Veteran Beats Younsters & Weather
Veteran Beats Younsters & Weather
Napier’s Ross McIntyre proved that experience can still
triumph over youth when he won the Armstrong Motor Group
Wellington Marathon in Wellington today.
Almost 4500 runners and walkers from 11 countries lined up in challenging conditions for the 26th running of Wellington’s premier marathon event. Among them was deputy Prime Minster Bill English and his wife Mary, who took the mantra of “families that play together” all the way to the finish of the classic 42.2k challenge, finishing in 4hrs 58min.
Ross McIntyre wasn’t in Wellington to run
with anyone. The Havelock North house dad has been the
country’s best performed veteran marathoners in recent
years. But in Wellington the 46 year old took a shot at
overall honours.
McIntyre came into the race as
co-favourite with Christchurch’s Glynn Hadley. In 2010
Hadley had been seventh in the Armstrong Motor Group Half
Marathon distance and had the fastest best time in the field
of 2hrs 32min. Hadley tried to take the race to McIntyre,
but the experienced Hawkes Bay runner ran a patient race and
eventually came away the winner over the final 5k, crossing
the Westpac Stadium finish line 57secs ahead of Hadley in
2hrs 38min 09secs.
Race day in Wellington dawned wet
with a northerly breeze. But both wind and rain increased to
make for difficult conditions. That made Victoria
Jackson’s full marathon win even more impressive, because
as well as winning by almost 13min she came up just a few
minutes shy of the race record.
The 30 year old
Wellingtonian was a last minute entrant, but despite
conditions missed the race record by just 2min 40secs to win
in 3hrs 03min 37secs. Behind her Christchurch’s Annabelle
Bramwell clocked in at 3hrs 16min 15secs to hold out
Auckland’s Dominique Hopkinson by 2min.
The half
marathon races produced much closer racing as just 1min
separated the first three men and first four women. The
woman’s race produced one of the most impressive
performances when Upper Hutt’s old Sarah Gardener improved
from third last year to claim the top spot.
Despite
tough conditions the 26 year old ran almost exactly the same
time as a year ago, winning by 1min 44secs in 1hr 23min
25secs. Behind her less than 90secs separated Lower Hutt’s
Rebecca Keat and Wellingtonians Sarah Christie and Charlotte
Wood.
The men’s Half Marathon produced the days
closest race when Wellington’s Evan Cooper and Canadian
visitor James Richardson went head to head until the final
few kilometres when Cooper applied pressure that eventually
saw him win by just 10secs in 1hr 13min 14secs.
In
other races Wellingtonians Tim Hodge and Gabrielle
O’Rourke dominated the 10k event, with Hodge beating
Wellington-based American Cary Chaffee by 31secs in 33min
08secs. O’Rourke, 43, was pressured early on by youngster
Sarah Drought but came home with a 19sec advantage in 37min
05secs.
The Kids’ Magic Mile was won by Upper
Hutt’s Nikolai Allen, but the highlight was a down to the
wire battle between Wellington’s Ruby Le and
Paraparaumu’s Michaela Walker, with just 2secs between
them at the line as they claimed third and fourth
overall.
Further back in the field, but ahead of our
Deputy Prime Minister, Christchurch’s Irena
Szalkowlski-Hayes bought the house down when the 55 year old
shrugged off Christchurch’s major tremor last Monday,
where she fled her workplace as it crumbled around her and
then drove her car into a sink hole on the way home, to
finish the Armstrong Motor Group Wellington Marathon in 3hrs
40min 42secs to win her 50-59 grade by just five seconds.
ends