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August 2019

70.3 World Championships 2019 in Nice, France (Sept 7th and 8th) – Entry List

For now, the list reflects the athletes that have qualified and accepted their slots (minus very few withdrawals already processed). I expect about 50 athletes for each gender once the bib list is released and even fewer actually starting on race day. When information about athletes not racing becomes available, I will cross out the names on this list until the bib list is released by Ironman.

Athletes also qualified for this year’s Kona are marked with “KQ”.

Prize Money

70.3 World Championships have a total prize purse of 250.000 US$, paying 10 deep.

Female Race Participants (Sept 7th)

Name Nation
Pamela-Ann Bachelder St.Pierre CAN
Lauren Barnett USA
Maria Barrera MEX
Nikki Bartlett (KQ) GBR
Gisele Bertucci BRA
Lucy Charles-Barclay (KQ) GBR
Haley Chura USA
Jeanne Collonge FRA
Judith Corachan Vacquero ESP
Luiza Cravo BRA
Sarah Crowley (KQ) AUS
Laura Dennis AUS
Nina Derron (KQ) SUI
Danielle Dingman USA
Dimity-Lee Duke AUS
Amber Ferreira USA
Paula Findlay CAN
Helle Frederiksen DEN
Alexandra Ganzon PHI
Manon Genet FRA
Lauren Goss USA
Anne Haug (AQ) GER
Jackie Hering USA
Radka Kahlefeldt CZE
Ewa Komander POL
Leonie Konczalla GER
Kinsey Laine USA
Fenella Langridge GBR
Holly Lawrence GBR
India Lee GBR
Carrie Lester (KQ) AUS
Xenia Luxem BEL
Lisa Norden SWE
Pamella Oliveira BRA
Rachel Olson USA
Romina Palacio Balena ARG
Emma Pallant GBR
Maddy Pesch USA
Laura Philipp (KQ) GER
Sarah Piampiano (KQ) USA
Anne Reischmann GER
Barbara Riveros (KQ) CHI
Katrina Rye GBR
Daniela Ryf (KQ) SUI
Kaisa Sali (KQ) FIN
Ellie Salthouse AUS
Francesca Sanjana GBR
Mariella Sawyer ZAF
Jenny Schulz GER
Felicity Sheedy-Ryan AUS
Imogen Simmonds (KQ) SUI
Chelsea Sodaro USA
Bianca Steurer (KQ) AUT
Sara Svensk SWE
Grace Thek AUS
Alexandra Tondeur BEL
Amelia Watkinson NZL
Annah Watkinson (KQ) ZAF
Hannah Wells NZL
Kyra Wiens USA
Laura Wood NZL
Heather Wurtele CAN

Male Race Participants (Sept 8th)

Name Nation
Bart Aernouts (KQ) BEL
Josh Amberger (KQ) AUS
Igor Amorelli BRA
Florian Angert GER
Sam Appleton AUS
Santiago Ascenco BRA
Filipe Azevedo POR
Daniel Baekkegard (KQ) DEN
Kristian Blummenfelt NOR
Andi Boecherer (KQ) GER
Adam Bowden GBR
Mark Bowstead NZL
Alistair Brownlee (KQ) GBR
Matt Burton AUS
Alan Carrillo Avila MEX
Maurice Clavel (KQ) GER
Kevin Collington USA
Pablo Dapena Gonzalez ESP
Thomas Davis GBR
Robbie Deckard USA
Tim Don GBR
Andreas Dreitz (KQ) GER
Joe Gambles (KQ) AUS
Javier Gomez ESP
George Goodwin GBR
Romain Guillaume FRA
Pieter Heemeryck BEL
Vicente Hernandez ESP
Gustav Iden NOR
Yvan Jarrige FRA
Iuri Josino Vinuto BRA
Ivan Kalashnikov RUS
Ben Kanute USA
Mitchell Kibby AUS
Sebastian Kienle (KQ) GER
Eric Lagerstrom USA
Patrick Lange (KQ) GER
Jackson Laundry CAN
Franz Loeschke (KQ) GER
Sam Long USA
Andre Lopes BRA
Paulo Roberto Maciel da Silva BRA
David Mainwaring AUS
Brent McMahon CAN
Mauricio Mendez Cruz MEX
Jack Moody NZL
Banjo Norte PHI
Joaquin Pereda Charles MEX
Mike Phillips (KQ) NZL
Sam Pictor GBR
Jason Pohl CAN
Alexander Polizzi AUS
Tim Rea AUS
Horst Reichel GER
Markus Rolli GER
Francisco Serrano MEX
Elliot Smales GBR
Dominik Sowieja GER
Milosz Sowinski POL
Andrew Starykowicz (KQ) USA
Frederik Van Lierde (KQ) BEL
Cyril Viennot (KQ) FRA
Rodolphe Von Berg USA
Bradley Weiss ZAF
Ruedi Wild SUI

