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Ironman to Offer Enhanced Coverage of Major Races

At the end of January Ironman has announced that they want to improve the online coverage of their major races. Here’s a more detailed look at some of the questions around this issue. (Thanks to Joe Skipper for providing additional information.)

Races to be Covered

According to the press release Ironman wants to cover the Ironman World Championships (Kona), 70.3 World Championships (this year in Zell am See, Austria) and the five regional Championships (Melbourne, South Africa, Texas, Brasil and Frankfurt).

The first race that will benefit from this enhanced coverage will be Ironman Melbourne on March 22nd. It is not clear if there will also be enhanced coverage for IM South Africa – it is also a Regional Championship but just one week after Melbourne, so there may not be enough time to learn from the „beta test“ (Ironman’s words) in Melbourne.

Improved Ironman Live

For the races indicated above, Ironman will produce “a hosted online show with extensive, in-depth coverage of the professional race“. My expectation is that this will be a similar setup to the coverage that we have seen from Kona – mainly a couple of commentators in a „studio” with live pictures from the course and some additional commentary. However, it is very good to hear that Ironman has learned from the mistake of the non-coverage of 70.3 Championships in Mont Tremblant.

GPS Tracking

The main change to the coverage will be that every Pro athlete will be required to wear a GPS tracking device on the bike and run. The GPS data will feed into a new athlete tracking platform (dubbed Ironfan). Athletes can also opt into transferring additional biometric data such as HR or power.

This data will be very interesting (can I have a live feed, please?) but I’m somewhat skeptical about the value this will bring for following the race:

  • I don’t think too many athletes will be open to provide important data to their competitors.
  • The current Athlete Tracker had major functional and stability problems. It will be a huge ask for the new platform to work better, more stable and with a much larger amount of data.
  • Ironman has not been very good in using their data. For example, they have failed to provide really useful leaderboards. I’m not very optimistic that they will do better with the GPS data: They said that they will show this data “in an intuitive, map-driven design“. While that is certainly a cool way to look at it, distance between athletes has so far been expressed in time rather than shown on a map.

GPS Devices

In order to provide the GPS data, all athletes will have to carry a device supplied by Ironman. The size of the device may be a bit of a surprise to athletes, expecting something like a timing chip. In fact, the device is only slightly smaller than an iPhone 5, about the same weight but about three times as thick:

Tracking Device

As far as I can tell, the size of the device makes sense: It is basically a complete smart phone with a GPS chip, a cell phone to transfer the data and a large battery.

To help athletes carry the device, Ironman will provide „specifically-designed pouches“. However, athletes can have their own race belt to carry the device. In addition, some athletes (for example Martin Jensen) have indicated that they are working with their clothing sponsor to integrate a carrying pocket into their race suit, similar to the pitches for radios that the cycling Pros have in their clothing.

At first, carrying the unit will be new, and there will be some grumbling from those athletes that haven’t prepared in time for them. But over time, I expect these issues to go away, especially when technology advances will make the units smaller.

For now, the GPS tracking will be limited to Pros in major races, but Andrew Messick said that they hope to „expand .. to all races and to age-group athletes in the future“.

My Assessment

In general, the introduction of GPS tracking and the enhanced race coverage has the potential to be a very good move by Ironman, one that can make following races online much more interesting and help Pros to raise their profile. It would be great to be able to follow races online at a level comparable or even better than what the ITU and Challenge have been doing.

I hope that Ironman will be able to deliver on this potential and I’m willing to give them some time to get things right. But too often, Ironman efforts have been half-hearted and ultimately disappointing. I’ll be anxiously watching for Ironman to get things right this time!

Ironman New Zealand 2015 – Analyzing Results

Race Conditions

This year the conditions in New Zealand were pretty quick across all three legs – almost no winds, and pleasant temperatures that seemed to be not too hot and not too cold. An adjustment of 7:49 is the fastest I have seen in recent years, leading to a new course rating of 4:34. The conditions probably helped, but it was amazing to see a new swim record by Dylan McNeice (44:26, improving on Brent Foster’s 44:47 from 2004) and an overall women’s record by Meredith Kessler (9:05:45, improving on her own record of 9:08:46 from last year).

