Pushing the Limits
At the Ford Ironman Florida triathlon in Panama City Beach, athletes of all
ages and abilities swim, bike, and run their way toward a grueling, but unforgettable,
finish.
by Nancy Henderson
photography by Steve Gates
Dressed
more for the slopes than the beach, thousands of spectators are bundled in their
coats, swarming the snowy white shoreline to watch the first leg of the race in
the 2006 Ford Ironman Florida triathlon. As fans vie for vantage points behind the
Boardwalk Beach Resort, a perky announcer warns against trampling the dune grasses.
Meanwhile, a handsome athlete plants a good-bye kiss on his girlfriend as fervently
as if he were marching off to war. Other athletes jog nervously, and a few practice
yoga, oblivious to the rumble of the crowd and the strong northwest wind that will
challenge their swim in the Gulf of Mexico.
More than twenty-two hundred athletes will compete in November’s grueling
triathlon in Panama City Beach, the eighth to be held here, in which participants
swim 2.4 miles, bike 112, and run 26.2. Half are first-timers, and about one hundred
are professionals. But the majority are amateurs here for the fun of it. Unlike
some of her many competitors, forty-nine-year-old Noreen Burke, an energetic, reed-slender
nurse practitioner with icy blue eyes, has skipped her warm-ups this morning. “It’s
just another training day,” she says, laughing. “But I’m nervous.”
Her sister Betty Groh, who traveled from Boston, hugs Burke before she joins the
others in the shallow green water. “She just wants to finish,” Groh
confides. “She will be awfully disappointed if she doesn’t.”
Elsewhere on the beach, fifty-year-old Richard Meek psychs himself up for the Ironman,
his fourth since 2002. “The ocean at sunrise is generally just like a mirror,
so your first lap is no different than swimming in the lake,” says the tall,
easygoing chief accounting officer from Chattanooga, Tennessee. “The second
loop around, you’re starting to get some waves and some wind. I’m sure
people who swim in the ocean every day have it timed perfectly and know how to breathe
and not get slapped in the face with a wave, but I always seem to turn my head at
the wrong time.”
Today he will have plenty of company. At 6:50 a.m., pros wearing
gold caps plunge into the ocean. The crowd, spread like a thick blanket from the
hotel to the shore, watches with concern as some athletes veer off course. “I
can’t believe those waves,” says one spectator. Despite their excitement,
fans are polite, apologizing when they accidentally bump someone with a hefty backpack,
camera, or sign. “You Can Do It,” “See You at the Finish Line,”
and “Chicks Rule” are just a few such signs spectators carry to support
the athletes. After all, they are in the same boat, trying to spot husbands and
wives, mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers.
Ten minutes later, a much larger group of amateur racers charges into the surf,
flailing their arms like broad-winged pelicans diving for fish. A flock of seagulls
reels overhead, the white, black-tipped bodies a perfect complement to the throng
of jet-black wet suits. “Remember,” proclaims the announcer, “the
pain is temporary, the gain is forever.”
The gain, of course, is exactly why these “ordinary” athletes from around
the world spend the better part of a year training for the Ironman. While vacationing
with his family in the North Carolina mountains in 1998, Meek, a budding marathon
runner, viewed back-to-back Ironman reruns on the only TV station the set picked
up. As he watched an eighty-year-old triathlete cross the finish line and narrowly
miss the midnight disqualification cutoff, Meek thought, I can do that. In 2002,
at age forty-six, he signed up for his first Ironman event in Hawaii, a much tougher
ordeal than he’d imagined. After barely finishing the swimming portion of
the race after a storm steered him a half mile off course, Meek did finish, despite
passing out twice during the run segment.
At 8:07 a.m., right on his schedule for the end of the first lap in Florida, the
timekeeper cheerfully announces, “Richard Meek, Chattanooga, Tennessee!”
But the self-proclaimed “slow swimmer” is nowhere in sight.
