ISSUE #10, April/May 2001
- The forecast for the US Winter Triathlon Championships at Snow Mountain
Ranch called for light snow with no accumulation likely. Hah! As the
nine AM start time approached, six inches of white stuff layered the
course and the blizzard showed no signs of relenting. For the competitors
attacking the 10K run, 20K mountain bike, 10K skate ski course, the
new snow turned an already challenging course into an adventure in
staying upright. Runners did the best they could to follow in each
other's footsteps, occasionally stumbling through holes of powder.
Mountain bikers cartwheeled off their bikes, creating mini snow tornadoes
before they came to rest. By the time the racers hit the skate ski
they were exhausted.
"The ski leg was like
doing a mile of butterfly at then end of a summer triathlon. The race
as a whole was one of the hardest and most frustrating things I've
ever done. It was epic," says pro triathlete Pat Brown, who suffered
from a snow-caked cleat problem throughout the bike leg.
Pro cyclist/duathlete, Kimberely
Bruckner adds, "It was an awesome experience and a great way
to be training on what otherwise would have just been a cold and miserable
day."
For Bruckner, this "training"
day meant being the first woman into the run-to-bike transition with
a thirty-second lead over XTERRA star Lorraine Barrows. Barrows closed
the gap in the transition area but a fight with pneumonia in the days
leading up to the race caused her to fade badly during the mountain
bike. Top mountain biker, Gretchen Reeves, on the other hand, was
slicing through the powder and would regain two of the five minutes
she lost to Bruckner's 55:01 run split with a 1:10:45 bike leg. Reeves
then used superior skate skiing ability to hunt Bruckner down and
pass her with three kilometers to go. By finishing the ski in 43:20,
Reeves' winning time was 2:54:50. Bruckner was next to cross the line
in 2:56:31 and Melissa Thomas was third in 3:00:20.
On the men's side, age and
experience ruled the day, which is the nice way of saying that the
older guys kicked the younger guys' butts. Olympian Ryan Bolton hit
43:34 for the 10K run and lead mountain bike legend Ned Overend, adventure
racer Mike Kloser, and Pat Brown by thirty-five seconds going into
the second leg. "I thought Pat, who has a ski background and
is on a mountain bike all the time, and some of the dudes who could
really ski, would rock everyone," says Bolton. Bzzzzt! That would
be wrong.
Overend's two-wheeled prowess
(58:06) gave him the fastest bike split and the lead with Mike Kloser
close behind. "I pulled out a 30-second lead on Kloser. I think
my tire setup was hooking up a little better and I was going all out
because I was worried that he was a better skier," says Overend.
"But the soft conditions on the ski course favored my lack of
technique. The faster the conditions the better for a real skier like
Kloser, but, a slog through deep snow with your heart rate jammed
through the roof, veins bulging in your forehead, and slobbering all
over yourself from effort, that's my specialty."
"The Lung" snatched
the fastest ski split by two minutes (33:16) and skated home to add
another championship title to his name in 2:15:31. Kloser finished
second in 2:17:49, while Bolton hung in for third at 2:19:56.
Finally, the race organizers,
Mountain Quest Adventures, would like to thank Zoot Sports, Salomon,
and adidas for their support and sponsorship of the race. Be on the
look out for a three-race, US winter triathlon series coming in 2002.
PHOTO
GALLERY