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We Noticed: (Insanely) Competitive IRONMAN Texas Field, Matt Hauser Steps Up to T100 and more

Kat Matthews will be looking for a four-peat in Texas. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

The first full-distance IRONMAN event in North America takes place at The Woodlands, Texas, and will once again feature an incredible field. The IRONMAN Texas North American Championship will offer US$175,000 along with six pro qualifying slots per gender for Kona, so it’s hardly a wonder that the start list includes over 100 pros. What seems to make this one a bit different, though, is the quality of the fields. The women’s race features three of the biggest names in IRONMAN racing along with a bunch of women we’d normally consider favourites for the win, while the men’s field includes last year’s Nice Norwegian podium, along with a who’s who of the sport’s biggest names.

Matthews 4-Peat?

While it seems crazy to expect anyone other than Kat Matthews to win the women’s race (she’s won the last three three Texas races, is the only woman to have won the IRONMAN Pro Series and arrives in The Woodlands having won IRONMAN New Zealand and 70.3 Geelong), the Brit will be facing last year’s Kona champ Solveig Løvseth and American Taylor Knibb, who has also won her first two races of 2026 – T100 Gold Coast and 70.3 Oceanside. Last year Matthews handily beat Knibb in Texas, and five weeks later would beat Løvseth in Hamburg (second to the Norwegian’s third with the both finishing behind Germany’s Laura Philipp). Add to that Matthews’ impressive performances in her first two IRONMAN Pro Series races and she’s definitely the pre-race favourite heading into Texas. There’s nothing like a motivated Taylor Knibb, though, and based on her 2025 season, it would appear that the American is very motivated to get things figured out on the full-distance front in 2026. A strong finish (which, when you’re at Knibb’s level, pretty much means a win) will be important to Knibb in order to arrive in Kona with the confidence to get all the way to the line this year, so she has a bit more riding on a big day than the other two, one would imagine.

Here’s the other thing – there are lots of IRONMAN champs in the field who will be more than happy to cruise on ahead should any (or all) of the “big three” falter – Kiwi Hannah Berry, Austria’s Lisa Perterer, Sweden’s Sara Svensk, Spain’s Marta Sanchez and Americans Jackie Hering and Danielle Lewis would normally be prohibitive podium favourites. You can also add to the mix Aussie Grace Thek, who is making her long-awaited full-distance debut.

WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib NumberFirst NameLast NameCountry Represented 
F1KatMatthewsUnited Kingdom
F2SolveigLøvsethNorway
F3TaylorKnibbUnited States
F4HannahBerryNew Zealand
F5LisaPertererAustria
F6SaraSvenskSweden
F7MartaSanchezSpain
F8JackieHeringUnited States
F9DanielleLewisUnited States
F10GraceThekAustralia
F11IndiaLeeUnited Kingdom
F12JanaUderstadtGermany
F13LottieLucasUnited Arab Emirates
F14KateCurranUnited Kingdom
F15RachelZilinskasUnited States
F16GabrielleLumkesUnited States
F17JohannaAhrensGermany
F18AnnamarieStrehlowUnited States
F19JoannaRyterSwitzerland
F20OliviaDietzelUnited States
F21LeslieHomolUnited States
F22SarahKarpinskiUnited States
F23MargaritaRyanUnited States
F24KatieRemondAustralia
F26CarolynOlsenUnited States
F27RebeccaKawaokaUnited States

IRONMAN World Champ Smorgasbord

Will we see another Norwegian podium sweep in Texas? Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Only one of the winners of the last five IRONMAN World Championship races won’t be competing in Texas – 2023 Nice champion Sam Laidlow. In the field you’ve got 2022 St. George champ (officially the 2021 world championship) Kristian Blummenfelt, 2022 Kona champ Gustav Iden, 2024 Kona winner Patrick Lange and last year’s Nice champion Casper Stornes. As if that’s not enough firepower to add to the excitement, there’s Marten Van Riel (fourth in Nice last year), Jonas Schomburg (sixth in Nice) and two-time defending IRONMAN 70.3 world champion Jelle Geens, who is making his full-distance debut.

But there’s more! Magnus Ditlev (runner-up in Kona in 2024) appears as number 14 on the start list and he’l be racking his bike next to American Sam Long, with Canadian Lionel Sanders a couple of spots over. There’s 2024 Kona runner-up Rudy Von Berg, fellow American and four-time Texas champ Matt Hanson (who is fresh off a podium finish at IRONMAN New Zealand), Spain’s Antonio Lopez and Dane Kristian Høgenhaug. This men’s field feels so much like a world championship that a three-time IRONMAN champ like France’s Leon Chevalier sits way down on the “mention” category, as do Americans Ben Kanute and Jason West. Ditto for Aussie Cameron Wurf and another multiple IRONMAN champ, Kiwi Mike Phillips.

There are 82 men registered at this point, making this a considerably larger field than we’ll see in Kona, so get ready for some fireworks – I’ll be in Texas to cover all the action.

MEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib NumberFirst NameLast NameCountry Represented 
M1KristianBlummenfeltNorway
M2CasperStornesNorway
M3PatrickLangeGermany
M4GustavIdenNorway
M5MartenVan RielBelgium
M6JonasSchomburgGermany
M7AntonioBenito LopezSpain
M8RudyVon BergUnited States
M9NickThompsonAustralia
M10JelleGeensBelgium
M11MattHansonUnited States
M12KristianHøgenhaugDenmark
M13MikePhillipsNew Zealand
M14MagnusDitlevDenmark
M15SamLongUnited States
M16MattKerrNew Zealand
M17LionelSandersCanada
M18MathiasLyngsø PetersenDenmark
M19LeonChevalierFrance
M20LeonardArnoldGermany
M21JonasHoffmannGermany
M22PaulSchusterGermany
M23JasonWestUnited States
M24VincentLuisFrance
M25KacperStepniakPoland
M26AndyKruegerUnited States
M27JacksonLaundryCanada
M28BenKanuteUnited States
M29JanStratmannGermany
M30RobertKallinSweden
M31KieranLindarsUnited Kingdom
M32MariusBjerkesetNorway
M33ZackCooperUnited Kingdom
M34CameronWurfAustralia
M35FilipeAzevedoPortugal
M36MatthewCollinsUnited Kingdom
M38CameronMainUnited Kingdom
M39AndreaSalvisbergSweden
M40ArnaudGuillouxFrance
M41NicholasChaseUnited States
M42LukeJonesUnited States
M43OgnjenStojanovicSerbia
M44ConnorWeaverUnited States
M45TomaszSzalaPoland
M46TomVaelenBelgium
M47EmilHolmDenmark
M48JohnKilleenUnited States
M49FedericoScarabinoUruguay
M50BrockHoelCanada
M51MathieuMerlandFrance
M52DavidReynoldsUnited States
M53LukasStahlGermany
M54ElliotBachUnited States
M55SamuelBöttingerGermany
M56RomainRezsohazyBelgium
M57JamieHayesUnited States
M58PamphielPareynBelgium
M59SimonShiUnited States
M60AlmogElazaryIsrael
M61BradBischoffUnited States
M62DriesMatthysBelgium
M63MitchWismansNetherlands
M64AdamFeighUnited States
M65Ole-bernardFuskevågNorway
M66MattJacksonUnited States
M67MichaelArishitaUnited States
M68ScottSteenbergDenmark
M69AlbertAskengrenSweden
M70JanKepinskiPoland
M71RobertWilkowieckiPoland
M72MatthewRichardUnited States
M73ConnorReadmanUnited States
M74JasonPohlCanada
M75StrahinjaTrakicSerbia
M76AlexIonRomania
M77LeventeLukacsHungary
M78CoryMayfieldUnited States
M79MarkSaroniUnited States
M80JasonQuinnUnited States
M81JulianBeckerGermany
M82FraserMinnicanUnited Kingdom

Matt Hauser Makes T100 Debut in Singapore

Matt Hauser wins WTCS Hamburg in 2025. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

The T100 race in Singapore promises to feature an interesting mix of, well, T100 specialists and World Triathlon Championship Series (WTCS) stars, including last year’s T100 Triathlon World Tour champion Hayden Wilde, who appears to be hedging his bets on both Olympic qualifying and big-money middle-distance racing this year. Wilde will face off against last year’s WTCS champion, Matt Hauser, who had originally planned to make his distance debut last year at IRONMAN 70.3 Wollongong, only to have his race end when he snapped a bolt on his handlebars a few kilometres into the bike.

Hauser, who finished seventh at the Paris Games before going on a tear at WTCS races last year, Wilde (silver medalist) and reigning Olympic champ Alex Yee are all going to be doing some sort of distance efforts at the end of this month – Hauser and Wilde will be taking each other on in Singapore on April 25, while Yee will be pacing countryman Emile Cairess (who did the same for him in Valencia last year) at the London Marathon the next day.

There are enough Olympic-distance specialists in the field to make the race in Singapore feel like a bit of a draft-legal reunion – Frances’s Léo Bergere was third in Paris and bounced between WTCS and T100 racing last year, and his countryman Pierre Le Corre finished fourth in Paris and has made the move to long-distance racing (he finished second at Challenge Sir Bani Yas and IRONMAN New Zealand already this year). You can also add Olympic silver medalist from Rio, Henri Schoeman to that list along with Jonas Schomburg, who finished 24th in Paris and will be bouncing back from IRONMAN Texas to compete in Singapore a week later. Another name from the Paris Games is Samuel Dickinson, who supported Yee in the individual race before dropping out to conserve energy for the mixed relay, where he was part of the bronze-medal winning team. Rounding out the Olympic get-together is Aussie Jake Birtwhistle, who competed at the Tokyo Games and finished 16th.

Here’s the start list for the T100 race in Singapore:

#AthleteCountryPTO World Ranking
1Hayden WildeNew Zealand#1
2Mika NoodtGermany#3
3Mathis MargirierFrance#8
4Jonas SchomburgGermany#9
5Youri KeulenNetherlands#10
6Samuel DickinsonGreat Britain#11
7Gregory BarnabyItaly#13
8Menno KoolhaasNetherlands#14
9Wilhelm HirschGermany#20
10Kyle SmithNew Zealand#28
11Jake BirtwhistleAustralia#29
12Guillem MontielSpain#30
13Gregor PayetLuxembourg#33
14Pieter HeemeryckBelgium#38
15Sam AppletonAustralia#39
16Pierre Le CorreFrance#42
17Dylan MagnienFrance#44
18Mike PhillipsAustralia#45
19Léo BergereFrance#108
20Henri SchoemanSouth Africa#291
21Matthew HauserAustralia

Tags:

IRONMANIRONMAN Pro SeriesT100 Triathlon World Tour

Notable Replies

  1. Her full-distance debut? I don’t think so. Grace Thek already did Challenge Roth 2025, where she finished second behind Laura Philipp.

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