andydude, on 02 February 2012 - 04:55 , said:
Me three...
Posted 20 February 2012 - 05:11
paulbrit, on 15 February 2012 - 02:17 , said:
Posted 21 February 2012 - 11:25
Posted 21 February 2012 - 05:01
Ultra triathletes around the world have responded in their droves to enter Cape Town’s latest annual sporting event, Challenge Cape Town, scheduled for 6 November.
Champions of the 226km iron distance event from Germany,Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Czechoslovakia who travel the world selecting top events in which to compete, have already entered Challenge Cape Town. Many others have made
inquiries.
“We are bowled over by the response to the event,” says race director Grant Kunneke. “Our promotional pictures of the course with Table Mountain in the background were placed on the home pages of every major triathlon website in the world. The industry is really excited about racing in Cape Town” says Kunneke.
“These athletes are aware of the Cape Epic and look to Challenge Cape Town to do for triathlon what the Epic has done for mountain bike racing” says Kunneke.
The 226km course will take in much of the region’s most spectacular scenery. The 3.8km swim will take place at the Granger Bay on the Atlantic Ocean with its stunning views of Table Bay, Robben Island and Table Mountain. The 180km one-lap bike course promises to be one of the toughest in the Challenge series with over 2,000m of climbing, through the Constantia winelands, including the famous Chapman’s Peak, along the coastal route as it skirts around Table Mountain and heads out to Khayelitsha and the Indian Ocean coastline allowing athletes a taste of the diversity of Cape Town.
The marathon starts at the Green Point Stadium precinct, heads into the City Bowl before climbing up the Table Mountain incline on Kloof Road, up and down into Camps Bay with its white sandy beaches fringed by palm trees, followed by a two-loop run along the Atlantic Seaboard finishing back at the Green Point precinct next to the
Cape Town Stadium.
The route is novel and testing and based in the heart of Cape Town. It incorporates the cooler waters of Table Bay, the CBD, the wind of the Cape Flats, the entire Peninsula and the steep slopes of Table Mountain. It offers international television crews a visual tabloid of Cape Town like no other.
The event becomes the 13th member of the Challenge Family, which has events throughout Europe, Australia the UK and New Zealand.
Cape Town was selected as a possible location after its successful hosting of the FIFA 2010 World Cup. The city is regarded as one of the most beautiful in the world with an experience of staging annual mass participation sporting events, like the Cycle Tour, the Two Oceans and the Cape Epic.
The hub of the action takes place at the Green Point fields, alongside the Cape Town Stadium where the sophisticated transition areas and finish will be placed.
“We expect a field of about 1 000 participants first time round, a third of them being international athletes. A media contingent of +-forty sport and triathlon specific journalists and photographers accompany the group as do many of the Challenge Family members who assist in putting on the event”, says Grant Kunneke.
The City of Cape Town has welcomed the project and has been hard at work to ensure road closures, athlete safety and spectator participation. The traffic plan has been submitted and accepted and participants are assured of rolling road closures throughout the cycle route.
The Cape Town City Council and its Events Office has been accommodating in planning the logistics of the event. Their assistance has been invaluable and their learning’s from the Cape Argus Pick n Pay Cycle Tour place them in a very advantageous position regarding attracting mass participation events.
Challenge Cape Town is also opened to relay participants of three members per team. Challenge Cape Town entries cost R2 990 for individual athletes and R4 500 for relay teams.
For entries and further information, please visit www.challengecapetown.com.
Challenge Cape Town is part of the Challenge Family series that features 13 races across three continents, including the world’s largest iron distance triathlon, Challenge Roth in Germany. Other races are Challenge Wanaka (New Zealand), Challenge Fuerteventura and Challenge Barcelona (Spain), Challenge Kraichgau (Germany), Challenge Cairns (Australia), Challenge Copenhagen and Challenge Aarhus (Denmark), Challenge Vichy (France), Challenge Walchsee(Austria) and Challenge Henley-on-Thames (UK). For further information, visit www.challenge-family.com.
One thousand solo athletes are expected, a third of whom will be international participants.
The event is also open to relay teams of three members.
The race starts at 06h00 and closes seventeen hours later with a cut
off at 23h00.
The swim follows a 3.8km course in Granger Bay starting from the
Oceana Power Boat Club.
The 180km cycle follows the Cape Argus Pick n Pay Cycle Tour
course with an extra leg along the Muizenberg, Strandfontein and
Khayelitsha coastline.
The 42km run takes athletes up Kloof Nek Road, into Camps Bay and
follows a looped course along the Atlantic Coastline finishing at
Green Point.
For more details and entry forms visit www.challengecapetown.com
Edited by SteveCT, 21 February 2012 - 05:05 .
Long live His Excellency, General Colonel Doctor Aladeen, Democratic President-For-Life, Invincible and All-Triumphant Commander, Chief Ophthalmologist, Brilliant Genius of Humanity, Excellent Swimmer Including Butterfly, and Beloved Oppressor and Ruthless Protector of the Precious and Expendable People of Wadiya.
Posted 23 February 2012 - 12:39