Anna Pasquali and women in the pro’s

Anna Pasquali

Professional athletics, like most of the sporting world, took a while to catch on.

Female sport is a hot topic. With the AFL women’s league, Women’s Big Bash cricket and a revamped national netball competition grabbing prime time TV coverage, women in sport has taken center stage.

From an athletics perspective, society has come a long way since the heady days of 1967 when Katrine Switzer ran the Boston marathon. With women banned from running, Switzer was attacked by race officials in an attempt to stop her finishing.

Switzer made it to the end and in the process ended the ludicrous thinking that females couldn’t run 42 kilometers.

Long the domain of men, professional athletics in Australia has seen very little in the way of female participation. Until the mid-90s, it was rare to see a female run.

Long-time stalwart of the Victorian Athletic League, Barry Milligan, was forced to think long and hard to find any reference to females starting in the sport.

“There was a lady by the name of Nicky Coughlan that ran for a while in the 80s. This of course is only in Victoria, I have no idea what may have happened in the other states”, Barry said.

“As best I know, Anne Fiedler was the first to win an open race at Stawell, when she won the Frontmarkers 400m in 2001. Kendra Hubbard was also the first to win an open Gift (Melbourne Gift) in late 2008”.

Whilst Anne Fiedler and Kendra Hubbard continue to race on the circuit, the retired Nicky Coughlan is considered the pioneer for women running professionally in Australia.

She was an oddity. Lining up against the men in the late ‘80s, she was a lone female flying the flag for women in pro sprinting.

“I trained with Neil King and a lot of his group ran pro. I asked whether I could try”, Nicky said.

The 57 year old teacher has fond memories of the sport, with this year’s Stawell Gift marking the 30th anniversary of her first race at Central Park.

“I first ran at Stawell in the ‘87 season and I loved it. I was on the limit and didn’t do very well but it was a great weekend”.

Not wanting to become the pin up girl for feminism in pro running, Nicky is matter of fact about the sport and her involvement.

“I must admit I didn’t really think too much about it. I just wanted to run”, she said.

“Most of the men were really good but I did have a few issues with some runners who thought I shouldn’t be running, it was nothing serious”.

“I didn’t have a lot of success against the guys but I did win a heat of the 70 meters at Rye which was a highlight”.

Coughlan breached the frontier that was the male dominated Victorian Athletic League, and whilst not celebrated, clearly led the way for women racing pro today.

Nicky Coughlan

“At first the only women you would see at race meetings were the girlfriends or wives of the athletes. When more girls started racing they introduced women’s races, so I didn’t have to run against the men. I ended up winning a few ladies races and it was a great time in my life”.

Women’s races were finally introduced into the Stawell Gift program in 1989 with female sprinters forced to run on the novice or “alternate” track, and for a pittance.

Things have changed. This year, 131 women, racing in 17 heats, bolted down the premier ‘Gift’ track. A long way from the lone female who took to the blocks in 1987.

The Stawell Gift often throws up great stories. It’s been the same for over 135 years and 2017 was no different.

You only need cast your eyes to Men’s Gift winner Matt Rizzo as an example. Perhaps even Kendra Hubbard coming second in the Open 200 metres might take your fancy. What about the win by evergreen Evan King in the 100m Masters as a terrific tale?

All three are great yarns no doubt, but one story from the 2017 Stawell Gift stands out.

Wangaratta’s Anna Pasquali is a mother of three. Married to the sport, and husband Wally, she epitomizes professional athletics.

Tall and slender, with a classic running style, the 38 year old balances life as a mother and a career as a physiotherapist, with professional athletics.

I am sure she won’t mind me saying, that amongst a generation of teenagers that now dominate the sport, she is almost a dinosaur. With 18 professional wins in a 20 year running career, she has had her share of success, a win at Stawell had eluded her though.

With little time for anything else, Anna is popular, easy going and always up for a chat. She has been trying to crack a win at Stawell since 1997.

Stawell, the small quant town in country Victoria, has a habit of leaving the bitter taste of disappointment to most who race. Until this year it was the same for Anna.

“I have two losses I still struggle with. In 2004, I crossed the line with Kimberly Meagher in the final of the women’s 400m. I knew it was really close. Immediately the TV crew came over to me, put the sponsors hat on my head. Wally was there with my training squad congratulating me. Within a minute, they had decided Kim had won it, so off came the hat and away went the TV crew”.