Ironman Arizona (WPRO-only, Nov 24th) – Entry List

Updates:

  • November 2nd: Added Janien Lubben and Ashley Paulson. Danielle Mack is no longer on the list.
  • October 25th: Added Lisa Becharas, Lauren Brandon, Kristin Lie, Kristin Louderback, Annah Watkinson, Amanda Wendorff. Carrie Lester is no longer on the list.
  • October 7th: Added Palmira Alvarez, Sarah Crowley, Kyra Wiens;
    Angela Naeth and Natasha Van der Merwe are no longer on the latest list.
  • September 17th: Added Erin Green, Melanie McQuaid and Lenny Ramsey
  • September 2nd: Added Carrie Lester
  • August 25th: Added Gurutze Frades Larralde, Mareen Hufe, Angela Naeth and Zuzana Trnovcova

Kona Slots and Prize Money

IM Arizona has 2 Pro Kona slots. It has a total prize purse of 50.000 US$, paying 10 deep.

Female Race Participants

Name Nation
Palmira Alvarez MEX
Melanie Baumann SUI
Lisa Becharas USA
Holly Benner USA
Lauren Brandon USA
Jennifer Clark USA
Linsey Corbin (KQ) USA
Sarah Crowley (AQ) AUS
Gurutze Frades Larralde ESP
Erin Green USA
Mareen Hufe GER
Heather Jackson USA
Meredith Kessler USA
Jennifer Lentzke CAN
Carrie Lester AUS
Kristin Lie NOR
Kristin Louderback USA
Janien Lubben NED
Danielle Mack USA
Melanie McQuaid CAN
Skye Moench USA
Angela Naeth (KQ) CAN
Ashley Paulson USA
Lenny Ramsey NED
Jessica Smith USA
Zuzana Trnovcova SVK
Natasha Van der Merwe USA
Annah Watkinson ZAF
Amanda Wendorff USA
Kyra Wiens USA

Ironman Florida (MPRO-only, Nov 2nd) – Entry List

Updates:

  • October 7th: Added Peru Alfaro San Ildefonso, Alexander Berggren, Patrick Brady, Karl-Johan Danielsson, Alessandro Degasperi, Lewis Elliot, Clay Emge, Philip Graves, Ben Hoffman, Bjoern Laibacher, David Plese, Jason Pohl, Gustavo Rodriguez Iglesias, Matthew Russell, Joe Skipper, Raul Tejada
  • September 17th: Added Cedric Boily, Andreas Borch, Tyler Butterfield, James Lubinski, Justin Metzler, Taylor Reid, Jesper Svensson. Adam Feigh and Christian Kramer are no longer on the latest list.
  • September 2nd: Added Johann Ackermann, David Breuer, Lionel Sanders, Andrew Starykowicz
  • August 25th: Added Denis Chevrot, Brent McMahon, Sam Proctor, Ruedi Wild

Kona Slots and Prize Money

IM Florida has 2 Pro Kona slots. It has a total prize purse of 50.000 US$, paying 10 deep.

