NEWS

Beijing Revisited: Looking back at the 2008 Olympic Games

By Merryn Sherwood | 31 Aug, 2011
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It’s been three years Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, when Australian Emma Snowsill and German Jan Frodeno became the third set of triathlon gold medallists in Olympic history.

As we head back to Beijing for the biggest event on the triathlon calendar this year, and what will be the last Dextro Energy Triathlon ITU World Championship Grand Final before the London 2012 Olympics, we take a look back at the last Games. Particularly as the course is the same and it just might offer some clues as to who might walk away with the 2011 ITU world titles.

Overall, the Beijing course is a tough one that demands an all-round strong swim-bike-runner, with both the run and bike offering a couple of serious hills. But there will be a few basic differences from the Olympic race, mostly the timing.  These races are a month later than the Olympics were held and therefore the temperatures may be a little less than scorching than back in 2008. But aside from that, there are perhaps some lessons to be learned from the last Olympic Games.

In 2008, Spain’s Javier Gomez was the clear men’s favourite. Gomez won the Beijing test event in 2007 and then stormed to the 2008 ITU World Championship in Vancouver, ahead of New Zealand’s Bevan Docherty and Switzerland’s Reto Hug.

But the women’s field was slightly more open. Portgual’s Vanessa Fernandes had won the 2007 Beijing test event, but only just from Snowsill. Both were already ITU legends, with multiple World Cup and World Championship wins, but both were after that elusive Olympic gold to cap off the medal collection. But there was even more intrigue added at the 2008 World Championships in Vancouver, when Helen Jenkins (nee Tucker) and Sarah Haskins won gold and silver off the back of a defining bike breakaway. Fernandes finished 10th there, while Snowsill didn’t race.

The women were the first to race on 18 August 2008, lining up on the Ming Tomb Reservoir course in scorching heat. Laura Bennett (USA) led the swim and helped lead out the first pack on the bike, but there wasn’t a huge break between the contenders in that leg. Basically, it all came down to the run and Snowsill dominated from transition. There were gasps from around the world when Snowsill ran down the wrong side of the barricade near the end of the third lap, but she quickly hurdled back over it and continued on to the finish line, where she ran home to gold by a whopping 66 seconds. Fernandes finished strongly for silver, and Emma Moffatt claimed bronze.

But the men’s race back in 2008 showed that upsets were possible, as Frodeno claimed an Olympic gold medal as his first ITU victory. Before Beijing, Frodeno had podiumed at ITU events, but never made the top of one, making his gold medal even more special. The way the men’s race unfolded kept everyone guessing right until the end. Although the swim didn’t cause too many breaks,  the bike did. Francisco Serrano (MEX), Dirk Bockel (LUX) and Axel Zeebroek (BEL) formed a break and while Serrano dropped off, Bockel and Zeebroek took almost a minute lead into the run. However, that wasn’t enough to keep off the sport’s top runners as none other than Alistair Brownlee (GBR) helped to reel them in. Then Ivan Rana (ESP) attacked on the hill that leads back to the reservoir and only Gomez, Brownlee, Frodeno, Simon Whitfield (CAN) and Bevan Docherty (NZL) went with him. But Rana dropped, followed by Alistair Brownlee and Whitfield, seemingly leaving the medals to Gomez, Docherty and Frodeno. But Whitfield made up lost group and in the final 500 metres, took the lead. In a dramatic final 100 metres Frodeno found the final push to win.

So what does it mean for this year? One is that Snowsill has already triumphed on the course and she has a history of coming up big when it matters most. After an injury riddled 2010, she came home strong to win the Budapest Grand Final last year and the three-time World Champion loves the heat. The next is that the course actually suits current rankings leader Jenkins perfectly. The 2008 World Champion is a strong swimmer and has exited with the leaders in most series races this year.  She’s usually turned that into a bike breakaway. It hasn’t always worked, but she’s then been able to turn in stellar run legs. An unknown is how athletes like Barbara Riveros Diaz and Paula Findlay will tackle the course.  But if it all comes down to the run again then they will be big chances again.

