Skip to content
  • News
  • Tourism
  • 钛紧固件
  • titanium fasteners
  • sligo gaa jerseys

HelenAtAmarIt

Month: November 2020

WTS Yokohama: Luis wins, Yee fifth

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

First ever #WTSYokohama victory for @vincentluistri @FFTRI
Read all about it

Advertisement

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Leave a comment

WTS Yokohama: Luis wins, Yee fifth

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

First ever #WTSYokohama victory for @vincentluistri @FFTRI
Read all about it

Advertisement

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Leave a comment

Unbeaten Zafares wins as US sweep podium in Japan

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

.@KZaferes6 leads a @usatriathlon podium sweep in #WTSYokohama
Read all about it

Advertisement

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Leave a comment

Unbeaten Zafares wins as US sweep podium in Japan

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

.@KZaferes6 leads a @usatriathlon podium sweep in #WTSYokohama
Read all about it

Advertisement

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Leave a comment

Ali Brownlee wins in Cagliari, Sardinia

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

In a return to ITU racing two-time Olympic Alistair Brownlee has won Cagliari World Cup, his first ITU World Cup race in over a decade.

Advertisement

“I am delighted with that,” said Brownlee afterwards. “I just said to myself with a couple of minutes to go, no-one can push harder than me so, if they’re going to beat me, they’re going to have to go really deep.”



It was to be Germany’s Justus Nieschlag and Mark Devay of Hungary first out of the water, however Brownlee was hot on their heels and the trio were joined by Ryan Bailie (AUS), and Sylvain Fridelance (SUI). A lead group of twelve riders then formed, and carved out a 12-second advantage by lap three.

Brownlee left T2 in first place and ran stride for stride with Germany’s Justus Nieschlag and Kevin Mcdowell of the USA for the first 4km. He continually pushed the pace until Mcdowell was dropped and Nieschlag had to settle for second, one second adrift of the winner.

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

“He (Justus) was there on the swim, pushed it on the bike and is a real all round triathlete,” said Brownlee. “It was great to see, but I am delighted to be back and in the sharp end of a race. As for what’s next, I am still sitting on the fence. I have European Championships in two weeks and Leeds the week after that. I’ll see where that leaves me in three weeks’ time.”

Advertisement

 In the women’s race compatriot Sophie Coldwell delivered an incredible performance in Cagliari also take the gold medal, ensuring two golds for Great Britain.  Beth Potter was the fastest on two feet by some margin; sprinting home to take 6th place and second Brit. Jodie Stimpson finished 7th and Kate Waugh was 25th.

Leave a comment

Ali Brownlee wins in Cagliari, Sardinia

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

In a return to ITU racing two-time Olympic Alistair Brownlee has won Cagliari World Cup, his first ITU World Cup race in over a decade.

Advertisement

“I am delighted with that,” said Brownlee afterwards. “I just said to myself with a couple of minutes to go, no-one can push harder than me so, if they’re going to beat me, they’re going to have to go really deep.”



It was to be Germany’s Justus Nieschlag and Mark Devay of Hungary first out of the water, however Brownlee was hot on their heels and the trio were joined by Ryan Bailie (AUS), and Sylvain Fridelance (SUI). A lead group of twelve riders then formed, and carved out a 12-second advantage by lap three.

Brownlee left T2 in first place and ran stride for stride with Germany’s Justus Nieschlag and Kevin Mcdowell of the USA for the first 4km. He continually pushed the pace until Mcdowell was dropped and Nieschlag had to settle for second, one second adrift of the winner.

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

“He (Justus) was there on the swim, pushed it on the bike and is a real all round triathlete,” said Brownlee. “It was great to see, but I am delighted to be back and in the sharp end of a race. As for what’s next, I am still sitting on the fence. I have European Championships in two weeks and Leeds the week after that. I’ll see where that leaves me in three weeks’ time.”

