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November 09, 2007

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rex

chris, i fully understand and feel your pain regarding your race in florida (after reading your race report). when i raced last year at placid i had my wallet and cell phone stolen out of my transition bag in the athlete's area. these things taint the sport and our experiences. BUT triathlon is still a great sport!

regardless, i don't understand why you quit. triathlon is an individual sport. i've seen those guys (and gals) out there and feel the same way you do, disgusted. but i don't let it ruin my day. i focus on what i came there to do, which is to race and finish. (i've DNF'd one race in my life and it was because i was physically unable to finish).

i know it's easier to point a finger and say 'i wouldn't do it that way,' but c'mon and suck it up. go ahead and write the letters, talk to the right people and raise hell, but finish the race. you have an opportunity to do something that many of us dream about...going fast and getting sponsors. even though what you witnessed was atrocious, there were also a lot of people out there like you who didn't cheat. what does quitting say to those people? be a role model, do it the right way and others will follow you.
rex i.

dave

Chris, I recently completed Ironman Florida and saw plenty of folks flagged for drafting. By definition, if you factually observed drafting, you were drafting since you would not have completed your pass in the necessary time. Realistically, few of us will buy that you made the "ultimate sacrifice" and that you were somehow disadvantaged in the race if you turned in a bike leg within two minutes of the eventual winner.

An Ironman is about physical and mental toughness to get through the day. You failed yourself by giving up, no one failed you. The race has wonderful volunteers and leadership. I for one lost 55 minutes to a flat tire which the volunteer bike technician just struggled to get changed. Rather than complain, I hugged her, thanked her for all her help, and went on to finish.

My college coach always said "you're only as good as your last race". Using that test, you DNF'd and the 3,500 volunteers at IMF were as good as always. Hopefully they'll continue to show up to make the experience wonderful for the rest of us despite the toxic criticisms of a few.

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