Nor'West News: January 15, 2019
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NOR’WEST NEWS Latest Christchurch news at www.star.kiwi<br />
7<br />
<strong>News</strong><br />
Tuesday <strong>January</strong> <strong>15</strong> <strong>2019</strong><br />
Local<br />
<strong>News</strong><br />
Now<br />
Jack of all trades honoured<br />
Fire rages, homes at risk<br />
• By Gordon Findlater<br />
IN THE sporting realm there’s<br />
not much that Barry Gardiner<br />
hasn’t done.<br />
The Avonhead 81-year-old<br />
who celebrated his birthday last<br />
week was recognised for his<br />
achievements by being named<br />
in the New Year Honours List as<br />
a member of the New Zealand<br />
Order of Merit.<br />
Rather than sitting back and<br />
relaxing on the back of the nod,<br />
Gardiner is doing what he does<br />
best. He’s played 10 rounds of<br />
golf in the last 12 days, is swimming<br />
and playing squash regularly,<br />
and is currently riding the<br />
bike most days as he trains for<br />
the 47km Motatapu mountain<br />
bike race from Wanaka to Arrowtown<br />
in March.<br />
“It’s quite a tough course but I<br />
go in it most years because I get<br />
the prize for the oldest finisher<br />
which is a bottle of wine . . . it’s<br />
good stuff as well, Central Otago<br />
pinot noir,” said Gardiner.<br />
You could say Gardiner has<br />
peaked late. In recent times he’s<br />
won squash world titles in the<br />
over 50, 60 and 70 categories.<br />
In his younger days he was one<br />
of the South Island’s top rugby<br />
league and union players until a<br />
serious knee injury in 1965 while<br />
playing for the Hanan Shield<br />
team (a mid-Canterbury, South<br />
Canterbury and North Otago<br />
combined team) against the<br />
Springboks.<br />
Gardner holds a unique record<br />
of having played four different<br />
positions against France in two<br />
different codes in the space of a<br />
year.<br />
In 1960 he played for the South<br />
Island in a rugby league match<br />
against the French. He started in<br />
the forwards. However, 20min<br />
into the game the South Island<br />
halfback was injured. With no<br />
replacements in those days he<br />
played the rest of the match at<br />
halfback.<br />
The following year he represented<br />
South Canterbury<br />
against France. After starting at<br />
flanker he finished the match at<br />
first five-eighths due to another<br />
injury.<br />
Gardiner never played internationally<br />
in either code. However,<br />
he came as close as you possibly<br />
can in 1958 when he was selected<br />
as the emergency forward for<br />
the Kiwis ahead of a test against<br />
Great Britain.<br />
“There was a guy by the name<br />
of Jack Jones who was the prop<br />
selected from Canterbury and<br />
he ended up breaking his finger.<br />
When they found out he couldn’t<br />
play we only had six forwards<br />
and I was included . . . on the<br />
Friday night they announced the<br />
team and they bought in a big<br />
prop from Auckland so everyone<br />
got dropped back one and I<br />
ended up being the emergency,<br />
so I missed out.”<br />
Before moving to Timaru,<br />
Gardiner was part of a very successful<br />
West Coast league team.<br />
“In 1960 we played Auckland<br />
in Auckland and beat them . . .<br />
there was probably about 11 or<br />
12 coasters in the South Island<br />
team that same year and beat<br />
the North Island team in Greymouth,”<br />
said Gardiner.<br />
“We used to beat Canterbury<br />
regularly. It was a good era for<br />
West Coast rugby league. If you<br />
look at where it is on the coast<br />
now it’s a shame. They’ve lost all<br />
their big miners and timber people<br />
which was their strike force<br />
for rugby league.”<br />
Gardiner also played cricket for<br />
the West Coast as a wicket-keeper,<br />
including an unsuccessful Hawke<br />
Cup challenge against Nelson.<br />
While living in the West Coast<br />
he also won the shot put title at<br />
the Canterbury junior athletics<br />
championships in dramatic<br />
fashion.<br />
The West Coast athletes<br />
FAMILY SUCCESS: In 2016, Gardiner won the<br />
75-plus national squash title, his son-in-law<br />
Grant Craig (left) won the 50-plus title and son<br />
Dave Gardiner (right) won the 40-plus title. Two<br />
weeks earlier his granddaughter Megan Craig<br />
won the NZ open women’s title.<br />
AGELESS:<br />
Barry Gardiner<br />
is training<br />
for the 47km<br />
Motatapu<br />
mountain bike<br />
race. He will<br />
be the oldest<br />
competitor at<br />
81.<br />
PHOTO:<br />
MARTIN<br />
HUNTER<br />
travelled by bus on Friday for<br />
the Saturday event. However, a<br />
storm closed roads to Christchurch<br />
meaning the bus didn’t<br />
arrive at Lancaster Park until the<br />
event was well under way.<br />
“We ran across to the shot put<br />
and it had just finished. The official<br />
said: ‘Look I’m sorry but you’re<br />
too late we’ve just finished it.’ We<br />
explained the situation and he said<br />
you can have one throw and it’s<br />
going to have to be right now. I was<br />
still in my street clothes, I picked<br />
it up did my best Parry O’Brien<br />
technique. It flew out of my hand<br />
and I ended up winning it.”<br />
In terms of the many highlights<br />
Gardiner holds a world<br />
over-50 squash title in 1991 as his<br />
greatest achievement.<br />
“I never knew I had that in me.”<br />
The squash court is also where<br />
Gardiner’s most hilarious sporting<br />
moment occurred.<br />
“I was warming for my match<br />
and was in my track pants on. I<br />
went off to take my track pants<br />
off, came back on the court<br />
started the game and the crowd<br />
starting laughing, I looked down<br />
to see I was standing there in my<br />
undies. I had forgot to put on my<br />
shorts under my track pants.”<br />
Off the field Gardiner has been<br />
involved as an administrator<br />
at club, district, national and<br />
international levels. He has<br />
held voluntary committee<br />
membership positions with<br />
squash clubs for 51 years.<br />
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