World Triathlon Championship Series - Slowtwitch News https://www.slowtwitch.com Your Hub for Endurance Sports Thu, 09 Jan 2025 01:29:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.slowtwitch.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/st-ball-browser-icon-150x150.png World Triathlon Championship Series - Slowtwitch News https://www.slowtwitch.com 32 32 2024 Slowtwitch Awards: Men’s Short Course Athlete of the Year https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-mens-short-course-athlete-of-the-year/ https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-mens-short-course-athlete-of-the-year/#comments Wed, 08 Jan 2025 00:42:52 +0000 https://slowtwitch.com/?p=66448 This should be simple, right? Fear not - our Slowtwitch Senior Editors manage to argue over this category, too.

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It’s our final athlete of the year article, as we debate the merits for the men’s Short Course Athlete of the Year.

To recap thus far, we’ve awarded the following:

Triathlete of the Year: Taylor Knibb

Long Course Athletes of the Year: Kat Matthews, Patrick Lange

Short Course Athlete of the Year: Cassandre Beaugrand

Ryan: To me, Kevin, this feels like it should be a two horse race between Alex Yee and Hayden Wilde. Kinda like the Olympics and WTCS season all over again.

Kevin: Yep, I do believe this is down to those two. I would love to add Léo Bergère to the discussion, but once again I feel like I’d just be throwing out a name then quickly setting myself up to discount it. (He was beaten by both the frontrunners at the Olympics, and finished behind Wilde for the overall supertri title, too.)

I think it’s hard not to put Alex Yee at the top of the list based on his Olympic win and then (finally) winning the world championship title. Granted, Wilde beat him at the Championship Final, but after two years of losing the world title thanks to a disastrous finals appearance, I think Yee’s one and only goal at that race was to not screw up. Yee also won when it most counted – he won every World Triathlon race he entered except the final. While he didn’t take the supertri title, Yee did manage two impressive wins in that series – taking both Boston and NEOM. (I captured this shot – and the one above – of the Boston finish – to me it pretty much expresses Yee’s dominance over Wilde when it counted the most.)

Supertri Boston. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

If we were to have an award for the year’s most exciting racer, it would have to go to Wilde. He certainly went for it all in Paris, setting up a truly classic race. He closed the season with a solid supertri season, and finally got the big day we’ve long expected at the World Triathlon Championship Final. While his Taupō performance doesn’t count on this front, he sure did help make that day an exciting one, too.

Am I missing something, Ryan? Is there a reason to give this award to Hayden Wilde that I am not seeing?

Wilde on the run at the IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Ryan: Yes, there is!

If we are looking line-by-line at their race results this year, you wind up seeing that Wilde and Yee split the supertri season against one another – they beat each other twice. But whereas Wilde was extremely competitive at all of the supertri events (his worst finish of the year was third in Toulouse), the same could not be said for Yee. He was 8th in Chicago, and 12th in London. Yee was never really in contention for the supertri standings crown.

Then when you factor in Wilde’s races with Yee in WTCS and the Olympics, it’s a much closer battle there than it was with supertri. Yes, Yee won more. But it’s not like Wilde was getting his doors blown off. And Wilde did, indeed, win the Grand Final, with a very sizable margin of victory.

I do put a bit of a premium on being able to showcase racecraft across multiple disciplines, even within our definitions of course length. Wilde did that more than anybody else last year.

Kevin: So, if I have this straight, Alex Yee, the Olympic and world champion, shouldn’t be our short course male athlete of the year because he had two “bad” supertri races and finished third at the World Triathlon Championship Finals? He beat Wilde in Cagliari. He beat Wilde in Paris, at the biggest draft-legal/ short course race of the year. He was well ahead of Wilde in Wehei (Wilde was 1:40 back there – further behind than Wilde was in Torremolinos), too. He also managed to beat Wilde at two of the five supertri races. To me, if you’re going to vote for Wilde, you’re saying that the supertri series means more in the big picture than the Olympics or the World Triathlon Championship Series. 

I get the added premium on Wilde doing so well at 70.3 worlds, and he also won the Laguna Phuket Triathlon, but I am not sure we should be counting those results when we’re handing out the short course athlete of the year.

Good grief … another vote? I thought I was going to be safe on this one, as with the women!

Ryan: Didn’t you know I went to law school? I can argue just about anything and make some type of reasonable case out of it…

I think, similarly to how we did the women’s calculus, it means we should weigh the supertri and WTCS season championships similarly. So the tiebreaker comes down to the Olympics. And, well, Yee beat Wilde, despite Wilde throwing everything he had at him.