“The other big disappointment was of course running second to Grace O’Dwyer in 2015. In some ways I shouldn’t be, but how could you not be somewhat upset in the first ever 120m women’s at Stawell, where equal prizemoney was at stake”.

2015 was the first time that women had parity, and with prizemoney increasing from $6,000 to $60,000, competition was fierce.

For Anna, her cool reflection of the race is probably the best indication of why she is so well liked on the circuit.

“If I was going to come second to anyone, I’m glad it was Grace. Wally and I both have the upmost respect for Peter O’Dwyer, her father and coach”.

Two decades in the making, when she finally breasted the tape first in the women’s 400 metres, it was stylish, classy and downright inspiring.

“To win this is like a dream come true. After 20 years and eight Stawell finals, I had finally reached my goal”, she said.

Trained by Stawell Hall of Famer, Greg O’Keeffe and in an event that takes a touch over 50 seconds, it was a dominant performance.

Running off the mark of 40 metres, in a race that went perfectly to plan, Anna took control early and finished almost two seconds ahead of second place runner Kim McDonough.

The Pasquali family, in many ways, sum up professional athletics.

Anna met her husband Wally in the sport, and his rather romantic courtship, proof that this was the picture perfect pro couple.

“We met on Easter Saturday 2002 when a girlfriend and I ran at Stawell. In typical 23 year old style we had nowhere to stay. Wally and his mate Clint Youlden, also a pro runner, had a spare room in their two bedroom cabin. So we bunked in with them, and the rest is history”, she said.

Anna Pasquali and family

It was a pro running love story with a fairy-tale ending.

“He proposed to me three years later on good Friday 2005, out the front of the Central Park gates”.

Now with three kids in tow, for the popular couple, it has been a match made in heaven.

Almost like a rite of passage, the Stawell Gift is about family and tradition.

Like the Pasquali family, generations make the trek to Stawell every Easter to celebrate a sport engrained in Australian culture. For Anna, its life.

“An Easter without Stawell is like a Christmas without Santa! We love the build-up, the excitement, the betting, the Friday night drill hall and the memories we have accumulated since Wally and I met in 2002”.

“Now the kids get to race, that only adds to our excitement”.

With the first page written by Nicky Coughlan, Anna Pasquali is another chapter in the growing story about female professional sprinters in Australia.

Things have changed for females in the sport no doubt, and with a long apprenticeship served, Anna, like Nicky Coughlan before her, has earned a place in Stawell Gift history.

The heartbreak of the Stawell Gift

True Colours – The people of Pro Running

Bill Sutton, Todd Ireland and Tim Mason.

As we inch towards the Easter Stawell Gift, thoughts of great winners come to mind.

George McNeil, Ravelo, Capobianco, Edmonson, Howard and Ross, are names that easily roll off the tongue as outstanding winners of the great race.

A source of constant debate, rarely will two people agree on who was the greatest winner.

Stawell Gift winners are immortalised. Even today when commercial sporting giants like the AFL dominate sport, the winner of the Gift is lauded on news broadcasts and broadsheets. People take notice of Stawell Gift winners, and rightly so.

It got me thinking. What about those that almost made it? The runners that were great in their own right but finished just short of the greatest prize in professional running. People like Bill Sutton, Todd Ireland and Tim Mason.

All three were super-fast, superb professional athletes, and all three men tell a story of heartache in a sport that gives you very few chances.

I can’t remember Bill Sutton not being at a pro race meeting. Most runners these days know him as a race starter.

The 75 year old is a jovial sort, the type that tends to calm runners before races with a well-placed joke and an easy word.

Bill Sutton was born to run and he has been in the trenches of professional footrunning for almost 60 years.

Bill Sutton

From Mendini near Broken Hill, in NSW, Bill ran in bare feet for his first 15 or 16 years. Running around a sheep and cattle station he didn’t know anything about running shoes, let alone spikes.

Back in the day, when men with money were on the lookout for anyone with speed, Bill was spotted after winning pro races at Gymkhana events in country NSW.

Asked to trial in Broken Hill against a local speedster, in bare feet and a standing start, Bill bolted in.

“I hadn’t trained at all before trialling with those guys. I ran in bare feet because I didn’t have shoes. I didn’t have a clue what Sweeny’s were or anything’, he said.

“I ran for fun but that day things changed for me”, he recalled.

Trained by Bill Botel and Henry McIntyre, Sutton moved to Melbourne in 1961 and took to pro racing like a duck to water, and it wasn’t long before he was raising the eyebrows of the handicappers.

