14 September 24 - October 7, 2021
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The path to inclusion: Catching up with Rob Balucas BY MIRA BRODY LOS ANGELES, Calif. â For Rob Balucas, qualifying for the Kona full IRONMAN World Championship race was more than standing on the triathlonâs biggest stage as a paratriathleteâit was about making the path of inclusion for paratriathletes easier to travel.
Knowing full well this was not communicated to his fellow athletes, Balucas did what heâs been doing since that crash in 2015âreaching toward athletic goals and striving to advocate for paratriathletes like himself.
âI didnât like what it meant for people in our division,â Balucas said of the mix-up. âI am able to do this with relative ease because of people who came before me, because I was following a path already set, and I want to do that Balucas had recently taken up training toward competing in triathlons when, for people who come behind me.â on Sept. 5, 2015, while mountain biking in Marin County, California, he After some investigating, Balucas found that his fellows in the handcycle crashed. His injuries included a broken collarbone, cracked ribs, collapsed division felt similarly that they had been misled. After all, this would forfeit lung and fracture in his lumbar spine, rendering him a paraplegic, and one handcycle athlete from representing the Americas at Kona this fall. forever changing his life. After reviewing Balucasâ concerns, the Lubbock IRONMAN race directors admitted their miscommunication and opened one more slot for Kona. Refusing to give up, Balucas began a rigorous rehab and training routine After confirming that the second place handcycle athlete before him didnât and began competing in triathlons with the help of a handcycle and want the spot, reality sunk in for Balucasâhe was going to Kona. race wheelchair. Today, he not only trains in the paratriathlete division of IRONMAN, but also speaks candidly about his crash, recovery and adaptive, athletic journey, including when he joined Outlaw Partners, publisher of EBS, last January for a riveting talk at TEDxBigSky.
With qualifying for Kona as his goal, Balucas competed in the handcycle division at the IRONMAN 70.3 in Lubbock, Texas, this past June. Despite a few hiccupsâhe and his wife Erika Chau, made the last minute decision to drive, forgoing the chaos that is pandemic air travel, and then it rained on the course the night prior, rendering all of his equipment soaking wetâ Balucas arrived and competed against two other handcycle racers for a total time of 5:57:20. Balucas came in thirdâjust one place short of qualifying for Konaâbut there was a communication mix-up. Usually, the first and second place handcyclers are offered a qualifying place at Kona, and the others are offered a spot in the Utah half IRONMAN. While congratulating the athletes on the podium, the race directors this time only offered the Kona spot to the first place winner.
Rob Balucas and his wife, Erika Chau, attend the IRONMAN 70.3 in Lubbock, Texas, in June. This race qualified Balucas for the Kona full IRONMAN. PHOTO COURTESY OF ROB BALUCAS
âI felt a full shock through my entire body, including the half I canât feel,â joked Balucas. âIt was half excitement, half âOh my gosh what have I gotten myself into.â It was validating.â Although Kona has been postponed from Oct. 9 to Feb. 5, 2022, due to pandemic concerns, Balucas remains optimistic and diligent about his training schedule. He calls swimming his âAchilles heelâ and hopes to get his swim pace down to an hour and 40 minutes, which means putting the time in to shave some time off of his current pace. âIâm in the best shape fitness and endurance-wise Iâve ever been in, and Iâm working on maintaining and increasing that,â Balucas said. âI worked hard I did the best that I could and Iâm about to get to the Big Dance.â The Big Dance, not only being one of two representatives for paratriathletes in the Americas at the full Kona IRONMAN, but also advocating for those who follow in his path, making it easier for those who have overcome their disabilities and still strive to achieve their athletic goals.
Balucasâ race wheelchair (above) allows him to adaptively compete in the running portion of a triathlon and he uses a handcycle (below) for the biking portion. PHOTOS BY SCOTT FLATHOUSE





