died --
also at Kurrawa Beach -- in 1996.
Bird drowned after being hit in the head with a ski in heavy
surf kicked up by Tropical Cyclone Ului.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.