History repeated at the Mount Monster yesterday, with Mount Maunganui's Hamish Miller and Mairangi Bay's Rachel Clarke owning the surf lifesaving endurance showpiece for the second time in four years.
Hamish, the 22-year-old phenomenon back on his home beach tore apart the competition to win the 24.5km Dexion-sponsored event by nearly four minutes, while Rachel also emulated her 2017 win with a commanding performance of her own, holding off a fast-finishing Rebecca Barron by 38secs.
Rachel used her strength on the opening 12km ski leg to pull away, keeping her foot on the gas through the subsequent 5km run, 1.5km swim and 6km board legs.
'I knew that my competition had the motivational advantage of chasing me down so I concentrated on chasing down the guys!” says Rachel.
Her 2hr 50min 21sec was nearly six minutes slower than last year's winning female time and nearly nine minutes adrift of her 2017 time, although that had much to do with the gusty westerly winds that caused havoc throughout the 300-strong field.
Rachel Clarke from Mairangi Bay on her way to victory on the women's division of the 2020 Dexion Mount Monster. Photo: Alan Gibson/Gibson Images
Hamish meanwhile was a class act, crossing in 2:24:47 and, after dabbling in triathlons for the past three seasons, regarded this win as just as good as his maiden victory in 2017.
'It's special either way,” says Hamish. 'It's always so humbling and so much fun, and being able to do it with my mates makes the experience all the better.”
The Mount Monster, famous for the giant leap into the ocean. Photo: Alan Gibson/Gibson Images
One of those mates was 16-year-old club mate Jayden Murphy, who improved on his fifth-place finish last year with second this time around. Jayden showed racing smarts beyond his years as he finished in 2:28:35, just 38secs ahead of another teenager, Omanu's Tanner Baxter.
'I knew the swimming leg wasn't my strongest so if I could put in that extra effort to hold off Tanner, I could take advantage of the surf break on the swim to shore and then make a hard push on the board,” says Jayden.
Top three men.Photo: Alan Gibson/Gibson Images
After a year filled with uncertainty, organisers were delighted with the turnout in the eighth edition of the race, with the testing conditions making the day particularly memorable.
With wind gusts reaching 50 km per hour at times, racing smart was the key, with local knowledge proving invaluable for Mount Maunganui's Rebecca Barron, who entered the final board leg in sixth place but stormed home.
'I noticed that during the final board, the girls in front of me had circled North Rock closely and got caught up in rough swells,” says Rebecca. 'I decided to circle wider and chase the wind further out – I ended up catching some awesome runners and passed three or four girls. I don't think they even saw me because I was so far out.”
Top three women. Photo: Alan Gibson/Gibson Images
Red Beach's Kate Rodgers completed the women's podium with a hard-fought third place. Other results from the day saw East End take out the men's and women's team event, while Mount Maunganui took home gold in the mixed team event.
The under-14 Mini Monster finished with Muriwai's Matthew Mihaljevich and Orewa's Elizabeth Brennan taking home gold medals in the boys' and girls' divisions respectively.
Results
Open men: Hamish Miller (Mt Maunganui) 2:24:47 1, Jayden Murphy (Mt Maunganui) 2:28:35 2, Tanner Baxter (Omanu) 2:29:13 3.
Open women: Rachel Clarke (Mairangi Bay) 2:50:21 1, Rebecca Barron (Mt Maunganui) 2:50:59 2, Kate Rogers (Red Beach) 2:52:50 3.
Teams
Men: Stache Bros (East End) 2:18:03 1, Legal Aliens (Mairangi Bay) 2.27.03 2, Reddaz Rampage (Red Beach) 2:29:29 3.
Women: Lucky Duckies (East End) 2:39:44 1, Chargers (Omanu) 2:48:12 2, Salty Gals (Wainui) 2:49:21 3.
Mixed: Two Broken Halves (Mt Maunganui) 2:24:12 1, Mairangi Magic (Mairangi Bay) 2:44:14 2, A2z (Mairangi Bay) 2:45:57 3.
Mini Monster (under-14)
Boys: Mathew Mihaljevich (Muriwai) 43:30 1, Asher Hales (East End) 44:42 2, Mason King (Orewa) 44:42 3.
Girls: Elizabeth Brennan (Orewa) 46.05 1, Ella Sutton (Midway) 46:48 2, Freya Stolte (Fitzroy) 48:01 3.
Mount Monster roll of honour:
2020: Hamish Miller (NZ), Rachel Clarke (NZ)
2019: Joe Collins (NZ), Claudia Kelly (NZ)
2018: Declan Dempster (NZ), Ella Kingi (NZ)
2017: Hamish Miller (NZ), Rachel Clarke (NZ)
2016: Luke Cuff (Australia), Danielle McKenzie (NZ)
2015: Ben Cochrane (NZ), Kirsty Wannan (NZ)
2014: Max Beattie (NZ), Kirsty Wannan (NZ)
2013: Cory Taylor (NZ), Danielle McKenzie (NZ)
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