2019 ITU World Triathlon Series

2019 ITU World Triathlon Series
LeagueITU World Triathlon Series
SportTriathlon
Men's Series
Series Champion Vincent Luis (FRA)
Points5096
Women's Series
Series Champion Katie Zaferes (USA)
Points6175
World Triathlon Series seasons
← 2018
2020 →

The 2019 ITU World Triathlon Series was the 11th season of the World Triathlon Series, the top level international series for triathlon, since its establishment in 2009. The season consisted of eight pairs of triathlon races for both a men's and woman's competition, beginning on 8 March in Abu Dhabi, and concluding on 1 September with the grand final at Lausanne, Switzerland.[1][2] The season also contained five mixed relays as part of the Mixed Relay Series which offers national teams qualifying points for the mixed team relay event at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Mario Mola and Vicky Holland began the season as defending champions from the 2018 season. Mario Mola was hoping to defend his title and become the first triathlete to hold the title for four years in a row.

Overview

Calendar

The 2019 ITU World Triathlon Series visited ten cities, including a test run of the 2020 Olympic relay course as part of the Mixed Relay Series.[1][2][3]

Events
Date Location Type
8–9 March United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi Sprint
27–28 April Bermuda Bermuda Standard
18–19 May Japan Yokohama Standard
8–9 June United Kingdom Leeds Standard
29 June Canada Montreal Sprint
6-7 July Germany Hamburg Sprint
20-21 July Canada Edmonton Sprint
30 August – 1 September Switzerland Lausanne Grand Final
Mixed Relays
Date Location Type
9 March United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi Mixed relay
15 June United Kingdom Nottingham Mixed relay
7 July Germany Hamburg Mixed relay (World Championships)
21 July Canada Edmonton Mixed relay
18 August JapanTokyo Mixed relay (Olympic Test Event)

Point System

For every race a triathlete finishes they are awarded points based on their position across the line. For a normal world series event first place is awarded 1000 points and every subsequent place is awarded 7.5% less, for the first forty triathletes, for the grand final 1250 points are awarded once again decreasing by 7.5% for each place but this time awarded down to 50th. However any triathlete outside of the time cut will not be awarded points even if they finish in a scoring position, the time cut is determined by adding 5% to the winner's time in the men's event and 8% in the women's event. A triathletes final score is the sum of their points from the grand final and their best five races of that year.[4][5]

Series

Abu Dhabi

Yas Marina harbour held the swim before cycling on the F1 track

The 2019 series began with a sprint distance race in Abu Dhabi in and around the marina on Yas Island. It was the 10th time the race had been held there and the 5th time a sprint distance race was held. The swim course was held in the harbour one 750-metre laps, before heading to transition outside of the Yas Marina Circuit. Athletes then biked five laps of a 4 km course that ran along the Formula 1 circuit. After the bike section, the competitors proceeded to complete two laps of a 2.5 km run circuit over part of the F1 track and part of the marina before finishing the triathlon at the Marina.[4]

The competition field for the race included both defending champions Mario Mola and Vicky Holland, as well as most of the top ten athletes from last year's the overall rankings.[6] Also competing was debutante Alex Yee who had won the most recent World cup race in Cape town.[7]

In the woman race a small split appeared in the swim which was pushed on the bike such that by the halfway point of bike course, a breakaway of seven was fully established. The group included Americans Zaferes, Spivey and Knibb, along with Learmonth of the UK. The breakaway pushed their advantage such that they had a lead a minute on the chasers by the time they hit the second transition. Zaferes was first out onto the run and lead for the rest of the race pulling away from everyone else to win alone. Spivey floated in between first and the battle for third. Meanwhile, Knibb and Learmonth were neck-and-neck for third and finished in a sprint finish which Learmonth won.[8][9][10]

On the men's side, whilst a split appeared in the swim and at the start of the bike leg, over the full course of the bike leg the entire field slowly regrouped such that the entire field entered transitioned at the same time. New Zealand's Hayden Wilde initially tried to create a gap on the run, but was soon chased down by the leading pair of Yee and Mola. The pair stayed together and in the lead until with 500m to go Mola upped the pace to claim first with Yee following up in second. Third across the line was Spaniard Fernando Alarza.[9][11][12]

Results

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Abu Dhabi [13]  Mario Mola (ESP)  Alex Yee (GBR)  Fernando Alarza (ESP)
Bermuda [14]  Dorian Coninx (FRA)  Javier Gómez (ESP)  Gustav Iden (NOR)
Yokohama [15]  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Bence Bicsák (HUN)
Leeds[16]  Jacob Birtwhistle (AUS)  Matthew McElroy (USA)  Javier Gómez (ESP)
Montreal[17]  Jelle Geens (BEL)  Mario Mola (ESP)  Tyler Mislawchuk (CAN)
Hamburg[18]  Jacob Birtwhistle (AUS)  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Jelle Geens (BEL)
Edmonton[19]  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Mario Mola (ESP)  Marten Van Riel (BEL)
Lausanne[20]  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR)  Mario Mola (ESP)  Fernando Alarza (ESP)
Overall  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Mario Mola (ESP)  Javier Gomez (ESP)