Male Race Results

Cam Brown continues to amaze: He won his 11th New Zealand title, and improved his own record of being the oldest male IM winner (now at 42 years, 8 months and 15 days). He was a bit behind after the swim, but bridged up to the front and slowly pulled away. Terns was still close to him in T2, but Cam quickly put some time into Terenzo and posted the fastest bike and run to win by six minutes.

Cam_NZ

Just one week after his big win in Dubai, Terenzo had a solid day: He was in the lead for some time on the bike, then ran a 2:55 marathon to finish second. The race for third came down to the wire: Challenge Wanaka winner Dylan McNeice struggled a bit on the bike after his swim course record, but found another gear at the end of the run and chased down Alex Reithmeier, securing a New Zealand podium!

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time Diff to expected
1 Cameron Brown NZL 00:50:02 04:37:39 02:49:08 08:22:13 02:24
2 Terenzo Bozzone NZL 00:47:04 04:41:08 02:55:51 08:28:53 02:11
3 Dylan McNeice NZL 00:44:26 04:53:27 02:54:24 08:38:05 -01:11
4 Alex Reithmeier AUS 00:50:03 04:43:03 02:59:58 08:38:47 -03:44
5 Mike Schifferle SUI 00:56:36 04:38:26 03:03:07 08:46:33 -10:14
6 Carl Read NZL 00:50:41 04:51:31 03:00:02 08:47:41 00:20
7 Simon Cochrane NZL 00:49:59 04:52:25 03:03:32 08:51:11 -05:59
8 Todd Skipworth AUS 00:44:32 04:54:00 03:12:21 08:55:31 08:19
9 Chris Sanson NZL 00:56:21 04:56:00 02:56:54 08:56:06 -08:19
10 Johan Borg AUS 00:56:16 04:55:50 03:08:28 09:06:06 -05:30
11 Shanon Stallard NZL 00:56:19 05:08:49 02:56:08 09:06:25 -06:36
12 Ricky Swindale AUS 00:50:07 05:08:04 03:03:03 09:07:41 n/a
13 Graham O’Grady NZL 00:44:29 04:45:16 03:44:40 09:19:20 n/a
14 James Cotter NZL 00:47:04 05:36:44 03:52:31 10:24:30 26:42
15 James Bowstead NZL 00:50:06 04:55:42 04:43:19 10:36:12 1:11:06
Nick Baldwin SEY 00:50:06 04:52:23 DNF
Young Hwan Oh KOR 00:56:27 05:28:36 DNF
Andrew Yoder USA 00:48:00 DNF
Daiki Masuda JPN 00:56:13 DNF
Joel Jameson GBR 00:59:50 DNF

Female Race Results

There was never a doubt in the women’s race: Meredith Kessler posted the fastest times in all three legs, even closing the day a new personal best for an Ironman marathon! An impressive, dominating performance that gives her breathing room to properly build for Kona now.

MBK_NZ

Even if Gina Crawford (also only two weeks after winning Challenge Wanaka) didn’t have a good day (as indicated by red times in all legs), she was never really challenged for second place. The final spot on the podium was taken by Melanie Burke.

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time Diff to expected
1 Meredith Kessler USA 00:49:36 05:04:29 03:07:18 09:05:45 -07:38
2 Gina Crawford NZL 00:51:25 05:16:55 03:11:13 09:26:11 11:38
3 Melanie Burke NZL 01:02:46 05:12:19 03:20:29 09:41:51 00:56
4 Stephanie Jones USA 01:00:39 05:18:47 03:21:13 09:47:32 04:59
5 Jocelyn Mccauley USA 00:58:46 05:30:33 03:13:25 09:50:01 n/a
6 Erin Furness NZL 01:01:09 05:33:29 03:32:18 10:13:05 10:07
7 Conny Dauben GER 01:06:08 05:53:42 04:19:47 11:27:58 40:34

Photo Credits: Tweets by Cam Brown and Meredith Kessler

Ironman Melbourne 2015 (March 22nd) – Predictions

IMMelb If you want to, you can submit your picks for IM Melbourne on IM-Predictions.com and see how you do against all our other players!

