

Until that point, no one present had ever done the bike race; Cdr. Collins
calculated that, by shaving 3 miles off the course and riding
counter-clockwise around the island, the bike leg could start at the finish
of the Waikiki Rough Water and end at the Aloha Tower, the traditional start
of the Honolulu Marathon. Prior to racing, each athlete received three
sheets of paper listing a few rules and a course description. Handwritten on
the last page was this exhortation: "Swim 2.4 miles! Bike 112 miles! Run
26.2 miles! Brag for the rest of your life", now a registered trademark.With
a nod to a local runner who was notorious for his demanding workouts,
Collins said, "Whoever finishes first, we'll call him the Iron Man." Each of
the racers had their own support crew to supply water, food and
encouragement during the event. Of the fifteen men to start off in the early
morning on February 18, 1978, twelve completed the race. Gordon Haller was
the first to earn the title Ironman by completing the course, with a time of
11 hours, 46 minutes, and 58 seconds.
With no further marketing efforts, the race gathered as many as 50 athletes
in 1979. The race, however, was postponed a day because of bad weather
conditions and only fifteen competitors started off the race Sunday morning.
San Diego's Tom Warren won in 11 hours, 15 minutes, and 56 seconds. Lyn
Lemaire, a championship cyclist from Boston, placed sixth overall and became
the first "Ironwoman".Collins planned on changing the race into a relay
event to draw more participants, but Sports Illustrated's journalist Barry
McDermott, in the area to cover a golf tournament, discovered the race and
wrote a ten page account of it. During the following year, hundreds of
curious participants contacted Collins.In 1981 the competition was moved to
the less urbanized Big Island by Valerie Silk and in 1982 Silk moved the
race date from February to October; as a result of this change there were
two Ironman Triathlon events in 1982.A milestone in the marketing of the
legend and history of the race happened in February 1982.
Julie Moss, a college student competing to gather research for her exercise
physiology thesis, moved toward the finish line in first place. As she came
nearer to the finish line, severe fatigue and dehydration set in, falling
yards away from the finish line. Although Kathleen McCartney passed her for
the women’s title, Moss nevertheless crawled to the finish line. Her
performance was broadcast worldwide and created the Ironman mantra that just
finishing is a victory.The sport of triathlon was added as an Olympic sport
at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney as a shorter distance race (1.5 km
swim, 40 km cycle, 10 km run).The original Ironman is held in conditions
which are uniquely punishing for endurance racing: the Hawaii water is warm
enough that helpfully buoyant wetsuits are not allowed; though the cycling
hills have only moderate gradients they are normally crossed by strong and
gusting winds; and the marathon leg of the race is usually extremely hot.
Other races under the WTC aegis have their own difficulties, characteristic
of their setting and season.
Anyone completing one of these races within the time limit, so long as it is
the prescribed distance, is entitled to call him/herself an Ironman (the
term being gender-neutral). At one time there was no cut-off time, then a 15
hour time limit - for these events the normal time limit is now 17 hours.
Some iron distance races (not sanctioned by the WTC corporation, but using
the same standard distances) have different cut-off times. TodayThe Ironman
format remains unchanged, and the Hawaiian Ironman is still regarded as the
most honored and prestigious triathlon event to win worldwide.
Ironman World Triathlon
The Ironman World Triathlon Championship or Ironman Triathlon is an annual
triathlon race, made famous by its grueling length, race conditions, and
sports television coverage.Held every fall in the US city of Kailua-Kona,
Hawaii, the race encompasses three endurance events; a 2.4 mile (3.86
kilometer) ocean swim in Kailua-Kona Bay, a 112 mile (180.2 kilometer) bike
ride across the Hawaiian lava desert to Hawi and back, and a 26.2 mile
(42.195 kilometer) marathon along the coast of the Big Island (from Keauhou
to Keahole Point to Kailua-Kona); finishing on Ali'i Drive.The current
course record was set in 1996 by Luc Van Lierde (Belgium) whose winning time
was 8 hrs 4 mins 8 sec.The next Ironman World Triathlon Championship will
take place on October 11, 2008.Qualifying events for the Hawaii Ironman take
place annually around the world, in places such as Australia, Canada, the
United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, the Canary Islands, South Africa
and Europe.The Ironman Triathlon logo is a trademark of the World Triathlon
Corporation.
The WTC has also registered the trademark "Ironman Triathlon" for its
athletic competitions, and the trademark "Ironman" for a line of clothing,
athletic equipment, and souvenirs. Organizations may also refer to their
triathlons generically as a "Full Distance Triathlon" to designate a
triathlon of a similar distance. History Start & Finish line of the Ironman
Triathlon World Championship on Ali'i Drive in Kona Hawaii.The sport of
triathlon was born in Southern California, where events involving swimming,
cycling, running or other sports were run by athletic clubs celebrating
summer exercise. The idea for the original Ironman Triathlon arose during
the awards ceremony for the 1977 Oahu Perimeter Relay (a running race for
5-person teams). Among the participants were numerous representatives of
both the Mid-Pacific Road Runners and the Waikiki Swim Club, whose members
had long been debating which athletes were more fit, runners or swimmers.
Ironman Triathlon was the first major competition to extend the distance to
an extreme endurance event.
The first Ironman Triathlon was held on February 18, 1978 in Honolulu,
Hawaii, repeated in 1979 and 1980.On this occasion, U.S. Navy Commander John
Collins pointed out that a recent article in Sports Illustrated magazine had
declared that Eddy Merckx, the great Belgian cyclist, had the highest
recorded "oxygen uptake" of any athlete ever measured, so perhaps cyclists
were more fit than anyone. Cdr. Collins and his wife had taken part in the
triathlons staged in 1974 and 1975 by the San Diego Track Club in and around
Mission Bay, California, as well as the 1975 Optimist Sports Fiesta
Triathlon in Coronado, California. A number of the other military athletes
in attendance were also familiar with the San Diego races, so they
understood the concept when Cdr. Collins suggested that the debate should be
settled through a race combining the three existing long-distance
competitions already on the island: the Waikiki Roughwater Swim (2.4
mi./3.85 km), the Around-Oahu Bike Race (115 miles; originally a two-day
event) and the Honolulu Marathon (26.2 mi./42.195 km).





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