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These were the headlines of the race:
Four Time Ironman Champion Chris Lieto wins the First Annual Nautica South Beach Triathlon, and, Celebrities, athletes and local competitors raised $80,000 to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
Miami Beach, FL – On Sunday, April 13, 2008, famous faces and determined athletes met on the sands of Miami Beach to compete in the First Annual Nautica South Beach Triathlon, presented by Toyota. Former Ironman Champion, Chris Lieto’s 1:16:15 finishing time for the half-mile swim, 18-mile bike and four-mile run earned him the Nautica title by 45 seconds over runner-up and first-year pro Ben Collins (who finished in 1:17:00). Third place went to current IronMan champion, Chris McCormack who finished at 1:18:57.

Well, I have just finished my first race of the season. I competed in the Nautica Miami International Triathlon which was a 2/3 Olympic distance race here on South Beach. South Beach is an amazing place to be especially early on a sunday morning. This is a party town and as we were getting up to go down to the beach to start our race, the clubs and streets were still packed with party goers from the saturday evening. It had a really great ambience and is a really happening town.
I was really disapointed with my bike today and lost about 2 minutes to the two leaders Chris Lieto and Ben Collins. I usually ride with these guys comfortably but lacked torque and power. My Team had told me this week that I might not have the power on a flat course like this to hold the watts on the bike yet. I have been doing some big miles in the mountains on my road bike and have not been in the aero position this season. Riding hard on a TT bike is something that you need to train for and I had done nothing yet. I thought I would be able to muscle my way through the bike and hold the tempo, but the guys were too fast early and broke me on the sharp turns and the wide open sections. My Team was right and I was wrong.
I thought I would be fine but my efficiency was down and my power, too. The bike was were I lost this race today. My run was controlled and the fastest of the day, but it was a little bit too little too late and I finishes about 1 minute from the win. Overall I was disappointed not to win but after speaking to my crew they have made me feel better. I had an email in my inbox from Mick that basically summed up the race before it happened. I spoke with him after the race and he said check your email. When I opened the email it was exactly as he predicted. I guess these guys know me better than I give them credit for. Anyway that’s my race from Miami. I head back to LA tomorrow afternoon and have two more weeks of heavy mileage before the program shifts into more pre competition stuff. I will be racing Wildflower a little on the base phase side but expect more power here and will then look for my speed to come back for the race in Hawaii and UK and then obviously my assault on the Germans in early July. My season has begun and now the racing begins. I love the racing and love this time of year.
St. Jude is unlike any other pediatric treatment and research facility anywhere. Discoveries made, have completely changed how the world treats children with cancer and other catastrophic diseases.
St. Jude is where some of today's most gifted researchers are able to do more science, more quickly. Where doctors across the world send their toughest cases and most vulnerable patients. Where no one pays for treatment beyond what is covered by insurance, and those without insurance are never asked to pay.
They have built America's 3rd-largest health-care charity, with a model that keeps the costs down and the funds flowing, so the science never stops. For more information visit www.stjude.org.