World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships
The World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships is a aquathlon championship competition organised by World Triathlon. The competition has been held annually since 1998. The championships is a continually timed race containing a swim stage and either one or two run stages. Typically, the race consists of run—swim—run segments. When the water is less 22 degrees Celsius, a wetsuit is required and the race starts with the swim stage, followed by a single run stage, so that participants do not have to put on a wetsuit mid race.[1] The total run distance is around 5 km and the swim is between 750m and 1 km. However the distances have varied during the event's history depending on local circumstances.
Champions
Men's championship
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | Shane Reed (NZL) | Benjamin Sanson (FRA) | Craig Alexander (AUS) |
1999 | Shane Reed (NZL) | Paul Amey (NZL) | Levi Maxwell (AUS) |
2000 | Matt Reed (NZL) | Brad Kahlefeldt (AUS) | Paulo Miyasiro (BRA) |
2001 | Iván Raña (ESP) | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Filip Ospalý (CZE) |
2002 | Kris Gemmell (NZL) | Andriy Glushchenko (UKR) | Filip Ospalý (CZE) |
2003 | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Brent Foster (NZL) | Paulo Miyasiro (BRA) |
2004 | Shane Reed (NZL) | Csaba Kuttor (HUN) | Kris Gemmell (NZL) |
2005 | Tim Don (GBR) | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Paulo Miyasiro (BRA) |
2006 | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Daniel Lee (HKG) | Clark Ellice (NZL) |
2007 | Sergio Sarmiento (MEX) | Antônio Mansur (BRA) | Eder Mejía (MEX) |
2008 | Brent Foster (NZL) | Antônio Mansur (BRA) | Crisanto Grajales (MEX) |
2009 | Antônio Mansur (BRA) | Wesley Matos (BRA) | Adam Carlton (AUS) |
2010 | Richard Varga (SVK) | Daniel Halksworth (GBR) | Attila Fecskovics (HUN) |
2011 | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Ran Alterman (ISR) | Leandro Barbosa (BRA) |
2012 | Richard Varga (SVK) | Richard Stannard (GBR) | Ognjen Stojanović (SRB) |
2013[2] | Richard Varga (SVK) | Ivan Ivanov (UKR) | Csaba Rendes (HUN) |
2014[3] | Yuichi Hosoda (JPN) | Ryosuke Yamamoto (JPN) | Yegor Martynenko (UKR) |
2015[4] | Richard Varga (SVK) | Igor Polyanski (RUS) | Matt McElroy (USA) |
2016 | Alistair Brownlee (GBR) | Richard Varga (SVK) | Tommy Zaferes (USA) |
2017 | Matthew Sharpe (CAN) | John Rasmussen (CAN) | Aiden Longcroft-Harris (CAN) |
2018 | Emmanuel Lejeune (BEL) | Nathan Breen (AUS) | Alexis Kardes (FRA) |
2019 | Rostyslav Pevtsov (AZE) | Kevin Viñuela (ESP) | Dmitry Polyanski (RUS) |
2021[5] | David Castro (ESP) | Richard Varga (SVK) | Ander Noain (ESP) |
2022[6] | Márk Dévay (HUN) | Kevin Viñuela (ESP) | Márton Kropkó (HUN) |
2023[7] | Cristian Fernández (ESP) | Christopher Perham (GBR) | Jimmy Lund (GBR) |
Source:[8]
Women's championship
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | Rina Hill (AUS) | Nicole Hackett (AUS) | Melanie Mitchell (AUS) |
1999 | Rina Hill (AUS) | Nicole Hackett (AUS) | Michelle Dillon (GBR) |
2000 | Pilar Hidalgo (ESP) | Ana Burgos (ESP) | Pip Taylor (AUS) |
2001 | Siri Lindley (USA) | Rina Hill (NZL) | Sheila Taormina (USA) |
2002 | Sandra Soldan (BRA) | Jill Savege (CAN) | Lenka Radová (CZE) |
2003 | Carla Moreno (BRA) | Elizabeth May (LUX) | Anna Cleaver (NZL) |
2004 | Samantha Warriner (NZL) | Elizabeth May (LUX) | Charlotte Bonin (ITA) |
2005 | Sheila Taormina (USA) | Carla Moreno (BRA) | Lenka Radová (CZE) |
2006 | Sara McLarty (USA) | Eslpeth McGregor (CAN) | Maria Barrett (GBR) |
2007 | Sarah Groff (USA) | Kelly Cook (USA) | Ayesha Rollinson (CAN) |
2008 | Claudia Rivas (MEX) | Melody Ramírez (MEX) | Dunia Gómez (MEX) |
2009 | Samantha Warriner (NZL) | Maxine Seear (AUS) | Lisa Mensink (NED) |
2010 | Margit Vanek (HUN) | Szandra Szalay (HUN) | Gaia Peron (ITA) |
2011 | Elizabeth May (LUX) | Jessica Souza Santos (BRA) | |
2012 | Nicky Samuels (NZL) | Emma Davis (IRL) | Tea Miloš (CRO) |
2013[2] | Irina Abysova (RUS) | Claire Michel (BEL) | Yuliya Yelistratova (UKR) |
2014[3] | Anneke Jenkins (NZL) | Yuliya Yelistratova (UKR) | Hannah Kitchen (GBR) |
2015[4] | Anastasia Abrosimova (RUS) | Elena Danilova (RUS) | Long Hoi (MAC) |
2016 | Mariya Shorets (RUS) | Anastasia Abrosimova (RUS) | Valentina Zapatrina (RUS) |
