New Zealand at the 1998 Commonwealth Games

New Zealand (abbreviated NZL) sent a team of 217 competitors and 80 officials to the 1998 Commonwealth Games, which were held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The flagbearer at the opening ceremony was Graeme Miller, and at the closing ceremony Darren Liddel.

New Zealand at the
1998 Commonwealth Games
CGF codeNZL
CGANew Zealand Olympic Committee
Websitewww.olympic.org.nz
in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Competitors217
Flag bearersOpening: Graeme Miller
Closing: Darren Liddel
Officials80
Medals
Ranked 6th
Gold
8
Silver
6
Bronze
20
Total
34
Commonwealth Games appearances (overview)

New Zealand has competed in every games, starting with the first British Empire Games in 1930 at Hamilton, Ontario. Selection is the responsibility of the New Zealand Olympic Committee.

Medals edit

Gold Silver Bronze Total
  New Zealand 8 6 20 34


New Zealand was sixth in the medal table in 1998.

Gold edit

Athletics:

  Beatrice Faumuina — Women's Discus Throw

Cycling:

  Glen Thomson — Men's Track Points Race
  Sarah Ulmer — Women's Track Individual Pursuit (3000m)

Rugby sevens:

  Christian Cullen, Rico Gear, Jonah Lomu, Caleb Ralph, Roger Randle, Amasio Valence, Bruce Reihana, Eric Rush, Dallas Seymour, and Joeli Vidiri — Men's Sevens Team Competition

Shooting:

  Stephen Petterson — Men's 50m Rifle Prone

Weightlifting:

  Darren Liddel — Men's + 105kg (Clean & Jerk)
  Darren Liddel — Men's + 105kg (Snatch)
  Darren Liddel — Men's + 105kg (Total)

Silver edit

Cycling:

  Susy Pryde — Women's Individual Road Race
  Sarah Ulmer — Women's Track Points Race

Netball:

  Belinda Charteris, Belinda Colling, Julie Seymour, Sonya Hardcastle, Donna Loffhagen, Bernice Mene, Lesley Nicol, Anna Rowberry, Jo Steed, Lorna Suafoa, Noeline Taurua, and Linda Vagana — Women's Team Competition

Shooting:

  Tania Corrigan and Jocelyn Lees— Women's 10m Air Pistol (Pairs) - Women
  Tania Corrigan and Jocelyn Lees — Women's 25m Pistol (Pairs)
  Alan Earle and Jason Wakeling — Men's 25m Rapid Fire Pistol (Pairs)

Bronze edit

Athletics:

  Joanne Henry — Women's Heptathlon

Badminton:

  Rhona Robertson and Tammy Jenkins — Women's Doubles
  Geoff Bellingham, Chris Blair, Dean Galt, Anton Gargiulo, Nick Hall, Jarrod King, and Daniel Shirley — Men's Team

Boxing:

  Garth da Silva — Men's Heavyweight (- 91 kg)

Cricket:

  Geoff Allott, Nathan Astle, Mark Bailey, Matthew Bell, Chris Drum, Stephen Fleming, Chris Harris, Matt Horne, Dion Nash, Shayne O'Connor, Adam Parore, Craig McMillan, Alex Tait, Daniel Vettori, and Paul Wiseman — Men's Team Competition

Cycling:

  Tim Carswell — Men's Track 20km Scratch Race
  Brendon Cameron, Tim Carswell, Greg Henderson, and Lee Vertongen — Men's Track Team Pursuit (4000m)
  Greg Henderson — Men's Track Points Race

Gymnastics:

  David Phillips — Men's Floor

Field Hockey:

  Tina Bell-Kake, Helen Clarke, Jenny Duck, Emily Gillam, Sandy Hitchcock, Anna Lawrence, Robyn Toomey, Skippy Hamahona, Suzie Pearce, Moira Senior, Jenny Shepherd, Karen Smith, Mandy Smith, Kate Trolove, Lisa Walton, and Diana Weavers — Women's Team Competition

Lawn Bowls:

  Millie Khan — Women's Singles

Shooting:

  Des Coe — Men's Trap
  Tania Corrigan — Women's 10m Air Pistol
  Sally Johnston — Women's 50m Rifle Prone
  Greg Yelavich — Men's 10m Air Pistol

Swimming:

  Toni Jeffs — Women's 50m Freestyle
  Trent Bray, Scott Cameron, John Davis, and Danyon Loader — Men's 4x200m Freestyle Relay

Squash:

  Sarah Cook and Glen Wilson — Mixed Doubles

Weightlifting:

  Nigel Avery — Men's 105kg (Snatch)
  Nigel Avery — Men's 105kg (Total)

Cricket edit

Team Event Group stage Semifinal Final
Opposition
Score
Opposition
Score
Opposition
Score
Rank Opposition
Score
Opposition
Score
Rank
New Zealand Men's List-A   Kenya
W by 5 wickets
  Scotland
W by 177 runs
  Pakistan
W by 81 runs
1 Q   Australia
L by 9 wickets
  Sri Lanka
W by 51 runs
 

New Zealand Team edit

Athletics edit

Field Hockey edit

Men's Competition edit

Women's Competition edit


See also edit

External links edit