Manawatu Standard

Hewitt’s triathlon hopes dashed

- DANIEL GILHOOLY NZN

Andrea Hewitt couldn’t hide the sadness of the last nine months after crossing the Olympic finish line in Rio.

The veteran New Zealand triathlete was comfortabl­e talking about her seventh placing, why her pre-race tactics didn’t play out and how a stomach bug hampered her run.

But it was different when the subject turned to the ordeal of coping without her fiance and coach Laurent Vidal.

Frenchman Vidal died of a suspected heart attack last November.

Asked if she had considered pulling out of her third Olympics, Hewitt’s voice faltered.

‘‘I didn’t know at all, I had to change everything,’’ she told NZ Newswire.

‘‘I’ve had so much support but the preparatio­n for this was four years and this last year ... it wasn’t part of the plan.’’

Hewitt linked with experience­d coach Chris Pilone in May and believed she was in good shape coming to Rio.

However, she said there was no way her preparatio­n was what it might have been.

‘‘Changes are good but when it’s not like what’s supposed to happen, then it’s difficult.

‘‘I’ve got mixed feelings. I’m happy I was able to race here and that I actually made it.’’

The 34-year-old finished ahead of 13th-placed compatriot Nicky Samuels in a race won by Gwen Jorgensen of the United States.

Both Kiwis were in a group of 18 that came off the bike leg together but Jorgensen and Switzerlan­d’s Nicola Spirig Hug cleared out from the rest of the field on the 10km run.

The 30-year-old Jorgensen, the reigning ITU champion, put distance between herself and the defending champion on the last of the four 2.5km laps at Copacabana.

Spirig Hug held on to silver while Britain’s Vicky Holland outsprinte­d teammate Non Stanford to win bronze.

Hewitt said the leading peloton was twice as big as she and Samuels wanted on a tough, hilly course.

The large group suited superior runners such as Jorgensen.

An unwell Hewitt started the run conservati­vely and dropped as low as ninth but felt better in the last of four laps, finishing one minute 59 seconds behind Jorgensen.

A five-time world series overall medallist, the Olympic dais has been elusive for Hewitt. She was eighth in Beijing and sixth in London. Samuels, 33, was pleased with a ‘‘solid’’ effort, particular­ly after sitting out 2015 with knee and hip injuries.

Both Kiwis will contest the two remaining world series races, in Canada and Mexico, this year.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Andrea Hewitt of New Zealand leaves the water during the women’s triathlon on day 15 of the Rio Olympics.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Andrea Hewitt of New Zealand leaves the water during the women’s triathlon on day 15 of the Rio Olympics.

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