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Athlete Focus: Linsey Corbin before IM Wisconsin

With the new Kona qualifying system coming into effect (details can be found in this post), each Ironman winner receives a slot for next year’s Ironman World Championship, even before the 2018 edition is being held this October. Together with Ironman Wales, IM Wisconsin will be the first race giving out slots for Kona 2019. One of the athletes trying to secure an early Kona spot is Linsey Corbin who is lining up in Madison on September 9th.

Linsey Corbin Wisconsin Training

Photo: Linsey training in Wisconsin. Credit: Chris Corbin, CorbinBrands

I’ve asked Linsey about racing a full Ironman shortly before Kona: “It’s a five-week turnaround between Wisconsin and Kona. I’m putting in the hard miles now and hope to go well at both. There are a number of reasons to race in Wisconsin: a) I want to try and get my 2019 Kona slot, b) IM Wisconsin has always been on my bucket list, c) I really enjoy the women’s only events, d) Madison is the home of Trek bikes – my long-time sponsor and e) I thought it would actually help my Kona preparations doing a big block of work in August. I’ll just be giving it my best!”

Last year Liz Lyles was racing an Ironman even closer to Kona: She won IM Chattanooga just three weeks before finishing eighth in Kona. (After that result, Liz felt she had achieved all her goals and retired to put a bigger focus on her family. Liz also won IM Wisconsin the last time it was a female race in 2016.)

Photo: Liz on the run in Kona, Credit: Etienne Van Rensburg

I’ve asked Liz if she has any thoughts for Linsey: “I chatted with Linsey earlier in the year about her plan, and said go for it! Until Kona pays more, if you don’t get a Top 10, you get nothing! It’s crazy to me. I do hope Linsey can race well in Wisconsin and Kona.

“I built up really well for Chattanooga, but race morning I woke up sick with a sore throat/cold. So after the race I slept and slept and napped for a week! I did some training the second week, including a long bike ride of four hours on the indoor trainer that was very Kona bike course focused, then flew to Kona. I did my workouts, but never stressed about them – and no joke napped every day for three hours and then tried to sleep from 9 pm to 6 or 7 am every night. I also think I was carrying a few extra pounds, which helped me on the day, rather than feeling depleted from Chattanooga.”

Looking at the start list for IM Wisconsin, it looks to be a race between Linsey and Kirsty Jahn who also plans to race in Kona. Both are pretty evenly matched on the swim, bike and run, so there shouldn’t be more than a minute or two between them all day. So far Kirsty has had a fantastic year with two wins at IM Brasil and IM Boulder, while Linsey has only raced IM South Africa (third place) since her 13th in Kona last year. The race is likely to be even more interesting with Angela Naeth in the mix who is always biking extremely well but is still recovering from Lyme’s disease.

The field in Wisconsin shows that even though most Pro athletes are focused on IM Hawaii, it won’t be easy to secure a Kona slot in the fall Ironman races – there will always be a couple of athletes on the start line of Kona caliber, and you’ll need a lot of luck to “cherry pick a slot” under the new system.

