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快活app Triathlon Team Finds Early Success, Team Chemistry With High Levels of Competition

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Matt Meyer

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matt.meyer@du.edu

Program Prepares to Host First On-Campus Event

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Freya McKinley riding a bike during a triathlon

Freya McKinley rides her bike during a triathlon. Morgan Engel/Clarkson Creative Photography

Last season, the 快活app triathlon team logged nearly 6,000 miles of travel to race in Florida, Virginia, Arizona and Utah.

This year, they鈥檒l also get to compete a little closer to home as they host the first NCAA triathlon event in University history on Sunday. will start at 8 a.m. in the El Pomar Natatorium, part of the Ritchie Center for Sports & Wellness, then continue at the Denver Soccer Stadium and around the adjacent sports fields. The event follows in Longmont on Saturday morning.

The team, in only its third year competing at the NCAA level, will be back on the road soon after, chasing even more success in the three disciplines鈥攕wimming, cycling and running鈥攖hat make up a triathlon.

Under the coaching of Barbara Perkins, a professional triathlete who competed with the U.S. National Team, the Pioneers found fast success. After its inaugural season was delayed to the spring by COVID-19, 快活app topped the team standings at two events during the 2021 fall season and had three first-year student-athletes鈥擣reya McKinley, Olivia Ebenstein and Avarie Faulkner鈥攅arn All-American honors and place in the top 20 at the Collegiate National Championships.

Anchored by a rapidly growing core of young student-athletes, 快活app at the Southern Hills Triathlon in Hot Springs, South Dakota. McKinley, now a sophomore, topped the podium and was joined by teammates Clara Normand and Elizabeth Harita.

For Perkins, there鈥檚 no better place to build a strong program with championship ambitions.

鈥淐olorado is a natural place for triathlon,鈥 she says. 鈥淎thletes already live, train and compete here, so to get in on the ground level in the sport, to be at the very beginning of it, has been great. It鈥檚 a growing process over the last year and people might鈥檝e not expected us to do as well as we did, but we had a great first full season. Now we鈥檙e working on building our traditions and trying to become a powerhouse.鈥

The state of Colorado and the 快活app hold the same appeal for student-athletes. McKinley hails from The Highlands, Texas, where she was twice a high school All-American. With the added elevation, outdoorsy lifestyle opportunities and a quality coach like Perkins, 快活app was a perfect fit.

鈥淚 can safely say Texas doesn鈥檛 compare to Denver,鈥 McKinley says with a laugh. 鈥淭he views, the weather, the opportunities for competition and the places you can train. I came out here for a visit and instantly fell in love with the lifestyle. I couldn鈥檛 have picked a better place for it.鈥

With the multifaceted nature of triathlon, the training is equally varied, with up to three different practice sessions per day. Athletes begin each weekday swimming as a team, sometimes as early as 6 a.m., which McKinley jokes is 鈥渁 great way to wake up before class.鈥

After a rigorous academic schedule, student-athletes spend their afternoons and evening hours training on land. Sometimes, the team begins with biking, followed by a run. Other times, the running is accompanied by lifting.

Beyond academic and athletic excellence, Perkins has fostered a strong sense of team chemistry. While training during the early mornings and late evenings can build camaraderie, Ebenstein says many small moments make her experience great.

鈥淭here are so many simple moments,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檒l drive up to races and we鈥檒l have full-blown rap battles in the back of the car. We鈥檙e roasting trays of vegetables every other night together as a team it鈥檚 a ton of fun. It鈥檚 super small things like that that help me realize that these people are not just my teammates. They鈥檙e really good people, and they鈥檙e friends for life.鈥