Leading rural sporting stars recognised by their peers
Leading rural sporting stars recognised by their
peers
The winners of the Norwood New Zealand Rural Sports Awards have been announced at a gala dinner at Awapuni in Palmerston North on the eve of the Hilux New Zealand Rural Games.
Sir Brian Lochore,
Chair of the New Zealand Rural Sports Awards Judging Panel,
says the Norwood New Zealand Rural Sports Awards is about
celebrating traditional sports and the people who keep
events running year-in and year-out in the towns and
settlements across New Zealand.
“We had a fantastic
line-up of entrants and finalists for each category. Our
2018 winners have proven themselves on the field of their
rural sport or in the committee room organising rural
sporting events around New Zealand,” says Sir Brian.
Tim Myers, Chief Executive Officer at C B Norwood Distributors, congratulated both the winners and finalists.
“It has been a truly inspirational
evening, hearing about the dedication and commitment of our
rural athletes to their sport, and the standing they have on
the international arena," Mr Myers said.
•
The winners are:
The Fonterra Young New
Zealand Rural Sportsperson of the Year: Tegan
O’Callaghan of Doubtless Bay. Last year, at the age of 17,
O’Callaghan became the captain of the New Zealand Rodeo
High School Team in 2017 and has been a member of the team
for three years. This year, O’Callaghan is part of the
Australasian Team at the World Rodeo Youth Championships in
Shawnee, Oklahoma, USA in July 2018. Alongside this, in
2016, O’Callaghan won the junior New Zealand Wine Barrel
Race. The award was presented by Commonwealth Games
Medallist Natalie Rooney.
The Norwood Rural Sportsman of the
Year: John Kirkpatrick from Napier. John has won
149 open finals in New Zealand including Golden Shears (four
times) and the New Zealand Champs (two times). He is the
2017 World Champion – Individual Shearing and the 2017
World Champion – Teams (two shearers). As well as running
his own contracting business, Kirkpatrick, competes in more
than 60 national competitions each year and world
championships every 2-3 years. This is his 25th season of
open class shearing. He has won 20 titles in the United
Kingdom and represented New Zealand at four World
Championships.
The Skellerup New
Zealand Rural Sportswoman of the Year: Chrissy
Spence of Morrinsville. Spence was the inaugural winner of
this award in 2017. That same year, Spence lifted the bar
taking out an unprecedented fifth world title at the 2017
International Tree Climbing Championship. Spence has five
International Tree Climbing Championship titles (2005, 2007,
2011, 2016, 2017), six New Zealand National Women’s
Championship titles (2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010), and four
Asia-Pacific titles (2008, 2009, 2010, 2015).
The award
was presented by Steve Hansen, coach NZ All Blacks and
Skellerup’s Perry Davis and Deborah Allan.
The Federated Farmers Contribution to the New Zealand Rural Sports Industry: Jude McNabb of Owaka. McNabb is secretary of Shearing Sport’s New Zealand South Island committee, and runs her own business. She was secretary for the New Zealand Shearing Foundation, which was established to run the 40th Anniversary World Shearing and Woolhandling Championships for which she was the event manager. More than 30 countries were represented and 12,000 spectators attended. The championships were named New Zealand International Event of the Year at the NZ Events Association awards. In August, McNabb was appointed secretary of Shearing Sports New Zealand. By the end of the year she was also helping organise the Southern Shears and a Southern Field Days Speed Shear, both held in Gore in February. The award was presented by Sir Brian Lochore and Federated Farmers vice president Andrew Hoggard.
The inaugural Toyota Lifetime Legacy
Award: Paul van Beers from Porangahau. Van Beers
retired from competing in 2016 after a fall from a horse on
his sheep and beef farm. His competition career spanned the
1990s to 2016. No one else has ever – or is likely to ever
again – repeat the staggering number of wins and podium
finishes van Beers had through his 31-year competitive
fencing career. He has under his belt 14 Wiremark Golden
Pliers New Zealand National Singles Championship Titles, 12
Fieldays Silver Spades New Zealand National Doubles
Championship Titles and two Patura World Power Fencing
Champion Titles. In 2014 he was half of the first father and
son (Jason) combination to win the Fieldays Silver Spades.
Paul continues to help drive NZFC. The award was presented
by Ray Davies, Simon van Velthooven, Guy Endean and Sean
Regan from Emirates Team NZ and Andrew Davis General Manager
Marketing Toyota NZ.
The judging panel is chaired by
former All Black captain and World Cup winning coach, Sir
Brian Lochore, who is also a founding board member of the
New Zealand Rural Games Trust. The other judges are rural
sports icon and president of Shearing Sports New Zealand Sir
David Fagan, Olympic equestrian medallist Judy ‘Tinks’
Pottinger, MP for Taranaki-King Country Barbara Kuriger,
founder and trustee of the Hilux New Zealand Rural Games
Steve Hollander, and respected agricultural journalists
Craig ‘Wiggy’ Wiggins, Tony Leggett and Jamie
Mackay.
Nominations for the awards are made by rural
sports associations from throughout Aotearoa.
A full list
of finalists can be found below.
For more
information or to arrange an interview with a category
winner please contact:
Daniel
O’Regan
021832151
danielo@dosc.co.nz
The
finalists in the five prestigious 2018 Norwood New Zealand
Rural Sports Award categories were:
• The
Norwood New Zealand Rural Sportsman of the Year:
o
Corey Church (Rotorua) – Rodeo
o James Kilpatrick
(Tauranga) –Tree Climbing
o Shane Bouskill (Waipawa)
– Fencing
o John Kirkpatrick (Napier) –
Shearing
• The Skellerup New Zealand Sportswoman
of the Year:
o Maryanne Baty (Gisborne) –
Shearing
o Chrissy Spence (Morrinsville) – Tree
Climbing
• The Fonterra Young New Zealand Rural
Sportsperson of the Year
o Rebecca Birkett (Taumarunui)
– Endurance Horses
o Tegan O’Callaghan (Doubtless
Bay) – Rodeo
o Robbie Hollander (Dairy Flat) – Egg
Throwing & Catching
• The Federated Farmers
Contribution to the New Zealand Rural Sports Industry
o
Jason Semenoff (Hikurangi) – Wood Chopping
o Nick
Liefting (Auckland) – Fencing
o Jude McNab (Owaka)
– Shearing
• The inaugural Toyota Lifetime
Legacy Award:
o Paul van Beers (Porangahau) –
Fencing
o Hugh McCarroll (Whangamata) – Shearing
o
Elizabeth Mortland (Taihape) – Gumboot
Throwing