70.3 World Championships 2018 (Nelson Mandela Bay, South Africa) – Analyzing Results

703ChampsLogoFemale Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time Diff to exp. Prize Money
1 Daniela Ryf SUI 00:24:25 02:15:27 01:16:59 04:01:13 -08:32 US$ 45,000
2 Lucy Charles GBR 00:23:01 02:17:12 01:20:36 04:04:59 -13:27 US$ 20,000
3 Anne Haug GER 00:24:27 02:23:16 01:15:11 04:07:22 -01:26 US$ 15,000
4 Pamella Oliveira BRA 00:24:25 02:23:18 01:21:29 04:13:44 -11:45 US$ 10,000
5 Radka Kahlefeldt CZE 00:24:25 02:23:30 01:21:39 04:13:50 -05:35 US$ 7,500
6 Imogen Simmonds SUI 00:24:26 02:23:29 01:22:33 04:14:40 -07:24 US$ 6,500
7 Jeanni Seymour ZAF 00:24:25 02:27:21 01:19:08 04:14:57 -04:41 US$ 6,000
8 Ellie Salthouse AUS 00:25:44 02:25:54 01:19:24 04:15:12 -04:13 US$ 5,500
9 Emma Pallant GBR 00:25:56 02:25:57 01:20:04 04:15:53 -03:02 US$ 5,000
10 Sarah True USA 00:24:24 02:29:11 01:17:58 04:16:00 -03:45 US$ 4,500
11 Heather Wurtele CAN 00:25:54 02:25:49 01:22:59 04:18:48 01:30  
12 Sarah Lewis GBR 00:25:48 02:28:32 01:23:22 04:22:27 -01:15  
13 Jackie Hering USA 00:27:30 02:30:39 01:20:00 04:23:08 00:03  
14 Felicity Sheedy-Ryan AUS 00:25:48 02:30:42 01:22:52 04:23:53 05:59  
15 Michaela Herlbauer AUT 00:25:56 02:32:10 01:24:36 04:27:13 -01:42  
16 Fenella Langridge GBR 00:24:07 02:33:46 01:27:11 04:29:19 00:57  
17 Agnieszka Jerzyk POL 00:25:52 02:34:51 01:24:33 04:29:41 06:36  
18 Romina Palacio Balena ARG 00:25:56 02:35:38 01:24:06 04:30:21 -04:02  
19 Danielle Dingman USA 00:33:11 02:27:02 01:26:09 04:30:39 -07:29  
20 Heini Hartikainen FIN 00:31:19 02:29:58 01:27:37 04:33:44 -11:43  
21 Annah Watkinson ZAF 00:28:10 02:34:29 01:27:32 04:34:53 -02:14  
22 Magda Nieuwoudt ZAF 00:28:28 02:31:17 01:32:17 04:36:46 -10:20  
23 Kyra Wiens USA 00:28:02 02:34:48 01:29:37 04:37:19 -06:04  
24 Anna Eberhardt HUN 00:33:20 02:35:39 01:26:03 04:39:49 03:40  
25 Kirralee Seidel AUS 00:25:58 02:42:29 01:29:47 04:42:40 09:09  
26 Laura Mathews USA 00:27:27 02:36:33 01:34:35 04:43:46 02:10  
27 Jenny Fletcher CAN 00:27:59 02:44:21 01:35:54 04:53:38 01:37  
28 Lotty Harari PAN 00:34:14 02:43:12 01:30:44 04:54:42 -04:06  

