Coming off a recent string of good form I was pretty excited
to race in Mandurah against a quality field. The word ‘stacked’ seems to be
thrown around quite a bit in Australian races these days. I think that the
sport is evolving and each year we are seeing more and more people assert
themselves as worthy contenders over the 70.3 distance which is very exciting.
With USD 50,000 and an Australian title on the line, many people were hungry to
snatch some of that pie, myself included.
After a 2nd place at Port Mac 70.3 a month
earlier, and then following it up with another 2nd at the Nepean
Triathlon seven days later, my confidence had gone through the roof. These
results, along with new coaching direction from with Tim Reed (building a program
that is focused on quality sessions and sufficient recovery which seems to a
good recipe), I was confident that in was in good form, but still had huge
respect for the guys that I was toeing the line with.
With an absence of super fish swimmers I knew I would be one
of the guys setting the pace in the swim. I got in clear water early to try and
set a solid tempo but the seemingly straight forward canal swim was a lot
harder to navigate than I anticipated. The weaving course coupled with my Ray Charles
sighting skills provided an interesting challenge for me. We were given a lead
paddler but he was paddling way too far ahead for him to take effect and it
seemed like I was trying to follow a speck on the horizon. I took a wrong turn round
one of the buoys (chopper) and found myself swimming into the guys trailing me.
After copping a few swift backhands to face I righted myself and swam back up
towards the front and came out in 3rd.
My pre race theory was that the race was going to be a pack
swim due to the current assisted canals and then a group would form on the flat
fast bike. This came to fruition as a group of 8 guys formed the lead pack with
all the heavy hitters involved. The wind hit us straight away and out on the
open highway there was nowhere to hide. Some big turns were put in by Terenzo
Bozzone (NZL), Tim Berkel (AUS) and Jeremy Jurkiewicz (FRA). Newly employed
coach Tim Reed unfortunately suffered a mechanical early into the ride forcing
him out of the race. Both the wind speed and temperature were rapidly rising
through the second lap of the bike and the pace was starting to take its toll
on everyone in group. My garmin was clocking speeds at 50km/h + on the return into
town and the work put in on the bike rewarded us with a 2:03 bike split. The
group was reduced to 5 by the time we entered T2 to start the run.
Terenzo showed some authority straight out of transition and
l none of us could go with the early pace. I was feeling pretty rattled after
the ride and was a little unsure about the run. I faded back through to 5th
by the time I hit the 6km mark with Bennett, Jurkiewicz and Berkel pulling
ahead of me. I found some rhythm and Bennett, who was looking very dangerous at
the beginning, was starting to suffer. I moved into 4th and kept the
other two guys in sight. I was feeling better as the run progressed and moved
through to 3rd place, relegating the Frenchman into 4th
by about 13km. I could see Berkel ahead but the gap between was not closing, so
I made a big effort to bridge up to him, digging deeper into my reserves than I
had originally planned. We duked it out together for a while until about 2kms to
go where he put in a surge to break these weary legs. Terenzo crossed the line
first, just under 2 minutes ahead of me but his Kiwi heritage meant the Aussie
title passed to Berkel who showed some true grit to defend it from last year.
Despite getting almost mowed down by angry Mandurah locals
on post race festivities I had a great time in WA and I want to thank my
amazing team in Shotz, Scody, Hawkesbury Physio, 3D bike fit and Tim Reed. Also
big thanks to my mum, dad and Kat for ongoing support.
Cheers.
PS. Be sure to check out the interviews and race footage in the videos below (excuse bogan accent).
This is a highlights package of the race made by Ironman Asia Pacific:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwY7Ea-hcKI
Photos courtesy of firstoffthebike.com and Ironman Asia Pacific
Interviews with firstoffthebike.com and oztri.com.au
Cheers.
PS. Be sure to check out the interviews and race footage in the videos below (excuse bogan accent).
This is a highlights package of the race made by Ironman Asia Pacific:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwY7Ea-hcKI
Photos courtesy of firstoffthebike.com and Ironman Asia Pacific
Interviews with firstoffthebike.com and oztri.com.au