Hewitt and McIlroy Top Ten in London
Hewitt and McIlroy Top Ten in London
So
close and yet so far, Andrea Hewitt stayed in touch with the
leaders for all but the final few kilometres at the London
Olympic Games overnight, fading to eventually finish in 6th
place on a day when she just had nothing left in her legs.
Kate McIlroy raced strongly for 10th place on her
long awaited debut at the Olympic Games while Nicky Samuels
never recovered from a poor swim start and sat back on the
bike to avoid helping any contenders close the gap to the
lead group and Hewitt, the Wanaka athlete eventually
finishing 35th.
The gold medal was won in a
thrilling sprint finish by Nicola Spirig (SUI) from Lisa
Norden (SWE), the two athletes were only separated thanks to
a photo finish, with Spirig getting there by a few
hundredths of a second, with Erin Densham (AUS) winning
bronze.
Hewitt had until that point raced the
perfect race, swimming in the main bunch and riding
conservatively at or near the front of the field, emerging
on the run in the lead group of half a dozen athletes, from
which all the medals would come.
“I just
didn’t have the energy to keep going and I dropped off
near the end. It was a rough swim and a good bike, it was
going to be a perfect day but while I was up there for the
first half of the run, I just didn’t have the legs today.
“I was in the lead group at the start of the
run then it went down to 7, 6 and 5 and unfortunately I just
dropped off. I was okay early, there were a few surges early
so I sat back to avoid that a bit of tripping that was close
to happening, I was staying at the back to keep out of
trouble but eventually I just couldn’t hold on any
more.”
McIlroy was pleased with her performance
in coming home 10th after always being prominent throughout
the day.
“I am happy with that to be honest,
the run was fast, I didn’t think we worked that hard on
the bike but we still had a good gap on the chase group and
that helped me. I slowly worked my way through the field on
the run after having a bad transition, a problem with my
shoes held me up for 5 seconds or so when the tongue on one
of my shoes got a bit tangled up. But I finished strongly
and I am happy with 10th place.
“There were
random bursts on the bike, we had the best bikers in our
front group and I wasn’t prepared to do all the work on
the front, those girls were biking well but we could see we
were gaining each lap so it was a case of sitting in at
times and saving my legs for the run.
McIlroy has
had her disappointments in the past having to pull out of
major championships on the track with injury, finally though
she has an Olympic campaign to look back on.
“You always want to win a medal and do better if you
can; top ten though is a good effort after what has been a
rocky road throughout my career. To actually be here,
performing well and finishing in 10th with a body in one
piece feels pretty good, it was great.”
Samuels
was behind the eight ball after a poor start.
“I was pretty much last to the first buoy; I just
haven’t been able to nail the start of the swim. Once on
the bike I didn’t want to do any of the work to bring up
any fast runners to the lead group, I just babysat at the
back of the group and hopefully help Andrea maintain the
right position so that is the way I rode out the race.
Essentially it was a case of trying to mess things up and
slow the group up.
“The run wasn’t great
either, the course was hard on the legs with the camber all
the way, my calves are killing me. But I think my race was
over after the start of the swim to be honest, from that
point it was a case of hoping the other girls were doing
well.”
Results highlight the growing depth in
the sport, with gold medal favourite Helen Jenkins finishing
5th and other pre race medal hopes Emma Moffatt (AUS;
crashing), Paula Findlay (CAN; 52nd), Gwen Jorgenson (USA;
38th), Barbara Riveros Diaz (CHI 16th) showing how
competitive the sport is now at the major championship
events.
ENDS