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Top 20 Times by Events
Licensed To: Counties Manukau Sw Champ Meet-Ofice HY-TEK's TEAM MANAGER 8.0 11/04/2021 Page 1 Individual Top Times Number of Top Times: 20 Convert To: LC Print: LC SNO TimeP/F/S Name Age/Yr Female Open 50 Free 1 25.02 L P Gabrielle Fa'amausili 17 UNIAK 3/04/2017 2017 NZ Open Championships 2 25.26 L F Gabrielle Fa'amausili 17 UNIAK 3/04/2017 2017 NZ Open Championships 3 25.27 L F Hayley Palmer 22 NSSAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships 4 25.36 L F Hayley Palmer 20 NSSAK 5/04/2010 2010 NZ Open Championships 5 25.46 L F Hayley Palmer 19 NSSAK 1/04/2009 2009 NZ Open Championships 6 25.50 L F Hayley Palmer 21 NSSAK 3/04/2011 2011 NZ Open Championships 7 25.55 L F Samantha Richter 22 NSSAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships 8* 25.56 L P Samantha Richter 22 NSSAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships 8* 25.56 L F Hayley Palmer 23 NSSAK 17/03/2013 2013 NZ Open Championships 10* 25.59 L F Samantha Richter 23 NSSAK 17/03/2013 2013 NZ Open Championships 10* 25.59 L F Rhiannon Jeffrey 25 WAQAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships 10* 25.59 L F Laura Littlejohn 16 SPCWK 5/04/2021 2021 NZ Championships 13 25.62 L F Gabrielle Fa'amausili 16 UNIAK 28/03/2016 2016 NZ Open Championships 14 25.64 L P Rhiannon Jeffrey 25 WAQAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships 15 25.68 L P Hayley Palmer 19 NSSAK 1/04/2009 2009 NZ Open Championships 16 25.70 L F Hayley Palmer 18 NSSAK 25/03/2008 2008 NZ Open & Olympic Trials 17 25.71 L P Hayley Palmer 23 NSSAK 17/03/2013 2013 NZ Open Championships 18 25.72 L P Hayley Palmer 22 NSSAK 25/03/2012 2012 NZ Open Championships -
Oceania Championship Records
OCEANIA SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS July 2010 INAUGUATED FEBRUARY 1993 MENS EVENTS 50m Freestyle 22.86 Orinoco Faamausili-Banse NZL Christchurch 08.06.08 100m Freestyle 49.83 Mark Herring NZL Christchurch 06.06.08 200m Freestyle 1:48.84 Robert Hurley AUS Christchurch 05.06.08 400m Freestyle 3:53.56 Robert Hurley AUS Christchurch 07.06.08 1500m Freestyle 15:27.31 Theodore Pasialis AUS Christchurch 05.06.08 50m Backstroke 25.64 Robert Hurley AUS Christchurch 06.06.08 100m Backstroke 54.91 Robert Hurley AUS Christchurch 05.06.08 200m Backstroke 2:01.23 Robert Hurley AUS Christchurch 07.06.08 50m Breaststroke 28.31 Glenn Snyders NZL Christchurch 07.06.08 100m Breaststroke 1:02.05 Mark Riley AUS Suva 15.05.04 200m Breaststroke 2:15.27 Jeremy Meyer AUS Samoa 21.06.10 50m Butterfly 23.98 Corney Swanepoel NZL Christchurch 05.06.08 100m Butterfly 52.33 Ryan Pini PNG Christchurch 07.06.08 200m Butterfly 1:58.00 Moss Burmester NZL Christchurch 05.06.08 200m Individual 2:02.21 Dean Kent NZL Christchurch 08.06.08 Medley 400m Individual 4:24.57 Adam Lucas AUS Noumea 10.06.02 Medley 4x100m Freestyle 3:19.91 M. Herring, 50.31 NZL Christchurch 07.06.08 Relay O. Faamausili-Banse, 49.76 W. Benson, 49.68 C. Gibson, 50.16 4x200m Freestyle 7:25.63 R. Napoleon, 1:52.10 AUS Christchurch 06.06.08 Relay R. Turner, 1:50.46 T. Pasialis, 1:52.30 R. Hurley, 1:50.77 4x100m Medley 3:38.62 D. -
NZ Junior and Elite World Championship Medalists Page 1