Advertisement

 In the women’s race compatriot Sophie Coldwell delivered an incredible performance in Cagliari also take the gold medal, ensuring two golds for Great Britain.  Beth Potter was the fastest on two feet by some margin; sprinting home to take 6th place and second Brit. Jodie Stimpson finished 7th and Kate Waugh was 25th.

Leave a comment

WTS Yokohama: 10 things we learnt

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

1. Yokohama not so hot as an Olympic dry run: The Japanese city lies less than a 40km bike leg from Tokyo and its course profile – essentially pan-flat – resembles what triathletes can expect at next year’s Olympics. Acclimatising to the time and cultural differences will provide valuable experience, but one factor that Yokohama could not recreate were the expected conditions come August 2020 – likely to be so oppressive the racing has been moved to early morning starts. History tells us that turning up the heat leads to unexpected outcomes in triathlon, so don’t read too many omens into this one.

Advertisement

2. British selection goes from tough to tougher: The women’s race might have played out as a precursor for the harshest of British Triathlon selection decisions for the Olympics. Jess Learmonth always leads the swim, pushes the pace on the bike, and is currently tied for second place in the series rankings. But it may not be enough. The more her cycling improves, the greater the chance of the front group staying away from the rest of the field – and that includes the faster running Brits. Had the chasing bike pack containing Georgia Taylor-Brown and Non Stanford caught the leaders in Yokohama, the chances of a GB medal would have increased. But before Learmonth fans cry foul and worry unduly, if and when Duffy and potentially even Nicola Spirig return, the race dynamics will change once more. Before selection is determined, there are plenty of twists and turns to come.

3. Dicing with the dismount line: Quite why pro triathletes cut the bike dismount so fine is almost as unfathomable as how technical officials could make an accurate penalty call amidst a flurry of legs and spokes careering down the blue carpet. Given any advantage would be negligible, there seems to be an unwritten code that no-one will actually be penalised for transgressing, except, as Jonny Brownlee, ala London 2012, will recall (then with the mount line), ‘rules is sometimes rules’. So, with next year’s Olympics in mind, perhaps all triathletes should give themselves a little grace as to where they plonk their feet.

4. The joy of a home hero: Yuko Takahashi may not be the highest profile triathlete in the world, but when it comes to racing in Japan, she tops the bill – and that will be multiplied 10-fold next year. The Asian champion has been in the sport for over a decade, is still improving, and in Yokohama went one better than her previous best of fifth place in last year’s Bermuda WTS. It brought smiles all round. Home heroes bring a vital ingredient to the WTS. Bermuda was all the poorer for local ace Flora Duffy’s absence in the last round and Leeds won’t be the same unless a Brownlee or two shows up.

5. Lose the wetsuit, concede the race: Yokohama is a long-standing host on the World Series and many of its past races have seen the field come together to form one main bike pack for a less-than-enthralling roll around the city’s streets. It didn’t happen in either race this time, and a major factor was the non-wetsuit swim. Without the neoprene, weaker swimmers are exposed, the race fragments, and among the big names to drop out of contention early here were men’s world champion Mario Mola and women’s 2018 Grand Final winner Ashleigh Gentle.

6. More glee for Yee: Britain’s Alex Yee, originally from London and now training in Leeds, produced another step up in performance to be the sole triathlete to run under 30mins for the 10km split (29:58). While he officially needed a top three finish to achieve the first part of the Olympic selection criteria, the 21-year-old, who finished fifth, must already be inked in for Tokyo, particularly with the Brownlees’ injury challenges and no other medal contenders emerging. Yee is not infallible, but after the curtain-raiser in Abu Dhabi we stated he could win a WTS race this season and his Yokohama performance further solidifies that view.

7. The first pedal strokes determine the race: As Britain’s Tom Bishop, Non Stanford and Georgia Taylor-Brown will attest, the frenetic moments heading out of T1 and on to the bike course define the narrative of the race. All three Brits were cut adrift by fine margins, and with it went their chances. It felt particularly tough on Bishop, who swam within 19sec of the lead, yet unable to latch on to the front was left time-trialling solo for several kilometres trying to bridge the gap.

