It’s sad news for Canadian long-distance triathlon fans – on Monday Heather and Trevor Wurtele announced that they are retiring from professional racing after an impressive 12-year career. We’ll have more on the couple in our January issue of Triathlon Magazine Canada, but wanted to make sure we acknowledged the news online before then.
“We are incredibly happy to have taken the leap in 2009 by quitting our jobs, selling our home, living in an RV and going after our dreams full-on,” Heather wrote on Facebook. “We honestly never imagined that we’d achieve all that we did.”
“First, I have to give a big, awkward, virtual hug to my coach Paulo Sousa. He knocked on the RV after Ironman Arizona in 2010 and basically said ‘I’m impressed by your commitment. I think we could do much better as a team,’” Heather continues. “His mission was to create a high performance training environment and we joined the Triathlon Squad for its inaugural training camp in Las Cruces, New Mexico, in 2011. That year started off with a bang when I won Ironman St. George, Ironman Lake Placid, finished 8th at the Ironman World Champs in Kona and 7th at the 70.3 World Championships Las Vegas. He has been in my corner ever since.”
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Over her impressive career Heather won seven Ironman races, 25 half-distance events and finished on world championship podiums four times. She also turned down a chance to compete at this year’s Ironman World Championship, where she finished eighth in 2011, after she won Ironman Canada in July. Earlier this year she also won Ironman 70.3 Campeche for the third year in a row. (Click here for a complete list of Heather’s results.)
![Triathlon Magazine Canada Trevor Wurtele wins Subaru Ironman Canada](http://triathlonmagazine.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Trevor-Wurtele-wins-Ironman.jpg)
Trevor took Ironman Canada in 2013 and has won three other half-distance races, while finishing “second at an embarrassing number of half iron distance races.” This year he also won Xterra Portland. (Click here for a complete list of Trevor’s results.)
The two will be sadly missed in the professional ranks of our sport. Beyond their impressive results, they were popular with fans, sponsors and journalists alike because of their easy-going, open and accessible personalities.
Heather’s thank you to Trevor serves, in many ways, as a description of herself, too:
“You are hilarious, terminally honest, modest to a fault and have always helped me keep perspective,” she wrote.
The good news is that we got to enjoy having Trevor and Heather Wurtele as part of our sport for so long. The bad news is that we won’t get to see them racing around the world any longer.
The post Canadian triathlon stars Heather and Trevor Wurtele call it a career appeared first on Triathlon Magazine Canada.