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Friday, July 4, 2025
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Augusto Benedicto: A triathlete’s journey from poverty to podium glory

Long before the finish lines, medals, and global competitions, August Benedicto’s story began on a bike — not racing, but delivering blocks of ice under the searing Tarlac sun.

With eight siblings and a family struggling to make ends meet in Paniqui, young August knew that education was a luxury he had to fight for.

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So he peddled through early mornings, balancing schoolbooks with sacks of ice, chasing dreams that, back then, seemed far from the Ironman banners he would one day cross.

Now 41, Benedicto has become one of the most enduring names in Philippine triathlon. At the recently concluded Century Tuna Ironman 70.3 Subic Bay—held under grueling 40-degree heat—the Ireland-based Filipino veteran dug deep once again, finishing second overall with a time of 4 hours, 40 minutes, and 58 seconds. His performance earned him the Bagong Bayani Award, a special recognition given to elite Filipino athletes who continue to raise the flag in international endurance sports.

The course, brutal by any standard, featured a 1.9-kilometer swim, a 90-kilometer bike ride, and a punishing 21-kilometer run. Benedicto posted splits of 31:19 in the swim, 2:30:06 on the bike, and capped it off with a 1:33:59 run—yet another strong showing in a career that has spanned over two decades.

Benedicto’s silver finish at Ironman Subic earned him the Bagong Bayani Award.

It’s a journey built on quiet sacrifice. His first foray into competitive sports came at 14, when he was discovered for his raw talent in long-distance running. From school-level track meets to eventually earning a slot in the Palarong Pambansa, Benedicto made each opportunity count.

He entered his first duathlon in 2003 and finished near the bottom of the pack. But the fire had been lit. By 2005, he was part of the Philippine Sports Commission’s training pool and represented the country at the Southeast Asian Games in Pattaya, Thailand, where he clinched a bronze medal.

It was there that he met British triathlete and future Ironman legend Chrissie Wellington, who encouraged him to try his hand at the sport that would later define his athletic life. He joined his first Ironman 70.3 in 2009 in Camarines Sur and finished as the fourth Filipino to complete the course. In 2012, he made history by clinching his first Filipino Elite title at the Cobra Ironman 70.3—a feat he repeated in 2014, 2015, and 2016.

“I was so excited for this year’s race,” Benedicto said after the event. “Just imagine, I’m already 41 and I’m still competing with younger athletes, national team members, and elite triathletes. But I focused on my training—10 to 15 hours a week, every week. One hour swimming, one hour running, and 100 kilometers of biking every weekend.”

Dedication, it seems, is the fuel that keeps Benedicto going. He credits his wife, Anna, and longtime friend Cesar Manlikmot as pillars of support through the highs and lows.

“This award is for my family. For Anna. For everyone who stood by me,” he said with pride.

As the finish line at Subic fades into memory, a new goal already looms: the Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Mabea, Spain, this November. Benedicto is preparing for it with the same fire that once drove a teenage boy to deliver ice—not just to help his family, but to carve out a future no one thought possible.

Benedicto’s story stands out—not just for the result, but for the road taken to get there. From hauling ice to hauling medals, he continues to prove that true endurance isn’t measured in kilometers—it’s built on grit.

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