NZ Herald Focus Sport's Cheree Kinnear recaps New Zealand's first gold medal as a potentially historic day dawns on day eight. Video / NZ Herald
Emotions were high in Te Awamutu as family and friends watched Kiwi BMX racer and local Rebecca Petch make a “gutsy” comeback in her quarter-final BMX races today, going on to qualify for tomorrow’s semifinals.
Petch picked herself up after she went flying over her handlebars midway through her first race when her front wheel locked up.
Rebecca Petch's mother and father, Barry and Sonya Petch, celebrate her qualification for the semifinals. Photo / Caitlan Johnston
The devastation was clear among a room filled with her family and friends at Fahrenheit Restaurant in Te Awamutu who had gathered to watch her compete in her first Olympic Games.
She was coming third at the time of her crash and finished in fifth with a time of 2mins 01sec. Japanese rider Sae Hatakeyama also crashed and did not finish.
Hearts briefly dropped in the room as it appeared Petch may not have joined the line-up for her second race, but relief spread as she popped out of the other side of the pit ready to go.
Petch's mother, Sonya left devastated after watching her crash in the first race. Photo / Caitlan Johnston.
"I didn't see her come through the pits and when I saw that she wasn't up on the gate I was thinking she must be injured, but then she popped out the other side and she rode outstanding," says Barry Petch, Petch's father.
Her coach Matt Cameron, who is with her in Tokyo, reported back to the family that she was feeling 50/50 following her crash but was ready to get back out after some motivational words her mother, Sonya Petch, said.
"Well they worked," recalled Sonya after Petch finished in third place in her second race.