PUERTO PENASCO, MEXICO,
April 26, 2003 - As tall saguaro cacti captured the early morning
sun casting shadows across the hilly desert landscape of Arizona,
the sound of random tent zippers broke the silence. For the University
of Colorado Triathlon Team, the low 60-degree weather was a treat
from the previous week of cool rainy weather back home. With the high
of reclaiming the National Championship last season, the Buffs were
ready for another team title. The team overcame numerous obstacles
throughout the season, but that was not about to stop them from accomplishing
their goals.
Last years leading scorers,
Chris Valenti, Blake Ottersberg, Sara Tarkington, and Jamie Sizzler
have since moved on to pursue other avenues in their lives and were
greatly missed. In addition to last year's scorers, Justin Caskey
battled a knee injury keeping him on the sidelines further throwing
off dynamics of the previous year. Sunny Gilbert, the only remaining
scorer from the 2002 team, is ready to race this year and has a great
chance of taking the overall women's title.
Another obstacle the team encountered
was the loss of Head Coach Bettina Younge. Faced with the opportunity
to run the junior development program at the Olympic Training Center,
Bettina struggled with the decision to continue coaching the team
but realized her role at the OTC would consume too much of her time.
Moving up in the ranks from his assistant coaching position, Ryan
Ignatz was ready for the challenge of taking over as head coach.
As head coach, Ignatz tried
to keep the athletes focused through all the adversity while getting
the team ready for Nationals with some early season racing. To start
out the spring season, the team held their own aquathon to compete
against the CU club swim team. Even with the wet snow coming down,
everyone who raced enjoyed themselves and had a good starting point.
With bad weather as a central theme, the team's Olympic distance practice
triathlon turned into another aquathon along with the triathlon event
hosted by the Air Force Academy.
In hopes of remedying the issues
of cold weather, over 30 Buffs made the 20 plus hour drive south of
the border to Puerto Peñasco, Mexico for the 8th annual Rocky
Point Traithlon. Once again, Mother Nature took control and high winds
caused a cancellation of the 1500m-ocean swim in the Sea of Cortez.
With a 2k beach run replacing the swim, the new course proved challenging,
but black and gold prevailed with Ryan Ignatz winning the overall
standings as well as the collegiate division. Replacing some of the
strong men from last year's team, Davin Anderson placed 2nd in the
collegiate race with J.P. Henry (4th) playing a role in the overall
men's victory. For the women, Mary Dishman held her own, placing 4th.
Followed closely behind were teammates Laura Freeman (5th) and Nicole
Gibson (7th) helping the CU women to a first place finish with University
of California Santa Barbara and UC San Diego rounding out the top
standings.
With Nationals approaching,
only one returning scorer and early season mishaps, CU's team was
still looking strong. On the men's side, the depth seamed endless.
J.P. Henry, Davin Anderson, Will Kelsay, Lance Panigutti and Christian
Cravens were some of last year's team members with scoring potential
along with newcomer Micah Howard. The front-runners for the women
consisted of returning members Sunny Gilbert, Hailey Garside, Mary
Dishman and Susan Einberger while Kendra Snyder, Laura Freeman, Rachel
Klein and Cindy Rosenberg rounded out the stronger new women.
Once at Nationals, just north
of Phoenix, AZ at Lake Pleasant, the 56-member team started the beautiful
spring morning with their game faces on. After a good warm-up to the
venue, the hustle and bustle of the transition area began. Glances
were being exchanged in every direction from team to team. Some of
the top teams looking to snatch the Championship from CU were 2001
winners Montana, long time rivals Cal Poly, Stanford, and Navy.
As the 7:45am start time approached,
the competition was already getting warmed up as teams began chanting
their cheers before heading down the boat ramp to the chilly spring
water. When the horn sounded the first men's wave churned up the water,
kicking off the event. Three minutes later, the first female wave
battled for position around the diamond shaped swim course.
Amongst the front-runners out
of the water, CU's J.P. Henry exited in a time of 18:42 and was already
a couple minutes off the blistering pace set by the Navy boys who
completed the 1500 meter swim around 16:45. Shortly behind for the
Buff's were Lance Panigutti and in the following wave things were
heated up by CU's Davin Anderson, Ted Romero, Micah Howard and a list
of others in black and gold. On the women's side, the pace was set
high by NAU's Annie Warner who posted a 20:08 swim split. CU's Sunny
Gilbert was in the first chase pack about a minute back and ready
for action once on land. Some of the other quick swimmers from the
CU women were Rachel Klein, Kendra Snyder, Mary Dishman, Susan Eignberger,
and Laura Freeman just to name a few.
With temperatures starting
to rise, things began to heat up as the racers tackled the hilly landscape
over the 40-kilometer bike course. Putting a gap on his next competitor,
Stanford's Erik Bean was first off the bike after posting a blistering
58:33 bike split on the rough pavement. Also making up lots of time
on the swimmers, Anderson squeaked into the top ten while Micah Howard
pulled ahead of teammate J.P. Henry. The women's race saw a similar
change in the first place spot as Univ. of Virginia's Andrea Dvorak
entered transition alone. Not far behind for CU was Sunny Gilbert
looking fresh for the run. A bit off the pace but still making up
ground were CU's Cindy Rosenberg and Hailey Garside.
Bikes racked and shoes on,
the competitors set off on the extremely hilly and exposed10k run
course of mixed pavement and dirt roads. Holding his lead, Eric Bean
posted the fastest time of the day in scorching 1:54:50 and set a
new course record. Just over three minutes back O'Donnell crossed
while still under 2 hours Virginia Tech's Dan Peairs rounded out the
top three men for the day. CU's top male scorers were Davin Anderson
(9th), Micah Howard (24th), and J.P. Henry (29th).
For the women, Dvorak also
held onto her 1st place spot finishing in a quick time of 2:11:52.
Making up lots of time with the fastest run split was Sunny Gilbert
coming in just two minutes back for another second place finish like
the previous season. Rounding out the women's top scorers were Cindy
Rosenberg (7th), and Hailey Garside (12th). Overall on the day, CU's
team showed dominance in numbers and everyone on the team seemed to
have great individual performances.