New Zealand at the 1994 Commonwealth Games
<tr style=border-top: 1px solid #aaa;">
| 
New Zealand at the Commonwealth Games  | 
||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
  | ||||||||||||
| At the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada  | 
||||||||||||
| Competitors | 134 | |||||||||||
| Officials | 57 | |||||||||||
| Flag bearer | Opening: Brian Fowler Closing: Stephen Petterson  | 
|||||||||||
| Medals Rank: 8th  | 
Gold 5  | 
Silver 16  | 
Bronze 20  | 
Total 41  | 
||||||||
| Commonwealth Games history (summary) | ||||||||||||
| British Empire Games | ||||||||||||
| British Empire and Commonwealth Games | ||||||||||||
| British Commonwealth Games | ||||||||||||
| Commonwealth Games | ||||||||||||
New Zealand (abbreviated NZL) sent a team of 134 competitors and 57 officials to the 1994 Commonwealth Games, which were held in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The flagbearer at the opening ceremony was Brian Fowler, and at the closing ceremony was Stephen Petterson.
New Zealand has competed in every games, starting with the first British Empire Games in 1930 at Hamilton, Ontario. Selection is the responsibility of the New Zealand Olympic Committee.
Medals
| Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 16 | 20 | 41 | 
 
New Zealand was eighth in the medal table in 1994.
Gold
 Mark Rendell — Men's Road Race
 Katie Portas — Women's Singles Visually Impaired
 Lindsay Arthur and Stephen Petterson — Men's 50m Rifle Prone (Pairs)
 Stephen Petterson — Men's 50m Rifle Prone
 Danyon Loader — Men's 200m Butterfly
Silver
 Beatrice Faumuina — Women's Discus
 Kirsten Hellier — Women's Javelin
 Courtney Ireland — Men's Shot put
 Brian Fowler — Men's Road Race  
 Glen McLeay — Men's 10 Mile Scratch Race
 Jacqui Nelson — Women's Points Race
 Sarah Ulmer — Women's 3000m Individual Pursuit
 Gerd Barkman and Jocelyn Lees — Women's 10m Air Pistol (Pairs)
 Geoffrey Jukes and Brian Thomson — Open Skeet (Pairs)
 Julian Lawton and Greg Yelavich — Men's Free Pistol (Pairs)
 Geoffrey Smith — Fullbore Rifle Queen's Prize Open
 Trent Bray — Men's 200m Freestyle
 Trent Bray, Danyon Loader, John Steel and Nick Tongue — Men's 4x100m Freestyle Relay
 Trent Bray, Guy Callaghan, Danyon Loader and John Steel — Men's 4x200m Freestyle Relay
 Danyon Loader — Men's 400m Freestyle
 Anna Simcic — Women's 200m Backstroke
Bronze
 Gavin Lovegrove — Men's Javelin Throw
 Ben Lucas — Men's Marathon Wheelchair
 Scott Nelson — Men's 30km Road Walk
 Nick Hall — Men's Singles
 Rhona Robertson — Women's Singles
 Peter Belliss, Rowan Brassey, Stewart Buttar and Bruce McNish — Men's Fours
 Marlene Castle, Colleen Ferrick, Adrienne Lambert and Ann Muir — Women's Fours
 Craig Nolan — Men's Singles Visually Impaired
 Kalolo Fiaui — Men's 57-60kg (Lightweight)[1]
 Trevor Shailer — Men's 60-64kg (Light-Welterweight)
 Brendon Cameron, Julian Dean, Glen Thomson and Lee Vertongen — Men's 4000m Team Pursuit  
 Brian Fowler, Paul Leitch, Tim Pawson and Mark Rendell — Men's Team Time Trial
 Jacqui Nelson — Women's 3000m Individual Pursuit
 Donna Wynd — Women's Sprint
 Sarah Thompson — Women's Uneven Bars
 Paul Carmine — Men's 10m Running Target
 Greg Yelavich — Men's 10m Air Pistol
 Greg Yelavich — Men's 25m Centre Fire Pistol
 Danyon Loader — Men's 200m Freestyle
 Sean Tretheway — Men's 100m Freestyle
New Zealand Team
Athletics
- Craig Barrett
 - Chantal Brunner
 - Nyla Carroll
 - Phil Clode
 - Angus Cooper
 - Tania Dixon
 - Shaun Farrell
 - Beatrice Faumuina
 - Gavin Foulsham
 - Kay Gooch
 - Anne Hare
 - Kirsten Hellier
 - Joanne Henry
 - Courtney Ireland
 - Robbie Johnston
 - Christine King
 - Gavin Lovegrove
 - Ben Lucas
 - Linn Murphy
 - Scott Nelson
 - Augustine Nketia
 - Kaye Nordstrom
 - Tracy Phillips
 - Doug Pirini
 - Simon Poelman
 - Richard Potts
 - Michelle Seymour
 - Jonathan Wyatt
 
See also
- New Zealand Olympic Committee
 - New Zealand at the Commonwealth Games
 - New Zealand at the 1992 Summer Olympics
 - New Zealand at the 1996 Summer Olympics
 
References
- ↑  "Former champ accused of escape attempt". nzherald.co.nz. 17 April 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2012. 
Fiaui is far from his medal winning days - he won a bronze medal for New Zealand at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Canada
 
External links
  | ||||||
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 18, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.
