Hungary’s Zsanett Bragmayer delivered
a dominant performance at the second leg of the 2023 Super League Arena Games
Triathlon powered by Zwift in Sursee, Switzerland, with Great Britain’s Olivia
Mathias finishing in second place and 15 year-old Hungarian sensation Fanni
Szalai grabbing bronze.
28-year-old Bragmayer won each of the
three stages to produce a statement win ahead of the Arena Games finale in
London on 8 th April 2023, having previously won the Singapore leg of the Arena
Games in 2022. “I’m so happy with this win. I didn’t do anything special ahead
of this race, but I felt really good going into it. I wanted to prove it here.
I really don’t like losing and if you lose your focus then you’re out of the
game”, she explained after finishing the races.
Today’s action saw a mass start
eight-length 200m pool swim in a 25m and not 50m pool (a first for the Arena
Games), before a 4km Zwift bike leg and a 1km run on an elliptical running
machine. Stage 2 would reverse that order, beginning with a 1km mass start run
before a 4km bike and a 200m swim. The concluding Stage 3 would open with a
Pursuit Start 200m swim, before the 4km bike leg and final 1km run to crown the
overall winner.
The action began with UK’s Olivia
Mathias, 24, being the first to push the pace, with the Welsh racer closely
followed out of the water by Bragmayer and Emma Jackson (AUS).
Bragmayer and Mathias took an instant
lead on the non-drafting 4km Zwift bike leg, opening up a 6sec advantage over
the chasers by the 1km mark. That gap was maintained at the halfway mark, with
Bragmayer edging Mathias into transition two to start the run in pole position.
Within 300m of the 1km run on
elliptical treadmills, Bragmayer had created a 7sec advantage over Mathias,
with Szalai and Jackson 12secs behind the leader. By the end of Stage 1,
Bragmayer was 10secs clear of Mathias, with the 15-year-old Szalai comfortably
beating the experienced Jackson into third.
The unique Arena Games format saw the
athletes return to the treadmills for Stage 2’s opening 1km run, with home
favourite Nora Gmür, 22, initially leading the field before the 15-year-old
Szalai, racing without fear, powered to the front to finish the run 5secs ahead
of Bragmayer.
The battle of the Hungarians on the
4km bike saw Bragmayer wipe out Szalai’s lead by the 1km mark, with Stage 1
force Mathias falling back to ninth. Home hopes were now being carried by
Cathia Schär (SUI), who passed Szalai to move into second just ahead of T2.
After a frenetic transition,
Bragmayer was first into the 200m swim, with Szalai losing valuable seconds due
to a swimming cap malfunction. Schär was a chief beneficiary, but the race was
soon becoming Bragmayer’s to lose, with the Hungarian taking the Stage 2 win by
17secs ahead of the Netherlands’ Rani Skrabanja. “I don’t like losing,” was
Bragmayer’s mid-race verdict.
The pursuit start of the final 200m
swim saw Bragmayer have a 30sec advantage over Jackson, Schär, Szalai and
Mathias into the water, and that advantage would remain by T1, with Szalai and
Mathias her closest chasers.
Onto the 4km bike and, with
Bragmayer’s lead of 30secs remaining, it was swiftly becoming a battle for the
remaining podium spots between Szalai, Mathias, Jackson and Skrabanja. Mathias
was the first to push the pace harder, moving into second to gain a 10sec
advantage by T2.
After a slick transition, Bragmayer
began the 1km run on the self-powered treadmill 30secs ahead of Mathias and
maintained that advantage throughout. The drama was just behind her, with
Mathias and Szalai locking horns. Szalai had the Brit athlete within touching
distance with 100m to go, but couldn’t quite make the pass to take silver.
Results: Elite Women
1. Zsanett
Bragmayer HUN 00:37:40
2. Olivia
Mathias GBR 00:38:02
3. Fanni
Szalai HUN 00:38:02
4. Emma
Jackson AUS 00:38:22
5. Rani
Skrabanja NED 00:38:29
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.
2 comments:
ok
Environmental sustainability has become a growing concern in stadium design, with efforts to incorporate green technologies and reduce carbon footprints. Modular Stadium
Post a Comment