School House Magazine Spring/Summer 2018

Page 1

SPORT | FEATURE

A THOROUGHLY

MODERN SPORT Pentathlon, and its family of linked multi-sports, is giving traditional team sports a run for their money in independent schools, says Sally Jones s British doctor Stephanie Cook strode home, blonde ponytail flying, overtaking seven rivals to snatch gold in the inaugural women’s Modern Pentathlon at the Sydney Olympics in 2000, with teammate Kate Allenby taking bronze, it captivated a worldwide audience. Here, for the first time, were women excelling at this rugged multi-sport incorporating the five military-style disciplines of running, riding shooting, swimming and fencing; long considered the preserve of the ultimate (male) all-rounders. The sport garnered unrivalled publicity. GB men’s sides had already taken Olympic medals: gold in 1976 and bronze at Seoul in 1988, while the women have now won five medals, most recently individual silvers for Heather Fell at Beijing in 2008 and Samantha Murray at London in 2012. During the sport’s early days, most of its stars came from army backgrounds. This reflected the founder of the modern-day Olympics, Baron Pierre de Coubertin’s vision of a contest simulating the experience of a 19th-century cavalry soldier behind enemy lines: riding an unfamiliar horse, fighting foes with pistol and sword, then swimming and running to return to his own troops. Now, however, modern pentathlon, and its family of linked multi-sports, is becoming increasingly dynamic and professional. In 2009 the combined laser-run (competitors shooting down five targets with a laser pistol, followed by a run, a sequence completed four times. The first competitor home is the winner) replaced the old shooting and running sections to provide a thrilling finale. The exciting and accessible laser-run is becoming a popular event in its own right, with new recruits then trying other disciplines, such as modern

A

Joe Choong, a Whitgift School, Croydon pupil

58 | SCHOOLHOUSEMAGAZINE.CO.UK | Spring/Summer 2018

biathlon (swim and run) and modern pentathlon (swim, fence, ride and laser-run.) Independent schools are proving a major launch pad for future Olympians, with both their own pupils and others using their fine facilities and coaches. Although multi-sports seem more individualistic than traditional team games like hockey and rugby, there is a strong team element. Most pentathlon competitions involve national, club or school teams, as well as individual events and relays. Rossall School, Lancashire, where Steven Mason, who has competed internationally, heads the Pentathlon Academy and Community Club, launched in 2015, already boasts three national age-group titles, including the Under-17 team championship in modern triathlon (swimming and laser-run.) ‘We’re a good all-round sporting school,’ says Mason. ‘Kids come here on swimming scholarships or as fine rugby players, then some take up biathlon or triathlon which boosts their performance in other sports. We now get curriculum time to do laser-run shooting sessions in PE lessons and often the less athletic kids discover a real talent for it and develop their running to take part in laser-runs.’

‘Schools like mine give ambitious pentathletes the technique, discipline and time management skills that could mean an Olympic medal’

Spring/Summer 2018 | SCHOOLHOUSEMAGAZINE.CO.UK | 59


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