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Hank McGregor paddles to massive Berg River Canoe Marathon lead

Hank McGregor paddles to massive Berg River Canoe Marathon lead

As Hank McGregor built an almost unassailable lead on Day 2 of the Berg River Canoe Marathon on Thursday, Jenna Nisbet was capitalising on a 'lucky mistake' to take control of the women's race.
Thirteen-time winner Hank McGregor added to his already big overnight lead on the shortened 30km stage from Gouda to Bridgetown, and now enjoys a daunting advantage of just under 10 minutes over young U23 Sam Butcher.
Robert Herreveld and Siseko Ntondini are nine and 35 seconds further back, respectively, with Friday's long 76km queen stage to Zoutkloof looming.
The race for the top five was switched around with 2024 winner Thomas Lovemore catching and passing Anders Hart to take over fifth, while Paul Marais is not too far off the pace in sixth.
Stage 2 was shortened due to safety concerns and fears that the loss of the tricky 16km stretch from Zonquasdrift to Gouda would nullify the racing, were proved wrong.
This was particularly true in the women's race, where Jenna Nisbet made what she initially thought was a disastrous error, that could turn out to be an unexpected race-winning mistake.
After starting a handful of seconds behind overnight leader Nix Birkett, the pair settled into a group with some male paddlers and all was calm initially.
'We started in a nice group of five, but at the first rapid, which was about five kilometres into the race, I spun out and someone went over me,' said Nisbet, a two-time race winner in 2013 and 2022.
'I thought it was the end of the race when I lost contact with Nikki and the other part of the group.
'Thankfully I was with a guy named John (de Villiers), who knows the river very well … and it actually worked in our favour that we both lost contact with the group, because he had some unbelievable knowledge of the river and took us down some channels which definitely paid off.
'I never saw Nix again until the end. I think she must have got a bit lost or stuck in a tree or something and I passed her without seeing her.
'I was happy to have had a clean day and to have been able to follow John down some good lines and conserve energy as much as possible, because tomorrow is a big day. Even though I have a nice lead over Nix, that can disappear very quickly over 76km tomorrow.
'Tomorrow (Friday) I am definitely just going to do my best to hang on to her, but she is super strong on the flats and I know she's gonna be going hard tomorrow – so it's going be a very tough day, I think.'
Nisbet is now eight minutes ahead of Birkett, with Neriyah Dill third, three minutes further back. Bianca Beavitt and Rachel van Deventer complete the top five.
Meanwhile, good news for those watching the progress of 'Oom' Jannie Malherbe were happy to see him finish Day 2, and the three-time race winner is still on his way to becoming the only person to complete a remarkable 52 Berg River Canoe Marathons.
All paddlers start together on Friday with the 76km paddle to Zoutkloof, the traditional race decider – although this year the short 30km blast seems to have sorted the top step of the podium in both the women's and men's races.
Under overall position, name, overall time, day 1, day 2
1. Hank McGregor 6:18:59 (4:14:44, 2:04:14)2. Sam Butcher 6:28:22 (4:20:26, 2:07:55)3. Robert Herreveld 6:28:31 (4:20:25, 2:08:05)4. Siseko Ntondini 6:28:58 (4:20:27, 2:08:31)5. Thomas Lovemore 6:34:11 (4:25:08, 2:09:02)6. Anders Hart 6:35:07 (4:22:13, 2:12:54)7. Paul Marais 6:35:55 (4:25:09, 2:10:45)8. Matthew Coetzer 6:37:48 (4:29:42, 2:08:06)9. Dyllan Farrell 6:37:49 (4:29:42, 2:08:06)
10. Heinrich Schloms 6:38:31 (4:27:48, 2:10:42)
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Hank McGregor paddles to massive Berg River Canoe Marathon lead
Hank McGregor paddles to massive Berg River Canoe Marathon lead

