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Triathlons
Friday, August 10, 2012
Highlights from the Men’s Olympic Race

IslandStats.com
The Men’s Triathlon competition at London 2012 didn’t disappoint with an amazingly fast display of athleticism.

As Triathlon at the 2012 London Olympic Games comes to a close, we reflect on the Men’s race and bring you some highlights.

Breaking Bad

The win for Alistair Brownlee in the men’s triathlon broke a bad streak of favorites failing at the Olympic Games. In its fourth Olympic cycle, nobody that won a test event had repeated the feat the Olympics. Alistair became the first person to break the spell, as he came up golden in both the test event and the real deal. On the contrary, the bronze medal winner at the test event has now gone on to finish third in the Games for the third consecutive Olympics. The trend began with Sven Riederer, continued with Bevan Docherty and was carried on in London by Jonathan Brownlee.

The win also ended a dry period of medals for Brits in the sport, as none had ever stood atop the podium in an Olympic triathlon. The Brownlee brothers outdid themselves, scoring not just one, but two medals for their country.

Meddling with Medals

While the gold and bronze were the first for Great Britain, other countries also came up big for the first time. Spain saw its first triathlon podium with silver in Javier Gomez. With the absence of a Swiss at the medal ceremony, Australia remains the most successful country in Olympic competition to date, with a total of five.

Switzerland follows with four, including Nicola Spirig’s gold medal from Saturday’s women’s race. New Zealand ranks third on the charts with three medals, two of which were courtesy of Bevan Docherty. Canada and Germany each have two medals. Both of Canada’s medals belong to Simon Whitfield. Austria, the Czech Republic and the USA currently have one medal each.

Speedy Splits

Alistair’s amazing Olympic win was in no small part due to his blazing run split of 29:07 on a run course that the London 2012 Competition Manager is confident is an accurate 10km. The time is nearly 40 seconds faster than what he clocked on the same course in 2011.

“I ran really really hard, probably as hard as I’ve ever run, so yeah I was obviously very very proud and very happy but my overwhelming emotion was just to get across the line and get it done with,” Alistair said.

The fastest swim of the day went to Richard Varga with a time of 16:56, more than a minute faster than fastest swimmer Gomez in 2011. Tyler Butterfield was the top cyclist of the day, as he attempted to make up ground on the lead pack by biking solo. His time of 58:32 was over two minutes faster than Ivan Rana’s best time at the test event.
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