Click here to meet the models and more in the following behind-the-scene features of the Triathlete magazine swimsuit shoot from The Hilton Rose Hall Resort in Montego Bay, Jamaica. Like what you see? Check out the June, 2010 issue of Triathlete.
The highly anticipated first race of the Rev3 Triathlon Series kicks off this Sunday in Knoxville, Tennessee and you can watch it all live on Competitor.com! The weekend will feature both an Olympic-distance and a half-Ironman distance race, with the professionals battling it out on the short course.
Both the male and female winners of this race will have a strong incentive to compete in the Rev3 Half-Ironman distance race in Quassy, Connecticut on June 6. The two victors will be eligible for the $150,000 prize purse available if anyone can win all three Rev3 Triathlon Series races.
On May 5 Jason Lester and Richard Roll will swim, ride and run into an exploit no human has attempted: five Ironman-distance triathlons in five days. That’s 560 miles of cycling, 12 miles of swimming and 131 miles of running. Lester, 35, and Roll, 44, will will do each stage on a different Hawaiian island.
Triathlons for kids are popping up around the country. Professional triathlete and sports nutritionist Pip Taylor explains what, if anything, you should know about your child’s nutrition before he or she gets involved in a sport like triathlon.
Written by: Pip Taylor
Q: My daughter, who is 10, has started training for triathlons (and I love being a triathlete myself). She has a healthy appetite and is average size and weight for her age, but is there anything different nutritionally she or I need to know as she starts to train more?
In today’s RunCenter we recap last weekend’s Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational, including Chris Solinsky’s record-breaking performance in the men’s 10,000m, and “Eat and Run” host John Berardi, PhD, answers important questions about nutritional supplements for runners.
Round two of the 2010 Dextro Energy Triathlon ITU World Championship Series will take place on Saturday in Korea’s bustling capital city of Seoul. The event marks only the second time that an ITU race has been staged in Seoul.
Because of its high-impact nature, running is a trickier form of exercise to start than other forms of exercise.
So you’ve decided to start running. That’s great! You won’t regret it. If you’re like most beginning runners, you are full of questions. The most basic questions have to do with the running itself: how far, how often, how fast, and so forth. This article will answer some of those basic questions.
A new study sponsored by the World Anti-Doping Authority found that the use of human growth hormone improved sprint performance enough to have made the last-place finisher a gold medalist in the final of the 2008 Olympic men’s 100 meters. That’s interesting. But is anyone else tickled by the idea of WADA administering performance-enhancing drugs to athletes for the purposes of this study?
This week on TriCenter we talk to the winners of the inaugural Ironman St. George, recap the 30th Anniversary of Escape From Alcatraz, and go inside the campgrounds at the Wildflower Triathlon Festival.
Beijing Olympic champion Emma Snowsill will make her long awaited return to racing at next weekend’s Dextro Energy Triathlon ITU World Championship Seoul.
The Revolution 3 Triathlon Race Series announced today the addition of a fourth race to the series. The sprint and Olympic triathlons will take place on the weekend of February 19 and 20, 2011 in Costa Rica.