• About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Podcasts
  • Digital Magazine
NZBusiness Magazine

Type and hit Enter to search

Linkedin Facebook Instagram Youtube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
NZBusiness Magazine
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability
EventsNews

Pōhiri welcomes Crankworx 2022 to Rotorua

Kiwi fave Sam Blenkinsop kickstarts the festival and Kiwi domination with DH win in famed Redwoods. A traditional Māori welcome, iconic Kiwi track, real fruit ice cream, trail doggos, good […]

Glenn Baker
Glenn Baker
November 7, 2022 4 Mins Read
966

Kiwi fave Sam Blenkinsop kickstarts the festival and Kiwi domination with DH win in famed Redwoods.

A traditional Māori welcome, iconic Kiwi track, real fruit ice cream, trail doggos, good vibes, and real quick humans all came together to kick off Crankworx Rotorua 2022, reminding the world of one thing that’s abundantly clear: New Zealand knows how to bring the vibes to mountain biking. Several of the world’s best lined up for this classic Rotorua race, but it was the Kiwi locals who came out on top.

Athletes and organisers were invited to attend a pōhiri (traditional welcome) at Te Puia, home to the New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute on Sunday after a day of fierce competition. Local iwi and mana whenua representatives gathered to welcome international Crankworx riders and visitors to the event and the region. Darren Kinnaird, Managing Director of the Crankworx World Tour acknowledged the 8 beating hearts of Te Arawa.

“We are honoured that you welcome us so that our hearts may beat in time with yours.”

“I just love how our people welcome manuhiri – with acknowledgements of all the factors that contribute to the cause, and with karakia and waiata to put minds and hearts at ease. We all have such a big week ahead of us and the opening gets us all set on the right trajectory for the moments that are to come.” said Ariki Tibble, Crankworx Rotorua Event Director.

Tere Panuku was the te reo Māori name bestowed on the festival by Kingi Biddle, Pūkenga Mātauranga Māori (Māori Knowledge Specialist), in 2020. It translates to: to glide, soar and rise. After a big day of racing under riders’ belts, “Tere Panuku” can well and truly be considered on.

The Crankworx Rotorua Taniwha Downhill track described by Crankworx Downhill Manager Dave Hamilton as “well known in NZ as the OG!” welcomed 184 racers, pro and amateur, to the Whakarewarewa Forest – the only event held in the forest as the festival now moves the epic racing action to Skyline Rotorua. The event was free for Rotorua locals and spectators to attend as fans were fizzed to return to the festival for the first time since March 2020.

“It was probably the biggest amount of people I’ve seen out watching in the Redwoods. It was pretty awesome.” said Blenkinsop.

This year’s track is 2.3 kilometers long, with an elevation drop of 320 meters, the Taniwha DH features a mix of tight technical sections, slick roots, high speed drops, jumps, and full on gnar with one section seeing riders hit speeds around 60km/hr. New this year, the sprint to the line featured a motorway section resembling a supercross straight rhythm of doubles, whoops and steep on/offs. The last steep section resembles a tree stump graveyard and shoots riders into two gap jumps.

“High speed, high risk, high adrenaline. Such fun…” added Hamilton.

Just like the ongoing battle over who created the pavlova, it was a real Kiwi vs Aussie showdown in the first event of the festival. Christchurch local and crowd favourite Sam Blenkinsop won the men’s final with the fastest time of the day and a commanding lead, over three seconds ahead of Australia’s Jackson Frew. Hawkes Bay local Brook MacDonald took third in his first Crankworx event of the year against fellow Kiwi Matt Walker.

“Obviously it’s awesome to win and to win by a pretty good margin. I feel good. It’s just good to be back home in New Zealand and riding Rotorua. I’ve grown up racing here. This was my first Nationals race, racing here and did well, so it’s always cool to come race in Rotorua. The dirt’s amazing, you just have fun riding your bike.” Said Blenkinsop.

“I think anyone that comes to Rotorua has a good time riding. It was kind of cool how the format was, we had lots of time this morning. So, I was out on my e-bike, riding all the trails. Every time I come here there are so many new trails. We’re pretty lucky here in Rotorua, and everywhere in New Zealand now. Just how the trails are evolving.  It’s awesome. And like I said, it’s cool to win.”

