Duathlon.com - Leading the duathlon revolution with news, results, and community devoted to duathlons and triathlons.
  Home  |  My Profile   Welcome Anonymous    Become a member! or Login!     


Talk
Photos
Survey
My Profile
Results
News
Interviews
Calendar
Classifieds
Links
Reviews
Need a Coach?
Contact
Support FAQ




Links Search


[Articles Home]  [Add Article]  

ITU World Cup Hungary

from Nici Andronicus of ITU on August 19, 2001
Add a comment about this article!


ITU World Cup Hungary
Sunday, August 18, 2001

Women
1. Siri Lindley (USA) 1:56:47
2. Wieke Hoogzaad (NED) 1:56:59
3. Anja Dittmer (GER) 1:57:31
4. Lenka Radova (CZE) 1:57:52
5. Tracy Hargreaves (AUS) 1:58:10
6. Carla Moreno (BRA) 1:58:26
7. Renata Berkova (CZE) 1:58:43
8. Ingrid Van Lubek (NED) 1:59:03
9. Barbara Koesser (GER) 1:59:09
10. Loretta Harrop (AUS) 1:59:20
11. Christiane Pilz (GER) 1:59:49
12. Jane Kargotich (AUS) 2:00:16
13. Nora Edosceny (HUN) 2:00:25
14. Annaliese Heard (GBR) 2:00:34
15. Stephanie Gros (FRA) 2:01:31
*

Men
1. Martin Krnavek (CZE) 1:44:17
2. Dimitry Gaag (KAZ) 1:44:29
3. Stephane Poulat (FRA) 1:44:43
4. Volodymyr Polikarpenko (UKR) 1:45:00
5. Bevan Docherty (NZL) 1:45:09
6. Andriy Glushchenko (URK) 1:45:21
7. Stephan Bignet (FRA) 1:45:29
8. Tamas Liptak (HUN) 1:45:38
9. Courtney Atkinson (AUS) 1:45:52
10. Sebastien Berlier (FRA) 1:45:54
11. Richard Stannard (GBR) 1:45:58
12. Domnik Norbert (AUT) 1:46:07
13. Csaba Kuttor (HUN) 1:46:24
14. Szabolos Agoston (HUN) 1:46:36
15. Andreas Raelert (GER) 1:47:17
Also: Joe Umphenour (USA) 1:47:58



Six different national flags were raised in victory at the medal ceremony
for the ITU World Cup Triathlon, Tiszaujvaros, just one of the firsts for
the circuit this year.

It was the first time in the history of ITU World Cup racing that the medals
have been so widely shared. Since triathlon made its debut at the Olympic
Games in 2000, racing has become closer, faster and far less predictable
than in previous years and the result has been more success for emerging
national teams.

There were many other firsts today, including some of the fastest split
times of the season on the flat and flowing course. The racing was the
hottest of the season, as the temperature reached a maximum of 36 degrees; a
small concern for the 15,000 most passionate spectators in triathlon
witnessed the close and exciting racing.

The women dived into the 25.8-degree water at 12.30pm. Three weeks ago
Loretta Harrop (AUS) lost her world number one ranking and today in the ITU
World Cup Triathlon, Tiszaujvaros, Harrop threw everything at her chance of
pegging back her top spot.

Harrop would have created an even bigger lead from the 1500m swim if she had
not misjudged her navigation on the first of the two-lap swim. Her sprint
through transition was reminiscent of her previous races on this course, and
an indication of Harrop's intentions of a solo race, start to finish. The
strategy has been the key to her success before and Harrop was chasing a
fourth consecutive victory at this popular leg of the ITU World Cup.

At transition one, the greatest question was, where is World Champion Siri
Lindley (USA)? Her consistent swim leg has given Lindley the advantage of
Harrop's feet in recent races, however today the crowd waited for 1.16min
before the recently crowned World Number One arrived.

Sometimes it is a matter of luck, said Lindley after the race. If you get
caught up behind athletes, that can slow you down. It wasn't until the
second lap of the swim that I was able to find clear water and build up my
speed.

