Texas man dies during first leg (swimming) of Alcatraz triathlon
"We have reason to believe the gentleman suffered from a massive cardiac event as he entered the water and began the swim," race officials said in a statement.
Read more: http://www.myfoxdc.com/story/21451717/texas-man-dies-during-first-leg-of-alcatraz-triathlon#ixzz2MbAbYQZQ
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http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Man-dies-at-colder-than-normal-triathlon-4324933.php
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Triathlon-victim-was-Texas-attorney-4326475.php
Incidentally, @Sharko and I were escorting a 2+ hour solo skin swim in the Bay around the same time as the triathlon. We passed by Alcatraz about 15 minutes before the race went off.
What a clusterf@*#. Hundreds of mostly incompetent swimmers in wetsuits trying to crab across a 4.2-knot ebb tide in choppy 51F water. 150 of them got swept past the finish.
This sounds like a CYA answer. Austin has some spring fed lakes and pools that might be colder than lots of other areas, but I think it's probably too soon to rule out water temperature as a factor. While 58 is too cold for me, most of the lakes around here (Baton Rouge, LA) and the gulf are around this temperature or higher. It's hard to get acclimatized to cold water living in the south, unless you swim outside through the winter.
This may very well be one of the colder events, but these things happen in water much warmer as well.
...anything worth doing is worth overdoing.
So wouldn't really expect a problem, especially if a trained triathlete. But maybe untrained and with a pre existing medical condition, things might be more risky.
We are aware that cold water shock can trigger heart attack. And maybe a thin wetsuit is of little defence at 51F. Maybe swimmers should not do dive starts but slower getting in and lining up starts to force a slow entry time and avoid cold water shock and hyperventilating. Especially when immediately racing will also elevate the need for O2, and a heart rate that increases due to adrenalin, racing, and cold, but tries to decrease due to face in the water. The heart really is in a mess for a minute or two.
"Some more info on this. The swimmer did not die within a minute after the jump - I thought that just didn't sound right, especially with all the kayaks and watercraft within yards of the jump. Turns out another mostly distressed swimmer, resorting to breaststroke found him face down 1/2 mile into the swim. Turned him over and he was blue. Waved over kayak's and tried to admin cpr. Motorcraft arrived, loaded him on boat and continued cpr, but was already too late. The swimmer that found him and tried to resuscitate was one from our Disney Tri Team."
http://www.statesman.com/news/sports/austin-attorney-who-died-during-triathlon-remember/nWgZq/
Not being familiar with how this is run, are there any open water qualification swims required? If so what's the standard? The goal shouldn't be to the get the maximum number of people in, but instead a maximum number of qualified and capable swimmers.
loneswimmer.com
We're all just carbon, water, starlight, oxygen and dreams
You can tell a bunch of them didn't do enough or any acclimation swims because they can't bear to put their face down in the water and go. 51 F water is serious business. To attempt that swim without acclimation is absolutely insane.
When someone dies and leaves behind a nice family, there has to be a rule change. If not already required, I think a qualification swim and a health certificate should be mandatory! The qualification swim temp could be changed each year depending on the month they plan on running the race. Lastly, the kayakers should all be required to wear wet suits. The paddler in the video didn't look like she was wearing one. If a rogue wave or too many hanger ons knocked her off, she'd need rescuing also. 51F water is really serious business.
One clearly different rule in triathlon as versus OW only is a swimmer is allowed to hang onto a escorts paddle board, kayak, boat etc., as long as they don’t advance there position (wink wink) without disqualification. In our world this is clearly a disqualification but in Tri world it’s actually encouraged, I have no doubt this was mentioned several times in pre-race meetings and on the ferry ride out.
According to this AARP article, 2.2% of heart attacks occur during sex. They call that a small percentage. http://www.aarp.org/home-family/sex-intimacy/info-01-2013/can-sex-give-me-a-heart-attack.html
www.WaterGirl.co
AZ Open Water Swimming on Facebook
I think it boils down to this: There is some level of cardiac risk in open water swimming. Wetsuits, cold water, mass starts, race-day excitement/anxiety, water conditions, confusion about the course, disorganization, etc. may exacerbate those risks.
Mountain climbing, hiking, and cycling are much riskier than open water swimming. I'll bet we have more cyclist and hiker fatalities here in the Phoenix area in one year than the entire history of open water triathlon swim deaths.
A person can die while open water swimming. It's a very small risk, but it's a risk. The athlete and the race organizers are not necessarily to blame.
p.s. Hot water is a different story. I blame the race organizers for Fran Crippen's death.
www.WaterGirl.co
AZ Open Water Swimming on Facebook
This triathlon made the news on a men's fashion blog.
We're all just carbon, water, starlight, oxygen and dreams
"I mean, you jump off of a boat—that’s sitting in the middle of the bay near ‘The Rock’—with 2,000 fellow triathletes into 58-degree (arguably shark-infested) water and have to swim 1.5 miles to shore, for crying out loud"
That is so triathlete ;-)