IRONMAN LOS CABOS 2013 Award Ceremony will be held on TODAY, Monday March 18 at 18:00 hr. at Puerto Paraiso Mall in Cabo San Lucas.
By: Bethany Mavis
Germany’s Timo Bracht and Hungary’s Erika Csomor came out on top
at the inaugural Ironman Los Cabos, set in the southern tip of Mexico’s
Baja peninsula. The pros were vying for a $75,000 total prize purse and
2,000 points in the Kona Pro Rankings.
Men’s Race
In the men’s race, Bracht, a multiple Ironman champion and top-10 Kona finisher, used a race-best bike (4:37:34) to get to the front then pulled away on the marathon to take the victory. First out of the 2.4-mile swim, which is located in a protected cove and starts from Palmilla Beach, was Aussie Luke McKenzie in a time of 49:23, just steps ahead of a pack that included Andres Castillo, Brett Carter, Axel Zeebroek and Maik Twelsiek.
In the men’s race, Bracht, a multiple Ironman champion and top-10 Kona finisher, used a race-best bike (4:37:34) to get to the front then pulled away on the marathon to take the victory. First out of the 2.4-mile swim, which is located in a protected cove and starts from Palmilla Beach, was Aussie Luke McKenzie in a time of 49:23, just steps ahead of a pack that included Andres Castillo, Brett Carter, Axel Zeebroek and Maik Twelsiek.
The 112-mile bike course takes athletes on the scenic tourist
corridor highway that joins Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo, and
runs parallel to the Sea of Cortes. After leading out of the swim,
McKenzie led early into the bike, and by 34 miles into the ride had
gained a 1-minute advantage on the chase pack of three (Carter, Castillo
and Zeebroek). Twelsiek lost his chip before the bike, so announcers
were unsure of his whereabouts until later in the bike. Bracht and
Switzerland’s Ronnie Schildknecht, two of the fastest men on the
European Ironman circuit, had exited the water about four minutes behind
McKenzie, but caught up to less than three minutes by 34 miles into the
bike. By 87 miles into the bike, Bracht had pulled into the lead with
Twelsiek just behind. Great Britain’s Paul Amey rode in fourth, less
than two minutes back, and Canada’s Jeff Symonds, in his Ironman debut,
rode in sixth. Bracht and Twelsiek entered T2, located in the heart of
downtown San Jose, together, with Amey 3:30 back.
The three-lap, 26.2-mile run takes place on the streets of downtown
San Jose. By 7 miles into the marathon, Bracht had opened a gap of 30
seconds on Twelsiek, and by 15 miles, the gap had increased to six
minutes, a lead he held to the finish. The battle for the remaining two
spots on the podium became a tight race. France’s Trevor Delsaut, after
losing eight minutes in the swim, ran his way into second place with a
2:48:02 marathon, and multiple Ironman champion Jozsef Major of Hungary
rounded out the podium using a 2:48:30 run split.
Women’s Race
Throughout the women’s race were multiple lead changes, but Hungary’s Erika Csomor, the reigning Ironman Switzerland champ, used a solid run to edge out the runner-up and take the title.
Throughout the women’s race were multiple lead changes, but Hungary’s Erika Csomor, the reigning Ironman Switzerland champ, used a solid run to edge out the runner-up and take the title.
Denmark’s Michelle Vesterby was first out of the water in 55:12, with
almost a minute over the second woman, Katy Blakemore. By the 34-mile
point in the bike, Belgium’s Sofie Goos, who exited the swim 90 seconds
behind Vesterby, was at the front of the lead pack that included
Vesterby and American April Gellatly. Two-thirds of the way through the
bike, Germany’s Mareen Hufe, who exited the swim six minutes behind the
leader, had pulled to the front, a minute up on Vesterby, while Goos and
Gellatly slipped to two minutes back.
Hufe hammered the final miles, clocking an impressive 5:09:23 bike
split, entering T2 4:05 ahead of Vesterby. Goos and Gellatly entered T2
more than 9 minutes off the lead. Vesterby gained back some time in the
early miles of the run, pulling within 2 minutes of Hufe 7 miles in.
Csomor, who raced without a timing chip all day, ran her way into the
top three. Hufe held onto her lead until Vesterby passed her about
halfway through the marathon. What happened in the final miles was
unclear, as neither Csomor nor Vesterby had a functioning timing chip,
but Csomor pulled into the lead in the final miles of the run, followed
by Vesterby less than a minute later. American Lisa Ribes used a 3:07:15
marathon to take third.
Ironman Los Cabos
March 17, 2013 – Los Cabos, Mexico
2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run
March 17, 2013 – Los Cabos, Mexico
2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run
Men
1. Timo Bracht (GER) 8:26:48
2. Trevor Delsaut (FRA) 8:33:26
3. Jozsef Major (HUN) 8:33:57
4. Jeff Symonds (CAN) 8:37:09
5. Maik Twelsiek (GER) 8:37:43
1. Timo Bracht (GER) 8:26:48
2. Trevor Delsaut (FRA) 8:33:26
3. Jozsef Major (HUN) 8:33:57
4. Jeff Symonds (CAN) 8:37:09
5. Maik Twelsiek (GER) 8:37:43
Women
1. Erika Csomor (HUN) 9:35:34
2. Michelle Vesterby (DEN) 9:36:31
3. Lisa Ribes (USA) 9:38:35
4. Mareen Hufe (GER) 9:40:50
5. Kathleen Calkins (USA) 9:46:55
1. Erika Csomor (HUN) 9:35:34
2. Michelle Vesterby (DEN) 9:36:31
3. Lisa Ribes (USA) 9:38:35
4. Mareen Hufe (GER) 9:40:50
5. Kathleen Calkins (USA) 9:46:55
Article By: Bethany Mavis
Bethany Mavis is the associate editor for Triathlete and Inside Triathlon magazines. She received her B.A. in journalism from Point Loma Nazarene University and is a multiple half-marathon finisher.
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