Tomás Delgado has come up with an Obliteride for the record books.
The 25-year-old is testing his body’s “physical and mental limits” with a middle-distance triathlon — that’s a 2.5-kilometer swim, an 80-kilometer bike ride and a 20-kilometer run — and then adding in a few extras.
“This year, I’m doing a half Ironman; eating an 18-inch pizza; drinking a 12-pack of beer (probably something light) and completing a 500-piece puzzle,” he said.
And he’s doing all of this in one day.
“I’m combining my favorite and least favorite activities to raise money for the Hutch,” he said. He did not elaborate as to which category pizza-eating or beer-drinking fit into. His top two donors will have the honor of choosing the beer and the pizza toppings, he said, asking they “not be too gross.”
Delgado is participating for his father, uncles and grandfather who have all survived various cancers as well as his grandmother, who died of advanced ovarian cancer.
Keeping the momentum going
Diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in 2017, Amber Hahto rode in her first Obliteride one day after receiving chemotherapy. She was dealing with side effects from another therapy during her second Obliteride.
This year, for her third, she’s “going big.”
“I’m doing 1 mile for every day I’ve been living with metastatic breast cancer — that’s 979 miles,” she said. “I’m doing my version of a triathlon: 50 miles kayaking, 429 miles biking and 500 miles of walking/running.”
Hahto said she’s raising money for research — over $7,790 of her $20,000 goal as of this writing — because “research is the fastest path to curing cancer. And I believe the team at Fred Hutch can get us there.”