Male Race Participants

Name Nation
Johann Ackermann GER
Peru Alfaro San Ildefonso ESP
Alexander Berggren SWE
Max Biessmann USA
Cedric Boily CAN
Andreas Borch DEN
Raymond Botelho USA
Patrick Brady USA
David Breuer GER
Tyler Butterfield BMU
Denis Chevrot FRA
Karl-Johan Danielsson SWE
Michiel De Wilde BEL
Scott Defilippis USA
Alessandro Degasperi ITA
Victor Del Corral ESP
Alan Dempsey CAN
Ivan Dominguez USA
Lewis Elliot USA
Clay Emge USA
Jonathan Fecik USA
Adam Feigh USA
Pedro Gomes POR
Philip Graves GBR
Tripp Hipple USA
Ben Hoffman USA
Derek Kidwell USA
Peter Kotland CZE
Christian Kramer GER
Bjoern Laibacher GER
Colin Laughery USA
James Lubinski USA
Brent McMahon CAN
Justin Metzler USA
Yorlliry Moreno VEN
David Plese SLO
Jason Pohl CAN
Sam Proctor GBR
Taylor Reid CAN
Gustavo Rodriguez Iglesias ESP
Matthew Russell USA
Lionel Sanders CAN
Matthew Shanks USA
Joe Skipper GBR
Andrew Starykowicz USA
Jesper Svensson SWE
Raul Tejada GTM
Hans Christian Tungesvik NOR
Ruedi Wild SUI
Brad Williams USA

Ironman Barcelona 2019 (Oct 6th) – Entry Lists

Updates:

  • September 17th: Added Ewa Bugdol, Antonina Reznikov, Gabriella Zelinka (WPRO) and Kacper Adam, Rasmus Ahlfors, Florian Angert, Andreas Borch, Jordan Bryden, Maciej Chmura, Philipp Fahrenholz, Matteo Fontana, Sebastien Fraysse, Allan Hovda, Patrick Jaberg, Kirill Kotshegarov, Christian Kramer, Mathias Lyngsoe Petersen, Sebastian Najmowicz, Toni Pallares Grima, Emilio Sampedro, Pacome Thibault-Lopez (MPRO). Julia Gajer and Claire Hann are no longer on the latest entry list.
  • September 2nd: Added Pleuni Hooijman, Candice Mizon, Katrien Verstuyft (WPRO) and Johann Ackermann, Bekim Christensen, Robert Drake, Daniel Gomez Hernandez, Marek Nemcik, Sebastien Rodriguez, Ivan Tutukin, Andrej Vistica (MPRO)
  • August 25th: Added Julia Gajer, Angela Naeth, Zeljka Saban, Francesca Sanjana, Merce Tusell (WPRO) and Emilio Aguayo Munoz, Anton Blokhin, Andrey Bryukhankov, Kyle Buckingham, Vicenc Castella Serra, David Hanko, Nick Kastelein, Markus Liebelt, Jeremy Morel, Stefan Overmars, Domenico Passuello, Elliot Smales, Rasmus Svenningsson, Robert Wilkowiecki (MPRO)

Kona Slots and Prize Money

IM Barcelona has 1m+1f Pro Kona slots. It has a total prize purse of 40.000 US$, paying 6 deep.

Male Race Participants

Name Nation
Johann Ackermann GER
Kacper Adam POL
Emilio Aguayo Munoz (KQ) ESP
Rasmus Ahlfors DEN
Lucas Amirault FRA
Florian Angert GER
Raul Barbero Martinez ESP
Miquel Blanchart Tinto ESP
Anton Blokhin BLR
Sergio Bolado Noriega ESP
Andreas Borch DEN
Steeve Brugiere FRA
Jordan Bryden CAN
Andrey Bryukhankov RUS
Kyle Buckingham ZAF
Vicenc Castella Serra ESP
Maciej Chmura POL
Bekim Christensen DEN
Jean Eudes Demaret FRA
Robert Drake GBR
Olivier Esser BEL
Philipp Fahrenholz GER
Rasmus Fitzner DEN
Matteo Fontana ITA
Sebastien Fraysse FRA
Stenn Goetstouwers BEL
Daniel Gomez Hernandez ESP
David Hanko HUN
Erik Hjertonsson SWE
Markus Hoermann GER
Erik Holmberg SWE
Allan Hovda NOR
Patrick Jaberg SUI
Nick Kastelein AUS
Kirill Kotshegarov EST
Jaroslav Kovacic SLO
Christian Kramer GER
Sam Laidlow FRA
Freddy Lampret ZAF
Markus Liebelt GER
Mathias Lyngsoe Petersen DEN
Santiago Martinez Torres ESP
Justin Metzler USA
Jeremy Morel FRA
Mikkel Mortensen DEN
Sebastian Najmowicz POL
Marek Nemcik SVK
Daniel Niederreiter AUT
Stefan Overmars NED
Toni Pallares Grima ESP
Domenico Passuello ITA
Sam Pictor GBR
Kristian Quintans Dominguez ESP
Sebastien Rodriguez FRA
Guillem Rojas ESP
Emilio Sampedro ESP
Elliot Smales GBR
Rasmus Svenningsson SWE
Kevin Thewes GER
Pacome Thibault-Lopez FRA
Ivan Tutukin RUS
Jon Ander Uribarri Ormaza ESP
Frederik Van Lierde BEL
Bert Verbeke BEL
Nacho Villarruel ESP
Thiago Vinhal BRA
Andrej Vistica CRO
Robert Wilkowiecki POL

