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Rotorua Flying Officer to row in a historic race at Henley Regatta

3 min readJul 2, 2019
Flying Officer Connor Broughton can’t wait to compete for the New Zealand Defence Force rowing team in the King’s Cup race at the Henley Royal Regatta. Photo: Vera Bucsu | Art of Rowing NZ

Royal New Zealand Air Force Flying Officer Connor Broughton chose flying over rowing when he left Rotorua’s John Paul College, so he’s rapt to be combining the two as part of the New Zealand Defence Force King’s Cup squad.

It’s 100 years since six nations — New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and France — competed for the Cup as troops waited to return home after the First World War.

This year those six nations will be joined by Germany and The Netherlands to race for the Cup as part of the Henley Royal Regatta at Henley-on-Thames in England from 5–7 July.

The NZDF rowing eight training at Lake Karapiro.

It will be the first time men and women have raced in the same boat at the elite, international event — something Flying Officer Broughton is embracing.

“I think it’s fantastic that it’s a mixed boat,” he said. “You need a balance in all organisations, men and women, and times are definitely changing for the better.”

Flying Officer Broughton grew up in Rotorua, where mother Paula is a cardiac clinical nurse specialist and father Evan a firefighter. Sister Olivia is a police officer in Rotorua, while brother Jack works with a dive company in Australia.

Flying Officer Broughton joined the RNZAF after finishing at John Paul College, where he was a rower and a prefect.

“I talked to a few coaches at universities in the United States with a view to getting into study over there and getting into rowing,” he said.

“But I’ve always wanted to be a pilot, so that took precedence over rowing.”

He hasn’t done any rowing for the past three years, focusing solely on becoming a pilot, so jumped at the opportunity to try out when he found out about the King’s Cup.

“It’s not just joining a rowing team — it’s joining a rowing team for a big event. I have

put in the hard work in training and will hope for the best in the race,” he said.

“Both the regatta and the race are rich in tradition and to be in the place of the original crew, well, there’s no excuse for not training.”

The NZDF squad for the event is: Leading Aircraftman Alex Hill (coxswain), Major Emily Hume, Lieutenant Commander Juliet MacLean, Corporal Rebekah Salt, Flying Officer Connor Broughton, Sub Lieutenant Rob Creasy, Lieutenant Ricky Daniel-Nield, Lance Corporal Mark Evans, Private Ryan Flintoft, Second Lieutenant Ashton Lovell, Lance Corporal Jack Proudfoot, Ordinary Rate Cathan Tamarapa, Rachel Gamble-Flint (coach), Wing Commander Rhys Taylor (manager).

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New Zealand Defence Force
New Zealand Defence Force

Written by New Zealand Defence Force

We are the New Zealand Defence Force. We are a Force for New Zealand. This is our official account. nzdf.mil.nz

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