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May 08, 2012
"It's a terrifying thing to see a bus wheel on top of you."
On April 21, personal trainer/coach Chelsea Duran, 29, was the third place Nevada finisher at RAGE Triathlon at Lake Mead, Nevada, thereby qualifying to race at the Best of the U.S. National Championship. That is her bike helmet underneath the school bus, and this is her story:
I started in triathlon almost 3 years ago. A client of mine came to me asking to be trained for a triathlon. I had been a cross country runner for a long time and had swum and cycled most of my life, but I had never done a triathlon. I figured the best way to train her for it, was to do one myself so I could give her first hand experience.
Read more: "It's a terrifying thing to see a bus wheel on top of you."
May 02, 2012
TriStuds: The Men of Minnesota Rock the Weekend
September 10, 2011
Matt Payne & Holly Walker are 2011 Best of the U.S. National Champions!
Gulf Shores, AL / September 10, 2011––A perfect day at the sugar-sand beaches of Gulf Shores / Orange Beach, Alabama set the
stage for victories on many levels at the 2011 Best of the U.S. Amateur Triathlete Championship. Low humidity, moderate temps and a flat, fast course designed by Team Magic for host race Brett Robinson Alabama Coastal Triathlon contributed to a wetsuit-legal swim in the Gulf and some seriously all-out fast performances.
Like winner Matt Payne's 27 MPH bike split. "It was one of those times when it all comes together," said Payne. "Three solid splits, and no epic fails" were enough to stay ahead of Minnesota teammate and friendly nemesis Patrick Parish, whose 33:20 10K was nearly two minutes faster than Payne's. It was also enough to run down Louisiana's 20-year-old Ben Hall, whose bike was fastest of the day (55:07) and who hit the run course in first place but faded to finish fourth. Florida's Colin Riley was second behind Hall at the start of the run and overtook him, but was passed by the speedy Parish and Payne; he held on for third.
Payne, 2010's 30-34 National Champion and a new father, was third at BOUS a year ago.
When you're a teacher/coach, mom to two young children and a triathlete training and racing in Montana, you don't tend to get a lot of notoriety. But when Holly Walker showed up at Best of the U.S. 2009 in tenth place at what was likely the most competitive women's field ever, on the heels of her 9th overall/2nd AG placing at 2008 Nationals, she put the rest of the field on notice that she was in it to win it. Coming back in 2010, she improved to 4th place among women, impressively coming in just behind the likes of Joanna Fiddler (Champion, Oklahoma), Shannon Donley (Alaska) and Suzanne Huelster (Colorado).
After today's swim, Walker had nearly 3 minutes to make up on fast-as-a-dolphin Rebecca (Villers) Carpenter from Georgia (photo, right). Rebecca, in fact, was second out of the ocean, her 19:11 swim second only to Ohio's Ross Hartley's 18:45. (Hartley was 2nd at the '09 Championship.) Carpenter looked sharp as a tack heading out first on the run. But Walker had made up about two minutes on the bike, and her strong 40:09 run was enough to overtake Carpenter and pad her margin of victory with another minute.
July 05, 2011
Holy Edelweiss, Kelly! 9:29:49?
OK, so Ironman Austria's Klagenfurt course is known as world-record fast. But 9:29:49? That may be the fastest amateur female IM time ever. And that's what Kelly Fillnow (28, from North Carolina) just did. If you read a recent blogpost
May 20, 2011
26. Smart. Fast. Two Tennessee Natives Rock the Early Season
We have no idea what was in the water in Tennessee about 27 years ago, but it must have been something special. The two amateur stand-outs of this early 2011 season are both 26; both born and raised in Tennessee; both currently in advanced studies in Alabama. And both are really, really fast triathletes.
Read more: 26. Smart. Fast. Two Tennessee Natives Rock the Early Season
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