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Abu Dhabi [21]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Taylor Spivey (USA)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)
Bermuda [22]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)  Joanna Brown (CAN)
Yokohama [23]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Summer Rappaport (USA)  Taylor Spivey (USA)
Leeds [24]  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)
Montreal [25]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)
Hamburg[26]  Non Stanford (GBR)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Summer Rappaport (USA)
Edmonton[27]  Emma Jackson (AUS)  Summer Rappaport (USA)  Ashleigh Gentle (AUS)
Lausanne[28]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
Overall  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)

Mixed relay

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Abu Dhabi [29]  Australia
Ashleigh Gentle
Luke Willian
Emma Jeffcoat
Jacob Birtwhistle
 United States
Taylor Spivey
Ben Kanute
Katie Zaferes
Eli Hemming
 New Zealand
Ainsley Thorpe
Sam Ward
Sophie Corbidge
Hayden Wilde
Nottingham [30]  Great Britain
Georgia Taylor-Brown
Ben Dijkstra
Sophie Coldwell
Alex Yee
 Switzerland
Jolanda Annen
Max Studer
Alissa König
Adrien Briffod
 France
Émilie Morier
Dorian Coninx
Léonie Périault
Pierre Le Corre
Hamburg[31]  France
Émilie Morier
Léo Bergère
Cassandre Beaugrand
Vincent Luis
 Germany
Laura Lindemann
Valentin Wernz
Nina Eim
Justus Nieschlag
 Australia
Natalie Van Coevorden
Aaron Royle
Emma Jeffcoat
Jacob Birtwhistle
Edmonton[32]  New Zealand
Ainsley Thorpe
Tayler Reid
Nicole van der Kaay
Hayden Wilde
 Great Britain
Sophie Coldwell
Jonathan Brownlee
India Lee
Gordon Benson
 United States
Summer Rappaport
Seth Rider
Taylor Knibb
Morgan Pearson
Tokyo[33]  France
Léonie Périault
Pierre Le Corre
Cassandre Beaugrand
Dorian Coninx
 Great Britain
Jessica Learmonth
Gordon Benson
Georgia Taylor-Brown
Alex Yee
 United States
Summer Rappaport
Seth Rider
Tamara Gorman
Ben Kanute

Overall standings

In the individual events, the athlete who accumulates the most points throughout the season is declared the year's world champion. The final point standings are:

Men
Rank Athlete Points[34]
 Vincent Luis (FRA) 5096
 Mario Mola (ESP) 4939
 Javier Gómez (ESP) 4533
4  Fernando Alarza (ESP) 4395
5  Marten Van Riel (BEL) 3659
6  Jacob Birtwhistle (AUS) 3433
7  Henri Schoeman (RSA) 3148
8  Léo Bergere (FRA) 3042
9  Gustav Iden (NOR) 3028
10  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR) 2892
Women
Rank Athlete Points[35]
 Katie Zaferes (USA) 6175
 Jessica Learmonth (GBR) 5326
 Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) 5191
4  Taylor Spivey (USA) 4651
5  Summer Rappaport (USA) 3589
6  Rachel Klamer (NED) 3586
7  Non Stanford (GBR) 3435
8  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) 2548
9  Annamaria Mazzetti (ITA) 2456
10  Laura Lindemann (GER) 2427

References

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  2. ^ a b Union, International Triathlon (12 September 2018). "ITU announces World Cup, Mixed Relay Series and Paratriathlon calendars for 2019 | Triathlon.org". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  3. ^ Union, International Triathlon (25 October 2018). "Edmonton joins the ITU Mixed Relay Series in 2019". ITU (triathlon.org). Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  4. ^ a b ITU. "2019 WTS Media Guide" (PDF). ITU (triathlon.org). Retrieved 8 March 2019.
  5. ^ ITU. "ITU World Triathlon Series Ranking Criteria" (PDF). ITU (triathlon.org). Retrieved 8 March 2018.
  6. ^ Union, International Triathlon (5 March 2019). "Holland begins title defence at WTS Abu Dhabi as Zaferes eyes strong start to 2019". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  7. ^ Union, International Triathlon (5 March 2019). "World's best line up for men's WTS season-opener in Abu Dhabi". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  8. ^ "Zaferes Golden, Spivey Takes Silver at ITU World Triathlon Series Opener in Abu Dhabi". Team USA. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
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  28. ^ Union, International Triathlon. "Results: Elite Women | 2019 Daman World Triathlon Lausanne". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  29. ^ Union, International Triathlon. "Results: Mixed Relay | 2019 Daman World Triathlon Mixed Relay Series Abu Dhabi". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  30. ^ Union, International Triathlon. "Results: Mixed Relay | 2019 Daman World Triathlon Mixed Relay Series Nottingham". Triathlon.org. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
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