June 15, 2025

Taylor Knibb Puts In Sensational Performance In Vancouver T100 Triathlon To Take Top Step

Vancouver, Canada: American star Taylor Knibb returned to the top step at the inaugural Vancouver T100 Triathlon in front of a big crowd at a stunning Jericho Beach Park course. 

The Olympian’s stellar performance on the bike was matched only by Great Britain’s Jess Learmonth, which earned the pair almost 5 minutes on the rest of the field. 

But while Knibb went on to secure her first T100 win of the year, Learmonth was agonisingly caught in the last kilometer of the 18km run by Switzerland’s Olympic silver medallist Julie Derron. The Brit hanging on to third place to secure her first T100 podium. 

Canada’s Paula Findlay finished in eighth place after receiving a penalty on the bike leg. 

Key Quotes 

Taylor Knibb: 

“My run felt a lot better than San Francisco. My coach made a few changes to my training to help me and it really helped, so thank you. It was really fun racing with Jess. I’m really pleased she got a Hot Shot [for the T100 series] and she made me better out there and I was really grateful for it. It was a fun race, it’s so much better having Jess. Like on the technical section I wasn’t taking it as well as she was, so I ended up following her line and wheel and that made me better. That is the fun thing about a lap course, is that you can learn on each lap and get better. She was really strong on that section and I was better at others and I’m glad that we could trade off each other.”

On staying ahead on the run: “There’s always doubts and anything can happen in a race so I treated it step by step and you focus on yourself.”

On the 100km format: “The distance is fantastic, the format is fantastic, the non draft race but also the laps – and it’s really professional.”

Julie Derron: 

“I gave myself quite a bit of work after the swim. My swim was terrible today, I don’t know what happened and then I found myself a bit in no man’s land on the bike, but I just had to focus and keep pushing away and onto the run I knew I was aiming for the podium and I was just hunting down Jess, which really kept me honest and kept me going all out until the finish line. So to come second when things didn’t go that well, I’m really pleased with. After Singapore the goal was to get back on the podium in these two races [San Francisco and Vancouver] and I’ve done that so I couldn’t ask for more.”

Jessica Learmonth: 

On her third place: “I can’t even tell you, I’m so delighted. So shocked. I can’t believe I’m stood here having got third, honestly. The difference here to how I felt on the run in San Francisco in just two weeks, is like…I’m shocked. I don’t really look at other people, I just focus on myself and then I saw her [Derron] at the dead turn on the last lap and I know straight away and then she sprinted past me and I thought, no, there’s nothing in the tank.”

“It was good fun at the front with Taylor on the bike. I really enjoyed it. Riding with her and being petrified of the red light and having to go past her, cos going past Taylor’s not easy!”

Paula Findlay, who finished eighth:

“It was really cool to race in Canada and have such great crowd support and around such a beautiful venue – and the great weather. I got a penalty which I didn’t deserve and that was kinda disappointing. But I worked through it and tried really hard and just used the crowd to get around. 

Big Edmonton Oilers ice hockey fan [who play the fifth game in their Stanley Cup final against the Florida Panthers later this evening with the score tied at 2-2], Findlay said: The Oilers inspire me in a lot of ways. They are so tough and I’ll be cheering for them tonight. Go hard Oilers!”

Mayor of Vancouver Ken Sim: 

“Oh my god, this T100 is absolutely amazing, it’s world class and it’s something we’re embracing as the city of Vancouver. The athletes just blow us away and speaking to the people in the crowd, they’ve been blown away by this event and I think there’s going to be even more people wanting to get involved next year. The race conditions this year were perfect, you have the backdrop of the city, we even had some orcas in the water. What a place to have an event and we love people from outside of the city to come to Vancouver and see what we get to see everyday.”

In A Nutshell

The USA’s Taylor Knibb returned to the top-spot with a sensational bike leg – matched only by Great Britain’s Jess Learmonth – that earned the pair almost 5 minutes on the rest of the field. Knibb secured victory on the run, winning her 5th T100 title by over 2 minutes with Switzerland’s Julie Derron running up 4 places on the run to take 2nd. Learmonth held strong to claim her first T100 podium finish.

How The Race Unfolded 

In the women’s race, Lucy Charles-Barclay (GBR) took the 2km swim out hard with Jess Learmonth (GBR), Wildcard Maya Kingma (NED), Holly Lawrence (GBR), 2024 T100 World Champion Taylor Knibb (USA) and Taylor Spivey (USA) strung out behind but in contact. 

Wildcard Alice Betto (ITA) was in no-mans land while Ashleigh Gentle (AUS) led the main chase group, around 90-seconds behind by the 1km split, trailed by the likes of Paula Findlay (CAN) and San Francisco T100 winner Julie Derron (SWI).

Out of the water with a 2:40 lead on the chasing group, Learmonth quickly took the lead while Knibb was soon in 2nd place. From there, the pair locked together to power away from the rest of the field.

The race settled into a groove with the leaders pulling ever further ahead with only Paula Findlay’s 1-minute drafting penalty disrupting the flow. At the half-way mark of the bike, Knibb and Learmonth led Charles-Barclay by 2:24, Kingma and Lawrence another 20 seconds behind. Julie Derron was up to 6th place, but 4-minutes in arrears, Spivey at 4:20 and Gentle at 4:43, the last athlete within 5-minutes of the lead.

