Escaping From Alcatraz Is an Unresolved Family Endeavor for This Triathlete

Whatā€™s pushing 2,000-plus athletes from over 50 countries to San Francisco for the 40th annual Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon (EFAT) on Aug. 15ā€”one of the most unique and grueling swim-bike-run races on the pro triathlon tour?

 

 

The usual healthy mix of spirit, grit, and determination with a dollop of straight-up masochism.

But only one competitor in the crowd (that we know of) has also been curiously drawn to this eventā€”which begins with a cold, current-churned, 1.5-mile swim across San Francisco Bay from the famous former offshore prisonā€”to finish what his suspected Alcatraz inmate ancestor started.

train for a triathlon
How to Train for a Triathlon Prepare to master the toughest endurance test of all. Read article

ā€œAccording to my mom and my grandmother, Iā€™m a direct descendant of Arthur Barker, a convicted criminal who tried to escape from Alcatraz back in the 1930s,ā€ says triathlete Ronnie Troyn, who felt a faint familial tug when first hearing about the race on Instagram. ā€œIt just immediately struck me as this incredible challengeā€”but also a very cool opportunity to get back into family stuff that Iā€™d heard about and really didnā€™t pay much attention to when I was younger. As a kid playing water polo, I had no idea who Arthur Barker wasā€”or even who his mother was.ā€

Arthur Barkerā€™s mother was infamous, Depression-era crime figure Ma Barker, often described as the ruthless matriarch of the Barker-Karpis gang (which included two of her sons) and one of the most notorious public enemies of her time.

Ronnie Troyn triathlete

Not everyone in the Troyn family was so eager to revisit this Barker linkā€”which the triathlete admits gets a little fuzzy in a family tree gnarled into a series of cryptic name changes. Curiously, right at the top of Troynā€™s tree sits Captain James Ketchum, a famous 19th-century Native American chief from the Delaware tribe.

Swimmers diving into the water of The Escape From Alcatraz Triathlon
Escape From Alcatraz Triathlon: A Grueling Race to Swim-Bike-Run Read article

ā€œI think my grandma was always embarrassed about the Barker end of the family name and all those movies out there about her, like Bloody Mama,ā€ says the 46-year-old, Southern California-based retired military veteran, who explains the connection to us this way: ā€œAccording to family papers handed down to me, my grandmother Elizabethā€™s mother Neva Farrington was Arthur Barkerā€™s daughterā€¦and therefore Ma Barkerā€™s granddaughter.ā€

Troyn didnā€™t expect to be talking to Menā€™s Journal about his suspected ties to Ma Barker (killed in a hail of FBI bullets at an Ocklawaha, Florida, hideout in 1935) or Arthur Barker (killed by Alcatraz guards while attempting to escape the prison in 1939) when he happened to mention this genealogical tidbit still in the process of being fleshed out to race organizers.

ā€œIā€™ve just made my first payment for $16.50 to Ancestry.com,ā€ he laughs. ā€œNow I guess itā€™s time to do more digging and fill in some facts. These family lines that go back to the mid-1800sā€¦they can spin you in circles.ā€

Troyn pushed himself to complete three qualifying events leading up to EFATā€”including Ironman Arizona 70.3, which he calls both therapeutic and the second-most exhausting experience of his life.

Spartan Race
How Obstacle Course Racing Is Making a Comeback Read article

ā€œIraq was the first. Thatā€™s the most tired Iā€™ve ever beenā€”and the hottestā€ says Troyn, whose 20-year army career includes five deployments after 9/11, including time spent in Kuwait and Iraq, Guantanamo Bay, and Afghanistan. ā€œBut I would say a very, very, very close second was doing a half-Ironman.ā€

Howā€™s Troyn feeling about Sundayā€™s race in San Franciscoā€”the Alcatraz-to-Marina dip in particular?

ā€œHonestly, man, Iā€™m looking forward to that swim,ā€ says Troyn, whoā€™s slimmed down from a beefy 230 pounds to a lean, muscled 180 since entering the triathlon world, and is open about being in ā€œa very dark placeā€ after some traumatic and heartbreaking military experiences overseas. ā€œA lot of my friends are like, ā€˜Dude, arenā€™t you worried about the sharks and currents that move at the speed of Michael Phelps?ā€™ Iā€™m like, well I volunteered to go to Iraq and Afghanistan, so not that much.ā€

Troynā€™s race goal is to crack four hours. His real goal though is just to take it all inā€”even if it costs him a few precious seconds.

ā€œThe real thing is, manā€”Iā€™m alive. So during my swim, Iā€™m gonna stop in the middle of the bay. Iā€™m just gonna eggbeater and tread water for a little bit. Iā€™m gonna look around in the middle of San Francisco Bay. Who in the world gets the chance to do that? Iā€™m gonna honor that. Hopefully I wonā€™t get in anyoneā€™s way.ā€

Will Arthur Barker cross his mind when Ronnie Troyn makes his own historic crossing.

ā€œMaybe,ā€ he laughs. ā€œIā€™m thinking about him a lot more than I was all of a sudden. I guess weā€™ll see.ā€

The post Escaping From Alcatraz Is an Unresolved Family Endeavor for This Triathlete appeared first on Men's Journal.



from Men's Journal Latest Health & Fitness News https://ift.tt/3s8eMHw

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How Tom Ellis Gained 20 Pounds of Lean Muscle for 'Lucifer'