Brad Kahlefeldt finding form 16 days out from the London 2012 Olympic Triathlon

With 16 days to go until the Olympic triathlon Brad Kahlefeldt has shown that he is well and truly over his San Diego health scare. Finishing 6th overall at the weekend's ITU Sprint triathlon in Hamburg and only 17 seconds behind South Africa's Richard Murray and only 12 seconds behind s

Brad Kahlefeldt finding form 16 days out from the London 2012 Olympic Triathlon
A great result as the final touches get put on Sticksy’s training in the lead up to London – Credit: Triathlon.org | Janos Schmidt / ITU

With 16 days to go until the Olympic triathlon Brad Kahlefeldt has shown that he is well and truly over his San Diego health scare. Finishing 6th overall at the weekend’s ITU Sprint triathlon in Hamburg and only 17 seconds behind South Africa’s Richard Murray and only 12 seconds behind second place Javier Gomez.

Aaron Royle was the next Australian home a further 22 seconds behind Kahlefeldt. For Royle is was all in the run. His 14:42 was a dead heat run with France’s Vincent Luis after they both headed out of T2 only seconds apart. Courtney Atkinson finished in 28th with a 15:26 run and Brendan Sexton suffered a puncture and had to retire. Peter Kerr had a solid swim / bike and ran 15:05 for 35th place and Dan Wilson finished in 44th.

A plan to go all out in the run carried South Africa’s Richard Murray to his first ITU World Triathlon Series win in spectacular style, as he blew away everyone except Javier Gomez and then outsprinted him in the final few hundred metres in Hamburg on Saturday. Germany’s Steffen Justus excited the home crowds, taking bronze in a furiously fast race in Hamburg.

“I think it’s probably the most spectacular one of the whole series, just because of the crowd and the ambience, and because Hamburg city is so amazing,” said Murray. “It was amazing running with Javi, it was definitely an amazing experience.”

The new sprint format in Hamburg promised a fast race, but it was even faster than predicted when the men hammered out an 8:32 swim. Gomez was first out of the 750m swim, with Maik Petzold and Richard Varga just beside him, but they were quickly followed by most of the field into T1. From there a small group of nine managed to pull away, led by Gomez, Petzold, Varga, Christian Prochnow, Courtney Atkinson and Aurelien Raphael, as behind them the field formed into three distinct chase packs, two close behind and a third one minute down after the first lap.

Within the second lap, the first chase had merged with the leaders, but Atkinson, Clark Ellice and Dan Wilson then went off the front and managed to stay away, until the fourth and final lap when Reinaldo Colucci bridged up to join them. Those four then left T2 with a 24-second lead on the rest of the field, and Colucci powered to the lead straight away on the run. But Murray, Gomez and Justus immediately cut into the gap, and midway through the first lap they had overtaken all four. From there it was clear it was going to come down to Gomez and Murray, who had an incredible battle with multiple lead changes, bringing the crowd to its feet.

After going toe to toe at the front for the final lap of the 5km run, Gomez initially tried to make a move but couldn’t shake the red-hot Murray, who stayed on his heels and then rocketed to the front down the finishing chute to claim his first series win and the first win in series history by an African athlete. Murray said his plan to put the hammer down from the start paid off, as he recorded an incredible 14:05 run split for the Hamburg course which was accurately measured at five kilometres.

“I just went absolutely all out for the first two kilometres, and then I wanted to see who would still be hanging on,” Murray said. “Because I realised the pace was not really sustainable for five kilometres. So I went out to do it on purpose.”

While he didn’t claim the win, Gomez said he was happy with his second consecutive series medal.

“It was overall a good race, I was the first one out of the water, I had a good second transition but Richard pushed the pace really hard on the first lap I just tried to keep up,” Gomez said. “I made my move on the second lap but I wasn’t that fresh yet and I’m looking forward to some tapering towards the Games. Today Richard was better, faster so I’m happy with second place.”

While Justus claimed third, his second WTS podium in 2012, and said in front of a home crowd it had been just as good as win.

“It’s amazing to get in front of this home crowd to get on the podium, maybe it’s like a victory in another place in the world and I’m really happy with this,” Justus said. “The whole team had really great results, we showed we are a really strong team for London.”

The German team had an excellent day at home in Hamburg, with Petzold finishing fifth and Jan Frodeno 10th to have all three London-bound athletes finish in the top-10. Brad Kahlefeldt also found form, after his pneumonia scare after San Diego, he finished 6th. Colucci’s seventh place was his best series result.

Overall it was an incredibly fast race, with a total of 29 athletes recording sub-15 minute times on a run course that was accurately measured at 5km, according to race officials.