Previous Winners

Year Male Winner Time Female Winner Time
2012 Craig Alexander (AUS) 07:57:44 Caroline Steffen (SUI) 08:34:51
2013* Eneko Llanos (ESP) 07:36:08 Corinne Abraham (GBR) 08:10:56
2014 Dirk Bockel (LUX) 08:01:02 Caroline Steffen (SUI) 08:57:57

*) shortened swim

Last Year’s TOP 3

Male Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Dirk Bockel LUX 00:45:35 04:23:05 02:48:35 08:01:02
2 Paul Matthews AUS 00:45:34 04:29:02 02:44:09 08:02:14
3 David Dellow AUS 00:45:44 04:21:35 02:51:41 08:03:07

Female Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Caroline Steffen SUI 00:52:03 04:56:38 03:04:44 08:57:57
2 Mary Beth Ellis USA 00:50:00 04:59:36 03:08:48 09:02:15
3 Kim Schwabenbauer USA 01:03:32 05:00:13 03:01:34 09:10:06

Course Records

Leg Gender Record Athlete Date
Total overall 07:57:44 Craig Alexander 2012-03-24
Swim overall 00:45:23 Benjamin Sanson 2014-03-23
Bike overall 04:20:50 Michael Weiss 2014-03-23
Run overall 02:38:46 Craig Alexander 2012-03-24
Total female 08:34:51 Caroline Steffen 2012-03-24
Swim female 00:50:00 Mary Beth Ellis 2014-03-23
Bike female 04:35:29 Caroline Steffen 2012-03-24
Run female 02:58:29 Mirinda Carfrae 2012-03-24

Course Rating

The Course Rating for IM Melbourne is 12:07.

Race Adjustments for IM Melbourne

Year Adjustment Swim Adj. Bike Adj. Run Adj. # of Athletes Rating Swim Rating Bike Rating Run Rating
2012 09:11 -01:22 10:34 04:05 41 09:11 -01:22 10:34 04:05
2014 15:02 00:05 08:34 07:02 37 12:07 -00:38 09:34 05:33

KPR points and Prize Money

IM Melbourne has 4000 KPR points for the winner. It has a total prize purse of 150k$. As a Regional Championship the Melbourne winners will receive an Automatic Qualifier spot for Kona 2015. Melbourne will also be the first race that will have mandatory GPS tracking for the Professional athletes – hopefully this will help to provide good coverage for the race!

Male Race Participants

Rank Bib Name Nation Expected Time Rating Exp. Swim Exp. Bike Exp. Run Overall
1 1 Nils Frommhold GER 08:07:33 08:14:10 00:48:26 04:23:57 02:50:10 2
2 13 Christian Kramer GER 08:17:58 08:40:33 00:47:57 04:33:14 02:51:46 48
3 2 Tim Van Berkel AUS 08:20:36 08:33:20 00:50:07 04:35:39 02:49:50 24
4 4 Marko Albert EST 08:21:57 08:34:23 00:47:31 04:34:59 02:54:26 28
5 5 Peter Robertson AUS 08:22:37 08:43:18 00:47:15 04:31:40 02:58:42 (55)
6 3 Luke Bell AUS 08:23:30 09:07:54 00:48:02 04:31:54 02:58:34 (156)
7 8 Jeff Symonds CAN 08:26:06 08:38:28 00:51:59 04:41:10 02:47:56 37
8 9 Jens Petersen-Bach DEN 08:26:50 08:46:49 00:52:32 04:39:02 02:50:17 67
9 6 Jan Raphael GER 08:27:06 08:36:59 00:49:42 04:36:58 02:55:27 34
10 7 Per Bittner GER 08:33:51 08:45:33 00:50:46 04:39:57 02:58:09 59
11 15 Casey Munro AUS 08:34:42 09:05:09 00:46:36 04:29:49 03:13:17 (147)
12 19 Joshua Rix AUS 08:42:46 09:08:29 00:50:38 04:37:33 03:09:35 164
13 10 Nick Baldwin SEY 08:42:57 09:01:01 00:54:43 04:40:25 03:02:49 131
14 21 Jan Van Berkel SUI 08:44:18 08:57:19 00:49:26 04:35:20 03:14:32 117
15 20 Todd Skipworth AUS 08:48:11 09:16:41 00:47:04 04:34:44 03:21:23 (199)
16 11 Simon Billeau FRA 08:48:49 09:08:05 00:53:21 04:35:25 03:15:04 (160)
17 18 Brendan Naef CAN 09:22:00 09:42:30 00:58:41 05:02:31 03:15:48 306
12 Brad Kahlefeldt AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
14 Lachlan Kern AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
16 Callum Millward NZL n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
17 Dan McGuigan AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)

