Home » New World Champion Hayley Nixon Leads SA to 5 Medals in Hong Kong

New World Champion Hayley Nixon Leads SA to 5 Medals in Hong Kong

Hayley Nixon became South Africa’s latest world champion when she conquered tough conditions and a strong field to win the ICF Ocean Racing World Championships on a day that saw the SA team scooping up five medals in Hong Kong. Nixon (Euro Steel/Carbonology Sport) led home a team charge that yielded four of the top […]

Hayley Nixon became South Africa’s latest world champion when she conquered tough conditions and a strong field to win the ICF Ocean Racing World Championships on a day that saw the SA team scooping up five medals in Hong Kong.

Picture of Nixon courtesy of Anthony Grote/Gameplan Media

Nixon (Euro Steel/Carbonology Sport) led home a team charge that yielded four of the top six senior women, a silver in the Under-23 women and two junior medals, with Sabina Lawrie becoming the new junior world champion.

Nixon, who came to canoeing and surfski racing from a rowing background, finally realised a lifelong dream of becoming a world champion, after having won the Surfski World Series title.

World champion – I think I’m going to cry… I’ve been waiting to hear that all my life…

‘World champion – I think I’m going to cry,’ she said on the finish line. ‘I’ve been waiting to hear that all my life. It just feels like I have ticked this massive box!’

‘I couldn’t be more proud. I’ve finished next to a previous world champion (in New Zealand’s Teneale Hatton), and Michelle Burn, who was almost a world champion. I couldn’t be prouder, but I’m exhausted.’

Nixon said that the tough flat and windless conditions combined with the very humid weather had made the race particularly taxing, which played into her hands.

‘I’m really efficient when it’s long and hard. For me, the harder the better. That’s where I really get to thrive.’

‘I think a lot of these girls come from surf-lifesaving and big wave backgrounds, so they’re really lethal in the runs. That’s where they’re efficient.

Amanzimtoti downwind star Michele Burn claimed the silver medal for South Africa, with London Olympics bronze medallist Bridgitte Hartley fourth and Nikki Russell taking sixth place.

In the junior race Sabina Lawrie was all smiles as she climbed to the top step of the podium after winning the U18 girls title, ahead of Australian schoolgirl Georgia Sinclair, with fellow South African Zara Wood claiming the bronze medal.

‘The race was very hectic. There was absolutely no wind so it was a solid grind from start to finish,’ said Lawrie.

‘It was stressful being behind the first girl until the last two kays, but I’m very stoked to win,’ she added.

SA scooped a fifth medal when Durbanite Kyeta Purchase finished second in the U23 race won by Swede Linnea Stensils.

SUMMARY OF RESULTS
OPEN
1 Hayley Nixon (SA) 1hr 55min 25sec
2 Michelle Burn (SA) 1:55:41
3 Teneale Hatton (NZL) 1:56:16

U23
1 Linnea Stensils (SWE) 2:00:51
2 Kyeta Purchase (SA) 2:04:17
3 Laury Marie-Sainte (FRA) 2:09:04

U18
1 Sabina Lawrie (SA) 2:05:25
2 Georgia Sinclair (AUS) 2:06:13
3 Zara Wood (SA) 2:18:29

Source: TeamSA.co.za