NZ Junior and Elite World Championship Medalists YEAR LOCATION Rider DISCIPLINE Event Result/PlacingTime/Score 1970 Leicester, ENGLAND H.D. Kent TRACK Elite Kilo 2nd 1976 Munich, GERMANY M. Richards TRACK Junior Individual Pursuit 3rd 1983 Wanganui, NEW ZEALAND A. Miller TRACK Junior Kilo 1st 1990 Maebashi Karen Holliday TRACK Elite Points Race 1st 1990 Maebashi Madonna Harris TRACK Elite Individual Pursuit 2nd 1993 Perth, AUSTRALIA Sarah Ulmer TRACK Junior Individual Pursuit 2nd 1993 Perth, AUSTRALIA Team Pursuit (Julian Dean, K. Hallett, B. TRACK Junior Team Pursuit 3rd Johnson, Lee Vertongen & E. Gilbert) 1994 Quito Sarah Ulmer TRACK Junior Individual Pursuit 1st 1994 Quito Sarah Ulmer TRACK Junior Points Race 1st 1995 San Marino Rawea Greenwood TRACK Junior Individual Pursuit 3rd 1999 Berlin, GERMANY Sarah Ulmer TRACK Elite Points Race 3rd 1999 Berlin, GERMANY Anthony Peden TRACK Elite Keirin 2nd 2000 Sierra Nevada, SPAIN Kashi Leuchs MTB U23 XC 3rd 2000 Plouay, FRANCE Jeremy Yates ROAD Junior Road Race 1st 2003 Stuttgart, GERMANY Hayden Roulston & Greg Henderson TRACK Elite Madison 2nd 2004 Les Gets, FRANCE Vanessa Quin MTB Elite DH 1st 2004 Les Gets, FRANCE Scarlet Hagen MTB Junior DH 1st 2004 Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Greg Henderson TRACK Elite Scratch Race 1st 2004 Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Sarah Ulmer TRACK Elite Individual Pursuit 1st 2005 Livigno, ITALY Scarlet Hagen MTB Junior DH 2nd 2005 Madrid, SPAIN Peter Latham ROAD U23 Time Trial 3rd 2005 Los Angeles, USA Greg Henderson TRACK Elite Scratch Race 2nd 2005 Vienna, AUSTRIA Sam Bewley -
Playing to Win Or Trying Your Best: Media Representations of National Anxieties Over the Role of Sport Participation During the 2002 Commonwealth Games
Waikato Journal of Education 10:2004 PLAYING TO WIN OR TRYING YOUR BEST: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF NATIONAL ANXIETIES OVER THE ROLE OF SPORT PARTICIPATION DURING THE 2002 COMMONWEALTH GAMES EMMA H. WENSING1, TONI BRUCE2 AND CLIVE POPE2 1 University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada1 2 Department of Sport and Leisure Studies, The University of Waikato ABSTRACT In the last few years, growing concern has emerged in New Zealand sport about the shift towards a more commercial or professionalised model of sport and away from a mass participation-based model. In the midst of a relatively intense period of debate and concern over this change in direction, the 2002 Commonwealth Games took place in Manchester, England. In this article, we analyse how media coverage of the Games articulated with the broader public debate over the direction of New Zealand sport. Grounded in the assumption that the media both reflects and impacts on public understandings of cultural issues, we believe this analysis of coverage of the Games reveals a profound ambivalence over a more professionalised model of sport and points to an unwillingness to give up traditional values of sports participation in order to win. We explore how this debate articulates with current tensions in the realm of Physical Education and suggest that health and physical educators have an important role to play in challenging current pressures towards a win-at-all-costs approach to sport. INTRODUCTION As we enter the 21st century, New Zealand sport potentially finds itself at a crossroads. Over the past decade, and increasing since the establishment of SPARC in 2002, we have seen a shift from traditionally egalitarian and participatory ideals to a more performance-based focus which emphasises winning.