Matt Fitzgerald’s
Iron War is a terrific book, a great story, and a prologue of man all in one.
It’s the story of a BIG race in more ways than one.
Iron War is a book
that Matt poured his heart and soul into to tell a story. In that sense it is a
book by a man. The story is about two
men and a race - a storyline built over many years, thousands of kilometres, and
countless emotions, and culminated in the Hawaii Ironman Triathlon Championship
in 1989. In this sense it is a story of two competitors and one intuitive,
defining moment. Ultimately, Iron War portrays the journey of man – in a world
that is becoming smaller and smaller, yet less communicative – how collective
and individual meaning can be sought through athletic and endurance endeavours.
Matt’s
relationship with writing and his dad, and fitness, running and triathlons has
a long and impressive history. Matt uses his skills and a variety of resources
– personal interviews and conversations, magazine articles, books, and radio
and television productions – to put you in the shoes of two of triathlon
forefathers and champions as they develop as athletes and mature into men.
Iron War covers
the history and development of triathlon – and it’s movers and shakers – in
detail I’ve neither seen nor heard elsewhere. Matt put’s to rest some of the
myths regarding the inaugural Ironman triathlon, highlights the evolution of
the USTS through, firstly, San Diego, and how though these, the popularity,
marketing and organization of triathlon events sowed the seeds for what is now
a worldwide recreational and competitive phenomenon.
Matt artfully
tells the story of Iron War’s two protagonists – Dave ‘The Man’ Scott, and Mark
‘Grip’ Allen. He dives into their history and their relationships. He
highlights their sporting achievements and personal journeys, and how they
bring each man to a single, defining moment 2 miles from the finish line. He
follows Scott, through a childhood of racing buses to school by bike and on
foot, through an adolescence of swimming, water-polo and weight training, on a
continual quest to discover his physical, mental and emotional limits – limits
tested at all extremes. Scott’s challenge was much about Nature, and the gifts
given to us by Mother Nature and her brother, Time.
Allen’s upbringing
is followed as closely, nearly draft-legal. Self-doubt, a crucifying painful
inner-voice, and a father that had next to no interest in nor intimate
relationship with, accompanied Allen through a journey of continually seeking
approval (and proof to himself). From dog-paddling across a diving-board pool,
to regularly choking as a competitive teenage swimmer the lad discovered that
he could run. Lifeguard events, and a burgeoning interest into the spiritual
side of life and living, proved to be Allen’s springboard into triathlon. Allen’s journey was much to do with Nurture,
and how attitudes, values and behaviors are inherited as strongly as slow twitch
muscle fibres, efficient lungs and a huge heart.
The human heart is
many things – an organ, a metaphor, a pump, a charm, a pin cushion, a house, a
rose, a gift, and a start and finish line. It sinks, it flutters, it beats, it
rocks, it grows, it bleeds, it hurts, it loves , it starts. And stops. It can
be given away and accepted; it can be trained and rested, it can be
transplanted and nurtured; and, it can be driven. And broken.
Matt Fitzgerald
expertly and effortlessly takes us on the journey of Scott and Allen
as they compete against and with each other, compete against others and against
themselves in what has been described as the greatest Triathlon (race) ever. He highlights the build-up to the race with grace and the excitable anxiety we competitors
encounter pre-race.
And, beyond a start
befuddled by the governor of Hawaii, Matt takes us stroke-by-stroke,
mile-by-mile , and stride-by-stride - in
near-40C heat among the lava fields of Kona, up out of the town of Kailua-Kona and
back, through a defining moment of intuition
and fortitude.
Matt superbly places
you there, and in the race. You’re there as spectator and support crew. You’re
there as an interested on-looker, and as a competitor. You’re there as
reporter, and reader. You’re there as Scott. And you’re there as Allen. You’re
wondering what they’re wondering; your wondering what he’s wondering; and
you’re wondering what you may.
And, in an
indescribable moment of “feel” – that
great human trait – one triathlete leaves the other behind. And leads him to
the finish live. One journey to the finish-line is first, yet not finished. The
other journey, second, is still unfulfilled.
For a decade Scott
and Allen owned the Hawaii Ironman. Each owned his destiny on that day, and
beyond. Matt Fitzgerald may not own the story of Iron War, yet he told it the
way all good stories should be told: with adventure, and with heart.
Buy a copy of Matt
Fitzgerald’s Iron War, take the adventure. And listen to your heart. Challenging ourselves as people, and as (tri)athletes,
in seeking clarity and understanding – even if through a ‘culture of pain’ - is
everyman’s war, and perhaps, ultimately, the BIGgest race.
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