Golden day for Aussie paratriathletes in Rotterdam
Triathlon Australia: September 15, 2017: Australia has had a golden start to the ITU World Triathlon Championships in Rotterdam today, with its all-conquering paratriathletes grabbing two gold and two silver medals on the opening day.
Vision impaired Rio gold medallist Katie Kelly added a second World crown to her Paralympic win from last year and her first World title in 2015 with guide, 2000 Olympic silver medallist Michellie Jones.
There was further excitement in the Australian camp later in the day when Gold Coast Commonwealth Games automatic nominee Emily Tapp (PTWC1) grabbed her maiden world title in the PTWC category for wheel chair athletes.
Canberra-based Queenslander Tapp topped her 2015 World Championship debut where she was the silver medallist.
As there was no female PTWC event in Rio, Emily switched to athletics, and was selected for the Australian Team for Rio but an injury prevented her competing.
Emily has won the Gold Coast and Edmonton WPS races in 2017, and has achieved the automatic selection for the 2018 Commonwealth Games Team, where the PTWC women and men have full medal status.
Adding to a successful start were WA’s two-time World champion Sally Pilbeam (PTS4) and Albury’s Justin Godfrey (PTS3) both producing stunning performances to win silver medals.
A third gold went begging when Godfrey lost valuable time in the PTS3 category after suffering a flat tyre early on the bike - dropping to fourth before riding into silver.
Godfrey added silver to his 2015 world championship bronze medal and his 2016 World Cross Tri championship gold.
Perth mother of two, Pilbeam maintained her reputation as one Australia’s most success paratriathletes, taking her medal tally to two gold and two silver medals after her silver in 2016 as well.
The two-time world champion, arm amputee’s class is one that has had the most change in the latest revision of the ITU classification system and she now competes mostly with a different group of athletes than those she did previously.
Sally was a silver medallist at 2016 World Championships also in Rotterdam, and unfortunately her then PT3 class was not included in the Rio program.
It is her fifth World Championships for Australia, her first was 2013.
And in further bad luck for the Australians, a crash also early in the bike cost Victoria's PT5 Paralympian Kate Doughty a podium place.
She lost over two minutes and after one stage almost calling it quits, recovered and battled on bravely for fourth – receiving stitches on the side of her leg.
It was a hard fought fourth place emulated by Queenslander Nic Beveridge with his best ever international performance, also finishing a close up fourth in the PTWC (Wheel Chair) category.
For Paralympian champion Kelly, today was a continuation of her stellar paratriathlon career with Jones.
The vision impaired Kelly (PTVI) has overcome a torrid year with injury to add a second world championship to the first title she first won with Jones in Chicago in 2015 in a time of 1 hour 13 minutes 48 seconds.
“I am just very happy and just chuffed to get that result, in what was a really tough race on a really tough bike course and it comes after what has been a massive 12 months, I’m really stoked, Michellie rode really well,” said Kelly.
Jones praised Kelly saying, “all the hard work has paid off Katie, all the hard work has paid off.”
The inclement weather forced organisers to delay the start by an hour from 9am to 10am, which did not deter the repeat world champions.
“It was nice, we actually went back to sleep and then we couldn’t have asked for a better day after yesterday’s (rain and wind).
“There were a lot of crashes around us and our goal on the bike was to be conservative on the corners and to push where he could.”
In the PTV1 Men Jonathan Goerlach (B2) with guide Simon Hearn finished sixth in 1:09:04 and Gerrard Gosens (B1) with guide Dimitri Simons was ninth in 1:11:52 while WA Paralympian Brant Garvey (TS2) finished eighth in 1:17:28 while SA’s Scott Crowley finished ninth in the PTWC division in 1:13:43.
Photo credit: Triathlon Australia
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