Following on from my first pro podium finish at Wimbleball a few weeks ago, I was confident of another strong performance at Antwerp on Sunday. This was my first 70.3 back in 2008 – I loved it then and every year it seems to get better – so last week I was getting excited about returning. The start list showed defending champion and local girl Sofie Goos would be racing as well as speedy Brit Ironman Rachel Joyce so I knew a good race was on the cards.
Right from the swim start Rachel and I were swimming stroke for stroke and it stayed that way for the entire 1900m. I felt ok (I never feel great in T1!) and led out of transition through the early stages of the bike. I was enjoying cranking up my Focus Izalco Chrono TT bike through the Waaslandtunnel when Sofie came flying through – and there was me thinking I was shifting! She was going well and – perhaps mistakenly – I let her go. I built into the two-lap course which takes riders up to the Dutch border and back into the heart of the city, riding to power throughout. I came into T2 still in second with Sofie now about three minutes ahead and unaware what kind of time buffer I had on Rachel.
Running out of T2 I wasn’t feeling brilliant, but hey, that’s a feeling most triathletes can identify with! It has become abundantly clear in training of late that my run pacing leaves a lot to be desired so I was under strict instructions (thank you Mr S!) to hold myself back on the first of the three laps. The run course at Antwerp is always my favourite part of this race. The crowds are terrific – whether it’s old Belgian men puffing on their pipes shouting “Bravo bravo!”, Brits screaming “Go Wiggle!” or the mad band playing the bongos – there is plenty to get you fired up and grinning like a loon.
The real highlight is the Grote Market, the old town square which athletes pass through four times, and each time the blaring music, booming commentary and packed grandstand give you a boost which no energy gel or aid station cola can touch.
It was leaving the Grote Market for the first time that I realised Rachel wasn’t too far behind so it was a case of really focusing on maintaining good run form and speed. I thought I’d held enough back on lap one to really turn on the gas on lap two and three but maybe this wasn’t quite the case…Plenty still to learn here! All credit to Rachel who ran past me on lap two and showed she’s coming back from her Abu Dhabi injury in very strong form – watch out Kona!
All in all I was pleased to be up on the podium once again. It’s early days for me yet with pro racing: I have plenty to learn, a lot to work on and am starting to understand the importance of patience. It’s a virtue, right?!
Big thanks to all the guys at Wiggle as well as all my usual suspects – and well done to all the Swindon Tri crew who raced Ironman Switzerland on Sunday, nice work!
Happy training, racing and recovery
EK




Once on, the Helix looks and feels ready for business – and that’s before you’ve even dived into the water.
Maintaining a high elbow through the early catch phase of the front crawl stroke is something which many triathletes fail to do, yet these arm panels are there to help you do exactly that. With this in mind, it’s suddenly no surprise at all that world and Olympic champions are falling over themselves to get into this suit. 