The competition was no different on the women’s side. Although Aussie Sian A’Hern clocked the fastest time of the day for the pro women, Rotorua local and Junior Women’s DH World Champion Jenna Hastings who lives just five minutes from the Whakarewarewa Forest did not go down without a fight landing second place in front of friends and family. Hastings earned some serious mana at Crankworx Rotorua 2021, landing herself on the podium in every race she competed in. Will she do it again in 2022?

Results – Taniwha DH

  1. Sam Blenkinsop (NZL) 2:44.114 // Sian A’Hern (AUS) 3:11.372
  2. Jackson Frew (AUS) 2:47.479 // Jenna Hastings (NZL) 3:16.751
  3. Brook MacDonald (NZL) 2:48.143 // Marth Gill (GBR) 3:23.995

Full results: crankworx.com/results/

Standings – King and Queen of Crankworx

As the final of four Crankworx World Tour stops, Crankworx’s top all-round athletes are in hot pursuit of King and Queen points at Crankworx Rotorua.

Blenkinsop’s win today pushes him up to fourth in the overall standings, while Jackson Frew’s second place finish pushes him into third. Bas van Steenbergen finished his day in sixth, which adds to his points stash as he sits at the pointy end in first.

The women’s results don’t shuffle, but tighten up, with the top three remaining the same. Jordy Scott sits in first, one point ahead of Vaea Verbeeck, and Caroline Buchanan close behind in third. Scott finished eighth today, Verbeeck fifth, and Buchanan 10th.

Current standings: crankworx.com/results/series/2022-king-queen/

Festival passes are still on sale for Crankworx Rotorua 2022. Do not miss your chance to rub shoulders with the world’s mountain biking Elite and watch them race right on your doorstep. For additional information and to purchase tickets, visit crankworx.com 

Share Article

Glenn Baker
Follow Me Written By

Glenn Baker

Glenn is a professional writer/editor with 50-plus years’ experience across radio, television and magazine publishing.

Other Articles

Christmas keyboard
Previous

How to manage a Christmas work party

Shannon Barlow_Frog Recruitment
Next

Survey: Who is the fairest worker of them all?

Next
Shannon Barlow_Frog Recruitment
November 7, 2022

Survey: Who is the fairest worker of them all?

Previous
November 2, 2022

How to manage a Christmas work party

Christmas keyboard

Subscribe to our newsletter

NZBusiness Digital Issue – March 2025

READ MORE

The Latest

From redundancy to resilience

May 16, 2025

Episode 16: Bryce Marsden on sustainable impact through education, youth and environment

May 15, 2025

The high cost of leadership neglect

May 14, 2025

Why making Auckland a Tech Hub makes sense

May 14, 2025

Is AI making us happier? Why some Kiwi leaders would trade coffee for Generative AI

May 13, 2025

Step back to move forward – how Kiwi business owners can unlock growth

May 12, 2025

Most Popular

NZBusiness Digital Issue – June 2024
Understanding AI
Navigating economic headwinds: Insights for SME owners
How much AI data is generated every 60 seconds? New report reveals global AI use
Nourishing success: Sam Bridgewater on his entrepreneurship journey with The Pure Food Co

Related Posts

Final speaker lineup announced for Ignite ‘25 Growth Summit

April 30, 2025

New data reveals why Kiwi SMEs are borrowing

April 28, 2025
Lilah McDonald WaterUs

Teenage social entrepreneur on a mission to install 100 drinking fountains

April 24, 2025

SME confidence climbs as economic outlook turns positive, survey

April 14, 2025
NZBusiness Magazine

New Zealand’s leading source for business news, training guides and opinion from small businesses to multi-national corporations.

© Pure 360 Limited.
All Rights Reserved.

Quick Links

  • Advertise with us
  • Magazine issues
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Sitemap

Categories

  • News
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Education & Development
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability

Follow Us

LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Self Development
  • Growth
  • Finance
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Sustainability