Rotorua speedster Megan Williams claimed third place in the 15-year girls' Challenge class in the longest day in memory at the BMX World Championships at Zolder in Belgium.
By the time the New Zealand riders completed their finals, they had been in competition mode for more than 12 hours in a day dominated by blazing heat, a major delay and also some upsets for the Kiwis.
Williams claimed the only medal while other finalists included Toni James (Waitakere), who was fourth in the 25-and-over women, Amy Martin (Hawke's Bay), who finished fifth in the 17-to-24-year class, and Leila Walker (Cambridge), who was eighth in the 14-year girls'.
Racing started at 8.30am and did not finish until 9.15pm. When the temperature reached 41C degrees, in the mid-afternoon, racing was suspended for three hours for the safety of the riders and to give the overstretched medical services a breather, as a number of riders fainted and crashed while racing.
None of the Kiwis were involved, but the long breaks between races - it took seven hours just to get through the three qualifying motos - and then the need to refocus took its toll.
"I can't remember a day like this," New Zealand team manager Sue Walker, who has been attending World Championships since 2004, said.
For Williams it was a continuation of the consistent form she has shown since claiming world number two at the World Championships in Auckland in 2013.
Despite not getting a good start and being only sixth to the first corner, she picked her way through the field and finished with a strong last straight to claim third.
James also had a mediocre start and was last into the first corner but her fitness saw her come through the field and overtake two riders on the final straight to collect her second world ranking of the meeting after finishing fifth in her Cruiser class on Tuesday.
In her fifth attempt at the World Championships, Hawke's Bay's Amy Martin made a final for the first time and held third until the final corner when two riders dived inside her, shuffling her back to fifth. Her previous best result had been making the semifinals.
Leila Walker started her final as the five-time defending champion and on the back of an unbeaten day of racing through three qualifying motos, an eighth final, quarter-final and semifinal.
She raced neck and neck with Dutch rider Lissi van Schijndel down the first straight. Van Schijndel held Walker wide through the corner and the pair touched as they hurtled into the first jump on the second straight.
It was enough to unbalance Walker, who lost momentum and control of her bike and crashed. Van Schijndel easily won the race as she and Walker were a class above the rest of the field.
There were any number of hard luck stories, with Te Awamutu's Cooper Merito the only male to reach the semifinals where he crashed in the first corner.
Rico Bearman, who won the 15-16 Cruiser on Tuesday, was involved in a three-rider accident in the eighth finals, but had looked good to progress a lot further.
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