Battle looms for Women at Kathmandu Coast to Coast
7 February 2018
The Kathmandu Coast to Coast is full for the first time in a decade with the women’s World Championship Longest Day
event shaping up as a titanic battle with defending champion Elina Ussher poised for a record equalling five wins.
Ussher will have to face a number of strong women including late entry, two time champion and three-time adventure
racing world champion Sophie Hart. The 34 year old Lyttelton GP last raced in the event in 2013, winning. Her first win
in 2011 in a time of 12 hours 10 minutes was only one minute outside the women's individual record of set by
Christchurch's Andrea Murray in 1997.
The women’s field is the strongest in years led by four time winner Ussher, last year’s runner up South African Robyn
Owen who was leading the race into the final bike leg before being over hauled by Ussher, Christchurch based German
Simone Maier who last raced in the event in in 2015 when she was second, Whakatane’s Corrine O'Donnell, a strong runner
who always makes her presence felt, 2016 women’s two day winner Anna Barret and Hart.
Former world champion kayaker and Olympian Teneal Hatton is another one to watch in the women’s one day event. Hatton
was third in Novembers ICF ocean ski world champs in Hong Kong racing as the event’s defending world champion.
The 2014 K1 1000m world kayak champion caused a major shock when she defeated double world champion Lisa Carrington in
December 2015 in the K1 500m at Canoe Racing New Zealand's Blue Lakes regatta. She won a World champs gold medal in 2013
and 2014 and was controversially not selected for the Rio Olympics. Hatton, who was fifteenth in the K1 500m at the 2012
London Olympics now works full time as a paramedic and has racked up a number of adventure races while still not ruling
out a bid to make the Tokyo Olympics.
Ussher’s build up to her thirteenth consecutive Coast to Coast has been slightly different to previous years as she and
her husband, five time winner and Event Race Director Richard, have purchased an adventure park near Nelson resulting in
a busier build up.
“It’s definitely been busy times and a little more stressful than in the past,” Ussher said. “However I feel like I have
been training well and now I’m just looking forward to challenging myself again in the race on Saturday.”
“It is a super strong women’s field this year and I’ll be racing against young, determined girls so it will be a tough
one but I have a lot of experience about the race that definitely is one of my strengths.”
Ussher welcomed the strong women’s field saying it provides extra motivation to race well and is good for the Kathmandu
Coast to Coast and multisport. If the 41 year old Nelson endurance athlete wins on Saturday she will equal multisport
legend Kathy Lynch’s women’s race record of five wins.
“I think it will be a tough day on Saturday, a real catfight. I have a few different race plans on my mind but most
often you just have to listen to your body and race smart and by doing that you most likely get the best result out of
yourself.”
Owen is hoping to put learnings from last years’ first taste of the event to good use on Saturday where her lack of road
cycling cost her the win. “I've done more training on the bike this time, possibly still not enough as the roads aren't
my favourite place,” Owen said.
“I've been training some mixed discipline sessions too as I really hobbled for the first hour of the run last year after
getting off the bike. Hopefully some training of the bike-run transition will make that a bit easier this time around.”
“Elina, Simone and Sophie are all incredible athletes. It will be an honour to stand on the same start line and if I can
be in the mix with any of them I will be very pleased.”
Owen, who will be joined by her brother Lance Kime in the one day race this year, says New Zealand is known as the world
hub of multisport and adventure racing and believes the depth of talent, particularly the female athletes, is more than
can be found anywhere else in the world.
“It's one of the reasons that the Kathmandu Coast to Coast is such an attractive event,” she said “I am excited that
this year's race is shaping up to be even better and more competitive than last year. Of course I'm aiming to win -
that's the point of a race isn't it? - but with such a strong field I cannot expect to win. I'll be extremely happy to
make it onto the podium again.”
Hart was also looking forward to the women’s race with its strong competitive field. “It's been very different for me
this year compared to previous because my priorities have changed. I really just want to feel that race satisfaction at
the finish line so my aim is to firstly enjoy the day and be grateful for being out there. I know that if I can race to
my potential and tap into my experience then I will be able to be mix it up at the front end of the field and if I can
do that, then who knows.”
Hart made her first return to racing after becoming a mum earlier last year in the women’s Spring Challenge South in
Geraldine in September.
“I thought for a long time about entering this year, and then in the end, realised it's not going to get any easier, so
if I wanted one more race, it may as well be now. No more procrastinating, no regrets.”
Hart is not worried she has not competed in the event since 2013 saying she gained valuable experience and endurance
adventure racing with the Seagate team.
Leading Australian multi-sport athletes Alex Hunt and James Pretto and Kiwi Bobby Dean loom as men’s defending World
Championship Longest Day champion Sam Clark’s biggest challenges. Clark stormed home last year to past Braden Currie on
the final bike leg to claim back to back wins in the World Championship longest day event.
Dean has raced for top adventure racing team Team Bivouac inov-8 and was eleventh in the 2016 Kathmandu Coast to Coast
and fourth last year while Hunt is back for his third crack at his favourite event and is aiming to repeat his 2016
podium effort.
Clark says he has had a steady build up and with Saturday being his seventh Coast to Coast he’s starting to feel like
“an old hand now.”
“I’m feeling good and I have learned the importance of having a proper taper and avoiding any last minute stresses
during race week,” Clark said.
“It is called the longest day for a reason and a lot can happen out there. I can get over Goat Pass pretty quick, but
the race is won in the final two stages so I’ll leave the real hammering until then.”
Hunts is aware Australian’s Hunt and Pretto have been working diligently towards the event and says Kiwi Dean has really
stepped up his game this year. “There is also a bunch of South Africans who run and paddle extremely well so I'm taking
no chances.”
26 year old Kime is much like his sister Robyn, having raced professionally as a river paddler in South Africa most
notably winning South Africa’s biggest kayak race the Dusi Canoe Marathon in 2013 and 2016. He should have a strong
kayak leg, possibly even the fastest time, although says knows the kayak leg is secondary to being able to string
together a consistent race over the whole day in his first taste of the event.
A one day wild card who could feature is 50 year old adventure racing and multisport legend Ian Edmond who last entered
the event in 1995 when he won. Edmond has raced all over the world in an adventure racing and multisport career that has
spanned over 20 years and covered most continents. Edmond could push some of the top contenders and even make the top 10
of the event.
The Kathmandu Coast to Coast starts on Serpentine Beach south of Greymouth at 7am on Friday with the World Championship
Longest Day event getting underway on Saturday morning at 6am.
ENDS
Photo credit: Marathon-Photos.com: The Kathmandu Coast to Coast is full for the first time in a decade with the women’s World Championship Longest Day
event shaping up as a titanic battle with defending champion Elina Ussher (pictured) poised for a record equalling five
wins.
About the Kathmandu Coast to Coast
The Kathmandu Coast to Coast is an iconic multisport event based in the South Island of New Zealand. Held every February
the race starts on the West Coast, at Kumara beach and traverses the width of the South Island, crossing the main divide
where competitors reach over 1000 metres above sea level, finishing on the East Coast in Christchurch at the Pier on New
Brighton beach.
The brain child of previous Race Director Robin Judkins, the first official race was held on February 26 and 27 in 1983
with 79 competitors. Today over 800 athletes line up to run, cycle and kayak across the South Island. 1987 saw “The
Longest Day”, a one day ‘World Championship event introduced. The Coast to Coast has become a rite of passage for
multisport athletes from around the world with over 18,000 people having completed in the event in 35 years. The event
is at capacity for the first time in almost a decade.
For more information see www.coasttocoast.co.nz