Therefore, much to the happiness of a couple of our *ahem* vocal forum members, Alex Yee is our men’s Short Course Athlete of the Year.

Kevin: Great choice, Ryan. I do admire your ability to argue almost anything. And, while I’m not sure I’m willing to weigh supertri and WTCS equally, I’ll happily concur that Alex Yee is the right choice.

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2024 Slowtwitch Awards: Women’s Short Course Athlete of the Year https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-womens-short-course-athlete-of-the-year/ https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-womens-short-course-athlete-of-the-year/#comments Mon, 06 Jan 2025 18:01:08 +0000 https://www.slowtwitch.com/?p=66429 We’re now onto the Short Course Athlete of the Year nominees to close out 2024 and ring in 2025. It means rolling back through all of this year’s short events, including but not limited to the Olympic Games in Paris, the WTCS Season, supertri, the eSports World Championships, and more. Ryan: Alright, Kevin – let’s […]

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We’re now onto the Short Course Athlete of the Year nominees to close out 2024 and ring in 2025. It means rolling back through all of this year’s short events, including but not limited to the Olympic Games in Paris, the WTCS Season, supertri, the eSports World Championships, and more.

Ryan: Alright, Kevin – let’s look at who had outstanding season’s for women. I suppose we should really start this with Cassandre Beaugrand, right? Ran the table for the World Triathlon Championship Series events she raced, plus the Olympic gold.

Kevin: Yep, I think this conversation pretty much starts and finishes with Cassandre. Olympic champ, world champ, won on the biggest stages when it mattered most. (And, as I am sure you’re sick of hearing me say … won gold despite the pressure of an entire country on her shoulders.)  

Ryan: I think we can make a realistic case for Beth Potter. She won the e-Tri World Championship in February and then finished no worse than third in any other World Triathlon race she participated in during 2024. That includes dueling bronze medals in Paris for the individual and mixed team relay events, and then a second place at the Grand Final.

Add it all up and World Triathlon has Potter ranked number one, not Beaugrand. Couple it with her contributions to the mixed team relay rankings (second in the world, versus France in eighth), and you could say, just based on those rankings, Potter deserves the title.

But I also think it’s really hard to overlook the dual crowns Beaugrand took in 2024. If it was just the Olympic Games victory, you could maybe write that off as a one-off. But earning both that and the WTCS title in the same year? And she’s not the world number one right now? That tells me World Triathlon has some work to do on their points system.

Kevin: Yeah, hard to imagine how you possibly put Potter ahead in our Triathlete of the Year ranking. I think the World Triathlon Points system takes into account results from the previous year, too, which is why Potter remains at the top, but when you look at 2024, there really wasn’t any way you could say she was better than Beaugrand. Sure, she won the E World Triathlon Championship in London, but after that it was all Cassandre (almost) all the time. As much as I applaud Potter’s incredible journey from Olympic 10,000 m runner in 2016 to Olympic bronze-medal triathlete, when it comes to Triathlete of the Year voting, she just didn’t have the results.

Beaugrand’s season was so good that it even negates bringing up Georgia Taylor-Brown’s third straight supertri title – she took that after finishing fourth in the final race in NEOM which was won by … Cassandre Beaugrand.

Does this one even require a vote?

Ryan: For the sake of argument, let’s talk Taylor-Brown (and supertri) for a minute, as it’s definitely relevant. She won three of four their races before heading to the final in Neom. She beat Beaugrand head to head three times in a row. And was a critical component of that GB bronze medal in mixed team relay. She was arguably just as dominant at supertri as Beaugrand was at WTCS racing.

But that’s just the respective series crowns. And Beaugrand still won Olympic gold on top of that.

Kevin: Totally happy to have that argument, for sure. Although, I now find it interesting that the mixed relay suddenly factors into your voting process when it didn’t with the overall Triathlete of the Year conversation!

Ryan: Don’t you start bringing logic into the conversation.

Kevin: OK, I’ll give you that …  

OK, back to the supertri/ Taylor-Brown argument … I had a great interview with Beaugrand before the Boston supertri event, and she basically said she was just happy to have made it there after the insane few weeks she’d had since the Olympics. She knew she wasn’t going to be truly competitive, but still hung in for eighth that day. A week later she was second in Chicago and finished second to Taylor-Brown again in London and Toulouse. Then she took the win in NEOM where Taylor-Brown was fourth. So it’s not as though Beaugrand wasn’t competitive on the supertri front. 

