NEWS

Holland victorious on Canadian soil on a glorious day for the British

By Holly Bird | 28 Jul, 2018
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On a warm Edmonton evening British athlete Vicky Holland broke the tape for her second win of the 2018 season in 2018 WTS Edmonton.

On a warm Edmonton evening British athlete Vicky Holland broke the tape for her second win of the 2018 season in 2018 WTS Edmonton.  Holland led a fantastic day for the British squad, with her teammates claiming the third, fourth and fifth place.

Holland was a dominant force in the race from start to finish, coming out of the water in the lead pack, maintaining a lead pack position on the bike and breaking away from a cluster of athletes on the run to secure the gold medal position.

Holland is no stranger to Edmonton having raced there multiple times and winning the 2015 event in blustery and cold weather conditions.

“I was really riding high after Leeds, and I put in a really good block of training. It was unfortunate I had a crash in Hamburg, and I felt very angry and frustrated,” Holland says reflectively. “I take a race at a time. I try not to think about leading the series too much. Katie has had such a strong season, she hasn’t messed up any races.”

Coming in behind Holland was Australian Ashleigh Gentle, who has seen the podium in Mixed Relay this year but not in an elite women’s race.

“My season started with a crash in Abu Dhabi and then a fourth-place finish in Yokohama. I am thrilled to be here in second place. Before the race, I recognized that this course is one that might suit me, that hill is really tough.” Gentle laughs. “I was really happy to catch on to that front group.”

Coming in third, fourth and fifth respectively was a trio of British athletes that included Georgia Taylor-Brown, Jessica Learmonth and Jodie Stimpson. Georgia ran a strong to pull away from the Learmonth and Stimpson for the final podium spot. 

Taylor-Brown, who is having a breakout season of elite racing, says she was surprised to find herself in the third spot.

“It’s amazing to be up here (on the podium). It was scary heading into transition first, I wanted to get out of there and go hard.  There was a point where a break started happening and I thought, ‘I need to go and bridge back up to the leading two’.”

The race started with American Summer Cook leading the 750m swim on William Hawrelak Park, showing that she is one of the stronger swimmers in the field, only followed by British triathlete Learmonth and Vittoria Lopes (BRA). The three of them crossed the long transition maintaining a small gap and tried to break away on the first meters of the bike course, but Cook and Lopes realised pretty soon that they didn’t have the legs to confront the hill pushing hard, and in the first lap the three of them were engulfed by the chase group.

With some strong riders in the lead pack, including the four British, Katie Zaferes, Taylor Spivey, Gentle, Rachel Klamer or Andrea Hewitt, they managed the six laps with some technical turns quite easily and without major problems.

And the big group entered the second transition together, with all to be decided in the last 5km run. Under the Edmonton sun, Holland led the group out of transition and started dropping athletes. Klamer, Cook and Hewitt couldn’t keep up with the frantic rhythm in the first kilometre, and only the four Brits, Gentle and Zaferes were able to maintain their hopes for the podium places. Halfway through the run, Zaferes started to struggle to keep up and fell behind a few meters. One kilometer after, it was Stimpson and Learmonth who fell behind as well.

With the leading trio looking fresh in the last kilometer, it was finally Holland who had the legs to break away from Gentle with 500 meters to go, a final push that the Aussie was not able to follow, to cross the finish line in the first place, followed by Gentle, Taylor-Brown, Learmonth and Stimpson. Zaferes, who finished in the sixth place, is still the leader of the Series.

 

 

Related Event: 2018 ITU World Triathlon Edmonton
27 - Jul, 2018 • event pageall results
Results: Elite Men
1. Mario Mola ESP 00:51:15
2. Kristian Blummenfelt NOR 00:51:18
3. Jacob Birtwhistle AUS 00:51:22
4. Fernando Alarza ESP 00:51:24
5. Jonathan Brownlee GBR 00:51:25
6. Vincent Luis FRA 00:51:30
7. Marten Van Riel BEL 00:51:59
8. Richard Murray RSA 00:52:06
9. Andreas Schilling DEN 00:52:10
10. Sam Ward NZL 00:52:13
Results: Elite Women
1. Vicky Holland GBR 00:56:51
2. Ashleigh Gentle AUS 00:57:02
3. Georgia Taylor-Brown GBR 00:57:08
4. Jessica Learmonth GBR 00:57:12
5. Jodie Stimpson GBR 00:57:14
6. Katie Zaferes USA 00:57:30
7. Andrea Hansen NZL 00:57:38
8. Summer Rappaport USA 00:57:38
9. Verena Steinhauser ITA 00:57:44
10. Taylor Spivey USA 00:57:50