Male Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time Diff to exp. Prize Money
1 Jan Frodeno GER 00:21:54 02:04:28 01:06:33 03:36:31 -09:04 US$ 45,000
2 Alistair Brownlee GBR 00:21:58 02:04:29 01:07:39 03:37:42 -07:07 US$ 20,000
3 Javier Gomez ESP 00:21:57 02:04:37 01:08:15 03:38:27 -05:57 US$ 15,000
4 Ben Kanute USA 00:21:53 02:04:37 01:12:38 03:42:44 -05:21 US$ 10,000
5 Pieter Heemeryck BEL 00:22:23 02:04:15 01:13:00 03:43:06 -08:35 US$ 7,500
6 Sam Appleton AUS 00:21:59 02:04:22 01:13:57 03:43:58 -06:33 US$ 6,500
7 Adam Bowden GBR 00:22:00 02:11:56 01:10:15 03:48:17 -03:59 US$ 6,000
8 Braden Currie NZL 00:21:58 02:09:15 01:14:05 03:49:17 -02:08 US$ 5,500
9 Michael Weiss AUT 00:26:55 02:08:16 01:10:45 03:50:39 -00:53 US$ 5,000
10 Rodolphe Von Berg USA 00:22:55 02:10:59 01:14:04 03:51:36 00:10 US$ 4,500
11 Igor Amorelli BRA 00:23:07 02:12:55 01:14:01 03:53:43 00:12  
12 Marcus Herbst GER 00:25:28 02:10:31 01:14:21 03:54:03 -10:05  
13 Markus Rolli GER 00:22:59 02:10:59 01:16:11 03:54:15 -03:08  
14 Filipe Azevedo POR 00:22:50 02:15:04 01:12:47 03:55:25 01:00  
15 Yvan Jarrige FRA 00:22:59 02:15:08 01:13:41 03:55:35 -11:45  
16 Elliot Smales GBR 00:22:56 02:15:06 01:13:35 03:55:43 -04:12  
17 Mark Buckingham GBR 00:23:05 02:15:02 01:13:37 03:55:50 -05:59  
18 Sven Riederer SUI 00:23:03 02:14:49 01:14:11 03:56:09 04:35  
19 James Cunnama ZAF 00:24:07 02:11:36 01:16:31 03:56:21 00:44  
20 Ruedi Wild SUI 00:23:08 02:14:40 01:15:25 03:57:30 03:44  
21 Tim Rea AUS 00:23:55 02:13:53 01:15:56 03:58:02 -04:40  
22 Ryan Fisher AUS 00:21:58 02:09:34 01:23:44 03:59:04 06:10  
23 Emilio Aguayo Munoz ESP 00:23:05 02:14:54 01:20:14 04:02:37 04:48  
24 Adrian Haller SUI 00:24:07 02:17:43 01:16:22 04:02:41 00:16  
25 Alex Libin USA 00:25:34 02:21:19 01:12:56 04:04:45 03:56  
26 Kieran Roche AUS 00:24:00 02:24:52 01:15:17 04:08:09 05:56  
27 Kenneth Vandendriessche BEL 00:26:52 02:21:14 01:22:44 04:15:02 14:11  
28 Paulo Roberto Maciel da Silva BRA 00:24:01 02:34:15 01:18:51 04:21:34 19:13  

Athlete Focus: Emma Pallant before 70.3 Worlds

At last year’s 70.3 Championships in Chattanooga, Emma Pallant was one of the young athletes on the podium: With the fastest run-split, she was able to claim second place behind a dominating Daniela Ryf.

EmmaBarcelona

(Photo: Emma all smiles after winning 70.3 Barcelona. Credits: Ingo Kutsche – SPORTS-MEDIA Agency)

This year she changed her focus a bit, also racing on the full Ironman-distance with a goal to qualify for Kona. Her first race did not go as planned and she was forced to DNF Ironman South Africa. Her second Ironman start was more successful, finishing third at IM Austria after leading the race for some time but then struggling towards the end of the run – still securing a Kona slot. Even with her Ironman focus, she was still racing well on the 70.3 distance, winning the races in Barcelona, Staffordshire and Dun Laoghaire.


Thorsten: With your third place in Austria you are qualified for Kona and have accepted your slot. Will you be racing 70.3 Championships as well?

Emma: I will definitely be racing South Africa this year! It’s my goal for the season and for sure it would be great to top last year but I try not to go into races thinking about what I want out of them and instead focus on what I’m going to put into it. I’ve been training and preparing the hardest ever and hopefully the new gains we have been making can pay off in the race, the only thing I know for certain and that I can control is that I will be out there giving it my ALL!

T: What’s the goal for Kona this year?

E: This year Kona is purely about going out there for the experience. I have heaps to learn about Ironman let alone Kona but really want to take my time with the journey and do it the right way, taking every bit of experience that I can from each race but without it taking away from the key goals of the year. The A race is the 70.3 Worlds, and this fits in perfectly with Kona after. Kona is ultimately the big life goal so I think it’s never too early to gain experience.

T: You had to DNF in South Africa with an injury, is that completely behind you or is it still something to manage?

E: I changed my bike position for South Africa and trained on it in our camp in Spain. But we trained predominantly in the hills and so I never really spent too long in the bars. We knew my shape was good and wanted to be as aero as possible for what was quite a flat course because this is definitely one of my weaknesses at the moment. But I had back problems (at the time I didn’t know it was from the back) and the sharp pain in my calf halfway into the bike which was worsening every step on the run caused me to pull out. After that race I had some treatment for the great BMC-vifit staff on our camp in Mallorca and we readjusted my position and now all is feeling good. I still have to learn to spend more time in the bars to ride more strongly on flat courses but again this is something we are gradually building up over time to protect the back for a long-term career in Ironman.

