Dreitz, Charles-Barclay Victorious at 2019 Challenge Roth

Dreams came true on Sunday at the 2019 Challenge Roth triathlon with Franconian local Andi Dreitz and Brit Lucy Charles-Barclay both climbing one step higher on the podium to claim their victories.

Heading out the door? Read this article on the new Outside+ app available now on iOS devices for members! Download the app.

Read the recap from Challenge below, and check back to Triathlete.com for a comprehensive gallery.

Men’s Recap

On Saturday at the bike check-in, Andreas Dreitz predicted a first Franconian victory at Challenge Roth, and his prophecy come true in a time of 7:59:02. Behind him, Jesper Svensson (SWE) and Cameron Wurf (AUS) placed second and third, respectively.

Dreitz led the race from 40km on the bike claiming the fast split of the day in 4:13:12 and ran an entire 2:51:11 marathon in the lead but it was no easy win. “I went through many ups and downs today,” he said. “This victory here is insane.”

Svensson led out of the swim in 48:27 but the three Andies (Dreitz, Böcherer and Potts) pushed him into fourth which was where he started the run. He worked his way back towards the front, running a 2:48:43 to claim second place in 8:02:20. Third placed Wurf had also made a prophecy come true on the run course: He wanted to show this year in Roth that he not only can cycle very fast, but can also run fast which he did today posting a 2:50:37. Unlike last year, he did not lose any places on the run and finished in 8:04:08. Fastest run split of the day went to David McMcNamee in 2:41:01.

Women’s Recap

In the women’s field Lucy Charles-Barclay raced a wire-to-wire win. She led out of the water in 49:01, 5:28 ahead of Rachel McBride (CAN). While she held onto the lead, it was slowly being whittled away by chasers Sarah Crowley (AUS) and last year’s winner, Daniela Bleymehl (GER). With a cry of joy, the 25-year-old crossed the finish line to loud cheers and a new personal best of 8:31:09. “I can not thank the spectators enough for their support,” she said. “It’s so important, because you can never stop pushing and giving everything.”

Sarah Crowley exited the water in fifth and maintained this position until she made her move at the 70km mark up to third before coming off the bike in fourth. A 3:00:02 marathon saw her run up to second place on the podium. Bleymehl rounded off the podium in third in 8:43:17.

Complete results

Jan Frodeno Reflects on His Final Ironman World Championship

Immediately after finishing 24th place at his final Ironman World Championships, the Olympic medalist (and three-time IMWC winner) explains what his race in Nice meant to him.

Keywords: