Aquathlon

Aquathlon

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Aquathlon is a sport which consists of a continuous, two-stage race involving swimming followed by running.

The International Triathlon Union (ITU) and its member federation organizations sanction competitions and govern the sport.

The ITU holds an aquathlon world championship, typically held in the week before and at the same location as the ITU Standard Course Triathlon World Championship.

Holding an aquathlon rather than a triathlon can be an attractive option for a race director because:

  • It reduces race logistics by removing one of the legs from a triathlon.
  • It reduces the amount of space needed to hold a race limiting it to a rather small and manageable geographical course. Bicycling often takes up the largest area of the three legs of a triathlon making it, in a practical sense, the most difficult leg for a race director to manage.

Sometimes called an aquathon

An aquathlon is sometimes called an aquathon. The ITU and USA Triathlon sanctioning organizations generally use the term aquathlon.

Relationships to similar sports

The "Modern pentathlon" is similar to an aquathlon in that both include swimming and running. But swimming and cross-country running are only two of the five events which make up the modern pentathlon, and these are held as distinct, noncontiguous events. Within the penthathlon sport the term biathle is also used for (training) races containin swimming and running. These however contain distance stemming from pentathlon races, for instance 200m swimming 3k cross=country running. Aquathlon follows triathlon distances. For instance 1k swim - 5k run at the 2004 world champs in Queenstown, or 2.5k run - 1k swim - 2.5 k run in Lausanne 2006.