Tom Jeffrey earned his second consecutive U.S. Pro Duathlon
National
Champion title with a second place overall finish on Sunday,
September
30th, at the 2007 Elite Duathlon National Championships held at
the Powerman Ohio Duathlon in Malabar Farm State Park in Lucas,
Ohio."It was good to win the national championships again," said
Jeffrey (34) of Richmond, VA whose time of 2 hours 27 minutes
36 seconds over the 8K run (4.97 miles)-58K bike (36 miles)-8K
(4.97 miles) run course, earned him second in the Powerman
Duathlon to Belgian Duathlete Joerie Vansteelant, who won the
event in 2 hours 22 minutes 20 seconds. As a Belgian national,
Vansteelant was ineligible to win the U.S. National
Championships.
Third place went to American Dereck Treadwell, who finished
with a time of 2 hours 31 minutes even.
Jeffrey's victory in the U.S. Pro Duathlon National
Championships points him up as the top American contender for
the 2007 McDonald's ITU Duathlon Long Course World
Championships, which will be held in Richmond, VA on Sunday
October 21st. Jeffrey finished 10th in the 2006 world
championships in Denmark.
"I feel like I'm fit and I just have to go out and race," said
Jeffrey. "You never know what can happen in these longer races."
And with the sport reeling from the news of the death of
current world champion, Benny Vansteelant, the result of
injuries sustained in a collision with a car during a bike
training ride near his home in Tourhout, Belgium on Saturday,
September 8th, all eyes are on Joerie Vansteelant, Benny's
younger brother. His dominating performance in Ohio has many
thinking that despite his personal grief and sorrow, he has
assumed his dead brother's position as the odds-on favorite to
win the world championships.
The McDonald's ITU Duathlon World Championships will follow a
run-bike-run format over two loop courses. The run loop,
portions of which follow downtown Richmond's scenic Canal Walk,
is 7.5 kilometers in length. The bike loop, which winds along
parks and neighborhoods bordering the James River, is 20
kilometers in length. Athletes will run 15 kilometers (two run-
course loops), bike 80 kilometers (four bike-course loops) and
then run a finale of 7.5 kilometers, (one last run-course loop).
Five hundred athletes from 25 countries will compete in
Richmond. The strongest contingents will come from duathlon
powerhouses like Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, and Spain,
while the largest contingents will come from multi-sport
stalwarts Australia, Canada and the United States. While the
age groupers will be vying for international recognition and
bragging rights, the elites will be dividing up a prize purse
of $50,000 -- $25,000 for the men and $25,000 for the women.