| Jorgensen Scores First Win of Season | |
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Jun 18, 2012 |
By Erin Greene on 17/06/12 at 4:26 pm
Jorgensen Jets to Banyoles
World Cup Victory
The elite women were met with clear blue skies and rising
temperatures at the 2012 Banyoles ITU Triathlon World Cup. A race
brimming with athletes heading to London, triathlon newcomer Gwen
Jorgensen (USA) gave her competition reason to fear her presence in
England with a win in Spain on Sunday.
“It was a really great course,” Jorgensen said.
“Those girls really made me work. There are some really good
runners out there and when Erin took it out, I really tried to keep
the distance.”
From the start, amphibious Lucy Hall (GBR) and Banyoles local
Carolina Routier (ESP) wasted no time in creating a 20-meter
distance on the two-lap swim. Routier swam on Hall´s hip
throughout the swim, exiting to cheers from her compatriots.
Together, the young athletes headed out on the bike with a minute
lead over favorites Andrea Hewitt (NZL) and Erin Densham (AUS).
While they were expected to reign in the two runaways, the opposite
actually happened.
Hall and Routier continued hammering out even splits, while the
chase pack failed to find a rhythm. After trailing nearly a minute
and a half behind on the first lap, the main group started to
slowly chip away an average of ten seconds per lap. By the fourth
lap, they pulled within a minute of the two leaders.
However, the group lost nearly 40 seconds on the final two laps.
After a bike and swim that saw little change, the Hall and Routier
left with a vengeance to take advantage of their lead.
Unfortunately for them, even one minute and 40 seconds
wasn´t enough to secure a podium position. The pair was
quickly overtaken by a swift Densham. The Aussie pulled even with
Routier on the first lap and trailed Hall by just 14 seconds.
By midway through the second of three run laps, Hall was nowhere
to been seen, while the Spaniard had fallen out of contention.
Meanwhile, Densham continued ahead, while teammate Ashleigh Gentle
and Jorgensen pulled up third. Hewitt trailed close behind.
“I knew I had to dig deep from the start of the run, with so
many good runners around me,” Gentle said. “I was
really happy with the way I came home today because I was worried
when I started to feel a bit flat around the mid section of the
run, but I managed to pick it up.”
On the final lap, Densham owned a nine-second lead over Jorgensen.
Her lead, however, was soon destroyed. With a final surge,
Jorgensen overtook a fatiguing Densham early on in the final lap.
Jorgensen ran comfortably and confidently ahead.
She breezed over the finish line 16 seconds ahead of the
competition to claim her second world cup title. Densham cruised
into second, while her teammate Gentle gave Australia a two-three
finish with bronze.
“I basically just went out here to have a hit,”
Densham said. “To come away with second today, I actually did
a lot better than I thought I would. I´m really happy where
I´m at going into London.”
Elite Women
1. Gwen Jorgensen
USA 01:59:39
2. Erin Densham
AUS 01:59:55
3. Ashleigh Gentle
AUS 02:00:02
4. Andrea Hewitt
NZL 02:00:35
5. Lois Rosindale
GBR 02:01:10
6. Arina Shulgina
RUS 02:01:27
7. Elena Danilova
RUS 02:01:38
8. Felicity Sheedy-Ryan
AUS 02:01:48
9. Anna Burova RUS
02:02:07
10. Tamsyn Moana-Veale
AUS 02:02:12
Gwen's next outing is June 23rd in Kitzbuehel, Austria in an ITU World Triathlon Series race. Gwen will be racing the world's best women.
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