2017 | Emma Pallant (GBR) | Delia Sclabas (SUI) | Jacqueline Slack (GBR) |
2018 | Edda Hannesdóttir (ISL) | Hannah Kitchen (GBR) | Vida Medić (SRB) |
2019 | Alicja Ulatowska (POL) | Zsanett Bragmayer (HUN) | Itzel Arroyo (MEX) |
2021[9] | Margot Garabedian (FRA) | Sara Pérez (ESP) | Margaréta Vráblová (SVK) |
2022[10] | Céline Kaiser (GER) | Márta Kropkó (HUN) | Maryna Kyryk (UKR) |
2023[11] | Zsanett Bragmayer (HUN) | Margaréta Vráblová (SVK) | Céline Kaiser (GER) |
Source:[8]
Venues
Year | Date | Location | Distances (kilometers) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First Run | Swim | Second Run | |||
1998 | 8 November | Noosa, Australia | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
1999 | 31 August | Noosa, Australia | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2000 | 28 October | Cancún, Mexico | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2001 | 18 July | Edmonton, Canada | 2 | 0,75 | 2 |
2002 | 3 November | Cancún, Mexico | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2003 | December | Queenstown, New Zealand | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2004 | 5 May | Madeira, Portugal | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2005 | 8 September | Gamagōri, Japan | 3,2 | 1 | 1,6 |
2006 | 30 August | Lausanne, Switzerland | - | 1 | 4 |
2007 | 12 May | Ixtapa, Mexico | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2008 | 28 June | Monterrey, Mexico | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2009 | 9 September | Gold Coast, Australia | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2010 | 8 September | Budapest, Hungary | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2011 | 7 September | Beijing, China | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2012 | 7 October | Auckland, New Zealand | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2013 | 11 September | London, UK | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2014 | 27 August | Edmonton, Canada | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2015 | 16 September | Chicago, USA | - | 1 | 5 |
2016 | 14 September | Cozumel, Mexico | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2017 | 25 August | Penticton, Canada | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2019 | 2 May | Pontevedra, Spain | – | 1 | 5 |
2021 | 30–31 October | Extremadura, Spain | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2022 | 18 August | Šamorín, Slovakia | 2,5 | 1 | 2,5 |
2023 | 1 May | Santa Eulària, Spain | 1 | 5 |
References
- "Introducing Aquathlon". World Triathlon. 9 November 2019. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
- Sherwood, Merryn (11 September 2013). "Varga (SVK) and Abysova (RUS) collect 2013 Aquathlon World Championships". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
- Greene, Erin (27 August 2014). "Kiwis dominate Aquathlon World Championships". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
- Greene, Erin (16 September 2015). "Varga victorious at Aquathlon World Champs a fourth time". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- "Results: 2021 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships El Anillo - Extremadura - Elite Men". triathlon.org. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
- "Results: 2022 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships Šamorín - Elite Men". triathlon.org. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
- "Results: 2023 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships Santa Eulària - Elite Men". triathlon.org. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- "Aquathlon ITU World Champions" (PDF). International Triathlon Union. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
- "Results: 2021 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships El Anillo - Extremadura - Elite Women". triathlon.org. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
- "Results: 2022 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships Šamorín - Elite Women". triathlon.org. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
- "Results: 2023 World Triathlon Aquathlon Championships Santa Eulària - Elite Women". triathlon.org. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
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