8. You don’t out-kick sprint king Luis: After his fourth place in Bermuda last time out, we concluded that despite being the series leader, Vincent Luis was still an enigma when it comes to the highest level. What wasn’t acknowledged – and that he’s proved time and again – is that to beat the Frenchman, he needs distancing before the blue carpet. Otherwise, as shown in Yokohama, when it comes to a sprint finish, there is no-one better.

9. And we’re left seeing Stars… and Stripes again: It was the fourth occasion the USA women have achieved a podium clean sweep – the others being in London (2015), Gold Coast (2015) and Edmonton (2016)– and Katie Zafares has been there every time. There are also currently 10 Americans in the ITU world’s top 100 rankings, proving great testament to the collegiate recruitment system led by 2004 Olympian Barb Lindquist. Just as with the Brits, US triathletes with medal-winning potential are going to miss out on Tokyo. Just imagine the fun if 2016 Olympic champion Gwen Jorgensen fancied a return too?*

10. ITU is racing ahead with its coverage: No apologies for the plug because the broadcasting has gone up another level this season thanks to the introduction of a new platform on triathlonlive.tv. As well as full coverage of the men’s and women’s races in Yokohama, the paratriathlon was also shown live (Britain’s Jade Jones-Hall took gold in the wheelchair division). But your annual $26.99 subscription doesn’t stop there. The weekend’s World Cup race in Cagliari, where Alistair Brownlee and Sophie Coldwell triumphed, was also broadcast live, and, if you fancy a trip down memory lane or some extra footage to watch when on the trainer, there are years of archived races to get stuck into.

Advertisement

*Despite Jorgensen having chosen a slightly trickier alternative career path, there is no indication of this happening.

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Leave a comment

WTS Yokohama: 10 things we learnt

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

1. Yokohama not so hot as an Olympic dry run: The Japanese city lies less than a 40km bike leg from Tokyo and its course profile – essentially pan-flat – resembles what triathletes can expect at next year’s Olympics. Acclimatising to the time and cultural differences will provide valuable experience, but one factor that Yokohama could not recreate were the expected conditions come August 2020 – likely to be so oppressive the racing has been moved to early morning starts. History tells us that turning up the heat leads to unexpected outcomes in triathlon, so don’t read too many omens into this one.

Advertisement

2. British selection goes from tough to tougher: The women’s race might have played out as a precursor for the harshest of British Triathlon selection decisions for the Olympics. Jess Learmonth always leads the swim, pushes the pace on the bike, and is currently tied for second place in the series rankings. But it may not be enough. The more her cycling improves, the greater the chance of the front group staying away from the rest of the field – and that includes the faster running Brits. Had the chasing bike pack containing Georgia Taylor-Brown and Non Stanford caught the leaders in Yokohama, the chances of a GB medal would have increased. But before Learmonth fans cry foul and worry unduly, if and when Duffy and potentially even Nicola Spirig return, the race dynamics will change once more. Before selection is determined, there are plenty of twists and turns to come.

3. Dicing with the dismount line: Quite why pro triathletes cut the bike dismount so fine is almost as unfathomable as how technical officials could make an accurate penalty call amidst a flurry of legs and spokes careering down the blue carpet. Given any advantage would be negligible, there seems to be an unwritten code that no-one will actually be penalised for transgressing, except, as Jonny Brownlee, ala London 2012, will recall (then with the mount line), ‘rules is sometimes rules’. So, with next year’s Olympics in mind, perhaps all triathletes should give themselves a little grace as to where they plonk their feet.