Swimming with Lindley was Wieke Hoogzaad  (NED), the recent bronze medallist
in ITU World Cup Corner Brook, Anje Dittmer (GER) in her first ITU World Cup
of the season following a stress fracture of her toe, previous Tiszaujvaros
podium finisher, Tracy Hargreaves - and thirteen others.
The early lead was enough to inspire Harrop to surge ahead. During the 6km
stretch from Lake Tisza to the Tiszaujvaros town centre, where the athletes
would race a twisty six lap criterium style 40km bike Harrop gained twenty
seconds.

Behind a large chase pack formed as the formidable Christiane Pilz (GER)
took control to chase Harrop. However the group didn't seem to be
particularly organised in their pursuit and Harrop began to build a
significant gap. By transition two she had powered to a 2.14min lead in her
characteristic solo effort.

With the speed of Lindley, Hoogzaad and Hargreaves behind, it soon became
apparent that Harrop's efforts might be overwhelmed. Approaching the final
of four laps of the 10 kilometre run, Lindley passed Harrop, with Hoogzaad
around ten seconds later. The surprise of the day came from Dittmer, who ran
brilliantly to claim the final podium position. Harrop was swallowed up by
the relative fresh legs of the field, placing 10th.

Loretta swam and rode so well today and I realised that if she was able to
gain one and a half minutes in the first part of the race, then she would
easily have a lead of more than two minutes, said Lindley. I didn't feel
that fresh today and I didn't have the strength on the bike to try to break
away. My plan was just to get off the bike and hammer out the first lap to
get as much of a gap on Wieke. I felt like that was the hardest race in a
long time.

When the men hit the water at 4.15pm, the tight swimming was also a feature
of the first discipline of the race. As expected the French duo of Stephan
Bignet and Stephane Poulat exited the water first, however Courtney Atkinson
(AUS) trailed them in his first race of the ITU World Cup season, Richard
Stannard (GBR), and Hungarian hometown favourites, Szabolcs Agoston and
Gabor Buru.

There was no significant gap, as the entire field seemed to be joined in one
line. Closer to the lead of that line was pre race favourite Martin Krnavek
(CZE) in seventh and further adrift were notable runners Dimitry Gaag (KZE)
in 23rd and Bevan Docherty in 26th.

Krnavek soon joined a leading pack of thirteen men, but their pace was
erratic. While the group sometimes co-ordinated well to extend their lead
and would then lose momentum, to be swallowed up by a large group with just
five kilometres remaining on the bike. The efforts of Docherty and
Australians Bryce Quirk and Levi Maxwell on the bike paid off as the second
group were suddenly in contention.

The first two kilometres off the bike were lightning fast, as Gaag, Krnavek
and Docherty jostled for the lead. Poulat stayed in touch, around 10 metres
behind the group.

It was a tactic of `survival' that finally helped Krnavek to pull away, in
only the final kilometre of the race. Gaag held on for second place, and the
patient Poulat overpowered Docherty to pick up third.

The pace for the first lap was so fast, said Krnavek. Then we realised
how hot it was and the pace slowed quite a lot. I was just holding on,
trying to keep my pace and rhythm. It was a very tough run and it was only
in the last kilometre that I knew that I could win.

In another `first' the six medallists danced on the dais for the adoring
crowd, even providing an encore. However after the tough racing it was a
little difficult for weary legs to groove and perhaps it is lucky that they
are great triathletes, as the dancing was no Broadway performance!
The ninth round of the ITU World Cup is set for Lausanne, Switzerland next
weekend.


There are no comments on this article: Post One

Email Subscription
My Subscriptions
Subscriptions Help

Other Upcoming & News Articles
Chilly Willy Duathlon VII Results
A Duathlon Video
USAT 2012 Championship Schedule
Ironman Hawaii Results
Powerman Muncie Results


Web design and content Copyright © 1998-2011 by Eric Schwartz and Duathlon.com
Unauthorized reproduction of any Duathlon.com material is strictly prohibited and is subject to legal action
World Headquarters - Boulder, Colorado 
Contact