Frodeno would also be chasing a high point to end the year on, after his results in 2011 failed to live up to previous years and he’s returning to the site of his greatest ever triumph. But again, the course would seem to play into the hands of the current rankings leader, in this case Alistair Brownlee. In 2008, with five kilometres to go in the run the first time around Brownlee was with the leaders, before fading badly. But back then he was only 20, and since then he’s had more races affected by heat exhaustion. So if it is cooler, it will only play to his favour. Add in the fact that he’s got his brother, Jonathan Brownlee, to work with this time. The brothers have make plenty of bike breakaways in the series this year, and if they can get away on the steep hill in Beijing, they will be hard to catch. Although, Gomez is not one to be counted as out as the defending World Champion has some unfinished business after he started as favourite three years ago, and ended up fourth.

Overall, it’s going to be an intriguing battle as the world’s best return to one of the world’s best triathlon courses, to again decide who is the best triathlete in the world.

Related Event: 2011 Dextro Energy Triathlon - ITU World Championship Grand Final Beijing
09 - Sep, 2011 • event pageall results
Results: Elite Women
1. Andrea Hansen NZL 01:58:26
2. Helen Jenkins GBR 01:58:40
3. Melanie Hauss SUI 01:58:58
4. Lisa Norden SWE 01:59:00
5. Laura Bennett USA 01:59:02
6. Kate Mcilroy NZL 01:59:04
7. Jessica Harrison FRA 01:59:09
8. Liz Blatchford GBR 02:00:11
9. Flora Duffy BER 02:00:24
10. Sarah True USA 02:00:37
Results: Elite Men
1. Alistair Brownlee GBR 01:48:07
2. Sven Riederer SUI 01:48:14
3. Jonathan Brownlee GBR 01:48:17
4. Dmitry Polyanskiy RUS 01:48:20
5. Laurent Vidal FRA 01:48:24
6. Javier Gomez Noya ESP 01:48:27
7. David Hauss FRA 01:48:35
8. Vincent Luis FRA 01:48:44
9. Maik Petzold GER 01:48:46
10. Ivan Raña Fuentes ESP 01:48:50
Results: U23 Men
1. Matthew Sharp GBR 01:52:12
2. David McNamee GBR 01:52:17
3. Thomas Bishop GBR 01:52:19
4. Greg Billington USA 01:52:38
5. Franz Löschke GER 01:53:01
6. Igor Polyanskiy RUS 01:53:05
7. Pierre Le Corre FRA 01:53:17
8. Ivan Ivanov UKR 01:53:26
9. Rodrigo Gonzalez MEX 01:53:28
10. Davide Uccellari ITA 01:53:53
Results: U23 Women
1. Agnieszka Jerzyk POL 02:07:07
2. Zsófia Kovács HUN 02:07:08
3. Rebecca Robisch GER 02:07:14
4. Kaitlin Donner USA 02:07:18
5. Yuliya Yelistratova UKR 02:07:30
6. Non Stanford GBR 02:07:44
7. Anja Knapp GER 02:07:48
8. Charlotte Morel FRA 02:07:51
9. Lauren Goldstein- Kral USA 02:07:54
10. Alexandra Coates CAN 02:08:08
Results: Junior Men
1. Lukas Verzbicas USA 00:56:21
2. Justus Nieschlag GER 00:56:54
3. Tony Smoragiewicz USA 00:56:59
4. Ron Darmon ISR 00:57:06
5. Matt Brown AUS 00:57:11
6. Matthias Steinwandter ITA 00:57:19
7. Alois Knabl AUT 00:57:28
8. Dávid Pap HUN 00:57:30
9. Raphael Montoya FRA 00:57:35
10. Gordon Benson GBR 00:57:37
Results: Junior Women
1. Mikayla Nielsen NZL 01:03:40
2. Ashlee Bailie AUS 01:03:42
3. Hanna Philippin GER 01:03:47
4. Eszter Pap HUN 01:04:02
5. Kelly Whitley USA 01:04:12
6. Joanna Brown CAN 01:04:16
7. Adriana Barraza MEX 01:04:22
8. Allison Hooper CAN 01:04:27
9. Christine Ridenour CAN 01:04:38
10. Annika Vössing GER 01:04:49