The
Luik triplets, also known as the “Rio Trio,” have beaten every female runner in
their nation, qualifying for the upcoming Rio Olympics.
“We
are the first triplets who are going to the Olympics,” Leila, Liina, and Lily
Luik told Epoch Times in an email.
Each
nation is permitted a maximum of three athletes in each Olympic marathon. The
Luik sisters qualified for the marathon standard of 2 hours 45 minutes. Leila
has a personal best of 2 hours 37 minutes 11 seconds. Liina’s fastest time is
2:39:42, and Lily’s is 2:40:30. Coincidentally or not, their order of career
bests matches their order of birth.
The
trio trained for the Olympics almost every day. In the morning their
two-and-a-half hour training is much more intense than it is in the evenings,
they said. But they do get plenty of rest time, “We try to rest a lot during
trainings,” Lily said.
The
Luiks, now 31, were born October 14th, 1985; they grew up in Tartu, Estonia.
The sisters Leila, Liina and Lily had been born a month premature. None weighed
more than four and a half pounds. For several weeks, home was an intensive care
unit. Three decades later, the sisters are Olympic marathon runners for this
tiny Baltic nation — and they are believed to be the first triplets to have
qualified for the Winter or Summer Games.
The
Trio to Rio, the alliterative sisters call themselves as they prepare to run
the women’s marathon in Rio de Janeiro on August 14th. The International
Olympic Committee said that it did not track siblings but that “various trusted
sources reported it will be the first time that triplets compete at the Games.”
Among those sources is Bill Mallon, an American who co-founded the International
Society of Olympic Historians and keeps a database of 12,000 Olympic athletes
and their relatives. Two hundred sets of twins have competed at the Games,
Mallon said, almost always in the same events, including the canoeists Pavol
and Peter Hochschorner of Slovakia, who won gold medals in doubles slalom in
2000, 2004 and 2008.
But
Mallon said he was “99.99 percent sure” that no triplets had ever participated
in the same or in separate Olympics. “It’s rare enough that we would have heard
about it,” he said. “This just doesn’t happen.”
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