More recognition for New Zealand's queen of cycling
Ellesse Andrews on the podium at last year's Paris Olympic Games where she won two gold and one silver medal.
Photo:
Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com
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, John 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."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Is it better to give someone who's homeless cash or food if they ask for help?
"I think many of the people on the street feel rejected, feel outsiders, that they're being looked down on." Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin People working in top jobs at charities responding to poverty say the choice of giving food or money to those asking for help is tough and they often feel conflicted. Many communities are seeing a spike in homelessness, with a steady rise in the number of people living in cars, parks or on the streets. That included Auckland, where there were more than 650 living rough on the streets according to the last count in January, and outreach workers expected that to rise over winter. Auckland City Missioner Helen Robinson said giving is a personal decision. "For some people giving money is okay for some it isn't, for some it is giving money to an organisation, for some it's shouting someone a feed or offering to buy someone a pie or a drink while they're in the shop," she said. "For others it's really striking up that conversation and encouraging them to access services like the mission." Robinson said she often feels conflicted about what to give. "There are times when I have given them money and there are times when I haven't, which is ironic for me as the Auckland City Missioner that I say both of those things," she said. "I'm just conscious that sometimes $5 is the difference between someone having some food. It's a tangible expression of I actually genuinely care for what's going on for you in this moment." Hustling or begging at traffic lights was against the law and she urged people to consider theirs and others' safety in such situations. Robinson said a human response was needed and it's important not to ignore those living rough - she encouraged compassion. Wellington City Missioner Murray Edridge agreed. "I have a belief that the best possible thing we can do is greet them as you would anybody else, so say hello, make eye contact, engage with them, ask them how their day is," he said. "I've been doing that for a number of years because I heard directly from one of them that one of the biggest challenges they faced is that people wouldn't make eye contact." Edridge said he takes that approach and prefers to buy someone lunch or something they need rather than give cash. He said the mission is seeing a rare level of poverty in its 120 year history. "We're facing some huge social issues and my encouragement to government, to decision makers, to policy setters, to local councils and to leaders in our community is that we need to pay attention to this because if we don't then we all lose." Edridge has been the city missioner for seven years and said he felt privileged to be in a position to help others. "There's no downside to helping people get on and have an improved life, in fact the benefit that accrues to each one of us is huge." Ian Hutson works as a mission officer for the Salvation Army and said the question of what to give people on the street is not straight-forward. "In my case I often don't give but refer to agencies that can help but occasion you get the feel that it's fine to give." He said people need to feel part of society, regardless of their circumstances. "People are often somewhat frightened or fearful of people on the street and sometimes I think a certain amount of engaging and acknowledging them but without necessarily giving anything is at least one thing," Hutson said. "I think many of the people on the street feel rejected, feel outsiders, that they're being looked down on." He said individuals, groups and churches all need to help those in need. The missioners and Hutson said people experiencing homelessness should not be blamed for their circumstances, which often include challenges such as addiction or illness. Robinson is urging people to write to their local MP. "Contact your local representative and say to them that enough affordable housing is really important to you as a citizen, to use your power to communicate to our politicians how important it is to you because your view then enables them to shape their view." She said a lack of affordable housing is driving up homelessness and that needs to change.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Labour leader Chris Hipkins on latest RNZ-Reid Research poll
media politics 27 minutes ago According to results out on Wednesday morning, the left bloc would have enough support to govern. Labour leader Chris Hipkins spoke to Corin Dann.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Historic ship Tui on fire near Paihia's Waitangi Bridge
Historic ship The Tui on fire in Paihia. Photo: Supplied A historic ship is on fire by the Waitangi Bridge in Paihia. The Tui is a three-masted sailing ship that has been a feature of the Waitangi waterfront since the late Kelly Tarlton bought the historic vessel and used it to house his finds from a lifetime of exploring shipwrecks. It has recently changed ownership and Kerikeri-based TriOceans marine research institute had started restoring the vessel for use as a community space and marine education facility. Four fire crews are fighting the blaze after Fire and Emergency received multiple calls about it after 4am. "The timber ship is fully on fire and is already significantly damaged." Fire and Emergency believe the fire to be suspicious. The Tui. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf A witness told Morning Report the ship had been let go in the past few years and it was a bit of an eyesore but the community had good news when it had been sold. "I think they'd delivered $15,000 worth of materials in there yesterday and now she's gone up in flames." Derek Gerritsen from Big Fish Bay of Island said the top deck was on fire and the whole back of the ship was burnt out when he was at the scene. "She's fully engulfed in flames," he said. "I don't think there'll be much left of it." There were already rumours going around the community about the suspicious nature of the fire, he said. No one was on board the ship overnight. "The fire is generating some smoke around Paihia and Waitangi and people are advised to avoid the area and keep windows shut," Fire and Emergency says. It was not yet known how the fire started. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.