Look Where My Garmin Took Me!
The ITU has stated that all World Championship Series and World Cup races will be broadcast live in 2010. This is exciting news for the sport, and even more exciting for you, the fans! Check out the promo video for the Dextro Energy Triathlon Series.
With the World Championships Series released, as well as the dates and location of the 2010 Canadian Nationals, US Nationals, and the Pan-American Championships, Checkmate’s 2010 schedule is taking shape. The races on our schedule are the biggest ITU races in North America, and the most important races for Olympic qualification of our athletes.
Checkmate is pleased to announce the addition of Andrew Russell to our roster. Andrew has been a strong individual competitor in Canada for several years, and has just been added to Canada’s National Support Team for the World Championship Series. Andrew is a powerful triathlete with a promising future, and we are proud that Checkmate Triathlon Team will have a chance to help him reach the start line at the London 2012 Olympics.
The International Triathlon Union (ITU) is a bit delinquent in releasing the 2010 World Championship Series (WCS) schedule, but we wanted to get a list of probably races on here. Because most of our athletes will be competing for their country at the WCS races, our team calendar is highly tentative until we the ITU schedule is released.
This video recap of the 2009 WCS is sure to get you excited for next year.
It’s taken us some time to find the right words to describe the goals and purpose of this team, but after several iterations, we now have a mission statement and long term goals of the team under the “about” section.
Our Mission is to embody the Olympic Spirit – with friendship, solidarity and fair play, become the best triathlon team in the world.
Our goals are to work as a team to help each of our athletes realize their Olympic dream, and to become a model for the power and potential of teamwork in sport.
In achieving these goals we will become ambassadors for both our sponsors and the sport, and create media exposure previously unseen in the sport of triathlon.
The team is in discussions with potential Title sponsors for 2010 and beyond, but no deal is signed as of yet.
The Checkmate Triathlon Team consists of 8 riders representing the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The team’s accomplishments include an Olympian, a World Champion, and podium finishes at the US Collegiate National Championships, and the Canadian National Championships.
We are looking forward to securing a new partner for the 2010 season that can benefit from and build their brand by being associated with our world class organization. We are confident a sponsor will capitalize on the value Checkmate Triathlon Team generates through our fans, seven-figure annual measurable media exposure, 1 million annual onsite spectators and the charitable work our team does in the communities we race in.
In addition to winning races, Checkmate Triathlon Team has emphasized giving back to the communities they race in. The team goes to schools to speak to students and educate them on the benefits of a healthy and active lifestyle, sharing their own stories and spreading their passion for triathlon.
Contact us to help change the face of triathlon.
Checkmate Triathlon Team is devoted to changing the way professional triathlon is performed. When Triathlon became an Olympic Sport, it was designed to please fans, and allow for athletes to work as teams. Olympic Triathlon is no more individual than professional cycling, yet the athletes involved continue to race alone.
History: The popularity of the triathlon has soared around the world over the last forty years, and was included in the Olympic Games for the first time in 2000. Since the Olympics the triathlon has grown in popularity faster than any other time since its inception in the late 1970’s. Currently there are over125,000 annual members of the USA Triathlon Federation (USAT). There are USAT events each year. Over 300,000 one-day licenses are sold each year to athletes who want to race in one USAT-sanctioned triathlon.
Triathlon began as an individual sport, and as such the cycling portion of the race included strict rules to limit the ability of athletes to the slipstream of other cyclists (drafting) for an advantage. This ensured that each athlete faced the same athletic challenge in completed the race, but also required the sport to use large courses where it was impossible for spectators to watch live.
| Common Triathlon Distances | |||
| Race type | Swim | Bike | Run |
| Ironman | 2.4-mile | 112-miles | 26.2 miles |
| Olympic | 1.5-km | 40-km | 10-km |
| Sprint | .5-mile | 10-mile | 5-km |
This changed when Triathlon became an Olympic sport in 2000. One stipulation for the triathlon’s inclusion in the Olympics was that it had to adopt a more spectator and TV-friendly format. To do this, the International Triathlon Union created multi-loop bike courses, and sanctioned drafting in 1996 for the cycling portion of the race in the elite category. With drafting legal, tactical racing was introduced, and the intelligent athlete gained an advantage. The cycling leg of Olympic Triathlon is now more like a true bike race, where riders can work together in packs. In cycling, teammates work together for the benefit of one or two designated riders to secure the victory for the team. A good example of this is the Astana cycling team that worked for Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador in the Tour de France. Using “team tactics,” the team protected Armstrong and made his victory possible. The same strategy, using team tactics, can be used in draft-legal triathlons to increase the odds of victory for the team.
The rules of Triathlon have changed to allow intelligence and teamwork to separate the elites of the sport. The best athlete will win, but that athlete needs the smartest team behind them.
[a big thanks to Team Kinysis for their help in providing information]