USA TODAY US Edition

TRIATHLETE ALL-IN

2012 mishap leads Jorgensen to redouble efforts in drive for gold

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Gwen Jorgensen didn’t want to be a nomad.

She chose the tax side of accounting because it involved less travel.

When she started her triathlon career, she trained for most of the year first in Milwaukee, and then St. Paul, only going to Florida to dodge the worst of the winter.

“I kept saying it was a huge sacrifice for me to be away from home for so long,” she said. “I didn’t like being away from home.”

After a flat tire resulted in a 38th-place finish in the London Olympics, however, Jorgensen sat down and took a long, hard look at the next four years. Although triathlon had come looking for her, not the other way around, and she was only three years into her competitiv­e career, she knew

she was capable of winning gold at the Rio Olympics.

An All-American at Wisconsin in track and cross country, she could chase down pretty much anyone in front of her and hold off everyone behind her. But she needed to work on her swim technique and improve on the bike. As she made a list of possible coaches and training programs, Jamie Turner stood out.

“He is known for making people swim better,” Jorgensen said. “Jamie Turner was just the perfect fit for me.”

Except for one, very large thing: Turner is based overseas, splitting time between Wollongong, a city in Australia 90 minutes south of Sydney, and Vitoria, a city in Spain about 31⁄2 hours north of Madrid.

Training with Turner and his group would mean Jorgensen would be home for three months out of the year. If that.

As they talked, though, Turner told Jorgensen she was looking at it the wrong way.

“He had me think of it as an investment instead of a sacrifice,” Jorgensen said. “It makes me not only see it not negatively, but it makes me work that much harder. I know that every day I’m investing in my career.” Her investment is paying off. Jorgensen goes to Rio as the overwhelmi­ng favorite to win gold in the women’s triathlon. She is a two-time reigning Internatio­nal Triathlon Union world champion and has lost just two individual races since April 2014. She set a record with 13 consecutiv­e victories in the ITU’s World Triathlon Series from May 17, 2014, to April 3, and won the Olympic test event in Rio last summer.

In many of those races, Jorgensen erased lengthy deficits on the run, the last leg. In a victory in Leeds, England, in June, she overcame a 100-second deficit, the largest in the history of the World Triathlon Series — and won by 51 seconds.

“The last two years — not that she wasn’t as serious of an elite athlete before that — she’s essentiall­y dedicated her entire life to the sport. ... She has, like, two weeks off in December,” said Chuck Menke, the chief market- ing officer of USA Triathlon. “She took it to a whole new level in the last two years. Everything that she does literally is designed to help with her performanc­e.”

Though it was Jorgensen’s decision to move abroad to train with Turner, that first year wasn’t easy. She and Patrick Lemieux, whom she married in October 2014, didn’t know anyone. They didn’t know where things were. Wi-Fi was spotty, making it tough to communicat­e with family back home.

Even trips to the grocery store were stressful. Though Jorgensen made more than $200,000 in prize money last year and now has deals with, among others, Red Bull, Asics, Specialize­d and Oakley, she wasn’t making anything close to that earlier in her career.

“It was a struggle. I’d worry about money we spent on food,” she said. “If I wanted strawberri­es and they weren’t in season and cost a little more, I’d stress about that.”

After a 12th-place finish in Auckland, New Zealand, on April 6, 2014, Jorgensen wondered if she should quit the sport.

“It was really scary the first year. But I stayed on course because I believed in Jamie and I believed in this journey.”

Three weeks after that race, she finished third in Cape Town, South Africa. Three weeks after that, she won in Yokohama, Japan, to start her streak.

“Gwen’s execution on that streak, it’s really astonishin­g that, in a couple of those, she’s down a minute and a half after the bike and just running people down,” said Rob Urbach, CEO of USA Triathlon. “So her run speed and race strategy and execution — everything has to be right on the day. It’s really a testimonia­l to preparatio­n, to her becoming just a great profession­al in all aspects.”

Jorgensen is quick to point out her success wouldn’t be possible without Lemieux. He gave up his pro cycling career to move abroad with Jorgensen and handle every- thing for her besides the racing.

Cooking. Grocery shopping. Bike preparatio­n. Scouting the course. Anything she needs, he takes care of — usually before she even realizes it needs to be done.

“I am super blessed to have him with me,” she said. “At the end of the day, having Patrick by my side is the most important thing.” A gold in Rio is a close second. The USA has won one medal since triathlon made its debut in the Sydney Olympics in 2000, a bronze in Athens by Susan Williams.

No gold medals in four Olympics is one streak Jorgensen is keenly aware of and one she’d very much like to see end.

That, after all, is the point of this whole investment.

“My only focus this year is Rio. It’s been my goal to go to Rio and win the gold for four years.”

And afterward? Only 30, Jorgensen could easily continue racing through Tokyo in 2020. U.S. Olympic teammate Sarah True is 34. So is Swiss reigning Olympic champion Nicola Spirig, who last year won her fifth European title.

Besides, as good as Jorgensen is, she has room to grow.

“Her improvemen­t in the swim, her improvemen­t in the transition, her improvemen­t on the bike — she’s still improving,” Urbach said. “It’s scary. She’s still getting better.”

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Gwen Jorgensen, who was 38th in the triathlon in 2012, heads to Rio on a roll.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS Gwen Jorgensen, who was 38th in the triathlon in 2012, heads to Rio on a roll.
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