The Journey
Harry’s training campaign was supported by a crew of family, friends, colleagues and one very understanding partner (shout out to Lily!) who all played a role in making the goal a reality.
In 2023, Harry first tackled the full distance Ironman distance with a goal to finish and post a time under 10h30. Achieving this goal, Harry happily retired swore off the sport forever... or so he thought. However, in late 2025, something lit a fire within and suddenly the urge to break the elusive 10h barrier was an idea he couldn't shake. The idea turned into fuel, and the motto “sub-10 or death” was the driving force behind every early morning session and late-night ride.
By race week, Harry was in the best condition of his life. Fitness was high, confidence was high, and everything pointed towards a strong day out.
To give the sub-10 goal the best chance possible, the race was broken into a few key targets across each leg.
Swim (3.8km) – sub 1 hour: A swim under an hour is a classic Ironman benchmark. Hitting that mark would show the swim fitness was there and set things up well for the rest of the race.
Bike (180km) – sub 5 hours, 30 minutes: The Taupō bike course was significantly more challenging than his previous Ironman in Western Australia, with around 1,400+m of climbing. Harry’s aim was to get as close as possible to his previous Ironman bike time of 5:17, allowing a little extra time for the elevation.
Run (42km) – sub 3 hours 15 minutes: This was a big one and his second most important goal of the day. Running 3:15” would mean beating his standalone marathon personal best of 3:22 by seven minutes, and besting his previous Ironman run time by more than 30minutes. Which, after completing a 3.8 km swim and a 180 km ride, is a serious challenge.
In Harry’s own words, “Those last 10km, 5km, 3km, 2km and 1km were the longest of my life! I was trying my best to hold pace up the slight hill to the end. I saw the finish line and was constantly checking my watch if I could make sub 3:15.”
“The final push. Heart rate elevated, each stride breathing heavier, losing composure and grimacing through the pain. Finally, the red carpet. I had some time to spare, I heard my sister yelling out to enjoy the finish, which was something I’d promised myself I’d do before the race. Coming down the red carpet a sense over overwhelming pride and relief flood the body. The adrenaline kicks in; I realise everything I set out to achieve was a success. A proud and loud celebratory yell comes out as I cross the finish line. Shortly followed by a swift collapse onto the ground from pure exhaustion.”
Harry got the job done in a total time of 9:46:14 with an amazing 27min overall PB.
Congratulations Harry; YOU ARE AN IRONMAN (again!). Apparently, the monkey’s now off his back (much to Lily’s relief!) … but we know things come in threes, so watch this space!