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Darcy Hadfield
Inducted in 1990
The third of the single sculling elite New Zealand was able to boast before and after World War I, Hadfield could also claim an Olympic medal.
Sporting Category:
  • Rowing
He was a member of the first solely New Zealand team to go to an Olympics, in Antwerp in 1920, where he was third in the single sculls.

Two years later he challenged and beat Dick Arnst on the Whanganui River for the world professional title and lost it three months later to Australian Jim Paddon.

Hadfield’s career, which began with national rowing titles in 1911, had been interrupted by World War I, during which he was wounded at Passchendaele.

He had also been invalided out of the trenches because of bronchitis.

Hadfield won the singles at the Henley Peace Regatta in 1919 and at the Inter-Allied Games in Paris same year, he also won the single sculls and was awarded a gold watch as one of the two outstanding competitors at the Games.
 

Sporting Spotlight

Cecil Matthews

(1914 - 1987)

There could have been no greater praise for Matthews than to be dubbed “the Nurmi of the Empire” after the great Finn, Paavo Nurmi, who dominated middle and long-distance running in the 1920s.
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