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Published Tue, Jun 08, 2010 06:41 AM
Modified Tue, Jun 08, 2010 07:34 AM

Accessibility drives popularity of kids triathalons

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- Staff Writer

If the mere mention of the words "kids triathlon" makes you cringe, take a deep breath and relax: Kids triathlons are not designed to push children to their physical limits.

In fact, many of these swim-bike-run races are short-distance affairs that require almost no training and are over in 15 to 20 minutes. Flotation devices and training wheels are allowed if kids need them.

This accessibility is leading to a surge in the popularity of kids triathlons, according to data from USA Triathlon, the sport's governing body. As of March 2009, it had nearly 31,000 members ages 17 and younger, up 25 percent from the previous year.

Distances can vary. Huntersville's Birkdale Animal Hospital Kids Triathlon Series, one of the largest events of its type in the country, has relatively short requirements: 4- to 6-year-olds, for instance, swim 25 yards, bike three-tenths of a mile and run just 100 yards.

Meanwhile, the Kids In Training Youth Triathlon in Cary last weekend had ages 5 to 7 swimming 50 yards, biking 1.5 miles, and running half a mile. (Eight- to 10-year-olds went twice as long, and 11- to 17-year-olds covered three times those distances.)

"Our mission is basically to get kids and their families healthy," says Maylene Jackson, director of Cary-based Kids In Training, which this year will put on six triathlons statewide. Says Kathy Goody, race director of the Birkdale events: "It's a safe way to get physical. The mission is really for the kids to have fun."

Fun, experts say, is important.

"We want it to be fun because we want exercise to be a lifelong habit for a child," says Daryl Rosenbaum, a sports medicine physician at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. "If it's not fun ... they may not carry on this kind of healthy habit later on in life."

According to the results of a report by the White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity, one in three American children is overweight - and one in five is considered obese.

'Built-in cross-training'

As is the case with all youth sports, there is the risk of injury because of improper training. But parents and organizers agree that not much training is necessary, as long as the child has an active lifestyle (and perhaps is taking swim lessons - the water leg is typically the most stressful part of the race for families).

Even if kids do train, "with triathlon, you have built-in cross-training," Rosenbaum says. "It seems like everyone feels pressure to pick a sport by the time they're 6 and that's their sport - that's the one they do year-round all the time.

"The risk of that is you're doing the same movement over and over again: kicking a soccer ball every time, throwing a baseball every time. That can add up. The nice thing is triathlon is three sports. You're doing one sport one day, one another and then one a third day."

Also, triathlon being an individual sport, kids can take as competitive an approach as they wish. Often, how quickly they finish will be inconsequential the first time, then many realize that it would be fun to try again and go faster.

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Do your kids want to try a tri?

Kids In Training has several more events on its 2010 schedule, including triathlons in Nashville on June 26, Cary on July 31, Greensboro on Aug. 7, Fort Mill, S.C., on Aug. 14, Wilson on Aug. 21, and Raleigh on Aug. 28. Registration for any event includes free training sessions that both you and your child can attend. Details: www.kids intraining.com or call 919-372-7032.

IronKids Raleigh takes place beginning at 8 a.m. Sunday, June 27, at Lake Raleigh, on Centennial Campus at N.C. State. For ages 6 to 15. Details: www.ironkids.com. The IronKids series is run by the World Triathlon Corporation, parent of the Ironman series of endurance triathlons.


Heidi and Alan Wagoner of Apex don't want to become one of "those parents."

You know, those parents - the ones who pressure their kid into playing sports, then yell at him or her during competitions.

So they just let 8-year-old son Lars approach events sponsored by Cary-based Kids In Training however he wants to.

"Each time he goes out, he has specific goals," says Alan Wagoner, 40, whose son has done two triathlons, one duathlon and one 5K. "Sometimes it's to 'just finish,' and other times, he wants to have fun. Watching him compete ... it sounds corny, but the closest way I can describe it is joy."

And as Lars has gotten more interested in triathlons, so has Dad - who will do his first in August. (Mom is already a triathlete.)

That makes Heidi and Alan the type of parents Kids In Training director Maylene Jackson loves. The ones, Jackson says, who "start saying 'Wow, my kid just did this - I can do it.' We open that door for them.

"If we all just went out there and swam a little, biked a little, ran a little, most of us could complete a sprint triathlon." Théoden Janes


For kids, a triathlon is just another day to do the three things they love most: swim, bike and run. The only difference is that in a triathlon there's a start line and a finish line. Here are a few tips to help you and your child have a positive experience:

Put safety first. A safe bike, a good pair of running shoes and a bike helmet that fits are important. Supervise biking and swimming in particular.

Swimming should be a key focus. Help build your child's endurance to the point he can cover the distance of the swim portion of the triathlon comfortably. Stroke type is flexible.

Do not let her overtrain. This is supposed to be fun, and doing excessive training is not fun for a child. Just make sure she swims, bikes and runs at least once each week. Beyond that, just let your kid be a kid.

Work on pacing. Teach them to start slow and finish strong. By showing them how to pace, they'll have a much better day.

Practice transitions. The time between the swim and the bike, and between the bike and the run, counts. Have your kids practice getting out of a pool, running while dripping wet to their stuff, getting their shoes and helmet on, and then riding their bikes while wet.

Sources: Triathlon & Multi-Sport Club of Winston Salem

and FallFrenzy.com.


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