After opening registration for the 2013 Ironman U.S. Championship on Sunday morning, the World Triathlon Corporation has decided to suspend the registration process until further notice. The $1200 price tag, up from $900 last year and double the price of other Ironman races, has received mixed reaction from around the triathlon community. Ironman cited the need to “work with all of our partners over the next several weeks to ensure that this event can be conducted in the way that our athletes expect and deserve.” All athletes who have already registered will be given full refunds.
The announcement from Ironman below:
We listen carefully to our consumers and have heard from many of them about the inaugural Aquadraat Sports Ironman U.S. Championship. This is the feedback we have received:
Most of our athletes loved the race. It was iconic and challenging – a tough test – just like New York. We were also told to improve the logistics for our athletes and supporters. Producing an event in a large urban market is complex and challenging. The combination of the ferries, transition in Palisades State Park, an inability to have amplified sound in Riverside Park after 10 p.m. and the difficulty for our spectators to watch much of the race all combined to create an athlete and spectator experience that we need to improve.
Addressing the logistical complexity requires us to reconfigure a number of elements in our race. Given the changes we believe are necessary for the 2013 event, we need to do more work to assess whether it is viable at a price point that our athletes find reasonable. Part of our commitment to the Ironman experience is the relationship between registration price and the value to athletes. The pricing for the 2013 race is a reflection of the operational and logistical challenges of doing business in metropolitan New York and New Jersey. Simply put, to make this event a delight for our athletes, volunteers and spectators, the race is not viable at a lower price point.
It has always been our policy at Ironman races in North America to open registration for the following year’s race the day after the event so that athletes and volunteers can gain guaranteed entry before general registration opens. We followed that policy yesterday for the 2013 Aquadraat Sports Ironman U.S. Championship. In retrospect, it was a mistake. We should have taken the time to listen to our athletes, partners and municipalities before we opened registration.
By suspending registration, we are taking the time to do that now. We need to work with all of our partners over the next several weeks to ensure that this event can be conducted in the way that our athletes expect and deserve.
In the interim, we will immediately refund the registration fees of each athlete who has registered and will hold their spots for the 2013 race pending the re-opening of registration. We continue to be amazed by our athletes and all those involved in the success of our events, and we congratulate all of the athletes, volunteers and spectators that made the 2012 Aquadraat Sports Ironman U.S. Championship a memorable day in Ironman’s history.
.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.
Lance Armstrong Wins Marathon In Steamboat Springs
By Triathlete.comPublished 18 hours ago
Lance Armstrong won this weekend’s Steamboat Stinger Marathon in Steamboat Springs, Colo. This was the first race Armstrong has participated in since the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency launched an investigation against the seven-time Tour de France Champion. Armstrong had planned on competing in Ironman France (with a goal of qualifying for the Ironman World Championship), but Ironman’s rules against allowing athletes who are being investigated for doping to compete kept him from the start line.
Lance Armstrong’s participation helped define Sunday’s conclusion to the Steamboat Stinger weekend as a big-time local event, and what he said afterward summed it up.
A crowd gathered as Armstrong chugged toward the finish line of Sunday’s Stinger trail marathon at the base of Howelsen Hill, cheering the world-renowned champion as he crossed the finish line, winning the inaugural 26.2-mile race.
He took a few more steps, then hunched over, eyes wide and bright yellow Livestrong tank top sagging with sweat.
“Wow,” he said, hands on his knees.
His first-place finish and time — 3 hours, 18 minutes and 10 seconds — might have made it seem a bit easy, but Armstrong’s exhaustion mirrored that of his competitors, and his opinion matched the consensus. The course was beautiful and the race was fun, but wow, the Steamboat Stinger was tough.
Finishers of the Stinger marathon painted a picture of a grueling run that left athletes — sports celebrities and plain ol’ locals alike — in awe, sweating, heaving, exhausted awe.
“It was hard,” Armstrong said. “There was a lot of vertical climbing and a lot of technical downhills and obviously it’s a marathon.
“I’ve only done three marathons, two New Yorks and a Boston. I’ve never done anything like that.”
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario