Chris
Hauth and Michellie Jones won this weekend’s
inaugural Honu Half Ironman Triathlon, overcoming
both a strong field, tough conditions and a challenging
course for the win.
With
winds gusting to 40 mph at midnight before
this year’s inaugural Honu Half Ironman,
some anxiety struck most of the 716 athletes
preparing to start the newest Ironman qualifier
only seven hours later. The Big Island of
Hawaii is known for its mystic and magical
qualities, though, and as the sun rose above
majestic Mauna Kea on
race morning, only a slight breeze greeted
each athlete as they touched the white sand
beach at Hapuna.
The
field of athletes participating was as varied
as the Hawaiian landscape itself. Triathletes,
ages 17 to 74, registered from 15 countries and
38 states, all of them with aspirations to finish,
most with hopes of gaining one of the 85 Ironman
Triathlon World Champion slots up for grabs.
Thirty-five of those slots were going to Big
Island of Hawaii residents, twenty to athletes
from the state of Hawaii,
and thirty slots would be allocated to international
athletes (those not meeting the strict longtime
resident of Hawaii/Big Island requirements).
Amongst
those tossing and turning was last year’s
Olympic distance Honu champion, Tim Marr. Recently
receiving his pro card, this Hawaii talent
had been training hard with dreams of another
victory. However the field of men also wanting
that title had some pretty serious resumes to
back up their aspirations. Two-time Ironman champion
and Hawaii Ironman course record-holder, Luc
Van Lierde of Belgium spent
the week on the Big Island and
was looking for a win, as was Honolulu pro,
Chad Seymour. Age-group hopefuls such as Chris
Hauth of San Francisco,
Patrick Baldwin of San Diego,
and long-time Hawaii favorite,
Peter Hursty, were also posed to take the top
spot on race day.
On
the women’s side, three professionals and
pre-race favorites were: Michellie Jones, Olympic
silver medallist and distance champion; Heather
Fuhr, 1997 Hawaii Ironman champion; and Tina
Walter of Germany,
who placed ninth overall in Kona last October.
Just as the men had age-group contenders, so
did the women. Sian Welch, a former professional
and now 38-year-old mother of two, was out to
prove she still had what it takes. Monique Petrov
and Cathleen Calkins, both of California,
and Kailua-Kona’s own Bree Myers were also
ready to take top honors.
On
race morning the feared mumuku winds seemed to
disappear and the deep sighs and audible celebration
amongst athletes created a calm almost equal
to the ocean’s surface as the clock ticked
away towards the starting canon.
Within
minutes, a lead pack of eight turned around the
first buoy and by the halfway mark, five had
broken away from the pack. Tim Marr led the swim,
followed closely by Van Lierde, Seymour, Hauth
and Hursty. In the second pack, it was
Michellie Jones and Lauren Welting in amongst
the men.
Swells
greeted the front-runners as they rounded the
final buoy and the beach saw Marr out first in
24.06, with only seconds between the next four
of Seymour, Van Lierde, Hauth and Hursty.
Just
over a minute later the first women arrived.
Welting edged Jones over the swim finish line
by a second at 25:49 and 25:50, respectively.
Third was Caulkins at 27:45 with Fuhr and Petrov
a minute behind her.
Out
on the lava fields, Mother Nature seemed to be
holding her breath. She was, however, heating
up the bike course and the hills leading towards
Hawi were becoming hotter than ever.
By
the bike turn around at Upolu Airport (a
few miles shy of Hawi), the winds greeted the
first group with a relatively light 8-12 knots.
Marr had created a minute lead over Van Lierde,
with Seymour, Hauth and Hursty now spread out
three minutes apart. Amazingly, women’s
leader Jones was in seventh overall, with a lead
of four minutes over her closest female competitors,
Myers, Fuhr, Walter and Petrov.
At
T1, Marr arrived with a four-minute lead and
looked fresh as he blazed onto the run course.
Hauth came in second after overtaking Seymour
and Van Lierde on the return bike leg. Seymour
and Van Lierde arrived only seconds apart but
nearly seven and a half minutes behind the leader.
Hursty rounded out the top five into T1.
Jones
continued to move closer to the front as she
arrived at T1 and only 11 minutes off Marr’s
pace. Walter was in four minutes later
with Fuhr, Petrov and Caulkins coming within
seconds of each other but eight minutes off Jones’ lead.
