More than 60 competitors braved 14 degree water, icy rain
and chilly temperatures in the Philip Wareing Multisport Triathlon at Lake Rotoiti in
Nelson Lakes National Park on Sunday. Racing for top athletes like Richard Usher, Emily Miazga....
.. With a choice of five race
options, tradition was stood on its head, with 26 competing in the
kayak-bike-run multisport event, 16 the shorter sprint triathlon, nine the
standard triathlon (usually the most popular race) and 10 choosing one of the
two duathlon distances.
Trevor Voyce was last year's Coast to Coast runnerup, but
that didn't deter Daniel Busch, who powered off from the first stroke of the
kayak leg, covering the 8km course from Kerr
Bay to the mouth of the Buller River
and return in a brisk 30min 47sec, entering the transition to the bike side by
side with veteran Andrew Martin. John Harris was next in 33.04, with Voyce and
JJ Wilson a further 40 seconds adrift.
Photos - 3rd-eye.co.nz
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Three-time
Coast winner Emily Miazga
led the women from the water, with Sophie Hart and Rachel Voyce at one-minute
intervals. Jodie Fa'Avae and Helen Chittenden were right on Voyce's heels.
Busch didn't mess about on the 40km bike course, cutting out
the quickest split of 1.08.47, three minutes quicker than Trevor Voyce.
Miazga showed what a tough competitor she is, with the next
fastest bike time ahead of Martin, Harris and Wilson. Ian Shapcott from Marlborough shrugged off
his 62 years to record the next quickest split.
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Voyce clawed back 20 seconds on Busch in the 10km run, both
with sub-40-minute times, but it was clearly Busch's day, as he ran through the
finish nearly five minutes ahead. Martin was consistent in all disciplines to
take third ahead of Wilson and Harris.
Next to finish in a fine show of strength was Miazga (right), but
Hart showed she's a force to be reckoned with, only three minutes behind,
gaining two of them in the run. Fa'Avae took third, with Rachel Voyce and
Chittenden rounding out the top five.
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With some serious racing to do over the ironman distance at
Wanaka in six days, Richard Ussher was ready for a sharpener over the sprint
distance. Nobody would guess swimming was his weakest discipline as he emerged
from the 750m swim right on the heels of Jon Linyard, one of the region's
sharpest swimmers. Young Jack Thornton, 15, looked every inch a champion of the
future just a few seconds later.
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Josie Wilcox has a running scholarship which will take her
to the US
later this year, but she's using the time until then to hone her triathlon
skills. She showed a huge improvement in her swim form as she left the water in
fourth place, ahead of Nigel Burgess and Chris Whitaker.
Ussher (right) took a solid lead on the bike, with Linyard, Burgess,
Whitaker and Wilcox having the next fastest times to consolidate the first five
positions.
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The undulating 5km run doesn't encourage fast times, but
Ussher nailed it in 18.20, with Burgess the only other runner to duck under 20
minutes.
With the fastest splits in all disciplines, Ussher was a
clear winner ahead of Linyard and Burgess, with Wilcox slipping past Whitaker
for fourth.
The years of consistent Ironman training are paying off for
Hayden Harper (right), who dominated the standard distance triathlon with the quickest
times in all disciplines to win by more than six minutes from national
triathlon rep Rob Hoult from Christchurch.
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Dave Lawson, Danial Bremner and Paul Thornton took the next
three spots.
Sam Drew was too strong in the longer duathlon, scoring a
clear win over the team of Liz Peters and the solo race of Marlborough's Juliet Wiseman.
In the short duathlon Thomas Young's bike ability pulled him
through against the quicker run talent of Jono Drew, with the old dog Ian
McNabb consistent throughout to take third in his longest duathlon to date.
Anja Goldbach and Susan Drew were the first of the women.
Full results at nelsontriclub.co.nz.
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