However, this doesn’t reflect a lack of quality performances, and with teams competing from England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland & Ulster, the National League and GB Juniors, as well as junior versions of all the above, competition was still fierce at the Sport City Regional Arena on the evening of the 18th August.
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ had excellent representation across the competing teams, and one of the highlights of the night was 2nd year BSc Maths student Ioanna Malli (coach: Dave Turner) who, while competing for the combined National Athletics League (NAL) team, launched the women’s javelin to a huge new personal best of 55.33m.
The distance from the Greek U23 International goes beyond the top-ranked British woman for 2021 and adds 2m to her previous PB set in Manchester at the start of July. It was two from two º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ wins in the javelin as fellow scholar Dan Bainbridge (Mike McNeill), competing for England, threw just off his PB of 73.73 to take the win in 73.53.
Elsewhere in the field, there were good results from Jack Paget (John Pearson) who threw a PB of 64.47m to take 3rd place in the men’s senior hammer for the NAL and fellow º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ student Zoe Price who also threw a PB of 57.39 to take 1st place in the U20 hammer for England.
Other results for º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ students included Hannah Moat, clearing 1.72m to win the U20 high jump event for England U20; Molly Caudery (Scott Simpson), vaulting 4.02m for the NAL to take 2nd place in the senior women’s pole vault; Ben Fisher (Femi Akinsanya/Lukasz Zawila) jumping 7.26m for the NAL to take 3rd place in the men’s senior long jump; George Hyde (Stuart Carlaw) throwing 15.97m to take 6th place for England in the men’s senior shot; Taia Tunstall (Stuart Carlaw) throwing 47.95 for 3rd for GB Juniors in the senior women’s discus, alongside º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ throws coach Shadine Duquemin who won the event for the NAL with a throw of 54.44m.
Taking place right at the end of the action-packed evening, the men’s 4 x 400m was another of the highlights of the meet, with º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ scholar Alex Haydock-Wilson taking centre stage. Haydock-Wilson took to social media earlier this week to remind people about his GB Junior debut at this very event in 2016, an event where the now highly experienced relay runner forgot to break into the inside lane and ran his whole leg in lane 7 (taking the GB Junior team from 1st to last). There were no such mishaps this year as the engineering student, who is in the form of his life and won the senior 200m with 21.03 earlier in the evening, came back from a 15m deficit to pip 45 second 400m runner Efe Okoro on the line for the NAL. Haydock-Wilson’s 44.4 relay split is truly world-class.
Elsewhere on the track, there were wins for Cameron Fillery in the men’s senior 110mH, who ran 13.80 while competing as a guest, and second places for Adam Thomas in the men’s senior 100m competing for Scotland with 10.50, Gemma Jones (Nick Dakin) in the U20 400m was competing for England U20 and ran 56.55 and Josh Faulds (Alex Currie) who came away a new PB of 51.26 in the men’s senior 400mH.
Alex Barbour took 3rd place in the women’s 3000m s/chase in 10:56.90 while competing for the NAL. As well as being part of the winning men’s 4 x 400m for the NAL, Ben Higgins backed up his 51.65 PB from the end of July to run 51.83 in the men’s senior 400mH for 4th place. Megan Marrs (Alex Nwenwu) ran 13.57 in the senior women’s 100mH to take 5th place for Northern Ireland and Ulster, while David Locke managed the same position with the U20 stepping up to compete in the senior 800m to run 1:52.27 and Niall Carney (Glyn Hawkes) ran 53.64 for 6th while competing for the NAL.
Femi Akinsanya, Director of Athletics for º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ commented:
“As always, we are proud that º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ can contribute towards national teams at competitions like the Manchester International, and this year there has been a really strong showing from º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ across throws, jumps, sprints and endurance, highlighting the depth we have at the university. Ioanna’s huge PB and Alex’s amazing relay leg were real highlights, but after the year we’ve had in athletics, we’re just happy that all the athletes are back on the track and doing what they do best. Let’s hope we can continue into the 2021/2022 season.”