Hard work for a Sunday
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Rick Devereux
There must be some connection between the number 1,500 and work.
One thousand five hundred. That’s how many people the National
Security Agency plans to hire by September.
One thousand five hundred. That’s how many people were “let go” by
Gateway in April.
One thousand five hundred. That’s how many people will participate
in today’s seventh annual Pacific Coast Triathlon at Crystal Cove.
While 1,500 will find work with the NSA, 1,500 are now looking for
work after jobs with Gateway. But the hardest working 1,500 will
definitely be the ones in today’s triathlon.
According to race chairman Bob Cuyler, 1,500 is the maximum number
of athletes the course will hold without congestion. The athletes
start in waves of 100 to 120 people in each age group. Three waves
are spaced three minutes apart followed by a 15-minute break before
the next set of wave swells the race course.
The race will begin with a half-mile swim in El Moro Cove, then
transition to a 12-mile bike ride on Pacific Coast Highway to Laguna
Beach and back, and finish with a three-mile run that includes a 1/2
mile of running on the beach. Cuyler said the most difficult portions
of the course are an 11 percent inclined ramp near the beginning and
end of the race
“Right after they get out of the water, they have to climb a
lifeguard jeep ramp,” he said. “It gains 75 feet in elevation in
about 400 feet, so it’s pretty steep. There’s another killer ramp at
the end of the 3-mile run. The athletes call them ‘death ramps.’ ”
The route is half the length of an Olympic-size course and
utilizes different rules than what will be enforced in Athens.
Olympic triathlons have .932-mile swims, 24.85-mile cycles, and
6.213-mile runs and allow drafting. The Pacific Coast Triathlon
traditionally does not allow drafting
“You must have three bike lengths separation,” Cuyler said.
“Europeans changed the rules so they can use more team work, like
they use in the Tour de France.”
There aren’t many triathlons in the United States that allow
drafting, so in order to familiarize future Olympians with the
technique, the Pacific Coast Triathlon will have a special Junior
Elite wave at 6:45 a.m. before the age groups start 20 minutes later
that will be able to draft on the bicycle leg of the course.
“We offered the USA Triathlon national organization that we would
put on an extra race to give these kids the experience in a
draft-legal race,” Cuyler said. “We wanted to help future Olympians
who wanted to see this race format more.”
Cuyler said the Junior Elite race is the only change this year.
“The course has been exactly the same for seven years,” he said.
“This race has always been a sprint race, which is the shortest
possible race.”
Don’t mistake short with easy.
“This race has many challenges for being such a short race,”
Cuyler said. “This is the third largest triathlon in California
behind Wildflower and Los Angeles. And the Pacific Coast race has the
most beautiful course out of any of them.”
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