In 1962 and running off a handicap of Five and 3\4 yards, and under instructions from his coaches, his performances were strangely up and down. Quick heat times were followed by slower semi finals.

After an inconsistent performance in the Bendigo Gift, in order for Sutton to keep his handicap mark, the stewards gave Sutton’s handlers some advice.

It was advice that they didn’t heed, and it’s a decision that irks Sutton to this day.

“There were a couple of races where I ran well in the heats but lost time in the semis and the stewards were a bit tired of that. They told my trainers to let me win a race and then wait for Stawell, and my mark will be held”.

“They didn’t want me to race everywhere, continue to do what I was doing and make them look stupid”, he said.

“Well my two trainers thought they knew better and raced me everywhere. I mean I was 18 or 19, how could I say anything, I was just doing what I was told.”

“I was badly handled by two guys who got excited that they had a good runner”, Sutton said, the disappointment still obvious.

“The handicappers thought I had shit on them but I was just a kid doing what I was told”

“I ended up getting to Stawell in 1962, and my mark was four and 1\4 yards. I had lost one and half yards.”

The Stawell Gift in 1962 was won by Leonard Beachley, with Jeff Thomson second and Bill Sutton an agonizingly close third. Sutton’s loss was measured in inches.

“It sticks in my guts to this very day”, he said.

Sutton ended up winning 31 professional races in distances from 70 through to 400 metres. In 1963 he won both the 200 and the backmarkers 120 yards at Stawell, and some say he still holds an unofficial Australian 300 metre record, in a time somewhere south of 30 seconds.

Bill’s blistering speed saw him get a contract to play Rugby League with North Sydney before injuring himself in a trial game, and whilst having a running career others envied, it’s the Stawell Gift that haunts him, 55 years later.

Melbourne athletes Tim Mason and Todd Ireland both fell short in the same race, 28 years after Sutton.

In a Stawell final said to be one of the best ever, Dean Capobianco launched himself into athletic immortality with his win in the 1990 Gift.

Much has been said about Capobianco but very little has been written about those that lost that day.

Todd Ireland is a legend of the sport. He has made a record 14 Stawell semi-finals and three Stawell Gift finals.

1990 was his best chance, and like Sutton, he finished third.

A member of the Stawell Gift hall of Fame, Ireland grew up with visions of winning at Stawell. Whilst others looked to amateur success, he had a firm focus on Central Park in the small Victorian country town.

“When I was 16 or 17, I was training with guys who wanted to win national titles. For me, nobody remembers who won national titles but everybody remembers who won the Stawell Gift”.

In 1990 after running 12.07 in his heat, the Gary Barker trained Ireland, went into the 1990 final as equal favourite with Tim Mason.

The lightly framed Ireland faced a headwind in the final which seemed to suit the big striding, well-built Dean Capobianco.

“I was trained to the minute but it was unlucky that perhaps the conditions didn’t suit me. They probably didn’t suit Tim as well”, he recalled.

“I liked a wind blowing behind me and in the final we faced a headwind. A headwind suited a big strong runner like Capo”.

“Sometimes the running gods are with you and sometimes they aren’t, that day they weren’t with me”.

Todd Ireland

Ireland went on to win 15 or 16 pro races, with wins in classic’s like Bendigo, Burnie, Wangaratta and Maryborough Gifts. He also won the 200 Metres at Stawell in 2011.

“Looking back, I became a better athlete because of the loss. In reality I was beaten by a better runner, although I admit it did hurt. I couldn’t watch the replay for 12 months afterwards”, he said.

Currently on the board of the Victorian Athletic League, Ireland still runs when he can but his focus is the future of the sport and coaching a squad of young athletes, which include his sons Jake and Darcy.

“I don’t have any real regrets, sure I wanted to win but I don’t think about it much, my main focus is on the runners I coach and maybe I can help them win a few big races”.

For the easy going Tim Mason, he remembers the money that they didn’t get, after the 1990 Stawell Gift.

Trained by current Sprint handicapper Graeme Goldsworthy, Mason strangely laughs when he recalled that close to $50,000 in winning bets went begging after running second to Capobianco.

“It wasn’t just the prizemoney that we missed but it was what we lost in the betting ring. Goldy gave me the betting slips a while ago and they are now filed away in the scrap book. I will look at them if I ever want to get depressed”, he said with a chuckle.

“Initially you are disappointed, it’s something you think about when you’re young. You train hard and it becomes your focus for a few years”.

“There’s a photo in book called Capturing the Moment by Bruce Postle. It has Capobianco crossing the line with his hands in the air. Myself and Todd Ireland look devastated. That sums it up”.