There’s also the format question. To me it’s like the clay court tennis swing, where some athletes really excel on that surface, but aren’t always in the mix to be considered the top athlete of the year. (I won’t stir things up by asking anyone here to weigh in on which is more important, Wimbledon or the French Open …) Supertri is definitely a unique format that suits Taylor-Brown perfectly. Until that format appears at the Olympics, though, I think I’d prefer to have enjoyed Cassandre Beaugrand’s season over GTB’s.

As with Potter, that’s not to take anything away from Taylor-Brown and her incredible journey back to the top echelons of the sport, but I just can’t see an argument for putting her at the top of the list. 

So, in the end, I think this one is pretty simple – Olympic gold and a world championship makes this one a pretty easy pick! 

Ryan: Agreed!

Kevin: Cassandre Beaugrand is our women’s Short Course Athlete of the Year.  

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2024 Slowtwitch Awards: Triathlete of the Year https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-triathlete-of-the-year/ https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/2024-slowtwitch-awards-triathlete-of-the-year/#comments Tue, 31 Dec 2024 22:08:51 +0000 https://www.slowtwitch.com/?p=66365 Ryan and Kevin debate the nominees.

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Because it’s been an epic 2024 triathlon season, we’re handing out some end of the season superlatives for the first time. Over the next couple of days we will roll out a few articles, with categories including Triathlete of the Year, Long Course Athlete of the Year, Short Course Athlete of the Year and more.

First up is the big prize: Triathlete of the Year.

Kevin: Well this one is easy. She won the T100 Triathlon World Tour. She took her third straight 70.3 world championship. She also put together an incredible sprint to get the Americans the silver medal in the mixed relay at the Olympics. (There were a bunch of other T100 wins, Oceanside 70.3 and the national TT championship, too.) On the “long-distance” triathlon front – I am anticipating we’ll have a good ol’ debate about that, too – she was unbeaten this year. I really can’t imagine how this can go to anyone other than Taylor Knibb.  

Ryan: I can go different than Taylor Knibb!

When I think of Triathlete of the Year, I think of remarkable consistency across the entirety of the year, regardless of what they were racing. Don’t get me wrong: Knibb’s run of success is remarkable. She’s unbeatable at 70.3/T100. But her individual results at Olympic distance events was lacking, outside of a single second place early in the year: 19th in Paris, 11th in Caligari, her last two races at that distance. I also don’t put too much stock in Mixed Team Relay results, especially when you had the early race collision between New Zealand and France.

So in my mind there’s another woman that comes to mind: Kat Matthews. Ten long course races in her year. Of her nine finishes, eight of them were fifth or better. Two wins and four seconds mark highlights, including her incredible dual silvers at IRONMAN and IRONMAN 70.3 World Championships. She managed to satisfy both T100 and IRONMAN Pro Series requirements, earning $275,000 in year end bonuses (on top of the prize money from her other finishes). 

So I think it really just comes down to how you define your parameters, Kevin.

Kevin: I 100 percent hear you that Kat’s year was incredible. I certainly acknowledged that in the story I did on her IRONMAN Pro Series win last week. I even acknowledged how impressive the year was considering the adversity she faced – torn calf in Miami, DQ in Hamburg. 

In terms of my parameters, normally a season like hers would get my vote. For me, though, the head-to-head competition has to be a factor when you’re handing out the “triathlete of the year.” Yes, Kat got to within 1:15 of Taylor in Taupo, but at no point was Taylor ever threatened in that race – you certainly got the feeling there was another gear there if it was needed. I won’t count the difference in any of the T100 fall races because Kat was still recovering from Nice, but you look back at T100 San Francisco and the gap was pretty close to four minutes. 

The other factor, for me, comes from Kat herself. At the post-race press conference in Taupo, she (and the rest of the women in attendance) acknowledged that Taylor was in a different league this year. Yes, I know they’re likely being professional and respectful (Kat Matthews, Ashleigh Gentle, Imogen Simmonds and Julie Derron are all class acts), but they all made it pretty clear that Taylor was a step above them over the half distance this year.

And I might be a bit biased since I was there watching the Paris Games, but it is really hard to discount Taylor’s performance there. Bouncing back from a brutal time in the Time Trial, and a tough day in the individual, she found another level to get the US up a spot on the podium. I get that France should have dominated that day, but that’s racing. You can only compete with the people who are there.

Back when I used to do this for Triathlon Magazine, one of our criteria for Triathlete of the Year was that the athlete had to have won a world championship or major event (Olympics) to be considered. Part of the logic for that idea was we wanted to celebrate an athlete who “rose to the occasion” – was able to come through on the big day. I feel like Kat even got that – in Taupo there was no thought of “playing it safe” to ensure she took the IRONMAN Pro Series – she was going for the win, plain and simple.

