
Sowry's new Olympic gig
Glen Sowry
Outgoing Queenstown Airport boss Glen Sowry has just been elected as the new New Zealand Olympic Committee (NZOC) chair.
A former sailor, Sowry, 63, is Olympian #848.
He was first appointed to the NZOC board in 2023, ahead of the Paris Olympics, and will replace Diana Puketapu-Lyndon. Sowry, who finishes as airport CEO next month, says he's "honoured" to take on the job and build on the work Puketapu-Lyndon has done.
"I look forward to working collaboratively with the board, athletes and our diverse range of stakeholders of the NZOC to support our athletes to achieve continued success at the Olympic and Commonwealth Games, and to continue to promote the Olympic values and instil pride and excellence in all New Zealanders," he says.
Sowry, who competed in the Tornado event at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games, was earlier selected for Sir Peter Blake's 1985-'86 Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race campaign, onboard Lion New Zealand.
He went on to sail onboard Steinlager 2, helm the back-up boat for the NZ challenge for the America's Cup in '91-'92, and was then selected by Grant Dalton was watch captain for the '93-'94 Whitbread onboard NZ Endeavour.
He's previously served on the Yachting NZ high performance committee, and was a Yachting NZ Olympic selector for the 2004 Athens Olympics.
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Newsroom
18 hours ago
- Newsroom
Māmā Kells raises the bar for women in weightlifting
Sport has been a constant in Kelly Ihaka-Pitama's life. As a teenager, she was a talented shot put and discus thrower, competing against world champion Beatrice Faumuina. She rose to Commonwealth Games level, but never got the chance to compete at a Games. Instead, Ihaka-Pitama studied sports science and worked in the sporting industry until she was 22, when she met her future husband. They bought a home and travelled, then Ihaka-Pitama began a successful career in freight forwarding and logistics. But sport was never far from her mind, and she started coaching athletics and netball. At 40, Ihaka-Pitama fell ill with a tumour in her thyroid. After surgery, she joined a gym, started doing CrossFit and was soon hooked on weightlifting. 'I love the sport. It's been a whirlwind relationship that's gone from zero to 100,' she says. 'I wish I'd found weightlifting at 16.' She still competes in lifting and is the current New Zealand champion in her 45-49 age group, holding national masters records in two weight divisions, competing out of the Papatoetoe Weightlifting Club. 'I'm the oldest lifter at the club, and I get called 'Māmā Kells',' says the 50-year-old, of Te Aupōuri descent. 'That's the kind of aura I bring to any space I work in. And it's something that weightlifting was missing.' Kelly Ihaka-Pitama challenged the thinking of those running weightlifting in NZ during her residency. Photo: Thomas Hamill Photography Ihaka-Pitama was working as a team leader in freight forwarding when she got talking to Simon Kent, the president of Weightlifting New Zealand, who also coaches at the Papatoetoe club. With her business background, Kent thought she'd be perfect for the Women in High Performance residency experience – working for weightlifting's national body. 'But I was also studying, working, training and being a mum to my kids,' says Ihaka-Pitama, who was studying health science majoring in integrated health, and had two daughters, aged 21 and 17. 'But then my heart said, 'Yes, I want to give this a go',' she says. 'It took me six weeks to complete the forms… I'm an overthinker. I didn't really know what I was getting into.' Ihaka-Pitama's successful application led to two part-time roles – one as general manager of high performance development at Weightlifting NZ; the other within High Performance Sport NZ. The latter was a chance for Ihaka-Pitama, South Auckland born and raised, to share her local knowledge with the HPSNZ Pathways team for six months, as they explored high performance opportunities in her area. 'I'm grateful I took on this project because it gave me exposure to the high performance system. If I'd gone straight into Weightlifting NZ, I wouldn't have initially understood the HP processes,' says Ihaka-Pitama, who initially had to learn the 'new language' of high performance. 'It was challenging, learning from scratch, but what I learned was invaluable.' It wasn't easy for Ihaka-Pitama hearing that south Auckland athletes in high performance sport were encouraged to leave south Auckland to be better. 'That kind of hurt, because I've been living there my entire life, and there were high performance athletes who had stayed and been successful,' she says. 'But understanding how high performance rolls after seeing it and being amongst it, I get it now.' Ihaka-Pitama's work at Weightlifting NZ, as the sport's first fulltime employee, was a game-changer, Kent says. 'Before Kelly, we had volunteers trying to deliver high performance outcomes,' says the weightlifting performance coach. 'It's often not the glamorous stuff, but stuff that needs to be done that can slip through the cracks. Part of the role was sometimes rolling up your sleeves and helping out at a club competition. 'It's been a massive transition for Kelly. She'd just started coming to the club and had a real enthusiasm for the sport and a willingness to learn. Her logistics background definitely brought the processes we needed.' Kelly Ihaka-Pitama walks through the gym while NZ's top lifters train. Photo: Thomas Hamill Photography Ihaka-Pitama went through a process of figuring out how to lead in weightlifting. As part of the residency, she did the 360-degree leadership assessment that highlighted her strengths, but also 'what I lacked, what I hid behind and ran away from,' she says. She spent six weeks working with Helene Wilson, HPSNZ's Women in High Performance lead, to help her recognise who she was as a leader. 