It still feels like only yesterday. The memories of wheeling the Motobecane bicycle from the garden shed to the local station in Widdrington to catch the 7:45am train to Kings Cross, stopping overnight in Waltham Abbey, before travelling on to Reading.
No bike box - not invented yet - and eager expectation for an event advertised in the Daily Mirror, with renowned distance runner Brendan Foster gushing how the sport had captured the imagination of the United States and was ready to become the next big thing in endurance.
Memories are a funny thing. Mike Harris's reminiscences of the first triathlon ever held in the UK are as crystal clear as those of his final competitive outing this summer, the Northumberland Triathlon. Both events held on 5 June. Only 40 years apart. "It was a good time to bow out," Harris recalls. "Five miles from where I live, a scenic route on roads that are relatively traffic-free and a run around the lake. It's a lovely event."
Harris has an understated warmth and wealth of knowledge to pass on from decades in sport. A half-century of training diaries and an autobiography, Sixty Years An Athlete, will attest to his dedication. "If I went through the details, it'd bore you rigid," he adds with a wry smile. Yet it truly is a blueprint for health, longevity, and no little success.
The Morpeth athlete, who coached upcoming British professional Dan Dixon for three years when Dixon was a junior, has won hundreds of endurance events, including finishing eight times on the podium at the British Triathlon championship, and it's a measure of his competitive instinct that he rarely speaks in age-group terms, just overall positions. Part of the reason why he has retired from racing this summer is that he feels he can no longer compete at the very front of the race. Harris is 72.
This story is from the October 2023 edition of 220 Triathlon.
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This story is from the October 2023 edition of 220 Triathlon.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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