With 20km to go, Charles-Barclay and Kingma were trailing Knibb and Learmonth by 3:48, Lawrence around another 20-seconds back and Derron another 1:10 behind Lawrence.

Off the bike and Knibb was first onto the 18km run, distancing Learmonth out of transition. Learmonth was well out of sight by the time the trio of Charles-Barclay, Kingma and Lawrence entered transition, 4:44 behind while Derron was another 40 seconds back.

Charles-Barclay ran up to 3rd but before long, Derron’s ferocious running pace saw her make the pass and into the podium positions – but still 3:38 behind Learmonth with 10km to go. Meanwhile, Knibb was holding strong at the front with a 1-minute lead.

With Knibb 3km from the finish, her lead to Learmonth was 2:08 and unassailable. For the remaining podium positions, the splits showed it was set to be a tight battle.

Nothing could stop Knibb’s path to a 5th T100 title and the American crossed the line well clear of the rest in 3:30:50 and up to 2nd in the T100 Race To Qatar standings after only 2 races.

A little way back on the course, Derron finally caught and passed Learmonth to take 2nd place – for the 4th time – to Knibb, 2:06 behind. That moved the Swiss star up to 2nd in the T100 standings.

Learmonth came home 3rd, clearly delighted with her first T100 podium finish 2:29 behind Knibb.

Lucy Charles-Barclay, finishing out of the podium placings in a T100 race for the first time, took 4th place while Gentle rounded out the top-5 after a strong run.

Position Athlete Finish T100 Race To Qatar Points Prize Money
1 T Knibb 3:30:50 35 $25,000
2 J Derron 3:32:55 29 $17,000
3 J Learmonth 3:33:18 26 $13,000
4 L Charles-Barclay 3:35:49 23 $10,500
5 A Gentle 3:37:23 20 $9,000
6 H Lawrence 3:38:09 18 $8,000
7 T Spivey 3:40:05 16 $7,000
8 P Findlay 3:41:15 14 $6,000
9 L Byram 3:41:50 12 $5,000
10 D Kleiser 3:43:39 11 $4,500
11 E Salthouse 3:44:56 10 $4,000
12 A Betto 3:45:34 9 $3,500
13 G Thek 3:46:10 8 $3,000
14 C Perez 3:47:28 7 $2,500
15 M McDonald 3:48:44 6 $2,000
16 M Kingma 3:50:23 5 $1,500
17 M De Boer 3:52:16 4 $1,250
18 K Kivioja 3:58:16 3 $1,000
19 L Becharas 4:04:56 2 $750

T100 weekends are ‘festivals of multisport’ and feature a range of opportunities for amateur athletes of all levels to get involved. 1,500 amateurs started the day with a 5k Sun Up community run at 0700, followed by a yoga experience powered by lululemon. Tomorrow,  another 1,500 will take part in a 100km (2km swim, 80km bike, 18 run) and a Sprint distance (750m swim, 20km bike, 5km run). 

The battle for T100 Race To Qatar points now moves to London next on 9-10 August. 

Notes To Editors

How the 2025 T100 Triathlon World Tour works:

  • Athletes score 35 points for first place to 1 pt for 20th place 
  • The Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final has increased points to up the ante (55 pts down to 4 pts) 
  • Each athlete’s best four T100 race scores plus the Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final will count towards the women’s and men’s T100 World Championship titles
  • $250,000 USD prize fund at each T100, totalling $2,250,000 across the nine races (1st place – $25,000k; 2nd – $17,000; 3rd – $13,000 at each race)
  • The series winners following the Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final will be crowned T100 Triathlon World Champion and collect $200,000 USD from an additional total prize pool of $2,940,000
  • The T100 Contenders Rankings will pay 1st to 40th place from a total prize pool of $560,000 (1st place – $16,000; 2nd place – $15,000; 3rd place – $14,000 down to 40th place – $3,000)
  • Between the athlete contracts, T100 race prize fund, T100 Triathlon World Tour pool and the T100 Contenders Rankings, the series provides more than $8,000,000 in athlete compensation, and is distributed in a way that not only rewards the winners, but also recognises the significant achievement of racing at this level and a pathway that feeds into the T100 series

-ends- 

For Further Information: 

Anthony Scammell E: [email protected]

The PTO is a sports body that is co-owned by its professional athletes, seeking to elevate and grow the sport of triathlon and take it to the next level. Its T100 Triathlon World Tour was introduced in January 2024 and is designated by World Triathlon as the ‘official World Championship for long distance triathlon’, which is part of a 12-year strategic partnership with the sport’s international governing body. The T100 Triathlon World Tour is a season-long schedule of World Championship level races competed over 100km (2km swim, 80km bike and 18km run), where the world’s best triathletes go head-to-head in iconic locations on a global broadcast showing the races live around the world in 195+ territories, courtesy of the PTO’s partnership with Warner Bros. Discovery as well as a range of other international, regional and local broadcasters.  In 2025 these will include: Singapore (5-6 April), San Francisco (31 May-1 June), Vancouver (13-15 June), London (9-10 August), France (29-31 August), Valencia (20 September), Lake Las Vegas (25-26 October), Dubai (15-16 November) and Qatar (12-13 December) for the first Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final. T100 weekends are ‘festivals of multisport’ and feature a range of opportunities for amateur athletes of all levels to get involved. From experienced amateurs tackling the 100km distance to first-time swim, bike and run participants taking on single discipline, untimed events. For more information visit www.t100triathlon.com

 

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