Female Race Participants

Name Nation
Ewa Bugdol POL
Federica De Nicola ITA
Dimity-Lee Duke AUS
Julia Gajer GER
Katharina Grohmann GER
Claire Hann GBR
Heini Hartikainen FIN
Pleuni Hooijman NED
Simona Krivankova CZE
Kinsey Laine USA
Candice Mizon FRA
Angela Naeth CAN
Anna Noguera ESP
Antonina Reznikov ISR
Zeljka Saban CRO
Francesca Sanjana GBR
Celine Schaerer SUI
Sara Svensk SWE
Annika Timm GER
Merce Tusell ESP
Katrien Verstuyft BEL
Gabriella Zelinka HUN
Laura Zimmermann GER

Kristian Hogenhaug

At Ironman Hamburg, 27-year-old Danish athlete Kristian Hogenhaug had taken the T2 lead with the best bike split, but I expected that the more experienced athletes just three minutes behind him would be able to take the win. Andreas Raelert and Ruedi Wild were able to reduce Kristian’s lead to just over one minute after 10k, but then something unexpected happened: The gap didn’t change much in the second of four run loops, Andi was forced to drop out and Kristian extended his lead to Ruedi back up to three minutes. At the end of the marathon,  Kristian took his first Ironman win, and a gap of five minutes to second-place finisher Ruedi Wild allowed him to enjoy the finish chute, not sure whether to laugh or cry and ending up doing both at the same time.

Kristian Finish Line

Photo: Kristian grabbing the winner’s tape at IM Hamburg (Credit: Ingo Kutsche)

In the press conference after the race, Kristian just stated that when he started to do triathlon Ironman winners were super-human to him and that he couldn’t believe that he had been able to take the win in Hamburg. Following a brief chat in Hamburg we’ve exchanged a few emails, so here are some more details about Kristian, his development over the last few years, his Hamburg race and the goals for Kona and beyond.


Thorsten: Let’s get some “technical stuff” out of the way first. In Danish, your last name is spelled Høgenhaug, what’s the best way to transcribe that for English and other languages that don’t have the extra umlauts?

Kristian: Normally we use “oe” to substitute “ø”. But I think Hogenhaug is much easier for people to pronounce, so let’s stick with that.

T: What’s your triathlon background? Which sports did you enjoy while growing up?

K: I have done a ton of different sports. I was into taekwondo, where I won some national titles as a kid, and then later on Badminton where I never really shinned. I have always been very fascinated by cycling and Bjarne Riis, our danish rider at the time, so after 7th grade I bought a road bike and rode quite a bit during that summer. But then I got introduced to the computer game “World of Warcraft” and I pretty much stopped during sports until I graduated from high school in 2010. I am a nerd by nature, so when I’m into something I am 100% – and during this time, it was gaming. In 2011 I started at a Danish folk high school, a school some people live at during their gap year. This one had a focus on sports. I pretty much stopped gaming and got introduced to swimming along with triathlon. One of our teachers had done an Ironman, and he was like a god to us. From then on I was hooked! Along with my studies in sports science at Aarhus University, I raced triathlon as an age grouper. I did my first Ironman in Copenhagen in 2012 in 9h43min. [In the Challenge Copenhagen list Kristian is shown with a 9:33, but he thinks something went wrong with his timing chip and that he started in a different wave than the results indicate.] In 2016 I qualified for Hawaii where I placed second in the 25 to 29 agegroup. 2017 was my first year racing in the pro ranks. So I am pretty much a gamer who turned his interest from computer to triathlon.