A televised event also inspired Burke, a Bostonian who moved to Panama City in 1992,
to give the Ironman a try. For back-of-the-packers like herself, she says, “It’s
not about speed. It’s not about winning. It’s about finishing without
getting injured. If it takes me 16.59 hours, then that’s what it takes. If
I’m the last person to cross, then I did it and that’s all that matters.”
Well, that and the cool Ironman tattoo sported only by those who have finished the
race.
Athletes get seasick all around her in these choppy wind-whipped swells, but Burke
holds her own. Later, she will liken the sensation to “being in a washing
machine—you’re up, you’re down, you’re up, you’re
down.” She concludes the swim at 8:31 this morning, a half hour earlier than
she’d predicted. Back on dry land, volunteers in the “stripper zone”
help her peel off her tight wet suit. (The current no-nudity rule was prompted by
a Japanese competitor who forgot to wear a swimsuit underneath his wet suit one
year.) Sprinting through the hotel breezeway and into the changing tent, Burke emerges
moments later in black-and-yellow biking garb. She stops to dole out hugs to her
sister, brother, and roommate before pedaling west on South Thomas Drive. Meek’s
Litespeed bicycle is still on the rack.
As fate would have it, the lanky Tennessean who endured seven flat bicycle tires
during the Ironman Florida race in 2004, had just finished the morning’s first
swim lap when his daughter flagged him down in a panic. Instead of cycling and running,
Meek spends the rest of the day at a local hospital, where emergency-room doctors
treat his wife for a gallbladder attack. His early dropout “is disappointing,”
he admits, trying hard to mask his feelings. “But there will be another race.”
Back on the course, headwinds torment the cyclists for at least forty miles, giving
Burke a hard time, too. Along the flat route, well-wishers relax in lounge chairs,
flash attaboy signs, and clap for the athletes. Thankfully, by mid-afternoon, the
wind has turned into a gentle breeze as more bikers return amid yells of “Welcome
back, darlin’!” and “Way to go!” There are triumphant grins,
furrowed brows, looks of relief, and faces showing intense concentration. Seven
hours after the start of the bike segment, as the sun lowers itself into the ocean,
Burke wheels through the last transition arch. Without faltering, she embarks on
the final leg of the race, the 26.2-mile run.
The six-mile stretch inside St. Andrews State Park is lonely
for an extrovert like Burke. Even in this wildlife-rich park where snowy egrets
crouch over shallow ponds, white-tailed deer graze near nesting turtles, and alligators
sun on the sandy banks, Burke finds herself running alone in the dark. Relieved
to be back on the main road, she weaves through a patchwork of neighborhoods where
residents wave from their homes. Because finishing (not winning) is her goal, she
walks part of the way, stopping to chat with fellow racers and volunteers.
On the upper parking deck of the Boardwalk Beach Resort amid a village of event
sponsor tents and an elbow-to-elbow crowd, Burke’s supporters wait. A full
moon hovers overhead, and the temperature dips into the upper forties as athletes
cross the finish line and fans cheer their athleticism and perseverance. One dad
jogs along with his little boy asleep on his shoulder. Another man playfully mimics
a horse, pretending to prod himself as he gallops toward the ribbon that marks the
finish. Other racers simply muster a smile as they gingerly limp on sore, blistered
feet after a long, punishing day. Then, precisely at 9:39:52, a victorious Burke
beats her fifteen-hour goal with minutes to spare. Her fan club—roommate,
siblings, friends, running buddies, and local triathlon teammates—whisk her
off to celebrate. Her time doesn’t come close to that of the overall winner,
Germany’s Jan Raphael, who at 8:22:44, hobbled across the finish line before
Burke returned from the bike course. But finishing first is not the point for Burke.
Despite her success, she says one Ironman competition is enough. “I don’t
need to do it any more,” Burke explains. Unlike Meek, who vows to return next
year, Burke is satisfied. “I just didn’t wanna wake up at fifty or sixty
and say, ‘I wish I’d done that.’ Now I did it, and I can go on
to do something else. And I still get the tattoo.”
Editor’s Note: The 2007 Ford Ironman Florida is November 3. Please see “Things
to Do, Places to Go, People to See” on page 70 for details.