The Bohol 5150, which was a tune-up competition for elite athletes who would be joining the Ironman 70.3 in Cebu next month, also brought out Boholano aspiring thriathletes. Among the Bohol 5150 top finishers are Kim Zian Bartolata, who came in 10th in the M20-24 and 62nd overall on the race with 343 participants finishing the three discipline race, and Jervis Marimon, coming in 78th overall and 7th in the M40-44.
Also in were Jeffrey Real at 2:49:49 ranking 90th overall and was 9th in the M40-44; Val Anthony Uy with 2:53:29, the 107th overall and 10th in the M40-44. Philip Tan had 3:04:18 in his time chip came in 147th and was 9th in the M50-54 while Norie Calimbayan finished at 3:47:29 finishing second in the female 45-49 age category.
The Bohol event, which came after the 2017 race of the same name at the Bellevue, had athletes bringing their families, support crew and friends for at least three days of fun in the beaches of Panglao and exploring Bohol.
Coming right when Bohol is recovering from the pandemic, the race, according to Disaster and Risk Reduction Management Officer Anthony Damalerio, had athletes spending at least a thousand dollars for their Bohol sojourn and race.
The race also attracted several local athletes in the Sunrise Go for Gold Sprint event with 120 slots opened for the shorter course. While most of the Sprint event had locals, nearly half of the competitors were also from outside Bohol billeting in Panglao resorts, further perking up the local economy.
As to local sports scouts, the Sprint event had a local team of the Provincial Youth Development Office (PYDO), Triathlon Bohol (TriBo) and many locals in their individual capacities.
For Bohol Gov. Erico Aristotle Aumentado who himself bikes and does indoor training, in his term, the Ironman 5150 would the first among the many in the months to come.
And for Pagaura and the hundreds of Boholanos now into multi-sports, it certainly would be a venue to force the body to develop stronger cardio, grow muscle mass and stretch that stamina to be just as tough and resilient as a real Ironman. (RAHC/PIA7 Bohol)