All
reports from the run course had competitors dousing
themselves with water and ice at every aid station,
with the ambient temperature nearing 90 degrees
and the lava reflecting heat and making things
even hotter. The winds had now picked up on the
course, but they were tailwinds that offered
no relief to the searing sun’s rays.
Halfway
on the run Marr’s lead was dimishing, not
because he was slowing, but because Hauth was
running faster. This challenging run course,
with all its twists and turns, very rarely allowed
racers to see who was ahead or behind them.
Jones
continued to move towards the front and was in
a solid fourth position overall at the halfway
point on the run. In second, and in hot pursuit,
Fuhr was now in her trademark run pace and searching
the course for Jones. Walter, Petrov and Caulkins
continued to push as well but salt-stained skin
and shorts told the tale of suffering in the
Hawaiian heat.
With
only four miles left on the run, Hauth saw Marr
at last and passed him to take the lead. Marr
attempted to match his pace but Hauth pulled
away convincingly, and with a time of four hours,
fifteen minutes and fifty-four seconds, Hauth
became the first Honu Half Ironman champion and
secured his place in the record books. Marr followed
in second at 4:19:40 and in third it was…Michellie
Jones, first for the women at 4:28:16!
The
remaining top five men had Patrick Baldwin, third
at 4:30:42; Luc Van Lierde, fourth at 4:31:51;
and Peter Hursty, fifth at 4:35:42.
Coming
in sixth overall and taking back three minutes
on the run, Heather Fuhr placed second for the
women at 4:34:10. Tina Walter placed third at
4:38:28 with Monique Petrov at 4:49:40 and Kathleen
Caulkins at 4:56:16, fourth and fifth respectively.
Amazingly, Sian Welch was a close sixth at 4:57:59.
“What
a grueling course!” exclaimed race winner
Hauth. “The key was being out here on the
bike course and not in Kona. The run was incredible
with the grass, dirt and pavement all mixed in.
It was just incredible.
“It
was intimidating for me today because I’m
not used to being out towards the front,” smiled
a satisfied Hauth. “I was content being
in second at T2 and I didn’t know how close
I was to Tim until I came up on him with about
four miles to go. Still, I didn’t know
how close Luc was, or anyone else, so I just
kept pushing. I’m just thrilled to finish
first here because I think the hardest part of
finishing Ironman is from here to Kona. This
was just a fantastic race.”
Despite
her amazing finish, Jones was humbled by the
race.
“Hawaii is
always beautiful but it was damn hot out there
today!” beamed Jones. “There are
never any guarantees in triathlon and this run
course, while beautiful, was very challenging.
The golf course sections were really slow and
the changing terrain really messed with your
rhythm and your head.”
The
sun continued to beat down as hundreds of finishers
crossed the line, sweat stained but smiles beaming. A
crowd favorite, Sarah Reinertsen, the 30-year-old
single leg amputee from California who
was featured in the 2004 NBC Ironman show, seemed
to shine extra bright today. On target with her
swim and bike, her run was slower than she hoped
and reports came that she would be very close
to the eight-hour cut-off. Not so. Despite her
prosthetic leg breaking a stabilizing part at
10k into the run, Sarah ran solidly across the
finish line at 7:49:46, quite easily securing
her spot on the Ironman starting line in October.
In
the end the official finish time was extended
to eight and one-half hours due to the difficulty
of the course, allowing more competitors to cross
the finish line and know they are champions.
For
more coverage, click on the banner at the top
of the page.
Men
1.
Chris Hauth 4:15:54
2.
Tim Marr 4:19:40
3.
Patrick Baldwin 4:30:42
4.
Luc Van Lierde 4:31:51
5.
Peter Hursty 4:35:42
Women
1.
Michellie Jones 4:28:16
2.
Heather Fuhr 4:34:10
3.
Tina Walter 4:38:28
4.
Monique Petrov 4:49:40
5.
Kathleen Calkins 4:56:16
By Karen
Doane for Ironmanlive.com on Mon, Jun 6th
2005 (9:51 AM).
Source available at http://vnews.ironmanlive.com/vnews/topstories/1118056416
You may contact Karen Doane at kdoane@ironmanlive.com
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