Nicola Spirig sprints to Olympic Gold in London with Jenkins fifth
Created On: 04 August 2012
In a nailbiting all-out sprint to the finish,
Switzerland's Nicola Spirig edged out Sweden's Lisa
Norden in triathlon's first ever photo finish for Olympic
gold. Australia's Erin Densham took third, coming in just
two seconds later at 1:59.50.
It was the second Olympic gold medal won by Switzerland's women,
after Brigitte McMahon in Sydney, but Spirig had to through a
nervous wait before the photo finish was confirmed.
"I had a feeling but I wasn't really sure so I needed an
official to tell me, and it took a few minutes and those minutes
were really hard," Spirig said. "I would have been happy to win a
medal but of course it's a big difference if you win gold or
silver, so it's just amazing, I'm a bit speechless."
However, their medals were not always secure, given they all had
more than a minute deficit exiting the 1.5km in The Serpentine.
Dressed in wetsuits for the 19.6-degree water, five women
immediately churned for the lead after the start of the swim,
headed by the oldest Olympian on the course, 37-year old Laura
Bennett (USA).
Rookie Olympian Lucy Hall (GBR) took over on the turn,
leaving Claudia Rivas (MEX) to swim between them.Line
Jensen (DEN) swam on their feet, creating a small gap, while
the pack of nearly 50 women swam seconds back.
Just over midway through the swim, the amphibious Hall, Jensen,
and Pamela Oliveira (BRA) swam single file to move a line
of four more women into a sizeable lead over the chase pack. The
remainder of the top seven included Rivas, Bennett, Jessica
Harrison (FRA), and Mariko Adachi (JPN), while the
rest trailed at a sizeable distance.
Hall left the lake first, followed by Jensen and Adachi.
Harrison emerged in seventh 22 seconds later. With a minute
advantage, the group quickly came together to carry their small
pack onto the bike course. Behind them, the giant group scrambled
to get out of their wetsuits and onto their bikes, led by two-time
Olympian Norden.
Shortly into the first lap, Oliveira slid out on her bike while
maneuvering around a corner, causing her to fall out of second
place. Bennett managed to miss the crash, as did the other six
leading women. Oliveira slowed to join the chase pack, which had
already made up considerable space in the first lap. Unfortunately,
the first lap was plagued by crashes on a course which was showered
with rain late in the night. Most notably amongst those who hit the
pavement was Emma Moffatt (AUS). The Beijing bronze
medallist was forced to withdraw from the race after the crash,
which also involved Italy's Annamaria Mazzetti.
By the end of the first lap, Adachi rode through the transition
area with the fastest swimmers, but not without heat from the chase
group. Spain's Ainhoa Murua, who swam in the pack of athletes,
came charging through the first lap having made up 33 seconds.
With Spirig and Norden at the top, the chase pack joined the
lead to create a group of 22 women. Included in that group
were Helen Jenkins (GBR), Lisa
Norden (SWE), Nicola Spirig (SUI), Anja
Dittmer (GER), Erin Densham (AUS),Andrea
Hewitt (NZL), Sarah Groff (USA) and Emma
Jackson (AUS).
After the third lap, the lead group had gained an advantage of
nearly a minute and a half. Barbara Riveros Diaz(CHI) worked
at the head of the first chase group to pull up the group of 26
women. France's Carole Peon and Emmie Charayron, as
well as Anne Haug (GER) rode with Riveros Diaz.
However the powerful lead pack, which included a deep field of
favorites, proved to be too fast, advancing another 16 seconds to
increase their lead to 1 minute, 48 seconds. On the fourth
lap, Svenja Bazlen (GER) led the group of 22, which
spanned across just three seconds.
The group worked efficiently, signalling to one another for new
lead changes throughout the narrow and twisting seven-lap course.
With Spirig at the helm on the fifth lap, the ladies grinded ahead
another 20 seconds for a 2 minute, 8 second advantage.
While Spirig often rode in the front of the peloton, other
favourites like Hewitt, Densham, and Norden opted to ride in the
middle, along with Murua, conserving energy to battle on the run.
Hall also often led the group, as she did on the sixth lap, with
ease and control in an attempt to thwart the competition from
teammate Jenkins. Armed with more than a two-minute lead, the
ladies backed off their pedals slightly, gearing up to transition
into the four-lap 10km run.
