Robin Judkins has spent more than a quarter of a century organising New Zealand's favourite race. The Speight's
Coast to Coast race director essentially created adventure sports and most of
the world's best have cut their teeth
... in his 243k world championship across New
Zealand's South Island. From 1983's inaugural winner - Englishman Joe Sherriff,
who will race again this year - to legends such as John Howard, Steve Gurney,
Kathy Lynch, Australian John Jacoby, record holders Keith and Andrea Murray,
Jill Westenra and Richard Ussher, Judkins has watched them all and become an
astute judge of talent and tactics to the point where his annual "Top 10"
prediction have become like a book-makers list of champions both current and to
come.
"Gordon Walker is the
definite favourite this year," says Judkins without a hint of hesitation. "In
the last four years he and Richard Ussher have dominated the Speight's Coast to
Coast and with Richard not racing this year, 2009 is really Gordon's race to
lose."
Truer words have never
been said. In 2008 Ussher won his third Speight's Coast to Coast title, with
Walker second but 25 minutes ahead of third place. Walker himself is aware of
the favouritism, but rather than feeling the pressure he's looking to dominate
the race like never before.
Ussher & Walker 2008>>
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The 36-year-old
Aucklander will line up on Kumara Beach for the seventh time. After a couple
teething years, the last four outings have netted him no worse than second
place, with his breakthrough first place coming in 2007 when he beat Ussher and
a star-studded field.
This year he hopes to
play a catch-me-if-you-can game, but as Robin Judkins points out, "There are
plenty of capable guys waiting to pick up the pieces if he falls
apart."
"There's no Richard
Ussher this year to really put the pressure on Gordon individually, but there
are six or eight guys who have a shot at ruining the party if they worked
together."
"Guys like Marcel
Hagener, Luke Vaughan, Gordon Blythen, and Carl Bevins are proven performers at
the Speight's Coast to Coast," says Judkins, who points to the 25 year old
Vaughan for a possible upset.
"Luke has been
earmarked as a future world champion ever since he won the Two Day race as a
teenager," explains Judkins. "He's a police officer and they give him a lot of
support. He was seventh in 2007, but this year he has trained full time for
three months. If you add his experience in this race - he's only 25 but he's
done the Speight's Coast to Coast seven times - then you'd have to say he will
one day win this race. It's just a matter of when.
Judkin's, however, also
has a soft spot for the Speight's Coast to Coast old boys. "Marcel Hagener and
Gordon Blythen are both over 40, and this year Glenn Muirhead is back as a 40
year old."
All three athletes have
been top six placegetters in previous years, with Hagener and Muirhead having
bests of sixth (2003 and 2002) while Blythen was second in 2007, third in 2002
and 2006 and had a total of six top 10 placings.
Hagener, a builder
based in Ohekune, is a former professional cyclist and has won the adventure
racing world title with Richard Ussher in 2005. Muirhead is a physiotherapist
with the Wellington Hurricane and NPC teams, while Blythen is a fencing
contractor based in Wanaka.
"Gordon Walker remains
the odds-on favourite," says Judkins, but I highlight these three guys because
they are good enough to be competing for overall honours instead of their
veteran grade. And if they were to win it would be the first time someone over
40 has won the Speight's Coast to Coast."
Indeed, while the 2009
Speight's Coast to Coast has been dubbed, "The Year of the Woman" following
record female entries, it could turn out to be the year of the veteran because
in the woman's race the late entry of 44 year old, four-time winner Jill
Westenra has turned the form book upside down.
"I was so wrapped when
Jill entered," says Judkins. She's a tough competitor and although she hasn't
raced the Speight's Coast to Coast One Day since 2004, she has stayed
competitive and with four consecutive wins from 2000 to 2003, she has more
experience than any other woman in the race."
Westenra lines up
against defending champion Emily Miazga and 2007 champion Fleur Pawsey (right), not to
mention a handful of former top 10 women including internationals Elina Ussher
(Finland) and Sia Svendsen (Denmark).
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"Emily Miazga is going
for her third win," says Judkins of the Canadian-turned-West Coaster who won in
2006 and 2008. "Then you have local girl Fleur Pawsey, who won in 2007 and lost
to Emily by only 43 seconds last year. I also think Elina Ussher will go very
well because her husband Richard, who has won this race three times, is
supporting her rather than racing.
"These four were always
the women's favourites," continues Judkins, "And they knew it. But now Jill
Westenra's late entry will have them all worrying. They know she's a legend at
the Speight's Coast to Coast, but Emily is the only one who has raced against
her, and that was five years ago. So none of them have raced her for five years.
They don't know what to expect... and at the Speight's Coast to Coast it's the
unexpected that is the greatest challenge for any Speight's Coast to Coast
competitor."
Robin Judkins Top 10
Predictions
Men
1st
Gordon Walker
Auckland
2nd Luke
Vaughan
Christchurch
3rd Marcel
Hagener
Germany
4th Gordon
Blythen
Wanaka
5th Carl
Bevins
Timaru
6th Glenn
Muirhead
Wellington
7th Wayne
Oxenham
Auckland
8th Sam
Moon
UK
9th Neil
Gillespie
Hokitika
10th
Guilherme Pahl
Brazil
Women
1st Fleur
Pawsey
Christchurch
2nd Jill
Westenra
Wellington
3rd Emily
Miazga
Canada
4th Elina
Ussher
Finland
5th Fleur
Lattimore
Nelson
6th Sia
Svendsen
Denmark
7th
Koleighne Ford-Collins
Christchurch
8th Kim
Johnston
Christchurch
9th Rachel
Dixon
Nelson
10th Karina
O'Conner
Christchurch
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