forum shop
Logotype Logotype

Matt Russell takes Ironman Lake Placid

Matt Russell overcame a 16th-best swim with a dominating 4:27:38 bike split on Lake Placid’s challenging hills, then closed the deal with a 3rd-best 2:58:56 marathon. Russell, who made a comeback from extensive injuries with a 6th place finish last year at Kona, finished the male-pros-only contest in 8:27:57 with a 5:29 margin of victory over Joe Gambles of Australia and 9:04 over 3rd place Marc Duelsen of Germany.

Russell, 36, now based in Sarasota, Florida, posted the highlight of his 2019 season after a 3rd at Ironman 70.3 Texas, a 6th at the Ironman European Championship in Frankfurt, and a 12th at the Ironman North America Championship in The Woodlands, Texas.

Last year, during a long, exhausting effort to qualify for the Ironman World Championship for a return engagement after he was hit by a van and suffered serious injuries during the 2017 race at Kona, Russell placed 3rd at Ironman Canada, 3rd at Ironman Mont Tremblant and 2nd at Ironman Chattanooga. A good and remarkable set of results – but falling just short of the Kona qualifying mark. Fortunately, Ironman CEO Andrew Messick rewarded the unbreakable Russell with a Kona slot and he answered with his Kona personal best.

Race recap

James Capparell of the U.S. led the non-wetsuit swim in 73.8 degree waters with a 49:52 split that gave him a 2 seconds lead on Balasz Csoke of Hungary, 5 seconds on Igor Amorelli of Brazil and 7 seconds on Brent McMahon of Canada. Also among the 15 men who finished ahead of Russell were highly competitive triathletes Tim Rea of Australia (+3:11), Joe Gambles of Australia (+3:19) and Marc Duelsen of Germany (+6:50). Russell did beat one up and comer out of the water – Sam Long of Boulder (+7:27).

After 62 miles of the bike leg, McMahon and Amorelli surged ahead to a 2:01 to 2:14 lead on a pack of six including come-from-behind arrivals Long and Russell, as well as Andrew Talansky of the U.S., Gambles, Rea and Duelsen.

By the 89-mile mark, Russell rode his way into the lead, followed closely by Long, McMahon, Amorelli and Rea, with Gambles (+1:38) and Duelsen (+1:54) still within range. At 99 miles into the bike, Russell accelerated and broke away to a 3:57 lead on Long, 3:59 on Amorelli and 4:01 on Rea.

After his 4:27:27 split – 4:36 faster than the next-best effort by Sam Long – Russell arrived in T2 with a 5:04 lead on Long, 5:08 on Amorelli, 5:10 on Rea, 6:37 on McMahon, 7:46 on Gambles and 8:30 on Duelsen.

Just 3 miles into the run, Long chopped 1:11 from Russell’s lead and McMahon reduced his deficit by 2:02. At 7.5 miles into the run, McMahon passed Long for second place. But by 8.2 miles of the run, Russell appeared to stop the bleeding and held a 3:17 advantage of McMahon, 4:28 on Long and 4:43 on Gambles.

By 13.4 miles, Long fell off the back and only Gambles was making headway, 2:19 off the lead. Next were Duelsen (+6:05), Tripp Hipple of the U.S. (+6:18) and Tim Rea (+6:34).

For the next 4 miles, Gambles matched Russell’s pace but did not gain. At 18.54 miles, Russell held firm while Gambles fell back to a 4:30 deficit. By 21 miles, Russell had repelled all attacks. Gambles fell back to a 5:23 deficit followed by Duelsen (+7:48), McMahon (+10:20) and Rea (+11:45).

After his 3rd-best 2:58:56 marathon, Russell finished in 8:27:57 with a 5:29 margin of victory over Gambles (race-best 2:56:30 run) and 9:04 over Duelsen (2:59:21 run).

Ironman Lake Placid
Lake Placid, New York
July 28, 2019
S 2.4 mi. / B 112 mi. / R 26.2 mi.

Results

Pro Men

1. Matt Russell (USA) 8:27:57 S 56:42 T1 3:01 B 4:27:38 T2 1:42 R 2:58:56
2. Joe Gambles (AUS) 8:33:26 S 53:10 T1 3:29 B 4:38:28 T2 1:51 R 2:56:30
3. Marc Duelsen (GER) 8:37:01 S 56:41 T1 3:03 B 4:36:06 T2 1:51 R 2:59:21
4. Brent McMahon (CAN) 8:38:14 S 49:58 T1 2:39 B 4:41:21 T2 1:30 R 3:02:48
5. James Capparell (USA) 8:421:04 S 49:52 T1 3:05 B 4:46:59 T2 2:16 R 2:58:54

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Do you think the new hydration and fairing rules are good for triathlon?