THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

FLC Triathalon Turning 25

FLC Triathalon Turning 25

Story by Bob Brockley

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, April 3, 2013/Categories: Home, Campus, Sports

Rate this article:
No rating

Fort Lewis College’s annual triathlon will be celebrating its 25th anniversary on Sun., April 14th.

The 10 a.m. race involves a 500-meter swim in the campus pool, a 15-mile bike ride on pavement, and a 5K run that uses the Rim Trail.

“It isn’t a mini-triathlon - it is a sprint triathlon,” said Gerry Geraghty, who sprinted his way into 1st place last year with a time of 1:01.

The traditional course will remain unchanged this year, and special memorabilia will be distributed to celebrate the 25th anniversary, said Dorlan Owen, the event coordinator.

Registration costs is $37 for students, faculty, and staff, $42 for other individuals, and $85 for teams.

In the team format, groups of two or three athletes break up the segments of the race.

“The team format is great, since somebody might be a terrible swimmer but has a friend who swims well,” Geraghty said. “It lets people race that wouldn’t compete otherwise.”

Teams have occasionally won the race, but usually an individual racer wins, he said.

Most competitors are students and members of the local community, though certain international triathletes have competed in the event, Geraghty said.

Molly Hummel, a Durango-based professional triathlete has won the event four times and will be competing again this year, Owen said.

The event is more of a fun, local race than a destination race, but it is quite competitive at the higher levels, said Mike Ellis, a participant of the triathlon.

Tri the Rim is better for spectating than a standard running race, since the athletes can be viewed swimming in the pool, during each of their three bike laps, and as they finish the run, Geraghty said.

The best areas for viewing the bike and run segments are the entrance to the Education and Business Hall parking lot, since both courses cross this point, Owen said.

The center of campus also works well for spectating, since it is close to a transition area and the finish line, she said.

Registration for the event is capped at 168 athletes, and will close on April 10, according to the Tri the Rim webpage. As of late March there were still about 25 slots available, which are expected to fill before the race, Owen said.

48 volunteers are currently signed up to work the event, and there is still more work available for people to count laps during the swimming segment, direct traffic on the bike course, and work the first aid station, said Edgar Anaya, the event’s volunteer coordinator. Those interested in working will find registration information on the website’s volunteer page.

On race day the 8th Avenue hill will be closed from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m., and Owen asks that residents slow down for the bikers and runners who will be around campus and the golf course during the race.

“It’s a great race and a great accomplishment for somebody to complete a swim-bike-run event,” Geraghty said.

 
Print

Number of views (11374)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

FLC Men’s Soccer Scores Fifth Shutout of Season

By Benjamin Mandile

The Fort Lewis College men’s soccer team banked their fifth shutout of the season on Friday at home with a 1-0 win over the Regis University Rangers.

 

The Fort Lewis College men’s soccer team banked their fifth shutout of the season on Friday at home with a 1-0 win over the Regis University Rangers.   The Skyhawks played tight defense in the first half, keeping Regis from scoring despite eight shots from  the Rangers.   Offensively, the Skyhawks were able to string together multiple passes that moved the...

FLC Loses Heartbreaker in Five

by Matthew Roy

Fort Lewis College volleyball lost a heartbreaker last night 3-2 in an intense match that went five sets against the Adams State University Grizzlies.

 

Adams State won 20-25, 25-18, 23-25, 33-31, 15-9 in a back-and-forth match that had people on the edge of their seat until the final ball hit the court.

Fort Lewis College volleyball lost a heartbreaker last night 3-2 in an intense match that went five sets against the Adams State University Grizzlies.   Adams State won 20-25, 25-18, 23-25, 33-31, 15-9 in a back-and-forth match that had people on the edge of their seat until the final ball hit the court.   The first set was dominated early and often by the Skyhawks,...

New Deans Strive to Build Community

Story By Ben Mandile - Photos by Mia Thomas

Fort Lewis College introduced three new deans this academic year. The college brought in Dr. Jesse Peters from the University of North Carolina at Pembroke to head the School of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Steven Elias from New Mexico State University to head the School of Business Administration, and it promoted Dr. Richard Fulton from within the Teacher Education Department to be the new dean of the School of Education.

Fort Lewis College introduced three new deans this academic year. The college brought in Dr. Jesse Peters from the University of North Carolina at Pembroke to head the School of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Steven Elias from New Mexico State University to head the School of Business Administration, and it promoted Dr. Richard Fulton from within the Teacher Education Department to be the new dean of...

Trump’s Decision to Rescind DACA Felt at FLC

By Becca Day

The Trump administration announced its decision to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals immigration policy in early September, affecting the lives of college and university students across the nation.

 

  The Trump administration announced its decision to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals immigration policy in early September, affecting the lives of college and university students across the nation.   DACA previously allowed undocumented immigrants who came to America before they turned 18 to apply for work permits and deferred action status, Shirena...

Housing: What Should Students Do?

By Matthew T. Roy

At Fort Lewis College, students have a variety of housing options, but the primary choice for many comes down to off-campus living or resident housing.

 

At Fort Lewis College, students have a variety of housing options, but the primary choice for many comes down to off-campus living or resident housing.   However, not all students face this dilemma. Freshman do not have any option when it comes to living on campus due to an FLC rule that mandates freshman to live on campus for at least their freshman year, Julie Love, senior student...

First6364656668707172Last