T: How will the logistics of 70.3 Champs, Kona camp and travel to Kona work for you?

E: Unfortunately my best friend’s wedding (Olympic middle-distance runner Steph Twell) is getting married on September 28th and I’m her chief bridesmaid. So I have to fly back from South Africa to do a few weeks preparation in Lanzarote and then fly from there to the wedding and then out to Kona. My coach Michelle Dillon and her husband (my training partner) will be in Australia for AG World Champs so I will train on my own this time. But I think if you have the right attitude you make the best of it and just push everything possible. I will give this preparation all my best and I love the great team there at Sands Active who are hosting me!


What are Emma’s chances at Nelson Mandela Bay for another podium finish?

First of all, it’ll be interesting to see how the Ironman training is going to affect her speed on the shorter distance. This will also impact the other athletes that have stepped up and qualified for Kona for the first time such as Anne Haug, Helle Frederiksen or Sarah True. Other top athletes such as Lucy Charles, Melissa Hauschildt and of course Daniela Ryf have more experience racing these two distances. There are a few others in the field that are completely focused on the shorter distance: Heather Wurtele, Ellie Salthouse or Radka Kahlefeldt are therefore serious contenders for a podium finish.

Assuming that Emma will be in excellent form for the 70.3 World Championships, she will still have to swim and bike well enough so that her strong run is going to matter. Even if Daniela is not having a special day such as in Chattanooga last year,  she should swim and bike significantly faster than Emma and will be out of reach in T2. Emma should reach T2 at roughly the same time as Anne Haug, but Anne has been running a few minutes faster than Emma in the two races they’ve been racing each other. But on a good day Emma is able to put two or more minutes into everyone else in the field, so if she can start the run just a minute or two within the Top 3 spots, she could still be able to run herself onto the podium. So even if the female race has a clear favorite in Daniela, there will be close racing for the other podium spots – with Emma likely to play an important role!

Previous Kona Results by the 2018 Participants

This post looks at the previous Kona results by the 2018 Pro field.

A few observations:

  • Ronnie Schildknecht has the longest active Kona streak and the most Kona starts in the current field, he’s been racing Kona since 2006 (12 races).
  • Cam Brown has been racing even longer – his first race was in 2000! He also has 12 starts in Kona.
  • On the female side, Linsey Corbin has the most starts. She also the most finished in the whole Pro field (10 finishes out of 11 starts).
  • With 9 finishes, Luke McKenzie and Andy Potts have the most finishes on the male side.
  • The longest active streak on the female side is by Michelle Vesterby, she has been racing the last six races in Kona.

I am going to provide a lot more details on the race and the participants in my free “Kona Rating Report” which you can already pre-order at https://gum.co/Kona2018 (donations welcome).