Female Race Participants

Rank Bib Name Nation Expected Time Rating Exp. Swim Exp. Bike Exp. Run Overall
1 32 Mirinda Carfrae AUS 08:49:02 08:56:08 00:55:32 04:58:08 02:50:22 1
2 31 Caroline Steffen SUI 08:51:34 09:10:02 00:52:36 04:49:38 03:04:20 4
3 33 Yvonne Van Vlerken NED 09:05:22 09:13:42 00:59:26 04:53:32 03:07:24 5
4 38 Mareen Hufe GER 09:19:36 09:36:43 01:00:40 04:55:40 03:18:16 39
5 35 Asa Lundstroem SWE 09:21:22 09:34:57 01:00:45 05:03:43 03:11:54 34
6 47 Emma Pooley GBR 09:27:02 09:51:42 01:03:32 04:57:41 03:20:48 (67)
7 37 Beth Gerdes USA 09:28:24 09:51:25 01:03:51 05:17:32 03:02:01 66
8 36 Bree Wee USA 09:28:42 09:42:10 00:55:20 05:11:42 03:16:39 47
9 44 Stephanie Jones USA 09:29:58 10:08:58 01:06:20 05:06:59 03:11:38 (109)
10 42 Ashley Clifford USA 09:30:38 09:41:34 00:55:30 05:23:19 03:06:49 46
11 34 Melissa Hauschildt AUS 09:32:37 09:57:31 00:55:36 05:11:58 03:20:03 (85)
12 40 Laura Bennett USA 09:34:54 09:59:55 00:53:38 05:06:14 03:30:02 (90)
13 41 Kym Coogan AUS 09:42:59 10:08:20 00:58:18 05:10:51 03:28:50 (107)
14 43 Kristy Hallett AUS 10:02:16 10:31:21 01:04:31 05:15:04 03:37:41 154
15 48 Natasha Van der Merwe USA 10:09:30 10:31:31 01:04:04 05:19:34 03:40:52 155
39 Annabel Luxford AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
45 Marina Jurjevic AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
46 Jessica Mitchell AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)

Winning Odds

Male Race Participants

My favorites are two Germans, Nils Frommhold (6th in Kona 2014) and Christian Kramer (who went sub-8 in Austria 2014). Marko Albert is another strong European athlete, while the home country hopes ride on Tim Van Berkel (7th in Kona 2014), Luke Bell (hopefully fully recovered after an injury-ridden 2014 season) and Peter Robertson (who had to miss Kona with a broken collarbone):

  • Nils Frommhold: 40% (2-1)
  • Christian Kramer: 22% (4-1)
  • Tim Van Berkel: 12% (8-1)
  • Marko Albert: 10% (9-1)
  • Luke Bell: 9% (10-1)

Female Race Participants

The female fields is about as large as the men’s field – and probably even deeper. My top seeded athlete is Mirinda Carfrae returning to race in her home country, but it remains to be seen in what shape she’ll race. (Her previous spring races were more focused on validating her Kona slot in a decent way.) Last year’s winners Caroline Steffen would like to repeat and show that she is still a strong Kona contender. Yvonne Van Vlerken still needs a solid performance to ensure a return to the big island.

