Celebrations are in place as first time medal winners, Vanuatu, Cook Islands and the Solomon Islands finally joined the ranks of podium-finishers, picking up medals at the Commonwealth Games.

Three countries that have never won a medal in Commonwealth Games history are celebrating after bagging bronze in weightlifting, javelin and lawn bowls competitions.

A quarter of the 71 teams entered the 21st games medal-less, but now Vanuatu, Cook Islands and Solomon Islands have joined the ranks of podium-finishers.

While the Commonwealth winners circle is getting wider, 15 competing teams have still never won a medal at any games. 

On Monday night, Friana Kwevira won bronze in the para-athletics womens F46 javelin and then had a sleepless night.

“I didn't sleep until two o'clock, they were all say congratulations, you make us proud of you, your family and your island too, as well as your country Vanuatu,” she said.

The shy para-athlete only took up the sport 10 months ago and she is now Vanuatu's first ever Commonwealth Games medalist.

She said she wants to empower women - especially those with a disability - back home.

“Don't look at disability, look at your ability, you can do it as I have. If I can make it, you can make it,” she said.

Her eyes are set on an even bigger goal: the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Taiki Paniani, 19, and Aidan Zittersteijn, 20, made sporting history by claiming bronze in the men's lawn bowls pairs, clinching the first ever medal for the Cook Islands.

"I guess a lot of elderly people, a lot of older people play it but the sport name is 'lawn bowls' not 'old people's lawn bowls game,” Mr Paniani told Maori Television.

“To play against top players is actually a real good experience and it shows me and it shows the people back home we need to lift up our standard or our standard is pretty good and we just need to add a little bit more”.

Jenly Wini is the woman behind Solomon Islands’ success, lifting the country to victory in the 58 kilogram weight division earlier in the games.

“It speaks to the whole relevance (of the Games), not just of the high-performance athletes, in terms of world record holders and achievers and Commonwealth record achievers, but also where this plays in the development of sport across the Commonwealth,” said David Grevemberg, CEO of the Commonwealth Games Federation.

“The Commonwealth is a great platform for that, the more we can do that consistently from games to games to games, the more legitimate the games become and the more credible the Commonwealth is as a movement.”

These Pacific nations are now inspired after stepping up in into all-time medal ranks.

“It means we have a lot of potential into the future and if we invest more resources into it we'll be able to better results more medals,” said Vanuatu chef de mission Mike Masaovakalo.

 

Source: sbs.com.au