For Mason, pro athletics gave him a unique view on sport, and something not many individual sports can provide.

“I enjoyed the thrill of the punt. When you and your stable think you’re a chance, it adds to the mystique of the sport. I also really loved being part of a stable, the mates and everything that comes with pro running”.

In a career that saw him make two Stawell Gift finals, he eventually won four pro races and he has fond affiliation with Bendigo.

“I made the 1992 Stawell Gift final as well but I wasn’t really a chance. My highlights both came at Bendigo. The Bendigo Gift was my first win in the pros’ and the Bendigo 400m was a highlight because of the circumstances, and the 50 minute inquiry by the stewards after the race”.

Tim Mason

Similar to Ireland, Mason sees his future in helping the sport. With daughter Georgia just starting out in professional athletics, Mason has also started work on reigniting the Parkdale Gift for season 2018 and looking to give up and coming athletes more opportunity to race.

There have been some fantastic races at Stawell over the years and usually the winner of the gift is a memorable one.

There can only be one winner and for the others there is always next year. For Bill Sutton, Todd Ireland and Tim Mason, there is no next year, and whilst losing on the biggest stage, unlike most of us, at least they were there.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Exum you may not have heard about…..

tierra-exum

After playing a full season in his rookie NBA year, Aussie basketball star Dante Exum, spent the entire 2015\16 season watching from the stands with a knee injury.

At the same time as he was sitting on the sidelines reading the game day program, another Exum family member took the spotlight.

Tierra Exum, took centre stage and exploded onto the sporting scene in 2016.

The 21 year old twin sister of the Utah Jazz star, burst onto the professional athletics scene on New Year’s Day, by winning the Open 70 metre sprint at the Maryborough Gift meeting.

She finished the season in spectacular fashion when flashing home to get second in the rich Stawell Women’s Gift last April, missing the winners cheque by a mere 0.02 seconds.

Tierra is easy to like. She laughs a lot and has an open demeanour.

Strong, athletic and determined, the daughter of former National Basketball League Star Cecil Exum, is forging a name for herself away from basketball, in one of Australia’s oldest sports.

With personal goals that involve more field than track, Tierra sees triple jump as her preferred option but admits to loving running as a ‘pro’.

The former gymnast, turned triple jumper\sprinter, has set her sights high, and is using professional athletics as a springboard to further her  triple jump career.

“My goal is to one day make an Australian Commonwealth Games team and represent Australia in the triple jump”, she said.

Introduced to professional sprinting by her coach, she sees ‘pro racing’ as an important step in her development as a triple jumper.

“Pro running is great for my speed, it’s helping me with my triple jump and I really enjoy the racing”, she said.

With a history borne from the goldfields of Victoria in the 1800s and raced mostly on grass, under handicap conditions, ‘pro’ sprinting is unique to Australia and Scotland.

As is the case for successful professional athletes, winning in the Victorian Athletic League has its benefits.

Opposed to amateur athletics, where winners are awarded medals, professional athlete’s race for prize money.

“The money is great and it not only helps me with all the expenses associated with being an athlete but it helps pay for my mobile phone bill”, she laughed.

Like most ‘pro athletes’, early in the season she took aim at the worlds richest professional sprint race, the Stawell Women’s Gift. Unlike most pro athletes though, she almost took home the win.

History says she came a close second in the event to 15 year old Talia Martin.

In one of professional athletics most controversial victories, Martin from Ballarat, had to face the stewards after her rapid improvement.

Said to have improved more in two weeks, than most athletes improve in a lifetime, Talia was given a $2000 fine.

Racing under handicap conditions, it’s a requirement that all athletes run to their full potential in every race. With starting handicaps based on race performances, handicappers judge an athlete based on times and results.

Like the Melbourne Cup in horse racing, poorer performers are given improved handicaps, or better chances to win.

For Tierra it was exciting to be placed in the biggest female race of the year but admitted that the eventual winner was somewhat unexpected.

“It was a great race and I almost got there. Talia had a great race but usually you know who will be your main competition and she was a surprise for sure”.

With money being wagered in the bookies ring, the Stawell Gift has thrown up many ‘smokies’ and surprises over the years.

Offering equal prize money of $60,000 for both the men’s and women’s Gift, Stawell remains a much sought after ‘jewel’ in the professional athletics crown.

For Tierra Exum, the Stawell Gift will continue to be a goal, and at only 21 years of age, she has time on her side.