4. The joy of a home hero: Yuko Takahashi may not be the highest profile triathlete in the world, but when it comes to racing in Japan, she tops the bill – and that will be multiplied 10-fold next year. The Asian champion has been in the sport for over a decade, is still improving, and in Yokohama went one better than her previous best of fifth place in last year’s Bermuda WTS. It brought smiles all round. Home heroes bring a vital ingredient to the WTS. Bermuda was all the poorer for local ace Flora Duffy’s absence in the last round and Leeds won’t be the same unless a Brownlee or two shows up.

5. Lose the wetsuit, concede the race: Yokohama is a long-standing host on the World Series and many of its past races have seen the field come together to form one main bike pack for a less-than-enthralling roll around the city’s streets. It didn’t happen in either race this time, and a major factor was the non-wetsuit swim. Without the neoprene, weaker swimmers are exposed, the race fragments, and among the big names to drop out of contention early here were men’s world champion Mario Mola and women’s 2018 Grand Final winner Ashleigh Gentle.

6. More glee for Yee: Britain’s Alex Yee, originally from London and now training in Leeds, produced another step up in performance to be the sole triathlete to run under 30mins for the 10km split (29:58). While he officially needed a top three finish to achieve the first part of the Olympic selection criteria, the 21-year-old, who finished fifth, must already be inked in for Tokyo, particularly with the Brownlees’ injury challenges and no other medal contenders emerging. Yee is not infallible, but after the curtain-raiser in Abu Dhabi we stated he could win a WTS race this season and his Yokohama performance further solidifies that view.

7. The first pedal strokes determine the race: As Britain’s Tom Bishop, Non Stanford and Georgia Taylor-Brown will attest, the frenetic moments heading out of T1 and on to the bike course define the narrative of the race. All three Brits were cut adrift by fine margins, and with it went their chances. It felt particularly tough on Bishop, who swam within 19sec of the lead, yet unable to latch on to the front was left time-trialling solo for several kilometres trying to bridge the gap.

8. You don’t out-kick sprint king Luis: After his fourth place in Bermuda last time out, we concluded that despite being the series leader, Vincent Luis was still an enigma when it comes to the highest level. What wasn’t acknowledged – and that he’s proved time and again – is that to beat the Frenchman, he needs distancing before the blue carpet. Otherwise, as shown in Yokohama, when it comes to a sprint finish, there is no-one better.

9. And we’re left seeing Stars… and Stripes again: It was the fourth occasion the USA women have achieved a podium clean sweep – the others being in London (2015), Gold Coast (2015) and Edmonton (2016)– and Katie Zafares has been there every time. There are also currently 10 Americans in the ITU world’s top 100 rankings, proving great testament to the collegiate recruitment system led by 2004 Olympian Barb Lindquist. Just as with the Brits, US triathletes with medal-winning potential are going to miss out on Tokyo. Just imagine the fun if 2016 Olympic champion Gwen Jorgensen fancied a return too?*

10. ITU is racing ahead with its coverage: No apologies for the plug because the broadcasting has gone up another level this season thanks to the introduction of a new platform on triathlonlive.tv. As well as full coverage of the men’s and women’s races in Yokohama, the paratriathlon was also shown live (Britain’s Jade Jones-Hall took gold in the wheelchair division). But your annual $26.99 subscription doesn’t stop there. The weekend’s World Cup race in Cagliari, where Alistair Brownlee and Sophie Coldwell triumphed, was also broadcast live, and, if you fancy a trip down memory lane or some extra footage to watch when on the trainer, there are years of archived races to get stuck into.

Advertisement

*Despite Jorgensen having chosen a slightly trickier alternative career path, there is no indication of this happening.

Leave a comment

Bkool & Challenge Family Triathlon Series Launch the Challenge Cup

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

As part of its partnership agreement with the Challenge Family Triathlon Series, Bkool is organising a special online competition called the Challenge Cup, running from May 30 to June 27.

Advertisement

The Challenge Cup is an online competition based on the actual bike circuits of four Challenge Family events. Ride all four events and come top of the overall classification to win a free entry to the final European race of the 2019 calendar, the Challenge Mallorca!