PosAthleteCountryTimeSwimBikeRun
1Richard MurrayRSA0:51:480:08:560:27:520:14:05
2Javier GomezESP0:51:530:08:320:28:130:14:10
3Steffen JustusGER0:51:590:08:400:28:090:14:16
4Sven RiedererSUI0:52:040:08:460:27:590:14:18
5Maik PetzoldGER0:52:050:08:350:28:130:14:19
6Brad KahlefeldtAUS0:52:050:08:510:27:560:14:20
7Reinaldo ColucciBRA0:52:050:08:540:27:120:14:47
8William ClarkeGBR0:52:070:08:440:28:080:14:18
9Alexander BryukhankovRUS0:52:090:08:550:27:550:14:15
10Jan FrodenoGER0:52:090:08:460:28:010:14:24
11Bevan DochertyNZL0:52:110:08:470:27:580:14:27
12Tony MoulaiFRA0:52:130:08:440:28:000:14:33
13Alessandro FabianITA0:52:150:08:500:27:590:14:30
14Clark ElliceNZL0:52:170:08:490:27:330:14:57
15Florin SalvisbergSUI0:52:180:08:450:27:580:14:33
16Jonathan ZipfGER0:52:200:08:410:28:110:14:33
17Christian ProchnowGER0:52:240:08:350:28:190:14:35
18Aurélien RaphaelFRA0:52:260:08:380:28:120:14:43
19Vincent LuisFRA0:52:270:08:410:28:100:14:42
20Aaron RoyleAUS0:52:270:08:430:28:040:14:42
21Richard VargaSVK0:52:320:08:330:28:160:14:45
22Tony DoddsNZL0:52:360:08:450:28:060:14:50
23Tim DonGBR0:52:400:09:010:27:480:14:55
24Valentin MeshcheryakovRUS0:52:410:08:510:28:010:14:46
25Simon De CuyperBEL0:52:420:08:580:27:470:14:59
26Diogo SclebinBRA0:52:420:08:530:27:480:14:49
27Jarrod ShoemakerUSA0:52:440:09:030:27:510:14:52
28Courtney AtkinsonAUS0:52:450:08:430:27:410:15:26
29Bruno MatheusBRA0:52:460:09:020:27:440:15:01
30Matt ChrabotUSA0:52:490:08:500:28:020:14:58
31Dmitry PolyanskiyRUS0:52:490:08:420:28:090:15:06
32Ruedi WildSUI0:52:510:08:540:27:480:15:04
33Jan CelustkaCZE0:52:510:08:540:27:490:15:03
34Premysl SvarcCZE0:52:520:08:480:27:530:15:02
35Peter KerrAUS0:52:540:08:580:27:500:15:02
36Igor PolyanskiyRUS0:52:560:08:400:28:030:15:03
37Kris GemmellNZL0:52:580:08:500:27:550:15:12
38Andrea SalvisbergSUI0:53:010:08:450:28:060:15:16
39Franz LoeschkeGER0:53:040:09:060:27:430:15:19
40Ryan SissonsNZL0:53:060:08:470:28:220:14:59
41Gavin NobleIRL0:53:170:08:510:28:010:15:23
42Sebastian RankGER0:53:170:09:030:27:400:15:32
43Mehdi EssadiqMAR0:53:180:08:560:27:580:15:23
44Dan WilsonAUS0:53:260:08:470:27:300:16:08
45Ognjen StojanovicSRB0:53:290:08:520:27:520:15:41
46Hervé BantiMON0:53:310:08:580:27:490:15:40
47Adam BowdenGBR0:53:590:08:490:28:320:15:31
48Peter CroesBEL0:54:060:09:010:27:490:16:14
49Aaron HarrisGBR0:54:260:08:560:28:330:15:59
50Davide UccellariITA0:54:480:09:000:29:340:15:05
51Carlos Javier Quinchara ForeroCOL0:55:320:08:500:29:410:15:47
52Lukas VerzbicasUSA0:55:380:09:030:30:150:15:07
53Felipe Van de WyngardCHI0:55:390:08:560:29:440:15:53
54Joe MaloyUSA0:55:480:08:590:30:160:15:13
55Lukas HollausAUT0:55:510:09:050:29:410:16:06
56David McNameeGBR0:56:580:09:000:29:360:17:11
57Gregory BillingtonUSA0:57:180:09:040:30:290:16:47
58Gaspar RiverosCHI0:57:350:08:570:29:540:17:45
59Ivan IvanovUKR0:57:520:08:540:31:050:16:22
DNFMario MolaESP0:00:000:09:010:31:060:00:00
DNFBrendan SextonAUS0:00:000:08:520:00:000:00:00
