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Hlongwane and Makhanya made it in 2:57 and were in the first batch where Sbonelo "Eric" Zondi, also a Change a Life entrant, shared the winning prize with Andy Birkett.
The rest of the SAMSA Change a Life team members, Patrick Canham and Mmeli Ndimande, got in at 221 (3:44), Sifundo Gumede and Mhlonishwa Gcwensa came in at 190 with a time of 4:13, and Spamandla Shozi and Nduduzo Shozi came in at 342 (4:33). The group all come from the Inanda area and this was their first Dusi race.
The SAMSA Change a Life programme started with ten canoeists and today boasts 21 committed canoeists between the ages of 15 and 22 and group of about 12 Guppies (8-12 year old) who are showing promise of becoming well-trained canoeists in the near future. Eight qualified for the Dusi.
"These results are phenomenal. After only four months of training, these youngsters have achieved resounding success. It's not important where they fall on the pecking order. That they finished the race, that they survived it, intact, that they competed with up to 50 international canoeists, that they competed with 1,800 other professionals, is remarkable," SAMSA chief operating officer Sobantu Tilayi said.
"At SAMSA we wanted them to believe in themselves. We wanted them to understand that they would be able to have access to water sport. It was an epic moment when each of the teams completed the race. Their families were jubilant and proud of them. What we learnt from all this as is that we took school children, refused to allow them to ignore their studies, instilled discipline and allowed them realise their dreams."
Following the race this weekend, SAMSA will continue with the Change a Life programme under the leadership of seven times Dusi winner Martin Dreyer. As this has been a success in highlighting water sport and water safety, it will consider a more strategic role with the Dusi Marathon organisers itself.
Dreyer was equally pleased with his Change a Life team. "They had to attend school, do their chores at home, and walk many kilometres to the dam. But they were committed. The SAMSA programme was grassroots. People who never sat in a canoe before or held an oar battled against the odds to have a 100% success." Dreyer's next eye is on the Guppies to train them for the SA School Championships in April in Pretoria.
"But it does not mean that our Dusi canoeists will be forgotten. They will now train harder, and we will refocus our emphasis on other races," Dreyer said.