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Proud Kirsty on English singles success

Ilminsterโ€™s Kirsty Hembrow added her name to the list of womenโ€™s national singles champions, as she won the recent English Indoor Bowling Association title.

The 32-year-old admitted to being speechless after her victory at Nottingham IBC, but Bowls Internationalโ€™s Matt Wordingham caught up with Kirsty to discuss her success.

When six-year-old Kirsty Hembrow first attended a taster day at her local bowls club in 1995, little did she expect that she would become a future national singles champion.

That success is an aspiration for many young, competitive bowlers starting out on their quest for national and international successes, but very few achieve it.

Kirstyโ€™s career started at Taunton Deane BC in Somerset almost two decades ago, and it is somewhat a family affair for the Hembrowโ€™s, with her father Trevor, younger brother Levi and several cousins, aunties and uncles also playing the sport.

But it is Kirsty who has achieved the most success, with national and international honours dating back to the mid-2000s.

Kirsty enjoyed a seven-year spell starting in 2005 as part of Englandโ€™s indoor junior international team, making her debut in the outdoor equivalent squad the following year.

A 21-18 victory for Kirsty in the final over Swale’s Wendy King ensured that she became the first bowler from Somerset to win the EIBA womenโ€™s national singles title since Edna Bessell MBE in 2001.

โ€œI donโ€™t think there are any words to describe the feeling of winning the competition and itโ€™s just out of the world to think I have won the biggest competition within the English indoor association,โ€ she added.

โ€œI celebrated with my friend and family with a meal and Ilminster held a party at the bowls club for me.”

With June also coinciding with Pride Month, we asked Kirsty, an open member of the LGBTQ+ community, about her experience within the sport.

โ€œWithin bowls no one has ever been disrespectful towards me, and I have always been included within the bowls world,โ€ she said.

โ€œI feel the sport is very inclusive as wherever I have played, I have always felt welcomed with open arms.

โ€œI have no worries about being open as I feel I am me. If someone doesnโ€™t like it, then I respect their views and just play the sport without pressuring them into any discussion.โ€

The full interview with Kirsty can be read in June’s issue of Bowls International.

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