logo
More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling

More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling

The most successful cyclist in New Zealand Olympic history has dedicated her latest honour to the people who supported her decorated career - and it isn't over yet.
Four-time Olympic medallist and double Olympic champion Ellesse Andrews has been made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) in this year's King's Birthday Honours for services to cycling.
The 25-year-old sprinter said front of mind was her parents who were there when it all began.
Her father, Jon Andrews, was no stranger to the cutthroat world of elite cycling when he introduced his young daughter to the sport.
He won a Commonwealth Games bronze medal in the time trial, and knew the speeds she would be reaching when she raced the steeply banked oval tracks of the velodrome.
He also wore the silver fern at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona and at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria.
While mother Angela Mote-Andrews knew about competing on two wheels as an elite mountainbiker.
Currently competing in Japan with the New Zealand team, Andrews said the honour was a bolt from the blue.
"It means a lot to me but also really signifies the support that I have to had to get to this point," Andrews said.
"Absolutely my family, my friends and everyone has been so supportive and I guess beyond that the community that we have within cycling in New Zealand."
Andrews grew up in Luggate and attended Wānaka Primary School and Mount Aspiring College until her final two years when she attended St Peter's in Cambridge.
She set new standards in the sport after winning gold medals in the Women's Sprint and Keirin along with a silver medal in the Women's Team Sprint at last year's Paris Olympic Games.
She became the first New Zealand cyclist to win two gold medals and three medals in total at a single Olympics. Together with the silver medal she attained in the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games, taking her Olympic medal haul to four medals.
The previous best was two medals won by cyclist Hayden Roulston at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008.
Alongside her Olympic medals, Andrews won the the Keirin title at the World Track Cycling Championships in Glasgow in 2023. She also won three gold medals at the 2022 Birmingham Commonwealth Games.
While the medals on the track have come thick and fast, she didn't have an honour like this on her radar.
"I didn't really expect it at all so it was really a massive surprise to read the email and then to see it come out today - yes, it's a huge privilege."
"I'm really proud to have been a part of it and I'm really proud to go out there on the world stage and really to continue to put New Zealand on the map because we have so many talented riders."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Deans finishes with personal best
Deans finishes with personal best

Otago Daily Times

time2 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Deans finishes with personal best

Caitlin Deans (right), alongside Australian Moesha Johnson, looks at the board after the 800m freestyle at the world championships in Singapore yesterday. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Saving the best for last. Dunedin swimmer Caitlin Deans wrapped up an admirable world championships in Singapore with a top 10 finish and a personal best in the women's 800m freestyle yesterday. The Neptune swimmer touched the wall in 8min28.72sec in a big personal best, lowering the time of 8min29.3sec she set at the national championships earlier this year. Deans finished 10th overall in the 800m discipline after being drawn in a stacked heat against United States great Katie Ledecky, Australian Lani Pallister and German Isabel Gose, who are in the top four seeds for the final. Former Dunedin swimmer Erika Fairweather, also in the same heat as Deans, qualified sixth for tonight's final in 8min22.22sec. Earlier in the week, Deans, who represented New Zealand at the Paris Olympics, finished 13th in the women's 1500m freestyle in 16min13.16sec. Kiwis Zoe Pedersen and Laura Quilter, returning internationally for the first time since 2014, finished 24th and 29th respectively in the women's 50m butterfly. Lewis Clareburt. PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Olympian Lewis Clareburt set a New Zealand record on his way to finishing fifth in the men's 200m IM on Thursday. Clareburt collected his second personal best of the championships when he touched the wall in 1min57.06sec, lowering the previous record of 1min57.27sec from the Tokyo Olympics. French swimmer Leon Marchand, who set a world record in the distance during the semifinals, won gold in 1min53.68sec. Shaine Casas, of the United States, was second and Hungary's Hubert Cos won bronze. Quilter is back in the pool in the women's 50m freestyle heats and Andrew Jeffcoat and Finn Harland are in the men's 50m backstroke heats today. Fairweather will race in her final tonight and Clareburt will be out to defend his title in the men's 400m IM tomorrow.

Call-up surreal even for veteran
Call-up surreal even for veteran

Otago Daily Times

time7 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Call-up surreal even for veteran

Kelly Brazier looked down at her phone and saw the name she did not want flashing up at her. It was Black Ferns coach Allan Bunting ringing to let his players know if they had made the Rugby World Cup squad. Brazier had been told if she got the call from a position-specific coach, she was heading to England — but if she heard from Bunting, it was not good news. "His name actually came up on my phone so initially I was like, 'oh no'. Then next minute it was 'congratulations'," Brazier told the Otago Daily Times . "Just excited, happy and ready to get into work with the rest of the girls. "It's still pretty surreal." Brazier is the veteran of the squad at 35 and will join an elite club running out for her fourth World Cup later this month. The first five, who was named at second five in the World Rugby women's team of the 2010-19 decade, has nearly done it all in her career. She is a dual World Cup winner with the Black Ferns in 2010 and 2017, and won Olympic and Commonwealth Games medals, and World Cups, as a long-serving member of the Black Ferns Sevens. But the last couple of years left the 43-test stalwart — who had not played for the Black Ferns since 2021 until last month — hungry for more. The sting of being left out of the World Cup-winning squad in 2022 remained and injuries sidelined her for the Paris Olympics sevens campaign. "It's definitely up there," she said, when asked where the 2025 World Cup selection ranked. "The disappointment of not making that World Cup squad in New Zealand — I was absolutely gutted. "The last year and a-half, I guess battling a few sort of Achilles problems ... to finally be selected again, and be injury free, and get that phone call, I was over the moon and kind of felt like the first one all over again." Brazier, who grew up in Dunedin, made her comeback in Super Rugby Aupiki with Chiefs Manawa this year, and even after 15 years as an elite athlete, it was a shock to the system. "Even with Manawa the first week I was like, 'oh my God, what am I doing?' It was so hard. "Everyone used to complain about sevens was hard, but man, going back to 15s ... I was sort of questioning myself." Brazier, who was the top scorer (48 points) at her debut World Cup in 2010, was room-mates with Portia Woodman-Wickliffe — named for her third World Cup — at the first Black Ferns camp this year. They spent many late nights wading through information and game-plan changes and soon realised they had a lot to learn compared with their early days. "We'd be up until 10, 11 o'clock at night testing each other or writing in our books," Brazier said. "There was definitely a lot to learn, and different from when we were last in here, but I guess it's the challenge we want and excited from it." That spoke to the growth of the women's game, which Brazier said had been massive during her tenure. It was not lost on her how "surreal" it was to be heading back to England, where she played her first World Cup game 15 years ago. Back then, the final was played at Twickenham Stoop with a capacity of 14,800, whereas the 2025 final will be played at Twickenham Stadium with a capacity of 82,000. "Women's rugby has made massive leaps and bounds. "I think it's only going to continue that way as well, which is exciting." When she started, the Black Ferns seldom had tests before a World Cup — "now you've got 10 in a year." Tests were crucial for building towards pinnacle events and growing the game. "What you don't know, you don't know until you're put in those situations. "To have these opportunities now, and not even just the rugby, the chance to travel the world, experience different food, different culture ... "Probably why I've stayed in the game for so long is ... the experiences you get from it as well." But there is no place like home. Brazier left Dunedin in 2013 but has fond memories of the city and returned home for Christmas with her family last year. "I love going back home. It's my roots. "Obviously born and bred and proud to be from down there, which I think a lot of people don't realise because I've been gone for so long. "I'm definitely a Dunedin girl through and through — something I'm really proud of."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store