5 Jul 2022

NZ team bolstered for World Athletics Championships

2:45 pm on 5 July 2022

A record-breaking team of 20 New Zealand athletes will compete at the World Athletics Championships this month in Eugene, Oregon.

Wellington and New Zealand runner Hamish Carson.

Runner Hamish Carson is a late entry into the New Zealand team for the World Athletics Championships. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

The selected number of athletes surpasses the previous record total of 18 which attended the 1997 World Championships in Athens and is a significant rise on the 13-strong New Zealand team which competed at the previous edition of the event staged in Doha in 2019.

Following the initial selection on 14 May of 18 athletes which included seven unconditionally named athletes and 11 conditionally named athletes - in this latter group nine athletes have met their conditions.

In addition, earlier this month Sam Tanner (men's 1500m) and Quentin Rew (race walk) met the entry requirements for selection.

A further two athletes; Rosie Elliott (women's 400m) and Hamish Carson (men's 5000m) have also been named on the team after meeting the Road to Oregon criteria.

Sam Tanner

Runner Sam Tanner has met the entry requirements. Photo: Photosport

Eleven New Zealand athletes will make their world championship debuts.

Leading the team will be Tom Walsh, who will be seeking a third successive world outdoor medal after claiming gold in London 2017 and two years later in Doha taking bronze with an Oceania record of 22.90m.

The New Zealand challenge in the men's shot put is bolstered by three-time world championship finalist Jacko Gill, who set a lifetime best of 21.58m at an Open Throws Meet at AUT Millennium on Saturday.

Also featuring in the black singlet is world indoor bronze medallist Hamish Kerr, who secured New Zealand's first ever global championship high jump medal in Serbia in March.

Others looking to make an impact include shot put ace Maddi Wesche, who last year finished sixth in the Olympic shot final and earlier this season bettered her lifetime best out to 19.10m with a stellar performance at the New Zealand Track and Field Championships.

Meanwhile, another Kiwi athlete guaranteed to garner attention will be Zoe Hobbs, who takes to the track in the women's 100m.

Zoe Hobbs has equalled the women's 100m national sprint record set by Michelle Seymour 28 years ago in Melbourne.

Record-holding 100m runner Zoe Hobbs. Photo: Photosport

The 24-year-old has enjoyed a spectacular past six months or so and has posted no less than four national women's 100m records since December, most recently clocking an Oceania record of 11.09 when striking gold at the Oceania Area Championships in Mackay last month.

The team will also boast a full complement of three athletes in one discipline as Julia Ratcliffe, Lauren Bruce and Nicole Bradley have all earned selection in the women's hammer.

Bruce, the Oceania record-holder, and Bradley, the Oceania champion, will make their world championship debut with Ratcliffe, the Tokyo Olympic finalist, making her third successive world championship appearance.

New Zealand women's javelin record-holder Tori Peeters rounds out the seven-strong New Zealand throwing continent in Oregon.

Five male endurance athletes will take to the start line in Eugene, led by race walker Rew who will equal the record number of most world outdoor championship appearances by a Kiwi with six - matching the achievement of Dame Valerie Adams.

The Melbourne-based Kiwi who celebrates his 38th birthday later this month, made his world championship debut in Daegu 11 years ago.

Also featuring on the team is Tokyo Olympian Sam Tanner, who returns to Hayward Field in the 1500m, two months after running a personal best of 3:34.37 at the venue while competing in the Eugene Diamond League.

Two Kiwis take to the start line in the men's 5000m led by Geordie Beamish, New Zealand Indoor record-holder for the distance, and Hamish Carson, who recorded a PB of 13:17.27 in Huelva, Spain in May to climb to number six on the all-time New Zealand rankings.

Meanwhile, the 2018 Commonwealth Games fifth-place finisher Brad Mathas competes in the 800m after securing his spot on the New Zealand team following his gold medal-winning display at the Oceania Area Championships.

Joining Hobbs in Oregon, and further demonstrating the rising stocks of New Zealand sprinting, will be Georgia Hulls (women's 200m) and Rosie Elliott (women's 400m) while three years after making his world championship debut national champion Eddie Osei-Nketia wins selection in the men's 100m.

Eddie Osei Nketia. 2021.

Eddie Osei-Nketia will make his world championships debut in Oregon. Photo: PHOTOSPORT

Portia Bing has been rewarded for twice bettering her national women's 400m hurdles record during the domestic season to appear in her specialist event in what will be her third World Championship appearance.

Completing the team are women's pole vault duo; Olivia McTaggart, who placed sixth at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Belgrade in March, and her Auckland-based training partner Imogen Ayris.