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Birtwhistle, Standford top at WTS Hamburg

WTS Hamburg, Germany – Australia’s Jake Birtwhistle and Britain’s Non Standford took top honours at the 2019 Hamburg Wasser World Triathlon. The event is part of the WTS circuit.

Non Stanford returns to podium with WTS Hamburg win

After a year out of the podium in the WTS circuit, British Non Stanford returned back to the World Triathlon Series glory to claim the victory in the 2019 Hamburg Wasser World Triathlon Hamburg, after a gutsy race in which she never looked back. Last year’s champion, Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) claimed the silver while USA’s Summer Rappaport out-sprinted Rachel Klamer (NED) to claim the third spot in the podium.

The afternoon started in Hamburg with a full field, 55 women lining up under a light rain in the pontoon at the Alster, with Cassandre Beaugrand taking the lead almost immediately, followed up close by another three excellent swimmers like Summer Rappaport (USA), Sophie Coldwell (GBR) and KatieZaferes (USA).

After the 750m swim, the four of them were closely followed by a large pack of athletes that included strong bikers, like Taylor Spivey (USA), Emma Jeffcoat (AUS), Laura Lindemann (GER) and Vicky Holland (GBR), with this last one having to serve a ten seconds penalty in the first transition due to an early start.

A large group assembled in the first of the six laps in the slippery streets of the Hamburg city center with all the top riders in there, commanded in turns by Spivey and Nicola Spirig (SUI), but only a couple of kilometers into the bike course the current Series leader, Katie Zaferes (USA) was involved in a crash and was left riding almost solo almost 80 seconds behind the leaders.

With 18 riders in the lead, the group took it a bit easier trying to avoid congestions in the slippery turns, and still managed to get almost a minute over the chasers, with Emilie Morier (FRA) and Claire Michel (BEL) leading the second group, and Taylor Knibb (USA) riding by herself among the two groups for almost the whole 20km bike course. Behind them, Zaferes managed to catch up with a small group and kept the time difference just over a minute, which still gave her chances of finishing in the top ten, but the American looked exhausted when she got off the bike.

When it all came to the run, Non Stanford decided to go brave and early and was the first one of of the second transition. And without looking back even once, the British started to make a point increasing the speed a bit to leave behind Cassandre Beaugrand and Laura Lindemann, the only ones able to follow her at the beginning. With the group stretching behind her, the Brit kept the lead during the whole run, with a few battles going on behind her for the rest of the podium positions.

Spirig was the first one to give up in the podium places, followed by Lindemann, Spivey and Georgia Taylor-Brown(GBR). In the last meters, a visible emotional Stanford just sprinted to the finish line to stop the clock on 59mins 24secs, with Beaugrand behind her to grab her first WTS podium of the season. In a furious sprint for the remaining spot on the podium, Rappaport was able to beat Klamer for just a couple of meters.

“I really didn’t expect to do that”, said a visibly emotional Stanford after crossing the finish line. “I’ve been trying to edge my way back to the podium and this is testament to all the hard work behind the scenes.
There was a crash behind me at one point and my wheel was slipping and my saddle dropped down too. Im going to fully focus on preparing for Tokyo now and i want to go there and show the selectors im a genuine contender for that team”, she explained.

Also emotional was the silver medallist Beaugrand. “I love this race and it’s a great surprise to be on the podium. It was tough in that weather but i had my best swim and wanted to keep with the pack. Non is very strong and I’m very happy for her with that comeback and i’m happy with my race too”, she said.

Rappaport was completelly thrilled with her second podium of the season, after her second place in WTS Yokohama in May. “The conditions were really crazy, my wheel was slipping every time i got out of the saddle but i just wanted to keep focus. I think that’s the first sprint finish I’ve ever won in my life but i just thought ‘we need an American on the podium today’ as we have every race this year and my feet were slipping but somehow I just got it done”, she said.

WTS Hamburg  2019 Results: Elite Women
1. Non Stanford GBR 00:59:24
2. Cassandre Beaugrand FRA 00:59:31
3. Summer Rappaport USA 00:59:42
4. Rachel Klamer NED 00:59:43
5. Georgia Taylor-Brown GBR 00:59:49

Jakob Birtwhistle top at WTS Hamburg 2019 

Australian Jakob Birtwhistle proved himself to be in the battle for the Series in 2019 after claiming his second victory of the season in the 2019 Hamburg Wasser World Triathlon Hamburg. Birtwhistle led a full podium sweep of training partners, with Frenchman Vincent Luis grabbing the second place and Belgian Jelle Geens in third, only a week after stepping on top of the WTS podium for the first time on his life.