Male Participants

Athletes 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 # of Races Highest Finish
Bart Aernouts 11 8 9 8 12 5 of 6 8
Josh Amberger 29 1 29
Igor Amorelli 13 25 33 14 4 of 5 13
Nick Baldwin
Terenzo Bozzone 11 20 6 3 of 5 6
Cameron Brown 2 8 5 22 17 9 of 12 2
Kyle Buckingham 24 30 26 3 of 4 24
Tyler Butterfield 28 7 5 36 4 of 6 5
Denis Chevrot 23 32 2 of 3 23
Matt Chrabot 37 1 37
Will Clarke 41 1 41
Maurice Clavel
Simon Cochrane
Kevin Collington 0 of 1
Antony Costes
James Cunnama 51 4 26 5 4 of 5 4
Braden Currie 30 1 30
Alessandro Degasperi 20 20 2 20
Tim Don 15 1 of 2 15
Andreas Dreitz
Marc Duelsen 18 1 18
Jan Frodeno 3 Win Win 35 4 Win
Javier Gomez
Romain Guillaume 17 10 19 3 10
Matt Hanson 34 1 of 2 34
Ben Hoffman 55 42 15 2 27 4 9 7 of 8 2
Nick Kastelein 0 of 1
Sebastian Kienle 4 3 Win 8 2 4 6 Win
Philipp Koutny
Patrick Lange 3 Win 2 Win
Luke McKenzie 54 19 29 15 9 24 2 15 35 9 of 10 2
Brent McMahon 9 30 2 of 3 9
David McNamee 11 13 3 3 3
Callum Millward 36 1 of 2 36
Giulio Molinari 28 1 28
Patrik Nilsson 8 1 8
Timothy O’Donnell 8 5 32 3 6 19 6 of 7 3
Jens Petersen-Bach 0 of 1
Mike Phillips
David Plese 27 17 2 of 4 17
Andy Potts 7 9 21 17 7 4 4 11 7 9 4
Ivan Rana 6 17 12 9 11 5 6
Tim Reed 21 23 2 of 3 21
Matthew Russell 23 20 18 23 12 5 of 6 12
Lionel Sanders 14 29 2 3 2
Ronnie Schildknecht 15 4 18 15 19 12 15 31 8 of 12 4
Joe Skipper 13 41 2 13
Andrew Starykowicz 19 1 of 2 19
Boris Stein 20 10 7 10 4 7
Ivan Tutukin 0 of 1
Jan van Berkel 32 22 2 of 3 22
Tim Van Berkel 7 36 19 15 4 7
Frederik Van Lierde 34 14 3 Win 8 25 10 7 of 10 Win
Cyril Viennot 15 18 12 5 6 18 6 of 7 5
Thiago Vinhal 13 1 13
Michael Weiss 25 13 16 16 32 5 of 7 13
Ruedi Wild 21 16 2 16
Cameron Wurf 17 1 17

Female Participants

Athletes 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 # of Starts Highest Finish
Corinne Abraham 11 16 2 11
Teresa Adam
Jen Annett
Liz Blatchford 3 10 3 3 3
Lauren Brandon 26 1 26
Melanie Burke 26 1 26
Mirinda Carfrae 2 Win 2 3 Win Win 2 7 of 8 Win
Lucy Charles 2 1 2
Susie Cheetham 6 6 2 of 3 6
Linsey Corbin 23 5 11 12 16 8 10 12 13 13 10 of 11 5
Sarah Crowley 15 3 2 3
Tine Deckers 12 19 12 16 4 of 6 12
Gurutze Frades Larralde 33 22 2 22
Helle Frederiksen
Manon Genet
Anne Haug
Melissa Hauschildt 14 1 of 2 14
Lisa Huetthaler
Mareen Hufe 19 21 11 3 of 4 11
Heather Jackson 5 3 4 3 3
Kirsty Jahn
Meredith Kessler 26 7 26 35 4 of 6 7
Katja Konschak 36 30 31 3 30
Carrie Lester 23 10 7 3 7
Asa Lundstroem 17 11 8 17 4 8
Annabel Luxford 12 9 2 of 3 9
Rachel McBride
Jocelyn McCauley 10 1 10
Beth McKenzie 15 1 15
Emma Pallant
Sarah Piampiano 23 7 7 3 of 4 7
Lisa Roberts 20 16 2 16
Jodie Robertson 20 1 of 2 20
Daniela Ryf 2 Win Win Win 4 Win
Kaisa Sali 5 5 2 5
Laura Siddall 15 1 15
Lesley Smith
Maja Stage Nielsen 12 1 12
Sara Svensk
Sarah True
Michelle Vesterby 12 8 14 4 6 5 of 6 4

Challenge Almere 2018 (Sept 8th) – Seedings

ChAlmereLogoPrevious Winners

Almere is one of the longest running triathlons worldwide – the first edition was in 1983. Since 2013 it is part of the Challenge Family.

