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Van Coevorden and McShane win heats as Australians dominate Tiszaujvaros semifinals

By David Peddie (ETU) | 10 Aug, 2013

Natalie Van Coevorden and Charlotte McShane produced two controlled performances to march into tomorrow’s final at the ITU Tiszaujvaros World Cup. The Australians won both of their heats, with Van Coevorden faster in a three way battle but McShane much more relaxed after breaking away.

Semifinal 1 Review
Lucy Hall (GBR) displayed her swimming prowess once more as she powered through the water in the opening wave in the World Cup semi finals. Hall was out of the water in sub ten minutes and was followed out of the water by Aileen Reid (IRL) and Celine Schaerer (SUI).

Van Coevorden made the most impressive transition and she led a group of six together out of T1 and onto the bike. This lead group of Van Coevorden, Hall, Reid, Schaerer, Katie Hursey (USA) and Sara Vilic, the Croatian racing for Team ITU, worked well together and soon developed a mammoth gap over the chase group.

The chasing pack, led by Ai Ueda (JPN) and Yuliya Yelistratova (UKR), were almost two minutes and 30 seconds behind this lead group of six coming out of T2. With the pressure off, Van Coevorden, Hall and Hursey ran comfortably together, with Van Coevorden taking the heat win on the line.

Van Coevorden said: “We swam pretty hard and we always wanted a break. We rode strong and we got a good break with the girls. A break on the bike helps a ton but it’s all about the swim. I knew today I needed to have a good swim and a good ride so we could cruise the run and that worked out perfectly.”

Lucy Hall said: “I think the swim is a tough one as you don’t often get three laps in triathlon. We got a group of six, which was brilliant. I’m really happy to secure my place in the final.

“It’s a pretty cool format, there’s nothing like this in triathlon. Hopefully the final will be alright tomorrow but you just don’t know how you feel after a sprint. You don’t know when to back off and when to push on but I’m really happy that the run wasn’t hard.”

Full Results Semifinal 1

Semifinal 2 Review
Charlotte McShane dominated from the start of her heat, with a powerful swim to put her in a strong position throughout the race. She exited the water behind Monika Orazem (SLO) with Veronica Signorini (ITA) also in the mix. They were quickly joined by Erin Jones (USA) and Natalie Milne (GBR) in a small lead group of five on the bike.

This lead group continued to push the pace and by the end of the first lap they had created a gap of over a minute over the chasers. Felicity Sheedy-Ryan (AUS), Annamaria Mazzetti (ITA), Lisa Perterer (AUT) and Grace Musgrove (AUS) were among the chasers who maintained a steady pace but couldn’t quite make an impact on the leaders.

Orazem dropped out of the race but the remaining four athletes exited T2 with a sizable lead. When McShane kicked out for the lead the win was hers and Jones was equally impressive in maintaining a light pace to secure second. But behind them the real battle was heating up as Signorini faltered and Perterer and Sheedy-Ryan took advantage to storm into 3rd and 4th. Signorini kept her composure to see the race out and she eventually finished in 10th to secure qualification.

McShane can approach tomorrow’s final with confidence. She said: “I really wanted to have a good swim, I think in this type of racing the swim is hugely important. That was my focus going into this race and we were lucky enough to have a decent gap coming out of the swim and then I was like, lets create a gap, ride hard and then we can run a bit easier.

“The biggest thing that takes energy out of you is the run so because we had that gap we were all able to run a bit easier and that will definitely help tomorrow.”

Full results for Semifinal 2
Elite Women World Cup Start List

Related Event: 2013 Tiszaujvaros ITU Triathlon World Cup
10 - Aug, 2013 • event pageall results
Results: Elite Men
1. Florin Salvisberg SUI 00:53:46
2. Francesc Godoy Contreras ESP 00:53:54
3. Frederic Belaubre FRA 00:53:58
4. Declan Wilson AUS 00:54:00
5. Grégory Rouault USA 00:54:03
6. Alexander Bryukhankov RUS 00:54:07
7. Andrea Salvisberg SUI 00:54:08
8. Wian Sullwald RSA 00:54:10
9. Stefan Zachäus LUX 00:54:14
10. Rostislav Pevtsov AZE 00:54:21
Results: Elite Women
1. Katie Zaferes USA 01:00:25
2. Aileen Reid IRL 01:00:52
3. Sara Vilic AUT 01:00:58
4. Anne Tabarant FRA 01:01:08
5. Natalie Van Coevorden AUS 01:01:14
6. Natalie Milne GBR 01:01:19
7. Lucy Buckingham GBR 01:01:26
8. Erin Storie USA 01:01:34
9. Katie Hewison GBR 01:01:39
10. Ai Ueda JPN 01:01:41
Results: Semifinal 1 Elite Men
1. Stefan Zachäus LUX 00:54:18
2. Alexander Bryukhankov RUS 00:54:31
3. Tommy Zaferes USA 00:54:32
4. Florin Salvisberg SUI 00:54:36
5. Frederic Belaubre FRA 00:54:59
6. Ben Kanute USA 00:55:12
7. Justus Nieschlag GER 00:55:25
8. Gábor Faldum HUN 00:55:42
9. Martin Van Barneveld NZL 00:55:45
10. Brice Daubord FRA 00:56:09
Results: Semifinal 2 Elite Men
1. Yegor Martynenko UKR 00:55:30
2. Luciano Taccone ARG 00:55:39
3. Rodrigo Gonzalez Lopez MEX 00:55:39
4. Sean Jefferson USA 00:55:41
5. Aaron Harris GBR 00:55:44
6. Marcel Walkington AUS 00:55:45
7. Peter Kerr AUS 00:55:46
8. William Huffman USA 00:55:57
9. Miguel Arraiolos POR 00:56:05
10. Valentin Mechsheryakov KAZ 00:56:12
Results: Semifinal 3 Elite Men
1. Declan Wilson AUS 00:54:18
2. Joe Maloy USA 00:54:22
3. Rostislav Pevtsov AZE 00:54:27
4. Oleksiy Syutkin UKR 00:54:28
5. Andrea Salvisberg SUI 00:54:32
6. Csaba Rendes HUN 00:54:33
7. Francesc Godoy Contreras ESP 00:54:36
8. Alberto Alessandroni ITA 00:54:40
9. Conor Murphy IRL 00:55:00
10. Daniel Hofer ITA 00:55:08
Results: Semifinal 4 Elite Men
1. Anthony Pujades FRA 00:55:00
2. Wian Sullwald RSA 00:55:02
3. Grégory Rouault USA 00:55:09
4. Brendan Sexton AUS 00:55:12
5. Sebastian Rank GER 00:55:13
6. Joao Pereira POR 00:55:16
7. Patrick Rhyner SUI 00:55:23
8. Ron Darmon ISR 00:55:30
9. Gonzalo Raul Tellechea ARG 00:55:36
10. Luke Farkas USA 00:56:02
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