Gemmell Wins the Cash but Silva Gets the Glory in Yokohama
Gemmell Wins the Cash but Silva Gets the Glory in
Yokohama
As per the earlier women’s
race, conditions were nigh on perfect for the men at
Yokohama today, with the typhoon of the day before leaving
calm warm waters and an air temperature of 24 degrees for
the ITU World Series Triathlon.
Joao Silva (POR)
repeated his success from last year in winning ahead of
Javier Gomez (ESP) and Dmitry Polyanskiy (RUS). And while
the day didn’t pan out as he might have hoped, Kris
Gemmell (Palmerston North) did at least have a cash
consolation after winning a half share in the ITU bike leg
bonus.
New Zealand’s Bryce McMaster (still racing
under the ITU as he awaits his transfer to New Zealand) swam
superbly, exiting the water alongside Gomez in 5th place
while Gemmell was a little further back alongside good
friend and partner to Andrea Hewitt, Laurent Vidal
(FRA).
Any suggestion of a breakaway by a lead
group of 7 was quickly dispelled as Gemmell, Vidal and Sven
Reiderer (SUI) drove the chasers into a large lead group by
the end of the first lap of 8 on the bike. The completely
flat course wasn’t helping either, with no one prepared to
push the pace or take any risks too early in the
day.
But with a USD$20,000 bonus for any group of
five or fewer athletes to lead at the end of the bike by 50
seconds or more Gemmell made his move with one and a half
laps left on the bike, taking Yuichi Hosada (JPN) with him
in a daring move to break the field. That moved proved
perfect in its execution, with the time gap measured at
exactly 50 seconds at the end of the bike, leaving Gemmell
and Hosada to share the bonus money.
The effort
proved crucial for the Kiwi though as the 34 year old
immediately struggled on the run, clutching at his side in
obvious distress and with Gomez leading the chasers in a
desperate attempt to close the gap on World Series leader
Jonathan Brownlee, the gap was never going to be enough. It
was nonetheless a typically gutsy move from the Palmerston
North athlete.
Heading into the final 2.5km lap it
was Silva and Gomez side by side just a few metres ahead of
a fast closing Polyanskiy as the leading three gapped the
chasers. Despite hitting a cone and almost crashing midway
through the bike and quickly remounting to join the lead
group, Gomez was pushing himself and the others to the
limit, constantly surging and eventually dropping the
Russian. But a recent lack of running due to a foot injury
caught up with the Spaniard and Silva was the stronger in
the closing stages, kicking clear to back up his win here
last year.
The points though see Gomez close the
gap on World Series points leader Jonathan Brownlee and set
up a fascinating end to the season at the Barfoot & Thompson
ITU Grand Final in Auckland on Labour
Weekend.
ENDS