Two-time Ironman 70.3 world champion Michael
Raelert lit up a rain-hit Ironman 70.3 Asia Pacific Championship
in Phuket with a blazing performance that slashed eight minutes
off the course record and saw him finish five minutes ahead of
nearest rivals, Australians Richie Cunningham and Paul Matthews,
to claim the US$12,000 top pro prize.
He made his record time of 03:51:36 despite the
downpours on an unseasonable overcast day on the holiday island
that played havoc on the bike course and brought heartbreak for
hotly-tipped Ironman bike specialist Chris Lieto of the USA, who
was forced to retire after crashing just 20k into the tough 90k
ride.
Raelert, making his first appearance in Phuket, was
keen to end his season on a high note after injuries earlier this
year forced him to abandon the defence of his Ironman 70.3 World
Championship title at Las Vegas in September.
He was among
a field of 34 male and female international pro athletes and more
than 1,000 age groupers competing the 1.9k swim, 90k bike and
21.1k run course for a slice of a US$75,000 pro purse and
championship points, as well as coveted age group slots for the
2012 Ironman 70.3 and Ironman World Championships.
Raelert
won with a swim time of 00:23:24; bike of 02:14:17 and run of
01:11:15. Cunningham, Laguna Phuket Triathlon champion in 2008,
was runner-up on 03:57:16 with a swim time of 00:23:55, bike of
02:14:07 and run of 01:16:44; and Matthews finished on 03:58:24
with a swim time of 00:23:39, bike of 02:14:14 and run of
01:18:02.
In the women’s pro field, Melissa Rollison of
Australia, reigning Ironman 70.3 world champion and last year’s
Ironman 70.3 Asia Pacific Championship runner-up, cruised to an
emphatic victory and claimed the US$12,000 top prize in 04:17:01,
a massive 13 minutes ahead of Switzerland’s Natascha Badmann on
04:30:42.
They were joined in third place by last week’s
Laguna Phuket Triathlon women’s champion Radka Vodickova of the
Czech Republic, who shrugged off a knee injury sustained a few
days earlier in a bike accident with a gutsy run in her first-ever
Ironman 70.3 that saw her surge through the field to finish on
04:34:50, dashing the podium hopes of rising UK star Emma-Kate Lidbury.
Rollison won with a swim time of 00:27:32; bike
of 02:36:29 and run of 01:19:44; Badmann was runner-up with a swim
time of 00:30:00; bike of 02:26:01 and run of 01:30:57; and Vodickova finished with a swim time of 00:26:13, bike of 02:39:04
and run of 01:26:26.
Raelert was a commanding presence
early in the race, overtaking swim leader Daniel Halksworth of the
UK on the water exit to join the leading bike pack of Lieto,
Cunningham, Matthews, Matt Reed of the USA and Jason McHugh of
Australia.
After Lieto crashed out he was content to stay
among the pack as the skies darkened and rain poured down, but at
the run transition – with weather conditions more favourable for
runners - he took the lead, stretching it to more than two minutes
at the half-way point of the two-loop course.
“The
conditions out on the bike course were incredible, it was dark
with torrential rain,” Raelert said. “We had to slow down, but
that meant I could relax a bit and prepare for the run ... This is just a fantastic event. Even when the rain was coming
down the people were still lining the roads cheering us on. It
really encouraged all of us ... After the setbacks of this
season it’s great to end on a high note with a good win and I’m
sure this will be a springboard for my next season.”
It was
a disappointing day for three-time Laguna Phuket Triathlon
champion and crowd favourite
Massimo Cigana. The Italian, who won
his third LPT title last weekend and was bidding to follow-up his
runner-up place in last year’s Ironman 70.3 Asia-Pacific Championship, finished sixth in 04:01:54.
But it was a good
day for Australia, with five Australians among the top eight men’s
prize positions and three in the women’s top eight, including
winner Melissa Rollison.
Top Thai male finisher was the
country’s fast-rising triathlete star Jaray Jearanai of Phuket, in
a personal best of 04:38:38 on his home course, with a swim time
of 00:32:57, bike of 02:30:36 and run of 01:31:13. Top Thai female
was Nampetch Porntharukcharoen in 06:22:28, with a swim time of
00:45:09, bike of 03:18:24 and run of 02:09:55.
The day was
also a triumph for the oldest competitor, 79 years-old Hiromu
Inada of Japan, who finished in 06:42:01 with a swim time of
00:45:41, bike of 03:30:30 and run of 02:15:26.
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