'I discovered why I had reactive tendencies towards a situation, and how I could adapt to a situation in a better way. How to move forward and say, 'Hey, I want to do this' or approaching a coach who may be difficult to work with, or speaking to an athlete who's just missed out on selection,' Ihaka-Pitama says. 'Some of those conversations are quite hard if you don't understand yourself as a leader. 'Understanding who I was contributed to me becoming a better leader, because it became more natural to me and authentic to who I was. I came across as me – Māmā Kells – rather than running away from an issue.' Ihaka-Pitama experienced growing pains working at a truly volunteer sport. But preparing the high performance plan for investment was where Ihaka-Pitama took the lead. 'When weightlifting's leaders met on how we would present the plan, I challenged the thinking to start from scratch, rather than use a strategy from yesteryear,' she says. 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And we're a sport that constantly breaks boundaries. And if that includes having Kelly in a high performance role, when other sports don't, then, yes, we'll own it. But she's also great at what she does.' NZ weightlifting coaches (from left) Gabrielle Peach and Megan Signal, with Kelly Ihaka-Pitama and athlete Medea Jones. Photo: Thomas Hamill Kent says changes are afoot in high performance environments that have so long been a male domain. 'Women have only been competing in weightlifting at the Olympics since Sydney 2000, so we're now at a point, 24 years on, where we're starting to see shifts, including more female coaches,' he says. 'Kelly has brought something quite different – the empathy, the relationship-building – where a male in the role might have said, 'No this is what HP needs to look like'. New Zealand was a little ahead of the curve with the upsurge of female lifters we have coming through, so we had to change our approach. And I think Kelly has really added to that.' As an athlete, Ihaka-Pitama is well aware the end goal in weightlifting is always the same – everyone gets three lifts of snatch, and clean and jerk; everyone wants to better their last lift. But it's what goes on in the background that can make a world of difference to a lifter's performance. 'It's about the things we can do on a day-to-day basis – the planning, and the strategies. It's about how can we actually make this better? What environment can we create for the athletes, so they get exposure to high performance? How can our coaches lead better?' she says. 'Our sport is growing exponentially, so we have to be better. We want Kiwis to choose weightlifting, and we'll also go out to the community and find them.' On a personal level, Ihaka-Pitama's development through the Women in High Performance Sport residency experience has been exponential, too. 'I've had huge personal growth. I'm not the same person I was when I first arrived. I was happy to stay in freight forwarding until I die; now I want to fight to stay in sport, to continue the work I started for the people in the sport, the relationships that have been forged, and what we're building for the next generation,' she says. 'There's a lot of good mahi happening within our sport – we're on the right path.' Now that her residency has finished, Ihaka-Pitama is back working in the freight industry – 'and genuinely happy,' she says. 'My involvement with Weightlifting NZ continues, and it's incredibly rewarding to witness the enduring impact of the past two-and-a-half years. The sport is gaining momentum, and emerging athletes are defying challenges to showcase their talent on a global stage. Their resilience and unwavering commitment inspire a new era of excellence. 'My passion for weightlifting remains resolute – I continue to train, compete and coach. And I don't see that changing anytime soon.' This story originally appeared on the High Performance Sport New Zealand website and is published with permission


NZ Herald
3 days ago
- NZ Herald
Small Business On the Up: Former Olympian Willy Benson's PortaSkip journey in Hawke's Bay
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Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Finn Ward's turn — with brother Patrick in the mix
PHOTO: ODT FILES Otago hockey star Finn Ward has been named in the Black Sticks and his brother Patrick has been named as a back-up. Patrick has played for the Black Sticks previously, but Finn will be on debut. He is joined in the Black Sticks squad by Otago team-mates Malachi Buschl and Benji Culhane. Patrick has been named as a travelling reserve. The team will contest the 2025 Nations Cup in Kuala Lumpur from June 15-21. The Black Sticks, who won the tournament last year, return with a fresh opportunity to build on that momentum and push for top honours again. Coach Greg Nicol has named a squad that blends international experience with exciting young talent, including three debutants: Louis Beckert, Gus Nelson and Finn Ward. Their inclusion reflects the depth and development coming through the New Zealand hockey pathway. ''This is a great opportunity to expose new talent to international tournament hockey,'' Nicol said. ''Our focus is to keep building on last year's performance, playing a bold style of hockey and continuing to grow as a group.'' Dylan Thomas and Patrick Ward will also travel with the team as reserves. The last time the Black Sticks played a test match was during the Paris Olympics last August. This tournament is a valuable opportunity to represent New Zealand on a world stage and to build connections in preparation for Oceania Cup later this year. Black Sticks 2025 Nations Cup Louis Beckert, Dom Dixon, Scott Cosslett, Benji Culhane, Charlie Morrison, Brad Read, Simon Yorston, Malachi Buschl, Sean Findlay, Gus Nelson, Hayden Phillips, Nic Woods, Finn Ward, George Baker, Scott Boyde, Jonty Elmes, Sam Hiha, Sam Lane, Dylan Thomas (TR), Patrick Ward (TR). Schedule June 15, v Japan June 17, v Malaysia June 18, v Pakistan June 20, semifinals June 21, final