Year Male Winner Time Female Winner Time
2013 Bart Colpaert (BEL) 08:34:50 Susan Blatt (GER) 09:24:40
2014 Markus Fachbach (GER) 08:28:25 Heleen Bij De Vaate (NED) 09:16:26
2015 Markus Fachbach (GER) 08:12:24 Kathrin Walther (GER) 09:26:11
2016 Jan Raphael (GER) 08:03:43 Camille Deligny (FRA) 09:18:15
2017 Joe Skipper (GBR) 07:59:39 Yvonne Van Vlerken (NED) 08:51:13

Last Race’s TOP 3

Here’s the link to last year’s full Pro results and analysis.

Male Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Joe Skipper GBR 00:51:15 04:22:35 02:41:05 07:59:39
2 Viktor Zyemtsev UKR 00:51:02 04:25:24 02:43:40 08:03:14
3 Jaroslav Kovacic SLO 00:48:25 04:27:54 02:45:49 08:05:40

Female Race Results

Rank Name Nation Swim Bike Run Time
1 Yvonne Van Vlerken NED 00:57:24 04:44:15 03:05:44 08:51:13
2 Sarissa De Vries NED 00:52:34 04:44:58 03:27:27 09:09:44
3 Hanna Maksimova BLR 00:57:25 05:13:06 03:05:32 09:20:02

Course Records

I only have the detailed results for the time that Almere is held as part of the Challenge family. The “real” male record (though probably on a different course) is held by Jan van der Marel with 7:57:46 from 1999. As far as I can tell the female record is also from that year, when Irma Heeren finished in 8:56:23.

Leg Gender Record Athlete Date
Total overall 07:59:39 Joe Skipper 2017-09-10
Swim overall 00:46:10 Dylan McNeice 2013-09-14
Bike overall 04:13:25 Kristian Hoegenhaug 2017-09-10
Run overall 02:41:05 Joe Skipper 2017-09-10
Total female 08:51:13 Yvonne Van Vlerken 2017-09-10
Swim female 00:51:37 Hillary Biscay 2013-09-14
Bike female 04:43:11 Camille Deligny 2016-09-10
Run female 03:05:32 Hanna Maksimova 2017-09-10

Course Rating

The Course Rating for Challenge Almere is 14:33.

Race Adjustments for Challenge Almere

Year Adjustment Swim Adj. Bike Adj. Run Adj. # of Finishers Rating Swim Rating Bike Rating Run Rating
2013 06:52 00:52 03:13 01:57 30 06:52 00:52 03:13 01:57
2014 09:07 03:14 04:46 01:19 30 of 38 07:59 02:03 04:00 01:38
2015 17:27 00:59 16:00 03:08 36 of 43 11:09 01:42 08:00 02:08
2016 23:12 01:40 22:15 00:39 28 of 34 14:09 01:41 11:33 01:46
2017 16:07 00:52 13:56 02:23 34 of 48 14:33 01:31 12:02 01:53

Prize Money

Challenge Almere has a total prize purse of 38.000 EUR, paying 10 deep.

Male Race Participants

The strength of the field is 2% of a typical Kona field.

# Bib Name Nat Expected Rating ESwim EBike ET2 ERun Consistency Overall
1 24 Jaroslav Kovacic SLO 08:06:33 08:32:46 00:47:32 04:28:09 05:20:40 02:45:53 4% +72% -25% (6) 58
2 21 Cameron Wurf AUS 08:12:10 08:26:29 00:49:48 04:11:48 05:06:36 03:05:34 72% +22% -6% (14) 28
3 22 Evert Scheltinga NED 08:13:26 08:31:46 00:47:52 04:24:10 05:17:03 02:56:23 64% +0% -36% (6) 56
4 23 Kristian Hoegenhaug DEN 08:13:32 08:35:06 00:54:04 04:17:11 05:16:15 02:57:17 100% +0% -0% (3) 64
5 26 Bryan McCrystal IRL 08:20:30 08:49:42 00:55:10 04:15:08 05:15:19 03:05:11 32% +45% -23% (6) 105
6 25 Dirk Wijnalda NED 08:27:20 08:51:00 00:55:10 04:34:52 05:35:02 02:52:18 76% +5% -20% (23) 111
7 28 Marc Unger GER 08:33:52 09:24:32 00:50:49 04:28:13 05:24:02 03:09:50 26% +30% -44% (3) (225)
8 32 Diederik Scheltinga NED 08:39:28 09:32:41 00:51:58 04:37:03 05:34:01 03:05:27 25% +12% -62% (6) 240
9 36 Peter Seidel GER 08:45:31 09:14:06 00:52:14 04:48:32 05:45:46 02:59:45 50% +22% -28% (5) 190
10 29 Wouter Monchy BEL 08:45:32 09:10:29 00:49:24 04:43:42 05:38:06 03:07:26 33% +37% -31% (8) 181
11 30 Tjardo Visser NED 08:46:36 09:11:43 00:50:14 04:47:57 05:43:10 03:03:26 71% +29% -0% (4) 185
12 31 Till Schramm GER 08:56:40 09:22:22 00:54:07 04:41:51 05:40:57 03:15:43 65% +16% -19% (10) 215
27 Ivan Kalashnikov RUS n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)
33 Benjamin Feraud FRA n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)
34 Carson Christen USA n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)
35 Pete Dyson GBR n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)