  • Mirinda Carfrae: 56% (1-1)
  • Caroline Steffen: 33% (2-1)
  • Yvonne Van Vlerken: 6% (15-1)

Behind these three top athletes, there is a strong group of athletes looking for a podium spot or a good number of KPR points: I’m sure that Mareen Hufe, Asa Lundstroem, Emma Pooley, Beth Gerdes, Bree Wee, Ashley Clifford, Mel Hauschildt, Laura Bennett and Annabel Luxford will make the women’s race interesting to follow.

Ironman South Africa 2015 (March 29th) – Preliminary Startlist

This will be the first year that South Africa will be a Regional Championship. The automatic Kona slot for the winners, the large number of KPR points (it a P-4000 race now) and the increased prize purse of $150.000 has managed to attract a string field. Race registration is closed by now and while there may be a few withdrawals, we can get a good indication of the participants. I will post my regular longer predictions closer to the race.

Male Race Participants

Bib Name Nation
1 Cyril Viennot FRA
2 Frederik Van Lierde BEL
3 Bart Aernouts BEL
4 Michael Weiss AUT
5 Kyle Buckingham ZAF
6 Bas Diederen NED
7 Matt Trautman ZAF
8 Johann Ackermann GER
9 Mike Aigroz SUI
10 Konstantin Bachor GER
11 Bertrand Billard FRA
12 Gerhard De Bruin ZAF
13 Fraser Cartmell GBR
14 Alberto Casadei ITA
15 Emanuele Ciotti ITA
16 Will Clarke GBR
17 Greg Close USA
18 James Cunnama ZAF
19 Karl-Johan Danielsson SWE
20 Michael Davidson ZAF
21 Victor Del Corral ESP
22 Trevor Delsaut FRA
23 Marc Duelsen GER
24 Karol Dzalaj SVK
25 Herve Faure FRA
26 Frederik Flagstad GRL
27 Hannes Cool BEL
28 Kent Horner ZAF
29 Allan Hovda NOR
30 Martin Jensen DEN
31 Kirill Kotshegarov EST
32 Roman Krutina CZE
33 Eneko Llanos ESP
34 Carlos Lopez Diaz ESP
35 Jim Lubinski USA
36 David Mcnamee GBR
37 Johannes Moldan GER
39 David Plese SLO
40 Ivan Rana ESP
41 Michael Ruenz GER
42 Till Schramm GER
43 Boris Stein GER
44 Swen Sundberg GER
45 Sylvain Sudrie FRA
46 TJ Tollakson USA
47 Craig Twigg GBR
48 Urs Mueller SWI
49 Hendrik-Jan Verhaegen BEL
50 Andrej Vistica CRO

Female Race Participants

Bib Name Nation
38 Camilla Pedersen DEN
51 Jodie Swallow GBR
52 Linsey Corbin USA
53 Beth Shutt USA
54 Lucy Gossage GBR
55 Stefanie Adam BEL
56 Anne Basso FRA
57 Anja Beranek GER
58 Svetlana Blazevic SRB
59 Susie Cheetham GBR
60 Tine Deckers BEL
61 Amber Ferreira USA
62 Amy Forshaw GBR
63 Astrid Ganzow GER
64 Alyssa Godesky USA
65 Eleanor Haresign GBR
66 Corina Hengartner SWI
67 Jessica Meyers USA
68 Caroline Koll ZAF
69 Heather Leiggi USA
70 Maria Lemeseva RUS
71 Caroline Livesey GBR
72 Britta Martin NZL
73 Nina Pekerman ISR
74 Lucie Reed CZE
75 Diana Riesler GER
76 Riana Robertson ZAF
77 Linda Scattolin ITA
78 Caitlin Snow USA
79 Sonja Tajsich GER
80 Kathrin Walther GER
81 Eva Wutti AUT

