Docherty and Gemmell Brave in Farewell
Docherty and Gemmell Brave in Farewell – Sissons Picks up the Baton
It proved an exciting and
daring farewell for Bevan Docherty and Kris Gemmell at the
Barfoot & Thompson ITU World Triathlon Grand Final, if
indeed it is to be the last time that these two champion
triathletes are seen racing at ITU level.
Ryan
Sissons was first Kiwi home in 11th but the day belonged to
the departing veterans, with Docherty eyeing a mix of
distances next year (including Ironman) while Gemmell is
undecided as to his racing future.
And while
neither could match the class of race winner Javier Gomez
(ESP) and runner up Jonathan Brownlee (GBR) - who did enough
to claim the 2012 World Championship title, the roars of the
huge crowds braving the shocking weather conditions were
loudest when the popular duo cycled or ran through
transition.
Gemmell broke clear with 4 laps
remaining in a fascinating and treacherous bike leg as the
rain pelted down, establishing a lead of close to a minute
before heading out on the 10km run. While it was a lead he
would hold only briefly as he faded on the run, the likeable
35 year old had no regrets.
“I wanted to attack,
I tried to do it from first lap and be aggressive but I
couldn’t bridge across to Jonny and Varga as Javier was
too strong, he had to keep the group together to help his
race and he was strong at that time. I thought attacking
on the hill wasn’t best idea as everyone was saving their
energy for there so I thought, let’s see how big your
‘kahuna’s’ are and have an attack on the downhill with
the tight turns.”
“I wouldn’t change any of
it, going up Shortland Street with that crowd; I will never
get that again, that is something I can never get again,
that was amazing. On the last few laps on the bike when I
was out in front, man that was something special. When I
woke up this morning and saw the weather I thought the
streets would be empty, people would stay home reading the
paper on Labour Weekend. But they turned out in huge numbers
and made this very special, I wouldn’t change anything, I
gave it a crack.”
Docherty raced more
conservatively, in part for his mate up the road, but also
to enjoy the day and thank those who braved the weather to
watch.
“It was awesome out there today. I have
been struggling for motivation in the last month or so, but
I knew deep down this would be special and I didn’t want
to miss out. The weather was average, but the New Zealand
public turned out and made it a special
event.
“It’s been a long season, this was the
only opportunity really to make something of the race, so
I’m glad Kris got away. I tried to shut the chase group
down as much as possible, and while this meant the other
group caught up on the last few laps, we had a crack. At the
end of the day I just wanted to have fun out there and thank
the NZ public for all their support.”
Sissons ran
through a number of athletes after playing catch up
throughout the bike, having missed the lead group out of the
water along with fellow Kiwi Clark Ellice.
“That
was the run I was hoping to have in London, I knew I had it
in me, I just haven’t been able to show it that often
recently,” said Sissons. “I’m just happy today to put
a solid result away for the end of the season and that crowd
was amazing.
Ellice looked back on a race that was
effectively over after a poor swim, but one he found the
positives in nonetheless.
“I got out of the water
and I was oh man really! I was so far back and it's been
such a long season and you need 100% at this level and I
just had to really work the strength on the bike, be a bit
more conservative than I normally am just so I could run.
“On the run I tried to negative split and thanks
to York from Canada we had a real battle in the last lap. I
passed Gemmell in the last lap but it's not about beating
the Kiwis today it's about my next four years and this is
the beginning of it and it was a great way to start
it.”
Gemmell summed up the feeling of many of the
athletes, thoughts echoed by Gomez and Brownlee before and
after a race that provided for stunning visual shots, a
great variety of tactics and a demanding technical and
challenging bike ride, all in front of huge crowds despite
the poor weather.
“To be honest this would be the
only race I might consider a return to ITU racing for, this
is something special. If they get this race back again next
year it wouldn’t take much twisting of my arm to race
again but we will
see.”
ENDS