She might
be coming from a Nordic country, but Alberte Kjær Pedersen (DEN) has proven
once and again that she can manage racing under extreme weather circumstances.
With the Pacific Ocean waters at 30ºC and the air temperature at 34ºC, and
despite racing late in the evening, the young Dane delivered a commanding
victory at the World Triathlon Cup Huatulco, after outsprinting almost in the
blue carpet Rachel Klamer (NED) and Solveig Lovseth (NOR).
Forty
eight women lined up on the beach of Huatulco for a Sprint distance race that
will see them facing a challenging 750m swim, with waves and strong currents
that made both the swim start and the swim exit quite complicated, followed by
a demanding bike course of 22km, in four laps, with a long climb on every lap,
to then finish with a 5km run. And to make it even harder, high temperatures
and humidity, which made the second to last race of the Olympic qualification
quite a challenging one.
It was
Zsanett Kuttor-Bragmayer (HUN) who led the field out of the water, commanding a
small group of eight women that included the likes of Rachel Klamer (NED),
Lotte Miller (NOR), Sara Guerrero Manso (ESP), Karolina Helga Horvath (HUN),
Sophie Howell (CAN) and Tamara Gorman (USA). But by the time they all made it
to their bikes, after a long run out of the beach, they have been joined by
another large group of athletes and a long train of approximately 25 athletes
left the first transition together.
The four
laps of the bike became at that moment just a group ride with most of the
favourites on it, with some of them trying to stay up front to avoid problems,
like Miller, Klamer, Maria Tome (POR) or Maria Casals Mujica (ESP), and some
others staying on the back of the group, trying to save some legs for the final
run.
After
managing the 22km on the bike, the large train of 23 athletes came together to
the second transition and quite quickly a group of eight took control of the
situation. Klamer, Lovseth, Maria Carolina Velasquez Soto (COL), Kjær Pedersen,
Gina Sereno (USA), Horvath, Tome and Erica Ackerlund (USA).
They
quickly started to push and soon enough, Ackerlund and Tome were left behind,
while the chase pack was trying to keep the pace, with not only the medals up
for grabs but some very important ranking points that would mean the world for
the athletes that are vying to qualify for the Olympics in Paris. That was the
case for the two Austria representatives, Lisa Perterer and Julia Hauser, that
needed to consolidate their ranking in order to keep the dream of having a Team
at the Olympic Games alive. On a similar situation was Dominica Jamnicky (CAN),
who needed to score big in Huatulco to keep the chances of Team Canada being
represented at the Olympics alive.
Ahead of
the drama, the group of six women keep going, opening a gap that increased
kilometer after kilometer. It was Lovseth who charged first, with merely 500m
to go, but Klamer and Pedersen went with her and the Norwegian faded slightly
and it was Pedersen who took the lead to take the tape in style, her third
World Cup victory of her career, and the second in Huatulco, where she won her
first World Cup in 2021. “I am very happy with my victory here today, and I
managed to perform really well in the heat, and in Denmark is pretty cold”, she
said. “In the first lap of the run I decided to stay with the group, because I
was afraid of the heat. I knew that my sprint finish was pretty good so I tried
to wait for it and went for it at the end”, she explained.
Behind
her, Klamer proved once again that her run is always magnificent, and despite
having raced yesterday to claim the silver medal on the Mixed Relay Olympic
Qualifier Event and secure the Netherlands a Team at the Olympics, she crossed
the finish line just a couple of steps ahead of Lovseth. “I didn’t feel good
today at all during the race, I should have focused on recovery last night a
bit more, but I am really happy with my result today”, said Klamer. “I didn’t
want to make the same mistakes that I did in Wollongong -where she finished in
fourth- so I sat on the back and just pushed at the end, and it paid off”.
“I am
really surprised with my result today. The main goal for me and the Norwegian
team for this weekend was to qualify the Team, which we did yesterday, and this
is a bonus. I thought I need to make the most out of the trip. I felt really
good today, even at the swim, which is usually my biggest weakness. When I saw
that on the bike I didn’t have to bridge a gap because I was already at the
front I thought lets see what I can do on the run. I tried to go for the win
but I am extremely happy with third”, said Lovseth.
Velasquez
Soto was extremely happy with her fourth place, one that is worth a ticket to
the Olympics in Paris next summer, while Gina Sereno finished in fifth
place. Julia Hauser climbed to the sixth
place, securing some valuable points on the Olympic rankings, followed on the
finish line by Horvath, Ackerlund, Tome and Elizabeth Bravo (ECU), who rounded
the top ten. Sofia Rodriguez Moreno, 11th, was the first Mexican in the finish
line, followed by Casals Mujica.
The
disappointment was for Jamnicky, who was not able to finish the race, and Lisa
Perterer, whose 13th place puts Team Austria on a delicate position to qualify
for the Paris Olympics.
Results:
Elite Women
1. Alberte Kjær Pedersen DEN 01:04:54
3. Solveig Løvseth NOR 01:04:54
2. Rachel Klamer NED 01:04:54
4. Maria Carolina Velasquez Soto COL 01:05:00
5. Gina Sereno USA 01:05:08
No comments:
Post a Comment