Triathlon CEO Honoured With SPARC Award
Triathlon CEO Honoured With SPARC Award
Triathlon New Zealand CEO Dave Beeche was last night honoured with the Leadership Award at the annual SPARC Sector Awards Evening, one he accepted on behalf of his all stakeholders in the sport of Triathlon.
It was a proud Beeche who accepted the award from Minister of Sport Murray McCully last night, and he was quick to acknowledge the team at Tri NZ and the wider triathlon community.
“I am incredibly honoured and humbled by this award and would like to say thanks to SPARC for the effort they have put into recognising various achievements in the sport sector. In my view, leadership is about surrounding yourself with good people and I have been very lucky to have such a supportive and helpful chair and Board, as well as an inspirational and passionate team to work with. Triathlon is on a journey and I feel like while we have come a long way in the past 4 years, however we still have a long way to go to realise the full potential of our exciting sport.
“Leadership roles in the sector are not easy, particularly managing the demands of a wide variety of stakeholders, but these big challenges come with equally big rewards, and the one that stands out for me is the quality of people involved in the sector who achieve some amazing outcomes at the coal face of sport. These people make this an inspirational job to work in and I am grateful for having been given the opportunity to work in sport.”
Tri NZ President Garry Boon is delighted for Beeche, but also sees it as recognition for the incredible growth the sport has fostered in recent years.
“Dave has been a tireless worker for this sport and all who take part in it. He has overseen an amazing four years of huge change and rapid growth, at all times steering the ship on the right course and on a few occasions taking the lead in changing that course for the better.
“Dave talks about his wonderful team at Tri NZ and the incredible support the sport receives from a dedicated volunteer and participant community, all of which is true. But as CEO he has set the tone, he has indeed shown great leadership to position triathlon as one of the SPARC recognized high performance sports but also the country’s fastest growing participation sports, we are proud to have him as our CEO.”
SPARC and the judges recognised the quality of the nominations in the Leadership category when making their remarks about Beeche;
The judges said this
proved the most difficult category to decide but they also
felt that experiencing such difficulty in deciding on a
winner was a good problem to have as it showed how many
outstanding individuals there were leading in the sport and
recreation sector. They said Beeche was an outstanding
leader who was passionate about his sport, which was now one
of the fastest growing sports in the country. He was a
mentor to other leaders in the sector.
Including Lifetime Achievement Awards, other awards
presented were:
The Innovation Award –
Festival of Squash – Squash New Zealand
The
judges said the organisers of the tournament had done
something completely different by putting a glass squash
court in the middle of Mt Maunganui’s Bayfair Shopping
Centre to quite literally bring the sport to the public.
Thirteen of the world’s top 20 players took part in the
tournament, entertaining spectators and shoppers
alike.
The Event Excellence Award –
100% Pure New Zealand Winter Games – Winter Games New
Zealand
The judges said the organisation behind
this world class event was meticulous. They noted that the
Winter Games was the first of its kind, was started from
scratch and put New Zealand on the map. The Winter Games
were endorsed by international sports bodies, 816
competitors attended from 41 countries, there was a global
television audience of 765 million and the event posted a
surplus.
The Project Collaboration
Award – Community Swim
John Walker FIND YOUR
FIELD OF DREAMS Foundation (FYFOD); Manukau Leisure Services
(MLS); Manukau City Council (MCC); Counties Manukau Sport
(CMS); WaterSafe Auckland.
The judges said the
organisers of the Community Swim project believed that it
was every child’s right to learn to swim. They had a
vision about providing school children in Manukau with free
swimming lessons and they had made it happen. The community
had been fully involved, and there had been anecdotal
evidence that truancy levels were down on the days the buses
turned up to take the children to their swimming
lessons.
The Commercial Partnership Award –
BikeNZ and RaboPlus
The judges said BikeNZ had
been very clever about overcoming the tradition of
membership when creating its RideStrong on-line cycling
community and had formed a partnership with RaboPlus which
went beyond dollars. The benefits to both partners were
outstanding and provided an example for how others in the
sector could similarly succeed.
Lifetime Achievement Awards:
Graeme Dingle
Graeme Dingle ONZM MBE is an
inspiring adventurer, author and community leader. His
passion for mountaineering and the outdoors has taken him on
numerous adventures including in New Zealand, Europe and the
Himalayas. He turned his passion for the outdoors into a
career and was a founding member of the Sir Edmund Hillary
Outdoors Pursuit Centre and the Foundation for Youth
Development (formerly Project K). He is a member of the Sir
Edmund Hillary Outdoor Recreation Council (SEHORC) which
advises SPARC on issues relating to recreation. He has
received numerous awards including the MBE for service to
outdoor pursuits. He is a recipient of the United States
National Science Foundation’s Antarctic Service Award, is
a recipient of the Governor General’s Award for Mountain
Rescue and he is an Officer of the New Zealand Order of
Merit.
Dave Gerrard
Dave Gerrard
OBE CNZM is a former Olympic Games swimming representative
(he specialised in butterfly) and Commonwealth Games gold
and bronze medalist. After he retired from competition,
Gerrard gained a doctorate in medicine. He is highly
regarded in the field of sports medicine and has been team
doctor at several Commonwealth Games and Olympic Games. He
was chef de mission at the 1994 Commonwealth Games and at
the 1996 Summer Olympics. In 1996, he was awarded the OBE
for services to medicine and sport. In 2007, he was made a
Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit.
SPARC is the government agency charged with promoting, encouraging and supporting sport and physical recreation in New Zealand. For more information, visit www.sparc.org.nz.
ENDS