Gain a Competitive Edge

As well as being able to train safely from home on the real courses for each event, thanks to the Bkool Cycling Simulator, triathletes and all Bkool Premium members have a chance to compete in the Challenge Cup.

“If you’re training for a Challenge event, Bkool is a great way to hone your competitive edge and train on the actual race courses,” explains Javier Cepedano, Bkool’s Director of Marketing.

The Cup events will take place on the following dates:

Thursday May 30 – Garmin Challenge Herning

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

Thursday June 6 – SKODA Challenge Geraardsbergen

Thursday June 20 – Challenge Kaiserwinkl-Walchsee

Thursday June 27 – DATEV Challenge Roth

Each event will have 6 possible sessions to join online, covering all timezone possibilities:
11am (GMT+2) – 5pm (GMT+2) – 7pm (GMT+2) – 9pm (GMT+2) – 2am (GMT+2) – 5am (GMT+2)

Ride With The Pros

The Challenge Cup will also be ridden by some of the stars of the Challenge Family series, with triathletes such as Laura Siddalland Frederic Funkjoining in the fun.

How To Enter

To participate, and be in for a chance to win a free entry to Challenge Mallorca plus a tonne of Challenge Family merchandise during each event, all you have to do is download the Bkool Cycling Simulator and sign up to Bkool for the first event Thursday May 30:

Advertisement

Click here to join Bkool premium.bkool.com

Leave a comment

Bkool & Challenge Family Triathlon Series Launch the Challenge Cup

Posted on November 12, 2020 by HelenAtAmarIt

As part of its partnership agreement with the Challenge Family Triathlon Series, Bkool is organising a special online competition called the Challenge Cup, running from May 30 to June 27.

Advertisement

The Challenge Cup is an online competition based on the actual bike circuits of four Challenge Family events. Ride all four events and come top of the overall classification to win a free entry to the final European race of the 2019 calendar, the Challenge Mallorca!

Gain a Competitive Edge

As well as being able to train safely from home on the real courses for each event, thanks to the Bkool Cycling Simulator, triathletes and all Bkool Premium members have a chance to compete in the Challenge Cup.

“If you’re training for a Challenge event, Bkool is a great way to hone your competitive edge and train on the actual race courses,” explains Javier Cepedano, Bkool’s Director of Marketing.

Click Here: liverpool mens jersey

The Cup events will take place on the following dates:

Thursday May 30 – Garmin Challenge Herning

Thursday June 6 – SKODA Challenge Geraardsbergen

Thursday June 20 – Challenge Kaiserwinkl-Walchsee

Thursday June 27 – DATEV Challenge Roth

Each event will have 6 possible sessions to join online, covering all timezone possibilities:
11am (GMT+2) – 5pm (GMT+2) – 7pm (GMT+2) – 9pm (GMT+2) – 2am (GMT+2) – 5am (GMT+2)

Ride With The Pros

The Challenge Cup will also be ridden by some of the stars of the Challenge Family series, with triathletes such as Laura Siddalland Frederic Funkjoining in the fun.

How To Enter

To participate, and be in for a chance to win a free entry to Challenge Mallorca plus a tonne of Challenge Family merchandise during each event, all you have to do is download the Bkool Cycling Simulator and sign up to Bkool for the first event Thursday May 30:

Advertisement

Click here to join Bkool premium.bkool.com

Leave a comment

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Recent Posts

  • 升降桌選購指南:提升工作效率與健康的完美選擇
  • 升降桌選購指南:提升工作效率與健康的最佳選擇
  • 升降桌選購指南:提升工作效率與健康的最佳選擇
  • 升降桌選購指南:提升工作效率與健康的必備神器
  • 升降桌選購指南:提升工作效率與健康的最佳選擇

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • May 2022
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • December 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • March 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019

    Categories

    • News
    • Tourism

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Lodestar by Automattic.