Female Race Participants

The strength of the field is 3% of a typical Kona field.

# Bib Name Nat Expected Rating ESwim EBike ET2 ERun Consistency Overall
1 1 Yvonne Van Vlerken NED 08:59:05 09:15:57 00:56:23 04:48:00 05:49:24 03:09:41 78% +0% -22% (36) 10
2 3 Els Visser NED 09:17:21 09:55:14 00:54:47 04:48:56 05:48:43 03:28:38 47% +53% -0% (2) (80)
3 2 Camille Deligny FRA 09:30:39 10:02:47 01:00:42 04:54:59 06:00:40 03:29:59 51% +0% -49% (5) 90
4 6 Jenny Nae SWE 09:33:14 10:03:57 unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (1 IM Pro race) (92)
5 4 Kathrin Walther GER 09:36:36 10:39:29 00:58:27 05:03:08 06:06:35 03:30:01 15% +13% -72% (12) (135)
6 11 Karen Steurs BEL 09:36:48 10:07:41 01:00:27 05:10:17 06:15:45 03:21:03 n/a (1 IM Pro race) (97)
7 7 Brooke Brown CAN 09:36:58 10:11:19 01:01:02 05:07:03 06:13:05 03:23:53 44% +0% -56% (16) (105)
8 5 Lina-Kristin Schink GER 09:37:09 10:27:31 01:06:53 05:09:49 06:21:43 03:15:26 37% +12% -51% (12) 129
9 8 Renee Kiley AUS 09:54:44 10:26:36 00:59:55 05:12:23 06:17:18 03:37:26 n/a (1 IM Pro race) (128)
10 14 Rahel Bellinga NED 10:09:28 10:33:20 01:03:53 05:05:11 06:14:05 03:55:23 88% +9% -3% (10) 134
11 10 Corine Nelen NED 10:13:07 10:41:14 00:57:09 05:29:38 06:31:46 03:41:21 100% +0% -0% (3) 138
12 16 Francesca Sanjana GBR 10:31:15 11:11:43 01:04:45 05:29:32 06:39:17 03:51:58 39% +0% -61% (2) (147)
9 Ewa Komander POL n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)
12 Debbie Greig GBR n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)
15 Marleen Honkoop NED n/a unrated unrated unrated unrated unrated n/a (no IM Pro race) (n/a)

Winning Odds

Male Race Participants

  • Jaroslav Kovacic: 62% (1-1)
  • Cameron Wurf: 15% (6-1)
  • Kristian Hoegenhaug: 11% (8-1)
  • Evert Scheltinga: 10% (9-1)
  • Bryan McCrystal: 2% (52-1)

Female Race Participants

  • Yvonne Van Vlerken: 68% (1-1)
  • Els Visser: 16% (5-1)
  • Camille Deligny: 5% (18-1)
  • Lina-Kristin Schink: 4% (25-1)
  • Brooke Brown: 2% (41-1)
  • Kathrin Walther: 2% (55-1)
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