Throwback Thursday: Spencer Smith's rewarding career
By Grady Sports Media
For Spencer Smith, being the youngest men’s world triathlon champion isn’t his biggest accomplishment. Nor was it becoming the first man to win back-to-back world titles, in 1993 at Manchester, England and in 1994 at Wellington, New Zealand. Smith views his win at the 1992 ITU Triathlon Junior World Championships as the most satisfying result of his triathlon career.
“I think the hardest one to win was my junior championship,” said Smith. “I could have gone to the men’s level earlier, but I wanted to win the junior championship very badly.”
Smith, was born in West Middlesex, Great Britain and grew up a swimmer. But he eventually grew tired of doing laps in the pool and a friend suggested triathlons.
“I was a swimmer originally but I just got bored with it,” Smith said. “My friend said, ‘Why don’t you try triathlons?’ I then asked him what a triathlon was and from there it [the love of triathlons] grew. I got on a bike and then I ran cross country in school and that is how I got my start.”
After Smith won the junior championship on his third try, at the age of 19, he turned his attention to the elite men’s competition. When he won the 1993 world championship he felt like he had made it. Smith became the youngest ITU World Champion, winning at 20 years, 3 months and 11 days,just under two months younger than Miles Stewart was when he won in 1991. Smith said the championship pressures and pitfalls that plague athletes, such as complacency, affected him during the 1994 campaign.
“In 1993 I had a good year running up to Manchester, but in 1994 I wasn’t having as great a year and needed a win at the World Championships,” said Smith. “At the beginning of ‘94 it was tough to get up for some races.”
But the ‘94 season taught Smith some life lessons that he still employs today.
“When you have already become world champion, it is hard to get up for smaller races,” Smith said. “It taught me to not get complacent. To really put my head down and just work.”
The ’94 title was more important for him and his legacy as a triathlete, Smith said.
“People could have thought that maybe ‘93 was just a fluke, so I think the [‘94] championship validated me as a legitimate champion,” he said.
Smith has fond memories of time in triathlon.
“I was fortunate,” Smith said. “I travelled the world, which is something I wouldn’t be able to do if I wasn’t doing triathlons.”
When Smith looks back on his successful career, he said he feels that his three-year quest for his junior championship is what helped him the most.
“When I won the ‘92 junior championships, it felt very rewarding because it was something that I had expected to win a year or two before and to win it was very satisfying,” said Smith. “It brought closure to my junior career, and I think it helped me in my men’s career.”
ITU Career: 1992 - 2001
2x ITU World Champion (1993, 1994)
Junior World Champion (1992)
2x European Champion (1992, 1997)
ITU Long Distance World Championships - bronze medal (1996)