Ironman New Zealand 2015 (March 7th) – Predictions

IMNZPrevious Winners

Year Male Winner Time Female Winner Time
2005 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:20:15 Joanna Lawn (NZL) 09:30:14
2007 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:26:33 Joanna Lawn (NZL) 09:20:02
2008 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:24:49 Joanna Lawn (NZL) 09:16:00
2009 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:18:05 Gina Crawford (NZL) 09:18:26
2010 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:21:52 Joanna Lawn (NZL) 09:14:35
2011 Cameron Brown (NZL) 08:31:07 Samantha Warriner (NZL) 09:28:24
2013 Bevan Docherty (NZL) 08:15:35 Meredith Kessler (USA) 09:17:10
2014 Marko Albert (EST) 08:17:33 Meredith Kessler (USA) 09:08:46

Last Year’s TOP 3

Male Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Marko Albert EST 00:46:10 04:36:42 02:50:05 08:17:33
2 Cameron Brown NZL 00:48:25 04:40:39 02:47:45 08:21:55
3 Terenzo Bozzone NZL 00:46:16 04:43:12 02:54:55 08:28:56

Female Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Meredith Kessler USA 00:46:47 05:08:30 03:08:06 09:08:46
2 Gina Crawford NZL 00:51:20 05:10:05 03:08:06 09:15:53
3 Candice Hammond NZL 00:59:25 05:15:01 03:10:44 09:30:04

Course Records

Leg Gender Record Athlete Date
Total overall 08:15:35 Bevan Docherty 2013-03-02
Swim overall 00:44:47 Brent Foster 2004-03-06
Bike overall 04:35:06 Bevan Docherty 2013-03-02
Run overall 02:43:10 Cameron Brown 2009-03-07
Total female 09:08:46 Meredith Kessler 2014-03-01
Swim female 00:46:30 Monica Byrn 2005-05-03
Bike female 05:01:17 Emi Shiono 2008-03-01
Run female 03:01:06 Mirinda Carfrae 2011-03-05

Course Rating

The Course Rating for IM New Zealand is 04:06.

Race Adjustments for IM New Zealand

Year Adjustment Swim Adj. Bike Adj. Run Adj. # of Athletes Rating Swim Rating Bike Rating Run Rating
2005 n/a n/a n/a n/a 4 n/a n/a n/a n/a
2007 04:39 00:53 00:10 04:50 17 04:39 00:53 00:10 04:50
2008 09:12 01:34 02:55 04:19 31 06:55 01:13 01:32 04:35
2009 07:35 00:00 03:43 03:02 27 07:09 00:49 02:16 04:04
2010 05:55 01:02 04:26 03:32 17 06:50 00:52 02:48 03:56
2011 -02:42 00:28 00:36 -01:05 20 04:56 00:47 02:22 02:56
2013 00:32 00:41 03:55 01:27 17 04:12 00:46 02:37 02:41
2014 03:31 01:02 -00:15 03:35 28 04:06 00:49 02:13 02:49

KPR points and Prize Money

IM New Zealand has 2000 KPR points for the winner. It has a total prize purse of 75 k$.