Following the transition, that saw veteran German Anja Dittmer
leave for the run course first, Great Britain's Jenkins wasted no
time moving herself to the front of the pack in front of a
deafening crowd. With Olympic dreams on the line, a group of ten
women started to break away from 22-person pack midway through the
first lap of the run.
The group was led by Densham, Jenkins, Spirig, Norden and Murua,
while Groff, Hewitt, Jackson, Harrison, Bennett, and Dittmer ran on
their heels. The first nine competitors ran through the first lap
within three seconds of each other, while Bennett sat seven seconds
back to Dittmer's ten. Jenkins pushed the pace on the second lap,
dropping Harrison, Bennett and Dittmer, and leaving Aussie Jackson
trailing to create a new lead group of seven women midway through
the second lap of the run.
Groff and Murua also started to fall off late in the second lap,
while Densham, Jenkins, Spirig, Norden, and Hewitt forged ahead.
Shortly into the third lap on a winding technical portion of the
run, a group of four broke away to leave Hewitt. Jenkins looked
next to be picked off, as she found trouble staying with the
speed.
Groff worked to keep the lead pack in her sight, and overtook
Hewitt to move into fifth place. With one lap to go, she was just
two seconds down, and quickly joined leaders Densham, Spirig,
Jenkins, and Norden on the final lap. Densham stayed at the top,
repeatedly attempting to peel herself away. But her every step was
answered by the women, especially Groff who had moved into second
place. Jenkins, meanwhile, began falling behind.
A persistent game of cat and mouse, the only constant remained
Densham at the top. Then on the final straight away, Spirig moved
into first and began hammering ahead of Densham. Norden followed
suit, and the two sprinted over the finish line to take down the
finish line tape at nearly the same time. Spirig was crowned the
winner with time of 1:59:48, while Norden, for the second time in
her life, was named second in a photo finish.
"I did not have a clue, it was only in the last couple of
strides that I came close to her and I did kind of think I had
silver," Norden said. "But there is just this little hope and you
wait for the screen to come up. I saw I had the silver and I'm
pretty pleased with that, put it that way."
The finish was so close, officials had to review the two finish
line cameras to determine the winner. Race referee Bela Varga
determined Spirig had won by an estimated 15cm margin when her
torso hit the tape first.
"I lost a sprint in Madrid some years ago to Andrea Hewitt by
just 0.02 seconds and this was another one, I always just seem to
be on the wrong side of these decimals, but hey I got a silver
medal and I'm pretty stoked with that," Norden said.
Densham secured bronze in 1:59.50 to give Australia its fifth
triathlon medal in the Olympic history of the sport.
Groff, competing in her first Olympic Games, crossed over in
fourth at 2:00.00. Cheered on by a roaring crowd, Jenkins finished
in fifth at 2:00.19. Hewitt improved her Olympic showing by two
places for a sixth-place finish. Murua finished in seventh for a
dramatic improvement from her previous two Olympic, followed by
Emma Jackson in eighth. Harrison and Kate McIlroy (NZL)
rounded out the top ten in night and tenth,
respectively. Click here for full review
Elite Women's Competition at the London 2012 Olympic
Games - 4 August 2012
Final Results - Elite Women - 1.5km swim, 43km bike,
10km run
|
1.
|
Nicola Spirig
|
SUI
|
01:59:48
|
|
2.
|
Lisa Norden
|
SWE
|
01:59:48
|
|
3.
|
Erin Densham
|
AUS
|
01:59:50
|
|
4.
|
Sarah Groff
|
USA
|
02:00:00
|
|
5.
|
Helen Jenkins
|
GBR
|
02:00:19
|
|
6.
|
Andrea Hewitt
|
NZL
|
02:00:36
|
|
7.
|
Ainhoa Murua
|
ESP
|
02:00:56
|
|
8.
|
Emma Jackson
|
AUS
|
02:01:16
|
|
9.
|
Jessica Harrison
|
FRA
|
02:01:22
|
|
10.
|
Kate McIlroy
|
NZL
|
02:01:28
|
Click here for full results

Finish line photo: Triathlon.org | Delly Carr
/ ITU
Medal photo: Triathlon.org | Janos
Schmidt / ITU
Tags: news,lisa norden,helen jenkins,london2012,nicola spirig