The South African

time2 days ago

  • The South African

Hank McGregor paddles to massive Berg River Canoe Marathon lead

As Hank McGregor built an almost unassailable lead on Day 2 of the Berg River Canoe Marathon on Thursday, Jenna Nisbet was capitalising on a 'lucky mistake' to take control of the women's race. Thirteen-time winner Hank McGregor added to his already big overnight lead on the shortened 30km stage from Gouda to Bridgetown, and now enjoys a daunting advantage of just under 10 minutes over young U23 Sam Butcher. Robert Herreveld and Siseko Ntondini are nine and 35 seconds further back, respectively, with Friday's long 76km queen stage to Zoutkloof looming. The race for the top five was switched around with 2024 winner Thomas Lovemore catching and passing Anders Hart to take over fifth, while Paul Marais is not too far off the pace in sixth. Stage 2 was shortened due to safety concerns and fears that the loss of the tricky 16km stretch from Zonquasdrift to Gouda would nullify the racing, were proved wrong. This was particularly true in the women's race, where Jenna Nisbet made what she initially thought was a disastrous error, that could turn out to be an unexpected race-winning mistake. After starting a handful of seconds behind overnight leader Nix Birkett, the pair settled into a group with some male paddlers and all was calm initially. 'We started in a nice group of five, but at the first rapid, which was about five kilometres into the race, I spun out and someone went over me,' said Nisbet, a two-time race winner in 2013 and 2022. 'I thought it was the end of the race when I lost contact with Nikki and the other part of the group. 'Thankfully I was with a guy named John (de Villiers), who knows the river very well … and it actually worked in our favour that we both lost contact with the group, because he had some unbelievable knowledge of the river and took us down some channels which definitely paid off. 'I never saw Nix again until the end. I think she must have got a bit lost or stuck in a tree or something and I passed her without seeing her. 'I was happy to have had a clean day and to have been able to follow John down some good lines and conserve energy as much as possible, because tomorrow is a big day. Even though I have a nice lead over Nix, that can disappear very quickly over 76km tomorrow. 'Tomorrow (Friday) I am definitely just going to do my best to hang on to her, but she is super strong on the flats and I know she's gonna be going hard tomorrow – so it's going be a very tough day, I think.' Nisbet is now eight minutes ahead of Birkett, with Neriyah Dill third, three minutes further back. Bianca Beavitt and Rachel van Deventer complete the top five. Meanwhile, good news for those watching the progress of 'Oom' Jannie Malherbe were happy to see him finish Day 2, and the three-time race winner is still on his way to becoming the only person to complete a remarkable 52 Berg River Canoe Marathons. All paddlers start together on Friday with the 76km paddle to Zoutkloof, the traditional race decider – although this year the short 30km blast seems to have sorted the top step of the podium in both the women's and men's races. Under overall position, name, overall time, day 1, day 2 1. Hank McGregor 6:18:59 (4:14:44, 2:04:14)2. Sam Butcher 6:28:22 (4:20:26, 2:07:55)3. Robert Herreveld 6:28:31 (4:20:25, 2:08:05)4. Siseko Ntondini 6:28:58 (4:20:27, 2:08:31)5. Thomas Lovemore 6:34:11 (4:25:08, 2:09:02)6. Anders Hart 6:35:07 (4:22:13, 2:12:54)7. Paul Marais 6:35:55 (4:25:09, 2:10:45)8. Matthew Coetzer 6:37:48 (4:29:42, 2:08:06)9. Dyllan Farrell 6:37:49 (4:29:42, 2:08:06) 10. Heinrich Schloms 6:38:31 (4:27:48, 2:10:42)

Hank McGregor the Berg River Canoe Marathon GOAT on track for win #14
Hank McGregor the Berg River Canoe Marathon GOAT on track for win #14

The South African

time3 days ago

  • The South African

Hank McGregor the Berg River Canoe Marathon GOAT on track for win #14

Hank McGregor stamped his authority on the 2025 Berg River Canoe Marathon after building a massive lead of almost six minutes on Day 1 on Wednesday. The 47-year-old multiple world champion is already strongly favoured to claim his 14th title. While McGregor was cruising to his big overnight lead in the 62km stage from Paarl to Zonquasdrift, Nix Birkett was fighting a much closer battle with Jenna Nisbet, and in contrast to the men's race, the women's event looks like it could turn into a tight contest for the top step of the podium. Last year's runner up, Neriyah Dill, is third, six minutes behind, with 2024 champion Stephanie von der Hyde fourth, and three-time winner Bianca Beavitt fifth. In the men's race, six-time race winner, 53-year-old Robbie Herreveld led home a group of three to ensure the top two places have a combined age of 100 years. He edged out U23 Sam Butcher with Siseko Ntondini claiming third. Anders Hart and defending champion Tom Lovemore are fifth and sixth, respectively. 'I didn't expect that,' said McGregor when told how big his lead was at the end of the day. 'I would have taken just the win in an end sprint if somebody asked me at the start. So, yeah, I'm stoked with a gap that size.' 'Yeah, I'm really, really happy with the win today. It was great conditions and a really forgiving medium to low level.' 'We got away with a bunch of four just after Skooltjie – Tom Lovemore, Sam Butcher, Siseko Ntondini, my team-mate from Euro Steel, and myself. I wanted to see what Tom and Sam had in the tank and put them under pressure a little bit and they came off at about the 35km mark.' 'Then it was just myself and Siseko and we worked really well together. At Hermon Bridge Siseko came off and I had to go on a solo charge to the finish line.' 'Tomorrow is a shortened stage because of the water level and the tree blocks which are super dangerous. It is going to be a fast day and I am going to be on my own, so we will see what happens.' 'It is still early days and still lots to come,' added the 11-time world champion. Birkett said her race was a lot more chilled than the result indicated. 'It was a pretty cool day with Jen and I together the whole day, and then I just managed to take her at the end,' said the 2021 race winner. 'With three men in our group we all took turns pulling and the only drama I had was when I took one wrong turn – I think I lost about 30 seconds and had to work quite hard to catch up.' 'There were no other issues or anything, but I know that a lot can change on this river, so I'm not going to claim anything until the race is over.' On Thursday the paddlers will paddle from Gouda to Bridgetown after a decision was made to remove the Zonquasdrift to Gouda section due to dangerous conditions. 1. Hank McGregor 4:14:442. Robert Herreveld 4:20:253. Sam Butcher 4:20:264. Siseko Ntondini 4:20:275. Anders Hart 4:22:136. Thomas Lovemore 4:25:087. Paul Marais 4:25:098. Heinrich Schloms 4:27:489. Joshua Glyn-Cuthbert 4:27:48 10. Matthew Coetzer 4:29:42

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