Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Laurent Lambert, Ceepo's age group triathlete, heading to Kona!






CEEPO's strongest age group French triathlete, Laurent Lambert, is qualified for Kona.
Laurent has set some impressive results in this year's races as below, and is looking forward to the championship race in October.

- Triathlon du Sud HIM in France: 4th overall and 1st in age group @ 4:11
- IM Quelle Challenge Roth: 26th overall and 3rd in age group @ 8:37:11
- 70.3 MONACO: 22nd overall and 2nd in age group @ 4:35

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Ceepo in Eurobike 2009



CEEPO attended in Eurobike 09 with our new line of models and have received positive feedbacks from the press and many who visited our booth. Triathlon Magazine in Germany has reported on us. Click here to view the video on their site.

Belinda Granger gets 2nd in Ironman Canada 2009


Congratulations to Belinda for her 2nd place in Ironman Canada!
She has sent us a nice race report and here it is:



Ironman Canada 2009

Ironman Canada 2009 was my 34th Ironman-distance race and my third time to the beautiful town of Penticton. This time I would be sharing the town with my parents which made it even more special. This was their first time to Canada and they were not disappointed- they loved it!

I arrived on the thursday and my parents arrived on the friday. I had organised a wonderful homestay for them out at OK Falls (the run turnaround)- I don't think they quite new how wonderful it was going to be. Doug and Di Corbishley have the most amazing house right on Skaha Lake and it is to die for. My parents were in heaven.

I stayed right in town on Lakeshore Drive with the same homestay I have had the past two times here- Wilma is an absolute darling and I love staying with her. As far as I am concerned homestay is the best way to stay and you get a true feel for a place.


Well arriving on the thursday meant there was not much time for sight-seeing or socialising pre-race. I like doing it this way as there is less chance of me 'stuffing' things up. I am a creature of habit so it is best to keep me in my normal routine as long as possible. Before I knew it race day was upon us and it was exciting to get up nice and early on sunday morning ready for a long day of racing. Of course I had high expectations- as athletes we are all high-achievers and we expect only the best from ourselves- no excuses! I wanted to win the IMC title for a third time. I wanted to join amazing athletes like Lisa Bentley and Lori Bowden in winning three from three. I was happy with the way I had been training in Boulder- I had really enjoyed all of my training sessions and most of them had been going to plan. However, I had not had the smooth year I had hoped for. My surgery in March took the wind out of me and just when I thought I was getting back on track, I got hit by a car while training in Germany. But at the end of the day I have been racing as a professional for 10 years now and really have not had any major hiccups so I was just going to have to suck it up and move forward. My motto has always been that when you toe the start line of a race you give it all that you have got on that particular day- no excuses, no regrets. It was Ironman Canada and I love this race so I was going to give it all I had.


The swim was great- the lake is just beautiful- clean, crisp and one huge loop so not a lot of pushing and shoving going on, although I still managed to cop it in both eyes and have two nice scratch marks underneath both eyes to show for it. I exited only two minutes back on Tereza Marcel. I was very happy as she is a great swimmer and I expected her to have a lot more time on me. Onto the bike and for the first 15 kms I was slowly cutting snippets of time on Tereza. Everything was going to plan and I just assumed it would only be a matter of time before we were riding together. This was the scenario that had played out in my head pre-race (note to all athletes- have several different race day scenarios planned out). At around the 30km mark I was given another split of 3minutes. I automatically thought they had it wrong- I was making up time not losing time. Unfortunately Tereza had stepped it up a notch and I was not riding as strongly as I had hoped. I spent the next 100km getting splits of 5mins, 7 mins, 12mins, 15mins........ then I was like 'ok, no more splits. You need to start concentrating on you and you only'. It is really difficult when you have set yourself a goal and all of a sudden it is totally unachievable. You are out there going as hard as you can and then you have to try and change your mind set and your goals- not an easy or fun thing to do. But this is why we race- the thrill of overcoming all of the obstacles thrown at us on the day is a great feeling. Rarely do things go exactly as you have imagined or dreamed. We can prepare perfectly but race day is never perfect- not even for the eventual winners.

 
Into T2 I was 14 minute back. It had been a very tough bike ride- hot, dry, windy and smokey from fires that had started close by. How was I going to approach this? Last year I was Tereza, I was the girl with the insurmountable lead. Now I was the girl chasing, chasing the leader who was kilometers up the road.

I got to see my parents right at the beginning of the run- this made my day. I knew from then on that no matter what the end result, they were going to be proud. So I soldiered on and ran as best I could. I concentrated on looking after myself- hydrating, refueling and staying positive. I really did struggle with the smoke on the run. I had picked up a mild sinus infection during the week which normally would not bother me but it was giving me grief on the day.

It was a good feeling getting to the the turn around at 21km. I knew that getting to the finish was never going to be a problem for me. It was wonderful to see Lisa Bentley out on the course- she could see that I was doing it tough and her words of encouragement really helped pick my spirits up.


Once back in town, running down Main Street is always a treat. I don't think it would matter how bad I was feeling, you cannot help but smile from ear to ear. The crowd support is awesome- it is almost addictive- you kind of want to turn around and run through there again (don't worry I didn't do it). I got to then see my parents and my homestay, Wilma again and I gave them a smile and just shrugged my shoulders to my dad- he understood. He knows me inside out. He knew that even though I was so happy to finish, it wasn't a great day of racing for me. But I crossed the finish line with a smile and it was genuine. I love to race no matter what the outcome. I know how lucky I am to live the life of an elite athlete. I gave Tez a big hug- she had an amazing race and thoroughly deserved the win.

At he end of the day I achieved two of my three pre-race goals- I got my spot to Kona and I finished with a smile on my face.

A huge THANKYOU to Graeme, Joe and the entire race team and also to the wonderful volunteers who help make the race so special. This is one of the greatest and fairest IM races in the world.

Now it is back to Boulder and preparations will soon begin for the big day in Kona. It will be my 8th time there and I am looking forward to it as if it were my first.

Bjarne Moller gets 3rd in the Open Australian Champs (Ironman distance)

Congratulations to Bjarne Moller, finishing 3rd in Open Australian Champs!
Below is his race report:

"On August 29th I finished 3rd in the Open Austrian Champs on the ironman distance. Due to extremely bad weather I
had no chance of setting a new personal record. Though I am satisfied as I finished faster than to guys who have gone really fast: 8:17 and 8:11 respectively. There are results, videos and interview on www.austria-triathlon.at

Now my focus is already set on Ironman Florida where I want to qualify for Hawaii - and hopefully break the 8h 20min barrier."