Race Date Swim Bike Run Total Rank in Race
Challenge Copenhagen 2012-08-11 01:01:23 04:48:16 03:46:38 09:43:41 5 (M18-24)
IM Frankfurt 2013-07-07 00:58:12 05:00:54 04:08:25 10:12:29 10 (M18-24)
IM Copenhagen 2015-08-23 00:56:13 04:33:22 DNF
IM Frankfurt 2016-07-03 00:54:51 04:31:50 03:10:47 08:42:57 1 (M25-29)
IM Hawaii 2016-10-08 00:55:53 04:48:00 3:14:39 09:06:40 2 (M25-29)

Table: Kristian’s Ironman Results as an Agegrouper

T: In my database I have four IM results for you in 2018 – two podiums, but also a DNF. How happy were you with your racing that year?

K: My 2018 season went above expectations. I had a terrible race in Texas 2018 (probably overtrained) but then had a near-perfect build-up to Copenhagen. [Kristian modestly skips his second place in 8:02:53, posting the fastest bike split as in almost all of his Pro races.] I decided to race Almere three weeks later, where I also had a very good race. [Again he “forgets” to mention that he finished third, with a bike split that was just slower than Cameron Wurf’s.] One of my good friends wanted to race IM Italy, and I decided to join him on the trip and do Italy, but drop out in T2, as this would have been the third IM in six weeks. So that was a planned DNF 🙂

Race Date Swim Bike Run Total Rank in Race
Challenge Denmark Half 2017-06-10 00:26:57 02:04:51 01:20:52 03:55:35 6
Challenge Almere 2017-09-10 00:55:11 04:13:25 02:56:12 08:08:40 4
IM Texas 2018-04-28 00:54:55 04:11:31 02:59:33 08:11:49 17
Challenge Denmark Half 2018-06-09 00:25:03 DNF
ITU Long Distance 2018-07-14 00:40:48 02:52:10 01:52:44 05:29:38 7
IM Copenhagen 2018-08-19 00:51:48 04:15:01 02:51:11 08:02:53 2
Challenge Almere 2018-09-08 00:54:56 04:13:50 02:50:22 08:03:31 3
IM Italy 2018-09-22 00:52:28 04:40:02 DNF

Table: Kristian’s Pro Results in 2017 and 2018

T: What was the plan for 2019? It seems you were getting ready for IM Austria, but then you DNF’d there and went to Hamburg instead?

K: 2019 started with a surprising fourth place [at ITU Long Distance Worlds] in Pontevedra and a second [at the half-distance Challenge race] in  Herning. Both of them were done without specific training, so I knew that I was on point to something good. Klagenfurt was my A+ race. With the lead-up, I knew I had a good chance of battling for the win. Sadly I felt terrible in the last ten days leading up to the race and race-pace felt super hard (probably overtrained). On race day I struggled all the way, and after 10 km on the run I literally couldn’t move my legs faster than 5:30 pace, so I decided to call it a day. After a few days Hamburg was on my mind, this time though with the focus on getting fresh. Volume was lowered but with increased intensity, especially on the bike. I started to clock some of my best bike sessions ever.

Race Date Swim Bike Run Total Rank in Race
ITU Long Distance 2019-05-04 00:21:47 02:50:57 01:54:16 05:12:09 4
Challenge Denmark Half 2019-06-08 00:26:37 02:02:38 01:16:41 03:50:37 2
IM Austria 2019-07-07 00:52:25 04:26:36 DNF
IM Hamburg 2019-07-28 00:52:03 04:17:29 02:54:03 08:11:26 1

Table: Kristian’s Pro Results in 2019

T: What was your goal going into Hamburg, and how was race day from your end?

