He might be the mayor of Tauranga now, but Mahé Drysdale is still one of Waipā’s best Olympians.
His two gold – won at London and Rio de Janeiro – and a bronze medal from Beijing were among the star attractions at the Waipā Fun Festival at Cambridge Velodrome on Sunday.
World champion paralympian Devon Briggs, 20, who leaves today (Thursday) for Paris was another and he hopes his outstanding form this year carries through onto a track he knows well when the Paralympics start later this month.
Briggs has been an interested observer of the Olympics thus far although when The News spoke to him, racing had not started at the Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines Velodrome, where he first raced two years ago.
“It’s a really nice track. It’s similar to home, it’s made by the same people, it’s a metre higher with a little bit more steepness in the bankings so it means it’s going to be a really fast, hot track.”
So, the hand-laid Siberian spruce pine French track will be as familiar to him as the one in Cambridge where Briggs first started cycling a decade ago.
The one he and Waipā mayor Susan O’Regan – she complete with racing lycra – rode around on a racing tandem bike.
“I closed my eyes when we went up those banks,” said O’Regan. “But I put my trust in him.”
Earlier she and Drysdale competed against each other on trikes in the Velodrome’s infield with O’Regan the victor aided by a spot of help from her husband John Hayward who held the Olympian back at the start.
And then they swapped local politician talk – annual plans, Three Waters and the next Local Government NZ conference – before Drysdale headed off for his first week in the job as Tauranga mayor.
The morning was a big success with the cycle stand at the front of the Velodrome full and plenty for the children to do inside including erg tests, BMX demonstrations, have-a-go sessions and a fan art station.