Under blue skies and beside the steel-edged shadows of the escarpment, the 110th NSW Short Course Cross Country Championships unfolded in Dapto — fast, flat, and full of fight. But it was the women’s race that held the sharpest drama: a seasoned star gliding back to the top, unshaken and unhurried.
Kate Spencer Wins With Silence, Not Surge
There was no breakaway. No decisive kick. Just a woman running like water — steady, fluid, inevitable.
Returning from an overseas break and still shaking off jet lag, defending champ Jaylah Hancock-Cameron lined up beside Kate Spencer, Danette Sheehan, and Zoe Melhuish — a quartet with credentials, ready to trade rhythm for medals. Early on, they separated from the field like smoke peeling from the start line.
By halfway, Spencer, calm and unreadable, was setting the tempo. But when she began to move away with 2km to go, it was subtle. No teeth-gritting push. Just stride after stride, stretching the string until it snapped.
“I didn’t change pace,” she told Athletics NSW, almost puzzled. “It just felt like they slowly fell away.”
She ran the hills with quiet, borrowed time.
Spencer stopped the clock at 26:13, ten seconds clear of Hancock-Cameron (26:23) and thirty-five ahead of Sheehan (26:48), who is deep into Sydney Marathon prep. It’s Spencer’s second win in the short course format — her first came back in 2016 — but this one, after years of injury, was all about freedom.
“I’m consistent now. No pressure, just running for joy — and when I win, it’s a bonus.”
Her training? Just 70km a week. Her next target? National Cross.
The women’s team title came down to a thrilling finish between Bankstown and Sydney Uni. With four inside the top 12, Bankstown claimed gold by just six points, anchored by Hancock-Cameron and a rising crew of junior talent.
Bishop Battles to Breakthrough Win in Men’s Showdown

The men’s 7.5km delivered its own tactical fireworks, with triathlete Logan Campbell rolling the dice early, stringing out the field with a bold solo move through the first half.
But experience, and patience, won the day. Ben Bishop, running with the Sydney Uni wolfpack, bided his time until 2km to go. He closed the gap, sat briefly on Campbell’s shoulder, then broke free with teammate Ben Graham in tow.
The final climb was decisive. Bishop edged clear, crossing the line in 23:13, two seconds ahead of Graham, with Campbell bravely holding third.
“I’m in the best shape I’ve ever been in,” Bishop said. “But I had to risk it late. You can’t let someone like Logan get away.”
Sydney Uni took top honours in the men’s team standings, with both A and B teams on the podium, underlining their current depth.
Photo Gallery
View full photo gallery thanks to Fred Etter.