Triathlon world champions Siri
Lindley and Tim DeBoom have been named USA Triathlon's Elite
Triathletes
of the Year for 2001.
U.S. national duathlon champions Greg Watson and Andrea Ratkovic
were
named Elite Duathletes of the Year for 2002.
Lindley (Boulder, Colo.) led the women elite triathletes by
winning the
International Triathlon Union (ITU) World Triathlon
Championships in
July in Edmonton, Canada at the Olympic distance (1.5K swim, 40K
bike,
10K run), and winning five ITU World Cup races. She also won the
ITU
World Aquathlon Championship (2K swim, 750-meter run, 2K swim).
She
finished the season ranked No. 1 in the world by the ITU.
"Who would ever believe that I could have achieved what I did in
2001?"
Lindley said. "I achieved some of my biggest dreams. I feel so
thankful
that I was able to find the right ingredients in my training and
preparation to be able to put it all together successfully on
race day."
DeBoom (Lyons, Colo.) made his mark by winning the Ironman World
Championship in October in Kailua/Kona, Hawaii. DeBoom finished
the
2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike and 26.2-mile run in 8 hours, 31
minutes,
18 seconds. He also won the Isuzu Ironman California (Camp
Pendleton)
race in May and finished second at the Boulder Peak Triathlon,
which was
Olympic distance.
"Siri and Tim are fantastic role models for multi-sport
athletes," said
USA Triathlon Executive Director Steve Locke. "Both have worked
very
hard to achieve success and deserve the athlete of the year
title."
The awards are voted on by USA Triathlon's Athletes Advisory
Council.
Siri and Tim were also nominated to be the U.S. Olympic
Committee's male
and female athlete of the year.
In duathlon, Watson (Newark, Del.) continued to be one of the
most
consistent multi-sport athletes in the United States, while
Ratkovic
(Norman, Okla.) is so new to elite duathlon that she was also
named
duathlon's elite newcomer of the year.
Watson took his second straight U.S. elite national championship
title
in July when he won at the Dannon Duathlon (10K run, 40K bike,
5K run)
in Carlsbad, Calif. He won four other 2001 duathlons, including
the
Dannon races in Boston, New Orleans and Grenelefe, Fla. He was
second at
the Dannon race in Alpharetta, Ga., and at Powerman Alabama (10K
run,
60K bike, 5K run). He placed 10th at the ITU Long Distance
Duathlon
World Championships (15K run, 60K bike, 7.5K run).
A top professional road cyclist, Ratkovic won her first U.S.
elite
national championship title in 2001 by finishing as the top
American
(third overall) at the U.S. championships in Carlsbad. She also
won four
other duathlons, including the Dannon Duathlons in Everett,
Wash., and
Boston and she was eighth at Powerman Tennessee (10K run, 60K
bike, 10K
run).
"Greg and Andrea are two of the athletes who are taking duathlon
to a
whole new level and showing how exciting and rewarding it can
be," Locke
said.
The elite duathlon awards are voted on by the Athletes Advisory
Council
and one of the athlete representatives of the USA Triathlon
Board of
Directors.