Classic Race: Challenge Roth 2011 revisited

Seven hours, 41 minutes and 33 seconds. While with five podiums he may forever be the bridesmaid at the Ironman World Championships in Hawaii, Germany’s Andreas Raelert remains the fastest man in long-distance triathlon history courtesy of a barely-believable finish time at Challenge Roth in Germany on 10 July 2011.

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“This was the performance of my life,” Raelert said post-race after perfect conditions, a partisan crowd and an athlete at the top of his game combined to produce an historic day. “I remember Chris McCormack said in an interview that the boys in the future will make 7:45 or sub-7:40hrs, and last week Marino Vanhoenacker [at Ironman Austria] opened this new chapter. It was just a question of time that the men would get to such times.”

A week after the Belgian Luc van Lierde’s 1997 long-distance benchmark of 7:50:27 was finally broken by Vanhoenacker at Ironman Austria, the 34-year-old Raelert took to the waters of Challenge Roth in Bavaria aiming to create a piece of history of his own.