September N Magazine

Page 14

NSPIRE

The Natural How Nantucket native Beau Garufi won his first tri on his first try

WRITTEN BY ROBERT COCUZZO

PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE

Number 250 emerged from the water first. The crowd cheered as he stormed up the beach, then jumped onto his bike and pedaled off behind a police escort. The spectators then turned their attention back to the water’s edge to await the next triathlete. They waited and waited. Finally after nearly two minutes—an eternity in swim time—the next competitor hustled up Jetties Beach in hopes of catching the front runner that had just dominated the first leg of the Nantucket “Hero” Triathlon. He would try, along with many others, but in the end, no one could beat the leader Beau Garufi. At twenty-two years old and standing at a sturdy 6’1”, Nantucket native Beau Garufi has the look of an athlete who was born with bulging biceps and a six-pack—and now he has the résumé to match. In Nantucket’s first Olympic-distance triathlon, Garufi not only bested a handful of top ranked triathletes, he even beat out the lead relay team. In other words, he swam and ran and cycled faster than a three-man team, where each member of that team only had one event to complete. So after swimming .75 miles and then cycling twenty-eight, Garufi still ran faster than someone running on a fresh pair of legs. This feat becomes even more baffling when you consider that Beau Garufi had never competed in a triathlon before. What he had competed in was swimming. His record times still line the walls around Nantucket High School’s swimming pool like permanent fixtures. While he entered the water at an early age, it wasn’t until he was seventeen that he started honing his stroke. He put down his baseball glove and hung up his soccer cleats to focus entirely on swimming. “I knew that I couldn’t do all three sports at the level I wanted to, so I picked swimming, dropped everything else and then started training by myself all year round,” he says. “I’d go to Whalers practice, and afterwards I would stay until the pool closed...I knew what it took to be one of the better swimmers, but I had to do it by myself.” All the extra laps paid off when he earned a spot on the UMass Amherst swim team, a D1 program of which he eventually became, appropriately enough, tri-captain. Last season, Garufi missed nationals in the hundred-meter breaststroke by .14 seconds, a miniscule margin that clearly scathes him to this day. After his victory this past July, recruiters for the US Triathlon team reached out to him, and he was invited to compete in the Age Group National Championship in Milwaukee. Out of 2,650 racers, Garufi came in 57th overall, and 19th in his age group. The performance qualified him for the 2014 International Triathlon Union’s World Championships in Edmonton

N magazine

Canada, where plans to compete as a member of team USA. N magazine

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September N Magazine by Nantucket Magazine - Issuu