And to no ones surprise, Richard Varga (SVK) returned after an injury that has kept him out of the WTS for a while to be the first one out of the water. But close behind him was one of the local heroes in Hamburg, Jonas Schomburg(GER), proving once more that he is among the fastest swimmers in the field.

With all the big guns like Mario Mola (ESP), Jonathan Brownlee (GBR), Vincent Luis, Henri Schoeman (RSA) or Javier Gomez Noya (ESP) close behind, it was just a matter of seconds that all the athletes formed a massive train to get out of transition almost all together, to then start a quite dangerous bike ride on the slippery streets of Hamburg, after the heavy rain that appeared at the end of the women’s race.

With all the athletes marching in a large group, most of them were trying to stay in the front of the train to try to avoid crashes in the back, but half way through the 20km bike ride, and while Andreas Schilling was leading the pack, he slipped and crashed in a 180 degrees turn, causing chaos among the peloton. Richard Murray (RSA), Bence Bicsak (HUN), Fernando Alarza (ESP), Henri Schoeman (RSA), Jonny Brownlee (GBR), Tom Bishop (GBR) or Martin Van Riel (BEL), among others, ended up in the floor, some trying to get back on the bike, some clearly not able to.

After the massive crash, it was time for the remaining ones to take control of the lead group and try to slow down a bit the pace, with Mario Mola, Gomez Noya, Birtwhistle, Ryan Sissons (NZL) or Hayden Wilde (NZL) trying to command the group and stretch it to make the ride safer. Behind them, Alarza went back on his bike, as also did Alex Yee (GBR), Van Riel and Murray, but with limited options as they were quite far behind.

The lead group made it to the second transition easily, and it was then when Jonas Schomburg decided to go early and was the first one on his running shoes, but with a pack right on his heels that was quite impressive. Vincent Luis, Mario Mola, Javier Gomez, Jake Birtwhistle, Leo Bergere (FRA), Jelle Geens, Ryan Sissons and Hayden Wilde (NZL) went all to chase him. The first one to command the chasers was Geens, whi showed that he is a really strong runner in the 5km when he claimed the title last week in WTS Montreal, and before the end of the first lap Schomburg was neutralized.

With Sissons, Noya and Schomburg half way through the run, the group of leading six added an extra gear and imposed a pace really hard to follow, looking at each other trying to figure out who was going to go first. With a bit more of 500m to go, Luis gave it a go that proved to be a bit too early, with Jake right behind who went with him and sprinted him to claim in Hamburg his second victory of the season, after the gold in WTS Leeds.

Luis managed to cross the line in second, same place as he did last year, with Geens outbeating again Mario Mola in the last meters to claim the third spot of the podium over the Spaniard. Behind them, Leo Bergere got another top 5 place that puts him as the second frenchman in the rankings at the moment, while Hayden Wilde finished in 6th place, the best of his WTS career so far.

“Today was one of these special races”, said Aussie Birtwhistle. “Once we got onto the run, it was almost like a training session for us guys out the front there. I am really happy to come away with the win today, I thought I had a little bit left in the tank when Vincent went past and I just had to stick with him for the last 100m or so and thankfully I just managed to get on top of him”, he explained. For the Australian this second win is “a huge confidence boost, I’ve been able to back up the win in Leeds again this weekend so I guess hopefully that means I will be here to stay and hopefully to the Olympics and I plan to do something similar there”.

After the race, Vincent Luis said: “I knew coming into the last kilometre with Jelle, Mario and Jake it was going to be an epic finish. I train with these guys every day so I know their weakness, and they don’t have a lot. I know Jake has no weakness. So I just knew I had to go all out, try to play my card but today it wasn’t enough, he was stronger than me and kudos to him, he wins again and onto the next one”..

“If you told me 10-days ago that I would do a first and a third in WTS I would say you’re crazy. I knew I could do it though, because I am training very well. I knew it was possible but to do it two weeks in a row is a good feeling”, said Geens.

The World Series rankings are at the moment closer than ever, with Vincent Luis back on the commanding spot, and with Javier Gomez climbing another step to be in the second place, while another Spaniard, Fernando Alarza, is now in third place. Behind them, Jake Birtwhistle has escalated to the fourth place and Mario Mola in 5th, which makes three Spaniards in the top five spots.

WTS Hamburg 2019 Results: Elite Men
1. Jacob Birtwhistle AUS 00:55:09
2. Vincent Luis FRA 00:55:10
3. Jelle Geens BEL 00:55:13
4. Mario Mola ESP 00:55:15
5. Léo Bergere FRA 00:55:17

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