A healthy addiction
Bryce Alderton
July’s Ironman Challenge Race in Lake Placid, N.Y., is supposed to
bestow the title of “fittest chief executive officer” in the United
States, a distinction Mike Dannelley, president and managing member
of a Costa Mesa mortgage company, doesn’t take lightly.
Dannelley, 46, will attempt to complete his 10th Ironman -- an
event that includes a 112-mile bicycle ride, 2.4-mile swim and
26.2-mile run -- since entering his first triathlon in late 1985, two
months after quitting cocaine for good, when the CEO Challenge is
held July 25.
The race is a qualifier for the Ironman Triathlon world
championships, held each October in Kona, Hawaii. Dannelley has
already qualified for that race, which limits the number of athletes
to 1,500.
The Irvine resident, husband and father of three children, has
invested much of his time into creating a healthy lifestyle, which
was missing 19 years ago.
“I was near death, I had a lot of close calls,” said Dannelley,
who suffered a drug-induced heart attack that required
hospitalization. “I had been addicted for so long with sports ... it
was a pace I couldn’t keep up with. It was a serious health issue at
that point.”
Dannelley led an active lifestyle of running, biking and surfing
as a youth, but drugs got in the way of many of those sports for 10
years.
He has been clean since Sept. 19, 1985.
That year, Dannelley spent six weeks in rehabilitation and, three
months later, entered his first triathlon in Los Angeles. He said he
was encouraged to enter the race by a man whose name Dannelley
couldn’t recall.
The swimming portion provided a staunch challenge for Dannelley,
but he soon found he loved triathlons.
“I was the last person out of the lake, but I knew how to swim,”
Dannelley said. “I needed the entire 18-mile bike ride to regain my
composure, but I was hooked.
“I took up triathlons almost in lieu of [drugs]. It was a
coincidence, but [I wanted a healthy lifestyle].”
Dannelley, who lived in Newport Beach for 20 years, entered his
first Ironman race in 1993.
His best time in an Ironman came in 1997 in Zurich, Switzerland,
when he finished in 10 hours, 39 seconds.
Dannelley’s best finish in seven World Championships is seventh.
He hopes to join wife Mary, who is competing in the women’s 35-39
age division at Lake Placid.
Mary Dannelley will attempt to secure one of the top five places,
which traditionally has been the cutoff for entry into the world
championships, out of hundreds of athletes in her age division. This
will be her fifth Ironman race. Both Mary and Mike Dannelley competed
in last year’s world championships.
“You walk away with a respect for that race you didn’t previously
have,” Mary Dannelley said of the world championships.
Despite the difficulty of squeezing time to train for triathlons
within the demands of raising a family and holding jobs, Mary and
Mike Dannelley covet the time they spend together exercising.
Mike Dannelley said he trains an average of 12 hours a week.
Triathlons limit the occurrence of overuse injuries, he said.
“If you manage a family and business, it is difficult to run every
day,” Mike Dannelley said. “The best hope is to find time to run two
or three days a week and find time to bike and swim [with decreased
miles if done on the same day]. With the decreased miles on the road,
you are less likely to get hurt.”
“Kids are the first priority and jobs are a close second,” Mary
Dannelley said. “The sport is a very healthy way to spend your time.
There are weeks you put in more hours than others, but you have to
keep the sport in perspective.”
Mike Dannelley has focused his energy on sponsoring professionals
to increase the visibility of the sport.
Both Mary and Mike Dannelley said the allure of triathlon is the
accomplishment that comes with finishing.
“There is more to [the Ironman] than physical strength,” Mary
Dannelley said. “So much of the race is a test of your mental
toughness inside.”
One look to her husband and she’s reminded of that thought.
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