Male Race Participants

Rank Bib Name Nation Expected Time Rating Exp. Swim Exp. Bike Exp. Run Overall
1 1 Cameron Brown NZL 08:22:29 08:27:05 00:49:34 04:38:56 02:48:59 19
2 2 Terenzo Bozzone NZL 08:29:10 08:34:04 00:46:34 04:42:03 02:55:33 (35)
3 6 Dylan McNeice NZL 08:46:40 08:46:46 00:44:46 04:50:25 03:06:30 89
4 3 Joel Jameson GBR 08:49:18 08:52:22 00:56:33 04:51:21 02:56:24 121
5 4 Nick Baldwin SEY 08:50:54 08:50:22 00:53:14 04:47:19 03:05:20 107
6 30 Alex Reithmeier AUS 08:51:16 08:50:02 00:47:48 04:49:10 03:09:19 (105)
7 24 Luke Martin AUS 08:54:20 08:53:13 00:52:06 04:54:56 03:02:17 (124)
8 29 Carl Read NZL 08:55:09 08:54:59 00:52:31 04:57:58 02:59:40 128
9 10 Todd Skipworth AUS 08:56:12 08:54:57 00:45:46 04:41:22 03:24:04 (128)
10 9 Simon Cochrane NZL 08:59:14 09:04:51 00:51:33 04:58:03 03:04:38 184
11 5 Mike Schifferle SUI 09:02:19 09:04:24 01:00:25 04:51:22 03:05:32 179
12 21 Johan Borg AUS 09:09:14 09:19:30 00:54:53 04:57:41 03:11:40 (233)
13 7 Jose Jeuland FRA 09:09:42 09:14:53 00:52:45 05:04:43 03:07:14 211
14 32 Shanon Stallard NZL 09:13:29 09:20:56 00:55:08 05:04:47 03:08:34 240
15 31 Chris Sanson NZL 09:16:33 09:12:11 00:54:18 05:05:47 03:11:28 201
16 25 Daiki Masuda JPN 09:16:52 09:48:07 00:54:52 05:01:49 03:15:12 349
17 22 James Bowstead NZL 09:18:11 09:34:19 00:52:48 04:47:40 03:32:43 (293)
18 34 Marcus Hultgren SWE 09:48:51 09:31:24 00:58:29 05:03:07 03:42:15 (287)
19 23 James Cotter USA 10:05:14 10:06:50 00:47:52 05:05:03 04:07:19 (410)
8 Andrew Yoder USA n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
26 Graham O’Grady NZL unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
27 Young Hwan Oh KOR n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)
33 Ricky Swindale AUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)

Female Race Participants

Rank Bib Name Nation Expected Time Rating Exp. Swim Exp. Bike Exp. Run Overall
1 11 Meredith Kessler USA 09:08:31 09:21:17 00:48:15 05:03:02 03:12:14 15
2 12 Gina Crawford NZL 09:14:52 09:22:45 00:51:05 05:10:29 03:08:18 16
3 14 Mareen Hufe GER 09:31:41 09:36:43 00:59:15 05:05:11 03:22:15 42
4 15 Stephanie Jones USA 09:41:29 09:51:03 01:04:53 05:16:16 03:15:20 (82)
5 13 Melanie Burke NZL 09:42:08 09:49:20 01:05:36 05:14:23 03:17:08 77
6 17 Erin Furness NZL 10:05:40 10:11:50 01:00:44 05:31:59 03:27:57 130
7 16 Conny Dauben GER 10:52:52 10:57:22 01:07:18 05:40:58 03:59:36 172
18 Jocelyn Mccauley USA n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated (n/a)

Winning Odds

Male Race Participants

Cam Brown is the clear favorite for another New Zealand title. Terns Bozzone has been working on his IM skills for a while but hasn’t had a break-through race just yet. Maybe this is the year he can finally nail an Ironman race? Dylan McNeice will probably not be on top of his game after winning IM Wanaka just two weeks before but you never know how these doubles turn out:

  • Cameron Brown: 64% (1-1)
  • Terenzo Bozzone: 26% (3-1)
  • Dylan McNeice: 4% (23-1)

Female Race Participants

Meredith Kessler is the clear female favorite. If nothing goes wrong for „MBK“, she should win her fourth New Zealand title in a row. Her main contender, Gina Crawford, is also just coming off another IM-distance race – winning Challenge Wanaka. Maybe Mareen Hufe can deliver another great performance on the „fifth continent“ after her great second place at Ironman Western Australia in early December.

  • Meredith Kessler: 59% (1-1)
  • Gina Crawford: 29% (2-1)
  • Mareen Hufe: 9% (10-1)
  • Stephanie Jones: 2% (51-1)
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