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About Mark
The Ironman Triathlon held on the Big Island of Hawaii, is the
most difficult one-day sporting event in the world. It starts with a
2.4-mile ocean swim, followed by 112 miles of cycling, and then finishes
with a 26.2-mile marathon. For most of the 1500 men and women who compete
in the Ironman crossing the finish line amounts to a victory.
Mark had a different destiny. His first six attempts, all losses, were
casualties of everything from flat tires to internal bleeding. Yet,
each defeat served to galvanize his commitment to fulfilling his dream
of becoming the Ironman Champion. Finally on his seventh attempt Mark
won, beating Dave Scott in triathlon's greatest race ever.
Allen went on to win a total of six Ironman titles in six attempts.
His final victory came at the age of 37, making him the oldest champion
ever in this incredibly challenging event! Mark completed a 15-year
career in the world of elite athletics with a 90% top-three finish record,
going undefeated in 20 races over a three year span from 1988-1990.
He was named "Triathlete of the Year" six times, and after retiring
in 1996 was called "The World's Fittest Man" by Outside magazine.
Still living the principles that enabled him to turn adversity into
success, Mark was recently awarded the highest ranking any speaker ever
receives from Northwestern Financial Network for a keynote address he
gave to their advisors. Mark works for NBC Sports as an expert analyst
each year at the Ironman and provided commentary at the Sydney Olympics
for triathlon's debut at the Games.
Mark also authored the successful book on lifestyle fitness titled "Workouts
for Working People," and is currently working on a second project that
he is co-authoring with Brant Secunda titled "Fit Body, Fit Soul" due
for release in 2004.
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