Ryan: I hate the logic that you must have won a world title for consideration for this. You don’t vote for the year-end most valuable player in other sports based on their performance in the playoffs or a series (there’s usually one specifically for those events). It’s off of what they did in the entirety of the year.

Knibb would be my immediate pick for another award that we have coming. Her dominance is undeniable at 70.3 right now. But by that logic of having won a world title, I think we’d then throw Cassandre Beaugrand into the mix for Triathlete of the Year. To take Olympic and WTCS gold in the same year, IMO, is a bigger deal than Knibb’s display at 70.3/T100. She swept WTCS events. She finished second at eSports worlds. And that dominating display on home soil for gold is something else.

Ultimately, though, that’s why I think Matthews winds up the pick; she didn’t just do it at one distance. She does it at 70.3/T100 and at full iron-distance events. From the hilliest of course in Nice to pancake flat ones in Texas, she’s at the front of the field.

This might need to come down to some run-off voting.

Kevin: I totally see where you are coming from, and we argued long and hard over that criteria. In the end, though, we were looking to acknowledge the people who came up big at the major events. It’s funny that you mentioned Cassandre Beaugrand – I was going to suggest that if there was anyone who could arguably win the award not named Taylor Knibb, it would be her. To have won the Olympics in front of a home crowd was an incredible performance – I can’t imagine the pressure she was dealing with. She followed that up with her first world title, showing the consistency required of a world champion by winning the Grand Final to go along with WTCS wins in Cagliari and Hamburg. 

I do feel that there needs to be a level of consistency throughout the year to win the award. Taylor won middle-distance races from April to December – remember, she was unbeaten on that front all year. Cassandre’s only two “losses” in the World Triathlon realm this year came in March, a second at the Europe Triathlon Cup Quarteira, and April, a second at the E World Triathlon Championships in London. That’s why I would happily argue that either Taylor or Cassandre take the award over, say, Patrick Lange. While I would happily give Patrick the “performance of the year” for his incredible race in Kona, he wasn’t nearly as strong through the rest of 2024. I don’t think Patrick will be too worried about that, though – my guess is that even though he wasn’t as consistent, he’ll happily take his Kona win over Gregory Barnaby’s IRONMAN Pro Series title.

While I am not crazy about the coin flip idea, I am more than happy to let this be decided by votes – maybe through the forum?

Since I am the newbie editor here, I will leave that up to you, Ryan!

Ryan: I think that’s a very fair way of doing this.

Alright, Slowtwitchers: it’s now your choice. You can vote now in the forum thread for this article between our final three nominees.

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Wilde Wins Race, Yee Claims World Championship in Torremolinos https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/wilde-wins-race-yee-claims-world-championship-in-torremolinos/ https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/wilde-wins-race-yee-claims-world-championship-in-torremolinos/#respond Sun, 20 Oct 2024 21:07:21 +0000 https://www.slowtwitch.com/?p=64540 Wilde beats Bergere to race victory, but Yee matches Beaugrand's Olympic/WTCS double.

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Alex Yee came into the World Triathlon Championship Series Grand Final in Torremolinos needing a sixth place finish to finally earn his first world championship. That title has proven elusive, with three straight tries for Yee coming up short.

Today, that streak ended — although it took another outstanding run from Yee in order to make it happen, using the second fastest run of the day to move into the podium places and secure the world title. He joins women’s champion Cassandre Beaugrand in pulling off the Olympic Gold – WTCS World title double in the same season.

Yee, post-race, said, “This has evaded me for the last three years and makes it even sweeter. It is probably something that has haunted me day in day out and I wanted to put on a show and a smile on peoples’ faces and I’m World Champion. There’s always going to be pressure in these races… but pressure makes diamonds.”

Fellow series contenders Hayden Wilde and Leo Bergere gave it their best, blowing the race apart to take gold and silver on the day, and bronze and silver, respectively, for the year.

Wilde and Bergere were close enough out of the water to help create a five man leading effort, joined by Vincent Luis, Tayler Reid, and Simon Westermann. Yee was in the first chase group, led by swim pacer Matt Hauser, but when Hauser crashed out of the race, the chase pack slowly lost time on each lap to the leaders.

