I am trying to find a superlative I haven’t used in writing about Daniela Ryf in the past year. It is extremely difficult, she has been so uniquely consistent and dominant across both half and full Ironman distance for the last four years. Amazing; incredible; unbelievable; tremendous; colossal, I’ve used them all already, and I try very diligently not to be sycophantic.

The last person to beat Daniela Ryf at Kona was Mirinda Carfrae in 2014. The closest anyone has got since is Lucy Charles, last year, a distant 9 minutes behind. In 2015, she won to Rachel Joyce by 13 minutes, the next year she put 24 minutes into Carfrae in second.

Ryf cites her 2016 race as one of her best performances ever. It is easy to see why. Ryf led Carfrae by 22 minutes off the bike and then ran another two minutes into her, running a 2.56, the fastest run split of the day. Many talk about Ryf’s biking ability but she is also one of, if not the fastest women runners in Kona. It was hard for me as a competitor and is as hard for her current competition to see a way of beating someone that dominant.

With Ryf’s goal of closing the margins on the men’s field and surpassing her own past performances this year Ryf has concentrated on limiting the margin on best swimmer Lucy Charles. With less to catch up and Charles’s obvious improvement on the bike (she was able to cling to Ryf’s pace at Ironman 70.3 Worlds) we may see record times come from a scintillating two-up (12m apart). If that is the case, Ryf will start the marathon with fresher legs from some shared workload.

That race scenario depends on many factors, mechanical and health included. Charles may have other ideas than working with her nemesis Ryf to set up a run race that she in all probability will lose. It takes a brave athlete to not settle for second against Ryf. It is exactly what is needed to spice things up in the women’s race.

A race record time at Ironman Frankfurt; an Ironman 70.3 world-best time at Ironman 70.3 Gdynia; claiming her fourth Ironman 70.3 World title last month – Ryf is in her best form this year. My husband is her training partner leading into Kona. His verdict; she is happier, fitter and faster than before.

All this expectation, this pressure, this rhetoric could shake anyone, and Ryf will as always have to navigate the melee of race week and the media frenzy around her but she is good at that and will cope well. An in-form Ryf means that, once again, we would have to look at injury, illness or mechanical failure as her main opponents to victory on Alii Drive.

Let’s not hand medals out prematurely though, champions are human and as such, susceptible such to human afflictions. Frodeno is currently out injured. Don crashed two days before the race last year. Mirinda Carfrae crashed in race week, leading to her withdrawal in 2016. Chrissie Wellington’s late withdrawal in 2010 lurks lucid in the back of our minds too. Ryf, as much as anyone, knows her own vulnerability and claims no title before it is won. She will just be focusing on a low 50ish swim and a 4.40ish bike split, followed by a low 2.50ish marathon. No bells, no whistles, no secrets.

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Lauren Parker Leads Bahrain Victorious 13’s Medal Haul at World Championships

Lauren Parker Leads Bahrain Victorious 13’s Medal Haul at World Championships

The Bahrain Victorious 13 captured an impressive medal haul at the World Triathlon Championships in Wollongong, Australia this weekend.

Lauren Parker led the campaign, winning two medals including her fifth paratriathlon world title.

The paratriathlon races opened the elite competition on Saturday, where Parker once again proved untouchable. She led from the front, exiting the 750-metre swim first, hammering the 20-kilometre handbike leg with the day’s fastest split, and then powering through the 5-kilometre wheelchair run to cross the line 70 seconds clear of her nearest rival.

Unbeaten all year, Parker’s home victory carried extra meaning as she reclaimed the crown she relinquished last season.

“Everyone was so supportive out there and it definitely made me push a little bit harder,” Parker said post-race. “I wanted to get back on top again and I really worked hard for this one and I’m just happy to get it done.”

She also revealed her next sporting ambition: to qualify for the Winter Paralympic Games, with ongoing training in cross-country skiing and biathlon.

On Sunday, Parker added to her tally with a silver medal in the Para Mixed Relay World Championships, helping the Australian team to a podium finish.

In the men’s elite race, Vasco Vilaça placed fifth to secure the overall World Triathlon Championship Series bronze medal, returning to the world podium for the first time since earning silver at the one-day championship in Hamburg in 2020.

Emma Lombardi also delivered a standout performance, claiming bronze in the women’s race – her best finish of the season – and vaulting seven places to 11th overall in the Series standings. She swam into the pointy end on the 1.5-kilometre swim alongside compatriot Cassandre Beaugrand, then attacked on the 40-kilometre bike to lead onto the 10-kilometre run where she battled against the eventual winner and series champion Lisa Tertsch and a hard-charging Bianca Seregni to hold onto the final spot on the podium.

Beaugrand, who had stayed in the lead pack throughout the swim and bike, was forced to withdraw on the run to conclude her season ranked seventh overall.

The results in Wollongong wrap up the Bahrain Victorious 13’s short course season. The team now turns its attention to middle distance racing with the Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Marbella, Spain and Ironman 70.3 Bahrain on the horizon, as well as the T100 Tour’s final two stops in Dubai and Qatar.

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Kat Matthews Runs to Silver and a Record Finish in Kona

Kat Matthews Runs to Silver and a Record Finish in Kona

Kat Matthews led the charge for the Bahrain Victorious 13 on Saturday, taking her third IRONMAN World Championship silver medal at the historic final all-women’s race in Kona, Hawaii. The British star also set a new run course record on the way to her first-ever...

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