Portugal’s Vanessa Fernandes is the red hot favourite to win her second world championships in Vancouver on Sunday having dominated the sport in the past two years. The 22-year old has won a record 20 world cups and is a five-time European Champion.
Click here to watch footage from the 2008 Vancouver BG Triathlon World Championships.
Competition arrives from Australia in the form of 2006 under23 world champion Erin Densham and New Plymouth World Cup winner and last year’s world number two Emma Moffatt. While New Zealand sends a powerful team including Samantha Warriner who came from behind to win last year’s test event. She has been in British Columbia for the past few weeks training with good friend Jill Savege of Canada. The Beijing bound Warriner already has a world cup win after taking the Tongyeong title in South Korea. The Kiwi contingent also includes the rest of its Olympic team, Debbie Tanner and Andrea Hewitt.
Click here for full elite women’s start list
The home team Canada will have four contenders including local favourite Lauren Groves who will have plenty of support as the only Vancouver native on the elite national team. With a short hop from the island, Kirsten Sweetland, the 2006 junior world champion will be gunning for a big result as her Olympic hopes rest on the race. Same goes for her teammates Kathy Tremblay and Carolyn Murray. All need a top-8 for an automatic spot on the Canadian Olympic team, to join Groves who has already been nominated to the team.
Canada’s neighbours from the south, the United States, have also sent a fully loaded squad including Laura Bennett who took bronze behind Fernandes in Hamburg last year. As a four-time world championships medallist, Bennett is proven performer on the big stage and will look to get on the podium for a fifth time. Also wearing the red white and blue is Julie Ertel, winner of the U.S. Olympic trials and Sarah Haskins, who finished runner-up to Warriner here last year.
Sweden’s Lisa Norden has been one of the breakthrough successes from the Team BG Scholarship programme as she has collected two world cup medals in 2008 and a bronze medal at the European championships. She was crowned under23 World Champion last year and will look to make the podium in her elite debut.
The 2004 Olympic champion Kate Allen from Austria is also here and needs a solid race to earn Olympic points. The world championship is the final event in ITU’s 2-year Olympic qualifying period. Currently Austria is on the bubble to send a full team of three and is trying to chase down France in the Olympic rankings.
Click here for official website of the world championships
Click here for ITU’s world championship page for videos, photos and a recap of last year
Vanessa Fernandes savours her first world championship last year in Hamburg
Related Event: 2008 Vancouver BG Triathlon World Championships
Results: Elite Men | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Javier Gomez Noya | ESP | 01:49:48 |
2. | Bevan Docherty | NZL | 01:50:12 |
3. | Reto Hug | SUI | 01:50:17 |
4. | Hendrik De Villiers | RSA | 01:50:18 |
5. | Matthew Reed | USA | 01:50:27 |
6. | Simon Whitfield | CAN | 01:50:27 |
7. | Igor Sysoev | RUS | 01:50:28 |
8. | Tony Moulai | FRA | 01:50:31 |
9. | Paul Tichelaar | CAN | 01:50:32 |
10. | Ivan Vasiliev | RUS | 01:50:34 |
Results: Elite Women | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Helen Jenkins | GBR | 02:01:37 |
2. | Sarah Haskins | USA | 02:01:41 |
3. | Samantha Warriner | NZL | 02:02:32 |
4. | Erin Densham | AUS | 02:02:32 |
5. | Emma Moffatt | AUS | 02:02:34 |
6. | Felicity Abram | AUS | 02:03:35 |
7. | Sarah True | USA | 02:04:08 |
8. | Kate Allen | AUT | 02:04:14 |
9. | Debbie Tanner | NZL | 02:04:24 |
10. | Vanessa Fernandes | POR | 02:04:34 |
Results: U23 Men | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Alistair Brownlee | GBR | 01:54:37 |
2. | Gregor Buchholz | GER | 01:54:56 |
3. | Martin Van Barneveld | NZL | 01:54:59 |
4. | Todd Leckie | GBR | 01:55:12 |
5. | Alexander Bryukhankov | RUS | 01:55:36 |
6. | Lukas Salvisberg | SUI | 01:55:46 |
7. | Nils Frommhold | GER | 01:55:56 |
8. | Alberto Casadei | ITA | 01:55:59 |
9. | Joshua Maeder | AUS | 01:56:09 |
10. | Tony Dodds | NZL | 01:56:10 |
Results: U23 Women | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Daniela Ryf | SUI | 02:09:30 |
2. | Jasmine Oeinck | USA | 02:10:02 |
3. | Mari Rabie | RSA | 02:11:35 |
4. | Olesya Prystayko | UKR | 02:12:51 |
5. | Barbara Riveros | CHI | 02:13:02 |
6. | Justine Whipple | USA | 02:13:08 |
7. | Yuliya Yelistratova | UKR | 02:13:32 |
8. | Renáta Koch | HUN | 02:13:55 |
9. | Sarah Fladung | GER | 02:14:25 |
10. | Kerry Spearing | IRL | 02:14:57 |
Results: Junior Men | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Vincent Luis | FRA | 00:57:06 |
2. | Denis Vasiliev | RUS | 00:57:36 |
3. | Jonathan Brownlee | GBR | 00:57:43 |
4. | Joshua Amberger | AUS | 00:57:52 |
5. | Rodrigo Gonzalez Lopez | MEX | 00:58:19 |
6. | Franz Löschke | GER | 00:58:24 |
7. | Min Ho Heo | KOR | 00:58:26 |
8. | Igor Polyanskiy | RUS | 00:58:35 |
9. | Tom Davison | NZL | 00:58:39 |
10. | David Obozil | FRA | 00:58:40 |
Results: Junior Women | |||
---|---|---|---|
1. | Kirsty Mcwilliam | GBR | 01:04:05 |
2. | Ashleigh Gentle | AUS | 01:04:43 |
3. | Zsófia Tóth | HUN | 01:04:47 |
4. | Ashley Finaughty | ZIM | 01:05:07 |
5. | Emma Jackson | AUS | 01:05:18 |
6. | Alena Stawczynski | GER | 01:05:22 |
7. | Claudia Rivas | MEX | 01:05:23 |
8. | Maaike Caelers | NED | 01:05:27 |
9. | Paula Findlay | CAN | 01:05:28 |
10. | Nataliya Efremova | RUS | 01:05:32 |