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Beyond the armour of the ‘warrior princess’

August 26 - September 1, 2015
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Gulf Weekly Beyond the armour of the ‘warrior princess’

A woman like Caroline Steffen always seems to be in constant motion, whether she’s training at home in Queensland, Australia, or travelling all around the world to race and consistently getting on the podium.

GulfWeekly caught up with her between races for the Bahrain Endurance 13 team to see beyond the armour of the athlete aptly named the ‘warrior princess’ by race fans but instead met perhaps the princess of hearts.

Ironman Frankfurt was a hard-fought race with Caroline taking third place behind Daniela Ryf and Julia Gajer. “I wasn’t 100 per cent happy with my race in Frankfurt, which wasn’t a surprise, to be honest. The last few months were a little struggle health-wise, which makes it really tough to race against such a strong field like we had in Frankfurt,” Caroline said.

Despite her disappointment, she still finds the positive. “I’m happy to be four out of four times on the podium. Guess not many athletes can show such consistency,” she added.

And what consistency! With the points carried over from her fifth-place finish at the Ironman World Championship last year, her third-place finishes at Ironman Melbourne and Frankfurt, and a slew of 70.3 wins, Caroline will once again be joining the Big Dance in Kona this October.

When she isn’t busy training and racing (which earned her the ‘warrior princess’ nickname), Caroline makes time for loved ones. She spent some time with her family in Switzerland after racing Frankfurt and spectating at Challenge Roth, where her friend David Dellow made his comeback in long-distance racing after battling illness.

She has also gotten involved with some initiatives to benefit children. After racing Ironman 70.3 Vietnam, she donated her entire winner’s cheque to the Newborns Vietnam Programme. “No mother should get in a situation where their baby has to die just because of missing equipment. In so many countries we take the first aid for our baby after birth for granted. In Vietnam it is not. One day I’ll be a mum and if needed will be thankful for any help I get.”

After Ironman Frankfurt, a young girl approached Caroline and earned a hug from her hero. “She told me how much she loves to watch me racing and how excited she was when I crossed the finish line,” Caroline said. “Wherever I go she is there and follows me racing. It’s nice to see young people like her in our sport.”

While Caroline lets her guard down around children and loved ones, she is all business when it comes to her profession. She has already started her 10-week training block, which includes racing at Ironman 70.3 Sunshine Coast and IMG International Beijing before heading to Hawaii for the World Championship. “Tough weeks ahead,” she admitted.

When the cannon goes off in Kona, the warrior princess will once again be ready for battle.







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