By the time the leaders had racked their bikes and swapped into run shoes, the deficit to the chasers was 1:40. The race win was almost certainly up the road, with Yee needing to put in an effort to nab the top-six finishing position required to claim the world championship. After one lap, Yee had closed almost 40 seconds on positions three through five on the road, and made the comfortable pass into a podium position just over the halfway mark. Wilde cleared Bergere, eventually opening a full minute margin of victory in one of his finest performances.

Wilde enjoyed his victory, saying “I had the same sort of plan as the Olympic Games really, two laps hard, one lap easy then go and had a really nice gap. It’s a bit disappointing not to win the World Championships but to win the Grand Final is something special.”

Race Results

First NameLast NameTimeSwim 
1500m 
T1 Bike 
40.8km 
T2 Run 
10km 
HaydenWilde01:42:2200:19:2300:01:0600:52:0400:00:2000:29:29
LéoBergere01:43:2400:19:2000:01:0700:52:0700:00:2000:30:31
AlexYee01:43:5000:19:3100:01:0300:53:3900:00:2200:29:17
DorianConinx01:44:0300:19:1800:01:0900:53:4700:00:2000:29:31
PierreLe Corre01:44:0400:19:2400:01:0700:53:4700:00:2000:29:29
CsongorLehmann01:44:0800:19:2100:01:1100:53:4300:00:2000:29:35
TaylerReid01:44:1200:19:1800:01:0700:52:1100:00:2200:31:17
VincentLuis01:44:2200:19:1900:01:0600:52:1000:00:2100:31:28
TylerMislawchuk01:44:2600:19:2200:01:1100:53:4200:00:2300:29:49
HugoMilner01:44:3100:19:3200:01:1200:54:4000:00:2100:28:47

Photo: World Triathlon

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Cassandre Beaugrand’s Perfect Season Ends with World Title https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/cassandre-beaugrands-perfect-season-ends-with-world-title/ https://www.slowtwitch.com/triathlon/cassandre-beaugrands-perfect-season-ends-with-world-title/#respond Sat, 19 Oct 2024 19:30:41 +0000 https://www.slowtwitch.com/?p=64536 Beaugrand overcomes a navigation error in the swim to claim her first world title.

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Cassandre Beaugrand has claimed her first world championship, capping off an undefeated individual season of World Triathlon Championship Series racing with a win at the Grand Final in Torremolinis-Andalucia.

Although Beaugrand entered the race with a comfortable lead in the Series and the inside track for the world title, the race win was not an easy one to come by. Beaugrand took a position on the swim start pontoon on the far right and veered further and further right once the gun went off. She was forced to swim hard to the first buoy just to latch back onto the back of the field, but then would work her way further through the field over the course of the next 1000 meters to emerge with championship contender Beth Potter in 10th place.

There were 12 women in the lead pack of the bike, including Beaugrand and Potter, as well as swim leaders Bianca Seregini and Lena Meissner. Emma Lombardi was also there, setting up for a potential battle amongst the three leading title contenders (Beaugrand, Potter, and Lombardi). The group rode mostly together into transition, where Beaugrand, Potter, Lombardi, and Jeanne Lehair broke away during the course of lap one.

But it would be Beaugrand who would drive the pace on lap two, surging to drop her fellow title contenders and eventually open a 38 second margin of victory over Potter, who clinched second in the Series. Lombardi took bronze, which also moved her into third for the Series.

Beaugrand post race was delighted, saying, “I just wanted this world title so badly and have dreamed about it for so many years. Last year I was very disappointed finishing second. Nobody can take this away from me now. I was training hard and fighting all year for this one.”

Race Results

First NameLast NameTimeSwim T1 Bike T2 Run 
CassandreBeaugrand01:56:4400:22:1400:01:1200:59:4800:00:2500:33:08
BethPotter01:57:2200:22:1400:01:1300:59:4800:00:2200:33:47
EmmaLombardi01:57:3400:22:0700:01:0900:59:5800:00:2100:34:00
VickyHolland01:57:5600:22:1300:01:1200:59:5000:00:3100:34:13
MiriamCasillas García01:58:0200:22:1900:01:1100:59:4500:00:2300:34:26
JeanneLehair01:58:0900:22:1700:01:1400:59:4500:00:2200:34:33
LisaTertsch01:58:1200:22:4400:01:1001:00:4700:00:2300:33:10
BiancaSeregni01:58:1900:21:5900:01:1900:59:5900:00:2600:34:38
LeoniePeriault01:58:2800:22:5200:01:1701:00:3200:00:2500:33:24
KirstenKasper01:58:3500:22:1300:01:1200:59:5100:00:2300:34:58

Photo: World Triathlon

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