After a one-year hiatus due to the Covid pandemic, the best young talents in triathlon will take to the streets of Edmonton this Saturday to vie for the U23 World Triathlon Championship titles. And considering that most of the 2019 medallists have now moved to the Elite category, it is time to find the new stars that are set to take the future of the World Triathlon Championship Series by storm.
The athletes take the stage on
Saturday over a course that will be slightly different to that of the Elites,
albeit still over the Olympic distance. A beach start will get them underway
for a 2-lap, 1500m swim in Hawrelak Park lake before taking their bikes for six
laps of 6.67km each on a hilly and rather technical course. The race will be
decided over the final 10km run, four laps around the lake, to finish in style
down the Hawrelak Park finish chute that may not be lined with fans this year,
but will undoubtedly have all the emotions and vibes that come with a World
Championship Finals.
The U23 women will be the first to
take the stage at 8am local time, with weather forecast of cool temperatures
and likely a wetsuit swim, while the U23 Men will start their race at 16.30h by
when it is expected to be a bit warmer. Both races will be streamed live and
direct on triathlonLIVE.tv.
Women’s Preview
Out of the top 5 in the last U23
Women’s World Championship back at Lausanne 2019, only the winner Emilie Morier
(FRA) has moved up to the elite category, while the remaining four - Olivia
Mathias (GBR), Lisa Tertsch (GER), Kate Waugh (GBR) and Kira Hedgeland (AUS)
will again be lining up on Saturday morning in a bid to step up and land the
precious world crown.
But wearing number one will be New
Zealand’s Ainsley Thorpe. The young kiwi is willing to finish a bittersweet
summer for her in Edmonton, one that started at the Tokyo Olympics with a DNF
in her individual race and a 12th place in the Mixed relay, before going on to
earn a silver medal in the Montreal Mixed Relay race last Sunday.
Great Britain’s Olivia Mathias has
continued her journey into the Elite ranks with success this year, claiming the
victory in Tiszaujvaros Triathlon Europe Cup last month and displaying great
performances in both the Montreal and Leeds WTCS events, while the other young
Brit, Kate Waugh, is returning to competition after a pandemic year that has
meant no starts for her since late 2019.
The 2019 U23 bronze medallist, Lisa
Tertsch, will be looking forward to a powerful performance that will compensate
for the disappointment in not qualifying for the German Olympic team, while
young Aussie Kira Hedgeland will be looking to finish her U23 career - before
moving up to the Elite racing and join her sister Jaz - in style with a podium
finish in Edmonton.
Another major podium contender will
be Alberte Kjær Pedersen (DEN), the brilliant winner of the Huatulco World
Triathlon Cup last June who has had an impressive season so far, finishing 10th
in the Arzachena World Cup and 7th in Lisbon.
They should all keep an eye on the
two upcoming French superstars, Emma Lombardi and Lea Coninx. Lea, younger
sister of WTCS Montreal champion Dorian, claimed the silver medal at this
year’s Caorle European Cup and finished 4th in Melilla. Lombardi, only 19, has
finished in the top 10 in all her races in this year, her first at
international level, including a brilliant 6th place in her first ever World
Triathlon Cup on the tough, hilly Arzachena course.
Full start lists here. Watch LIVE the
race here. https://www.triathlonlive.tv/upcoming-live-streams/videos/world-triathlon-championship-finals-edmonton-u23-women?mc_cid=fb1be44459&mc_eid=6139649918
Men’s Preview
With the current U23 World Champion,
Spain’s Roberto Sanchez Mantecon, not able to defend his crown having moved up
to the Elite level, Edmonton could be the perfect occasion for Hungary’s
Csongor Lehmann to continue his impressive young career and add a U23 World
title to the Junior one he has already on the shelves, along with the second
place he earned in Lausanne in the U23 worlds in 2019.
The young Hungarian, still only 22
years of age, has been on a start list of elite international events more than
50 times and is well used to showing up in the right place and at the right
moment. Lehmann hails from a true triathlon dynasty, his father and coach Tibor
was a National Champion in the ‘90s and the man behind bringing the World Cup
circuit to the small Hungarian of Tiszaujvaros, where it has been a mainstay of
the World Triathlon calendar for more than 20 years. And it was right there, in
Tiszy, where Csongor won his last race, the Europe Triathlon Cup less than a
month ago, in perfect preparation for the U23 Worlds.
But the task of winning the U23 crown
won’t be an easy one. Wearing number one will be another young athlete that
Csongor knows well: Australian Matthew Hauser, Junior World Champion in 2017.
After over a year only being able to compete in Australia due to the pandemic,
Hauser returned to the international scene at the Tokyo Olympics, to then
continue his preparation for the U23 title with WTCS Montreal last week.
Also enjoying the highs of great
performances in Montreal last week will be USA’s Chase McQueen and New Zealand
duo Dylan McCullough and Saxon Morgan. All three proved they can perform great
over short distances, and will now have to see how they can manage expectations
for an Olympic-distance race only six days after the short, sharp Mixed Relay
race in Montreal.
Also lining up in Hawrelak Park this
Saturday will be Brazil’s Miguel Hidalgo, who stunned the world by taking the
bronze medal at June’s Huatulco World Triathlon Cup and who carried on his
impressive racing last week in Montreal to finish in 11th place in his debut on
the WTCS circuit. Tim Hellwig (GER) and the French pair Louis Vitiello and Paul
Georgenthum represent the new generations of their respective country’s
aspirations to continue producing outstanding performances in the elite level
of the sport.
Local cheers will be loudest for the
two Canadian men competing this Saturday: Aiden Longcroft-Harris and Brock
Hoel. Some of the other big names lining up in the men’s race include 2019
Junior World Championships bronze medallist Sergio Baxter (Spain) and ASICS
World Triathlon Team member and Tokyo 2020 Olympian Diego Moya (CHI).
Full start lists here. Watch LIVE the
race here https://www.triathlonlive.tv/upcoming-live-streams/videos/world-triathlon-championship-finals-edmonton-u23-men?mc_cid=fb1be44459&mc_eid=6139649918
ABOUT WORLD TRIATHLON
World Triathlon is the international
governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all
related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon,
cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in
Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the programme
at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic programme
at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development of the
sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and transparency at
our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the sport to be
extraordinary.
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