Ironman Hawaii enters the 21st Century 2001-2005

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In 2001 pro cyclist-turned-tri Steve Larsen shook up top cyclists, evoking even Normann Stadler to comment: “He passed me like a motorcycle.”
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The end for Steve Larsen’s dream race came at Mile 14 of the run, Tim DeBoom making the kill. Larsen’s bike charge left him with payment due. Fade to 3:19:09 run, 9th place.
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Lori Bowden lost 2 minutes to Badmann on the swim, 9 minutes on the bike. Thus Badmann’s 3:09:33 to Bowden's 3:03:089 deficit on the run didn’t matter in 2001.
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Wearing a Zoot outfit that looked like a Thursday Underwear Run ensemble, Badmann didn’t let this fashion faux pas slow her down on her way to her third Kona win.
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DeBoom’s 2001 win lent a measure of American pride just one month after 9/11.
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Amidst the cheers from fans and hugs from the DeBoom clan, Tim clutches his head and seems to be wondering “What have I done?”
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In 2002, Tim DeBoom and Peter Reid were 10 minutes behind Thomas Hellriegel after the bike. Then DeBoom’s 2:50:22 trumped Reid’s 2:53:48, while Hellriegel faded to 4th.
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Before 2002, Nina Kraft was just happy to be on the podium. In 2002, a paranoid Kraft thought a drafting penalty was part of a conspiracy to deny her the win.
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Winning her third straight Kona in 2002, Badmann scores her fastest ever 9:07:45 time in 2002.
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Friends and one summer training partners Tim DeBoom and Peter Reid
wave to the crowd after another battle. DeBoom prevailed by 3 minutes 10
seconds.
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After Tim DeBoom dropped out of a tight duel with kidney stones 14 miles into the run in 2003, Peter Reid cinched his third Ironman title with a 2:47:38 run
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After trading places with 1-2 finishes in 1998, 1999, and 2000, Lori Bowden finally joined husband Peter Reid on top in Kona in 2003. In a sad irony, they had just separated and divorce awaited.
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Peter Reid’s third Kona win in 2003 still puts him next behind 6-time winners Dave and Mark, ahead of two time winning legends Scott Tinley, Luc Van Lierde and Tim DeBoom.
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Natascha Badmann, the greatest woman cyclist ever at Kona, became dispirited and wondered if she should retire when Nina Kraft left her 20 minutes behind into T2 in 2004.
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Perhaps anticipating her imminent disgrace for testing positive for EPO, Nina Kraft hung her head when crossing the line first with a big lead over Badmann in 2004.
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Natascha Badmann’s sportsmanship shines through when she smiles like a winner after crossing the finish line on Alii Drive second. Actually, she was the real 2004 winner.
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Breaking the paradigm that says Ironman Hawaii is always won on the run, Uberbiker Normann Stadler’s 4:37:58 bike in 2004 put an unassailable 23 minutes on runner-up Peter Reid.
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Paradigm buster Stormin’ Normann’s 2:57:53 run surrendered 11:43 to Reid, but his dominating bike left him 10 minutes to the good at the finish.
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In 2005 Faris Al-Sultan wielded a top-notch 49:54 swim, a best-of-the top-10-finishers 4:25:24 bike and a 5th-best 2:54:51 run to finish a 7th-3rd-1st ascending arc at Kona.
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Natascha Badmann’s bike had crushed all rivals, causing many to downgrade her run. But on this day in 2005, Badmann’s 3:06:25 erased Michellie Jones’ 6-minute lead to win her 6th title.
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