Kiwi triathletes raced with E-coli-like sickness

Hayden Wilde of New Zealand in the bike leg of the Mixed Triathlon Relay Race. Photo / Photosport.

Full Olympics coverage

Two New Zealand triathletes struggled with E-coli-like sickness leading into the mixed team relay last night, including silver medallist Hayden Wilde.

The New Zealand team finished 14th in the event in Paris last night, won by Germany over USA and Great Britain.

Wilde, who won silver in the men’s individual race, confirmed to TVNZ that he was struggling with E-coli-like sickness, possibly picked up from swimming in the Seine River.

“There was a bit of sickness within the team 48 hours after the race,” Wilde tells TVNZ.

“[After] 24 hours it cleared up pretty quick, I was just lucky that I only had some E. coli-potential sickness for 24 hours.

Tri New Zealand confirms teammate Ashley Thorpe was ill before last night’s race, but hasn’t confirmed if it was e-coli.

“I was very close to not racing today,” Thorpe says at a team farewell at NZ House on the Champs-Élysées today.

“If it had been a day earlier, I definitely would not have made the start line. I was actually hoping it would be postponed today with the water quality but I didn’t get that extra day.

“Yeah, I was bed-ridden for a day and then tried to get the body moving pre-race day, and it felt so much better today. I did everything I could to get my body back to normal, had the nutritionist help me out, and, yeah, good medical team around me to get back feeling 100 percent.”

Wilde did well to chase down the lead pack on the bike following a poor swim, getting to the front before crashing on the final turn before transition.

“I was coming around the corner and one of the other athletes went on the inside and took a bit of a dive, and I had to recorrect my stance coming into the corner. And, yeah, just lost the front wheel,” Wilde says.

“I haven’t come down for probably six years so I was kinda gutted that happened today,” Wilde says.

“I was just gutted to let the team down with that. You know, crashes happen as part of racing, but fought as hard as I could to try to get back into the race. But just felt pretty fatigued coming on to the run.”With that adrenaline spike, it was really hard to get the legs moving.”

Hear it as it happens with live commentary of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 on GOLD SPORT & iHeartRadio, plus comprehensive coverage on Newstalk ZB.

-NZ Herald.

 

 

0 comments

Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.