K: I didn’t go into Hamburg with the intention to compete for the win, actually I wanted it to be a consolation race for IM Klagenfurt, Austria was quite hard on my self-confidence. The goal was to get a good swim, which was mentally important for me, then try to bike very hard until I would catch the front pack, and then sit in until the run and see how I could do. I normally bike all the way by my self, so wanted to see what I could do on fresher legs. Other than that I didn’t have a goal.

Kristian T1

Photo: Kristian grabbing his bike after the swim. (Credit: TriRating)

The startlist looked terrifying with some decent bikers and very good runners. I caught the front pack after 2h 14 min. I burned some matches to bridge the gap, but I quickly felt the benefit of sitting in a good group. I freshened up a bit, and after 35 min in the pack I went to the front and settled into my 70.3 pace for 15 minutes. When I looked back, they were gone – which surprised me quite a bit! On the small climbs I had seen them stand up on the pedals, which in my perspective meant that they were all struggling just a bit, but I was still very surprised that I had opened up a gap. Coming into T2 I was very happy with a three-minute lead. I had ridden seven minutes faster than the legend Andreas Raelert which got me pretty hyped.

Kristin Bike

Photo: Kristian working hard on the bike (Credit: Ingo Kutsche)

I did some quick mental arithmetic and thought that I could run 4:00 min/km, they are probably gonna run 3:45 min/km, so by km 10 they should pass me. My hope was that they would burn some matches in the attempt to bridge the gap, and then maybe I was capable of running with them. It never happened though. Suddenly we were running the same pace, so I knew they struggled quite a bit. But the gap had gone down to 1:30 minutes. I still felt very good at this point – to me, the key to a good off-the-bike run in an Ironman is that the first ten km have to feel like a recovery run, then when you really start to struggle the pace won’t drop dramatically – it will just get a lot harder. I know that I can run a decent marathon after a very hard bike. And I think that the run splits explain the race dynamics. The run course isn’t that hard, but the run times are quite “slow”. That just speaks HOW HARD we all went on the bike. To be honest, I never ever thought that I would run the fastest run split – a nice surprise.

Kristian Run

Photo: Kristian on the run in Hamburg. (Credit: TriRating)

T: You’ve raced Hamburg with a “blank race kit”. What sponsors do you have at this point, and do you think the win will generate some more interest?

K: I have a clothing sponsor and some smaller ones, but nothing big. I do hope that it will change. An Ironman win is very good when you have to negotiate sponsor deals – at least I hope! I hope that this can lead to a smaller work-load, so that I can focus even more on training and recovery. As of now I am actually trying to contact different brands, to see if they are interested in a cooperation 🙂 Wish me luck!

T: Now that you’ve accepted your Kona slot, how does the rest of the year look for you? Will you do some specific work in order to deal with the Kona heat and humidity?

K: I have a master of science in sports science (graduated in December 2018). I am very much into training physiology, nutrition, and right now I try to science the sh*t out of heat acclimation. I’m going to prepare here in Denmark. But I am probably gonna spend some time in a little tent with a heater and humidifier to simulate conditions that are even worse than in Hawaii. I have seen some quite interesting studies on it, they showed very promising results. I am going to do one more race before Hawaii. I race really good three weeks after an Ironman. So I am going to race Challenge Almere in September, four weeks out from Hawaii. Then I’ll have two weeks of a very hard heat acclimation protocol (in Denmark) and then fly to Hawaii 10 to 14 days prior to the race. I’m really looking forward to going full nerd-mode on the heat thing :-D. I was in Hawaii in 2016 as an agegrouper, where I also did a lot of studying on heat and cooling strategies. It went very good in the heat and humidity, but I also gained A LOT of experience on how to tackle it even better.

T: What are your expectations for your first Pro race in Kona and the next season?

K: In 2017 I made a 5-year plan. That included a Hawaii qualification in 2020 and a Top 10 in 2022. So I’m already ahead of the plan, it’s really crazy! The dream-goal this year is a Top 15 result – I would be over the moon if that happened. Experience is important, for sure racing in the pro field is something different than as an agegrouper. For now a career goal (based on the 5-year plan) is a Top 10 before 2023. After those five years, I’ll revise the goals. But for now, that is what is achievable and what I will focus on 🙂

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