New Zealand at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
New Zealand
 at the Commonwealth Games

Flag of New Zealand
CGF code  NZL
CGA New Zealand Olympic Committee
Website www.olympic.org.nz
At the 1974 British Commonwealth Games
in Christchurch, New Zealand
Competitors 145
Officials 33
Flag bearer Opening: Warwick Nicholl
Closing:
Medals
Rank: 4th
Gold
9
Silver
8
Bronze
18
Total
35
Commonwealth Games history (summary)
British Empire Games
British Empire and Commonwealth Games
British Commonwealth Games
Commonwealth Games

New Zealand (abbreviated NZL) had a team of 145 competitors and 33 officials to the 1974 British Commonwealth Games, which were held at Christchurch, New Zealand. Warwick Nicholl was the flagbearer at the opening ceremony. The theme song was "Join Together" by Steve Allen.

Venue

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

10th British Commonwealth Games
1974 British Commonwealth Games logo.svg
Host city Christchurch, New Zealand
Nations participating 38 Nations of the Commonwealth
Athletes participating 1276
Events 121 events in 10 sports
Opening ceremony 24 January
Closing ceremony 2 February
Main venue QEII Park

The games, which became known as "the friendly games", were held in Christchurch, New Zealand. The main venue was QEII Park.

The games marked the beginning of colour television broadcasts in New Zealand. The trademark logo of these Games served as the 'benchmark' design for logo designs for subsequent Games, up to 1998.[citation needed]

Medals

Gold Silver Bronze Total
Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand 9 8 18 35


New Zealand was fourth in the medal table in 1974.

Gold

Athletics

1st Robin Tait — Men's Discus Throw
1st Dick Tayler — Men's 10000 m

Lawn bowls

1st David Baldwin, Kerry Clark, John Somerville, and Gordon Jolly — Men's Fours

Shooting

1st Maurice Gordon — Full bore rifle

Swimming

1st Jaynie Parkhouse — Women's 800 m Freestyle
1st Mark Treffers — Men's 400 m Individual Medley

Weightlifting

1st Tony Ebert — Men's 75 kg
1st Graham May — Men's 110 kg

Wrestling

1st David Aspin — Men's Freestyle (82 kg)

Silver

Athletics

2nd John Walker — Men's 1500 metres
2nd Valerie Young — Women's Shot Put
2nd Jack Foster — Men's Marathon
2nd Sue Haden — Women's 800 metres

Boxing

2nd William Byrne — Men's Light-Heavyweight

Swimming

2nd Mark Treffers — Men's 1500 m Freestyle

Weightlifting

2nd Brian Marsden — Men's 90 kg
2nd John Bolton — Men's 110 kg

Bronze

Athletics

3rd John Walker — Men's 800 metres
3rd Bevan Smith — Men's 200 metres

Boxing

3rd Robert Colley — Men's Lightweight
3rd Leslie Rackley — Men's Middleweight
3rd Lance Revill — Men's Light-Middleweight

Lawn bowls

3rd Robert McDonald and Phil Skoglund — Men's Pairs

Cycling

3rd Philip Harland and Paul Medhurst — Men's Track Tandem Sprint
3rd Paul Brydon, Russell Nant, Blair Stockwell, and René Heyde — Men's Track Team Pursuit (4000 m)

Shooting

3rd Bruce McMillan — Men's 25 m Rapid Fire Pistol

Swimming

3rd John Coutts — Men's 200 m Butterfly
3rd Susan Hunter — Women's 200 m Individual Medley
3rd Susan Hunter — Women's 400 m Individual Medley
3rd Jaynie Parkhouse — Women's 400 m Freestyle

Weightlifting

3rd Rory Barrett — Men's 110 kg
3rd Brian Duffy — Men's 60 kg
3rd Bruce Cameron — Men's 67.5 kg

Wrestling

3rd Gary Knight — Men's Freestyle (+ 100 kg)
3rd Gordon Mackay — Men's Freestyle (74 kg)

New Zealand Team

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

New Zealanders Jane and Rebecca Perrott swam for Fiji at the games, as their father was Registrar at the University of the South Pacific. At 12½ Rebecca was the youngest competitor at the games.[1]

Television

The Games were the first major event to be televised after the introduction of colour television to New Zealand in November 1973. However, due to the NZBC's limited colour facilities, only athletics, swimming, and boxing were broadcast in colour. The National Film Unit produced Games '74, a feature-length documentary in colour of the games. This has since been restored and is available on DVD.

See also

External links

References

  • Official History of the Xth British Commonwealth Games edited by A. R. Cant (2004, Christchurch)
  • The Commonwealth Games: the first 60 years 1930-1990 by Cleve Dheensaw (1994, Hodder & Stoughton, Canada/New Zealand) ISBN 0-340-60002-0
  1. Wellington’s swim queen in The Wellingtonian, 21 March 2013 p12