PosAthleteCountryTimeSwimBikeRun
1Richard MurrayRSA0:51:480:08:560:27:520:14:05
2Javier GomezESP0:51:530:08:320:28:130:14:10
3Steffen JustusGER0:51:590:08:400:28:090:14:16
4Sven RiedererSUI0:52:040:08:460:27:590:14:18
5Maik PetzoldGER0:52:050:08:350:28:130:14:19
6Brad KahlefeldtAUS0:52:050:08:510:27:560:14:20
7Reinaldo ColucciBRA0:52:050:08:540:27:120:14:47
8William ClarkeGBR0:52:070:08:440:28:080:14:18
9Alexander BryukhankovRUS0:52:090:08:550:27:550:14:15
10Jan FrodenoGER0:52:090:08:460:28:010:14:24
11Bevan DochertyNZL0:52:110:08:470:27:580:14:27
12Tony MoulaiFRA0:52:130:08:440:28:000:14:33
13Alessandro FabianITA0:52:150:08:500:27:590:14:30
14Clark ElliceNZL0:52:170:08:490:27:330:14:57
15Florin SalvisbergSUI0:52:180:08:450:27:580:14:33
16Jonathan ZipfGER0:52:200:08:410:28:110:14:33
17Christian ProchnowGER0:52:240:08:350:28:190:14:35
18Aurélien RaphaelFRA0:52:260:08:380:28:120:14:43
19Vincent LuisFRA0:52:270:08:410:28:100:14:42
20Aaron RoyleAUS0:52:270:08:430:28:040:14:42
21Richard VargaSVK0:52:320:08:330:28:160:14:45
22Tony DoddsNZL0:52:360:08:450:28:060:14:50
23Tim DonGBR0:52:400:09:010:27:480:14:55
24Valentin MeshcheryakovRUS0:52:410:08:510:28:010:14:46
25Simon De CuyperBEL0:52:420:08:580:27:470:14:59
26Diogo SclebinBRA0:52:420:08:530:27:480:14:49
27Jarrod ShoemakerUSA0:52:440:09:030:27:510:14:52
28Courtney AtkinsonAUS0:52:450:08:430:27:410:15:26
29Bruno MatheusBRA0:52:460:09:020:27:440:15:01
30Matt ChrabotUSA0:52:490:08:500:28:020:14:58
31Dmitry PolyanskiyRUS0:52:490:08:420:28:090:15:06
32Ruedi WildSUI0:52:510:08:540:27:480:15:04
33Jan CelustkaCZE0:52:510:08:540:27:490:15:03
34Premysl SvarcCZE0:52:520:08:480:27:530:15:02
35Peter KerrAUS0:52:540:08:580:27:500:15:02
36Igor PolyanskiyRUS0:52:560:08:400:28:030:15:03
37Kris GemmellNZL0:52:580:08:500:27:550:15:12
38Andrea SalvisbergSUI0:53:010:08:450:28:060:15:16
39Franz LoeschkeGER0:53:040:09:060:27:430:15:19
40Ryan SissonsNZL0:53:060:08:470:28:220:14:59
41Gavin NobleIRL0:53:170:08:510:28:010:15:23
42Sebastian RankGER0:53:170:09:030:27:400:15:32
43Mehdi EssadiqMAR0:53:180:08:560:27:580:15:23
44Dan WilsonAUS0:53:260:08:470:27:300:16:08
45Ognjen StojanovicSRB0:53:290:08:520:27:520:15:41
46Hervé BantiMON0:53:310:08:580:27:490:15:40
47Adam BowdenGBR0:53:590:08:490:28:320:15:31
48Peter CroesBEL0:54:060:09:010:27:490:16:14
49Aaron HarrisGBR0:54:260:08:560:28:330:15:59
50Davide UccellariITA0:54:480:09:000:29:340:15:05
51Carlos Javier Quinchara ForeroCOL0:55:320:08:500:29:410:15:47
52Lukas VerzbicasUSA0:55:380:09:030:30:150:15:07
53Felipe Van de WyngardCHI0:55:390:08:560:29:440:15:53
54Joe MaloyUSA0:55:480:08:590:30:160:15:13
55Lukas HollausAUT0:55:510:09:050:29:410:16:06
56David McNameeGBR0:56:580:09:000:29:360:17:11
57Gregory BillingtonUSA0:57:180:09:040:30:290:16:47
58Gaspar RiverosCHI0:57:350:08:570:29:540:17:45
59Ivan IvanovUKR0:57:520:08:540:31:050:16:22
DNFMario MolaESP0:00:000:09:010:31:060:00:00
DNFBrendan SextonAUS0:00:000:08:520:00:000:00:00