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Sports

900 to Compete in Wyckoff-Franklin Lakes Triathlon

The 31st annual swimming, cycling, and foot race will be held Saturday morning.

Wyckoff-Franklin Lakes Triathlon race director Frank Crotty remembers the first time he participated in the event in 1984, then as a participant with only 200 other athletes.

Since taking over as race director three years later, he says, he's seen the event "grow tremendously," and on Saturday morning nearly a thousand athletes will swim a half mile, bike for 17, and run five in the event sponsored by the Wyckoff YMCA, Wyckoff-Midland Park Rotary, and Indian Trails Club.

"I've done probably 75 triathalons all over the country, and the Indian Trails Club is the best setting I've seen," Crotty said.

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Participants will dive into the water there beginning at 5:45 a.m. Saturday morning before taking to their bikes. Although traffic will not be shut down along the cycling route [shown above], there will be a heavy police presence on the roads and area towns, including Wyckoff, have warned drivers to expect delays for the duration of the race, which ends at 10 a.m.

Overall first, second and third places male and female finishers will be awarded in a ceremony following the race, as will winners in different age groups.

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"Our winners have been among the best athletes in the country," Crotty said, though added that the annual race is primarily a local event, featuring area families and racers from around North Jersey.

"It is mostly people from the area, and people who have left the area but have family here," Wyckoff Y events director Nancy Addis said. "So it's a lot of repeat athletes."

This year's event will touch off on a somber note, with a dedication to one regular athlete who won't be making his entrance into this year's event.

Andrew Capizzi, a 24-year-old Paramus man that regularly competed in the triathlon, was killed when a car struck him on his bicycle in Burlington County, while he was preparing for a bike race two weeks ago.

Crotty said that a hundred volunteers from the Rotary club will be helping with the event, which typically raises around $60,000 for their scholarship program and the YMCA's Strong Kids Campaign.

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