February 12, 2026

Cyclones Show Depth At 2026 Hancock Prospecting Queensland Sprint Championships  

Mackay Cyclones Swimming Club delivered an impressive performance across all age groups at the 2026 Hancock Prospecting Queensland Sprint Championships, held 7–8 February 2026, with swimmers collecting medals, finals appearances and a host of personal best results.
 
The opening day featured the club’s senior swimmers. Anisa Helou swam strongly in her heats to reach the finals in both the 16-year-old 50m freestyle and 50m butterfly, recording a national qualifying time in the butterfly and adding to her national campaign after previously qualifying in the 50m freestyle. 
 
Cyclones sprint specialist and her brother, Ehsan Helou, claimed a silver medal in the 17-year-old 50m breaststroke. The result followed a strong Queensland Country Championships campaign in Rockhampton in late January where he won silver in the 50m breaststroke and 50m freestyle, and bronze in the 50m butterfly. 
 
Oscar Wyatt and Rourke Bagley also competed on Saturday, both producing personal best times across their events.
 
The second day saw the younger swimmers take to the pool, led by Matthew Dolzon who won the Queensland State Sprint Champion (10 years S19 MC) title across all four strokes – 50m freestyle, backstroke, breaststroke and butterfly – while completing eight races across the program. 
 
Maddison Searle finished 10th in the 11-year-old girls’ 50m freestyle and was first reserve for the 50m backstroke final, while her sister Ellanah Searle finished the meet with a determined swim and personal best in the 50m butterfly after a long day of racing. Vogue Miles achieved a PB in the butterfly and Willow McLennan impressed in her first State meet with PBs in freestyle and backstroke. Freyja Wyatt closed out the club’s competition with personal best performances across backstroke and breaststroke.
 
Head coach Leighanne Pokarier said the championships test both speed and resilience.

“The Sprint Championships are tough because they’re raced at high pace across all strokes, and swimmers who make finals can end up completing several races in a short duration,” she said.

“It’s a great learning meet, the skills and race execution we practise at training really matter in this format.”
 
Pokarier said the results highlighted the club’s growing strength and depth, with swimmers successfully competing against some of the State’s fastest athletes and building strong momentum heading into upcoming meets later in the season.

Contributed with thanks to Sevda Inan

Ehsan Helou- State Sprints 2026

Matthew Dolzan

Anisa Helou QLD Sprints 2026. Photos supplied