Team Germany defends Mixed Relay world title to deliver Olympic warning shot to rivals

by doug.gray@triathlon.org on 14 Jul, 2024 03:51
Team Germany defends Mixed Relay world title to deliver Olympic warning shot to rivals

It was to be back-to-back world titles for Team Germany on Sunday afternoon in Hamburg, as Annika Koch brought home the gold once more after fine work from Henry Graf, Lisa Tertsch and Lasse Luhrs set up another grandstand finish in the home of German triathlon.

Once the GB challenge faded out of the final transition, it was once again between the hosts, Switzerland and New Zealand for the medals just as it had been in 2024. Koch proved untouchable once she had headed out on course for the first of two laps, and Cathia Schar this time out-sprinted Nicole Van Der Kaay to earn Switzerland the silver.

“The team did a great job and put me in the perfect position,” said Koch afterwards. “I had to give it all from the beginning. It was not easy, but I am very happy how everything turned out!”


LEG ONE

The men were out first, Canada’s Brock Hoel and GB’s Max Stapley quickest out of the blocks, Tayler Reid for New Zealand and Austria’s Martin Demuth giving chase, Belgium, Norway and Spain the final three onto their bikes.

Soon seven came together on the bike, Netherlands’ Mitch Kolkman leading them with 10s over the chasers after lap one lap, Denmark, Australia and Mexico 25s back. Jelle Geens and Max Studer were flying, but Reid muscled through to tag Ainsley Thorpe in front, USA’s Morgan Pearson handing off to Katie Zaferes 25 seconds back.


LEG TWO

An assured swim saw Maya Kingma and the Netherlands out of the water first followed by Olivia Mathias for GB and Tertsch for Germany, followed by Netherlands and Switzerland, while Hungary, USA and Canada were now trying to form an effective pack 40 seconds back.

A five-strong group of Netherlands, Great Britain, New Zealand, Switzerland and Germany were being chased by Italy’s Alice Betto and Belgium’s Claire Michel some 10 seconds off, it was now 90 seconds to Denmark and Australia after one lap of the bike.

It was a good T2 for Mathias, Derron out last but soon working back to just off the front as Tertsch handed over a useful lead to Lasse Luhrs, Kingma again gunning it just behind her to tag Niels Van Lanen, and it was Derron to Simon Westerman, Mathias to Sam Dickinson and Thorpe to Dylan McCullough as things heated up at the halfway mark.


LEG THREE

McCullough showed his Paris potential with a flying swim and led the bike just as the rain started to pour, Westermann and Luhrs for company, Dickinson suddenly 6 seconds back and chasing, now 39 seconds to the Dutch, 45 seconds to Crociani for Italy, Belgium with Arnaud Mengal now a minute off the front. 

That was how it stayed as the Kiwi brought Nicole Van Der Kaay into play with a slender lead, Dickinson handing over to Vicky Holland 6 seconds back and needing a massive swim segment to keep the dream alive.


LEG FOUR

That she did, and soon Germany, GB, New Zealand and Switzerland were riding through another downpour and biding their time for a big finish. Cathia Schar had quick work to do to get back onto the pack, but her power was never in doubt and she set the pace into the final transition.

Koch was out first by a whisker as Holland’s helmet bounced free of the box costing her precious seconds to correct and suddenly British hopes were dashed.

By the end of the first lap, the German had carved out a massive 5 second advantage over Cathia Schar, Van der kaay into third as Holland worked 15 seconds back, but as the crowd roared on their fourth hero of the day the result was no longer in doubt, Koch taking the tape and the warm embrace of her teammates, Schar and the Swiss with silver, New Zealand the bronze.


TEAM GERMANY
Henry Graf: “I was a bit worried because I didn’t have my best swim yesterday, but today it was much better. I am really happy that I could hand over to Lisa up in the front
Lisa Tertsch: “I am really happy how the whole weekend has played out and especially with today. The whole team had a great performance.”
Lasse Luhrs: “Today was my first time here in Hamburg doing a Relay. I was a bit worried after yesterday, about my run, but today I felt great. I am very happy with the whole team and with my run today.”


TEAM SWITZERLAND
Max Studer: “It was perfect for me, I could close the gap on the bike and on the run I managed to stay together with the lead group and hand over to my team mate in the right spot.”
Julie Derron: “The goal was to stay in the front for as long as possible, and I managed to do it. I am very pleased with the result today, one spot better than last year, so step by step!”
Simon Westermann: “I felt so good today, even in the swim. I am really grateful for this team.”
Cathia Schar: “It was really hard for me to manage to hold off Nicole Van Der Kaay. I just kept on pushiing and never looked back at the end. I am very happy with our second place today!”


TEAM NEW ZEALAND
Tayler Reid: “We always come to this event to hit hard. We are a small country but our sport is big for us and we are in progress. I am really happy with how we performed today, and also that I was able to outsprint Jelle (Geens), which I haven’t done in years.”
Ainsley Thorpe: “I managed to stay up in front since my teammate tagged me also in front, so I am very pleased with how we performed today.”
Dylan McCullough: “Really proud of the team for fighting the whole race and finally getting the bronze medal.”
Nicole Van Der Kaay: “Today was brutal. But the effort paid off, I am really happy and proud of this team.”


Article gallery
Related Event: 2024 World Triathlon Mixed Relay Championships Hamburg
14 Jul, 2024 • event pageall results
Results: Mixed Relay
1. Team I Germany GER 01:19:53
2. Team I Switzerland SUI 01:20:01
3. Team I New Zealand NZL 01:20:04
4. Team I Great Britain GBR 01:20:33
5. Team I Belgium BEL 01:21:41
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