2025 Men's IRONMAN World Championship Nice Field Announced

Originally published at: 2025 Men’s IRONMAN World Championship Nice Field Announced - Slowtwitch News

Patrick Lange and Sam Laidlow at the finish of the 2023 IRONMAN World Championship Nice. Photo: Donald Miralle for IRONMAN

We already had a pretty good idea of who would be competing at this year’s men’s IRONMAN World Championship in Nice, so today’s release of the bib list for the race really serves as a signal as to has dropped out of the race more than anything. Still, it’s fun to see the finalized list of those who have confirmed their attendance for the final full-distance IRONMAN World Championship in Nice, and begin our countdown to the race.

Who’s Out

Avid triathlon fans will have noticed that Lionel Sanders announced (via YouTube) he was out a few days ago – he’s still recovering from the sacral stress fracture that sidelined him earlier this year. Other men who have qualified who won’t be in Nice include Aussie Sam Appleton, Germany’s Johannes Vogel (who had announced last month that he was injured and done for the season) and Austria’s Michael Weiss. Marten Van Riel remains on the start list, although he’s still recovering from an ankle injury and has only just been able to start running, according to his social media post below.

Pre-Race Favorites

Heading into the race in Nice one has to imagine that Kristian Blummenfelt arrives as the favorite after wins earlier this year in Texas and Frankfurt, but the list of contenders is very long. Defending world champ Patrick Lange finished second the last time the men competed in Nice, while the last world championship winner on the Côte d’Azur, Sam Laidlow, has surged back into winning form with wins at Challenge Roth and IRONMAN Leeds. Magnus Ditlev finished third in Nice two years ago, then took second to Lange in Kona last year and has focussed his year on taking the world title. He started the year off with a bang with a win in South Africa, but was well back at 70.3 St. George (12th) and Frankfurt (eighth).

Rudy Von Berg was fourth in Nice two years ago, then took third in Kona last year. Is the American ready to contend for the win on “somewhat” home turf? (He grew up in the region.) France’s Leon Chevalier finished fifth in Nice two years ago, then was fourth last year in Kona. Will he continue his move up the finish list to the podium in 2025? Those are just a few of the potential men’s winners, too – the spectacular bike course and flat, fast run in Nice offer some unique dynamics for the race.

IRONMAN Pro Series

Originally launched as a way to compete with the PTO’s T100 Triathlon World Tour, the IRONMAN Pro Series has been a resounding success, with many of the sport’s to full-distance stars focusing their season around a top finish in the standings. Heading into Nice, nine of the top 10 in the series’ standings (Braden Currie didn’t nail a spot for Nice) are in the field.

While Chevalier sits at the top of the standings right now, American Matthew Marquardt, sitting in second, still has a 70.3 race to add to his total (to go along with his Cairns and Lake Placid wins), putting him in an excellent position at this point. Blummenfelt, currently in third, is in an even better position as he has a third full-distance race to add to his tally. Blummenfelt’s countrymen Casper Stormes and Gustav Iden are in a similar position – both have a full-distance race to add to their points total.

Speaking of Norwegians …

We posted a pair of stories about a couple of the “unknown” Norwegians competing in Nice. There are five in the field, including 2021 champ (St. George) Blummenfelt and 2022 Kona champ Iden, who appears to be building back to the form that saw him take a pair of 70.3 world titles (one in Nice in 2019) and the world title. Stormes is relatively new to the long-distance scene, but enjoyed draft-legal success and a pair of top-five full-distance finishes this year, so is a bit more well known in tri circles. The other two are Kristian Grue and Jon Breivold, who we featured on the site this week.

For a country of 4.5 million, having five men on the start list is impressive.

Other countries with a number of athletes competing include:

  • Germany with nine athletes
  • The United States with seven
  • Denmark, Great Britain and France with four

Olympian to IRONMAN World Championship contender?

Jonas Schomburg. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Looking to join Blummenfelt on the “Olympics one year world championship title the next” (although he won gold in Tokyo, of course!) are the afore-mentioned Van Riel and Germany’s Jonas Schomburg. The German followed WTCS Abu Dhabi up with a third-place finish at IRONMAN South Africa, then ended up having to drop out of the IRONMAN European Championship with handlebar issues. A week later he finished second to Laidlow at Challenge Roth, which makes him a very viable contender for the title in Nice.

Van Riel can’t buy a break on this IRONMAN thing. Last year, while biking at the front of the race in Cozumel, the Belgian star hit a girl. Luckily enough the girl was OK, as was Van Riel, but he had to wait for roughly 20 minutes to fill out a police report and would eventually finish seventh in the race, which meant he had to do another qualifying race this year – he would finish second to Ditlev in South Africa. He managed to balance all that out with T100 racing as he looked to defend his world title in that series from last year. Then came the ankle injury, which has put a big question mark next to his participation in the race in Nice.

We’ll be in Nice during race week to provide lots of coverage. Here’s the start list for this year’s race:

Bib # First name Last name Country Represented
1 Patrick Lange Germany (GER)
2 Magnus Ditlev Denmark (DNK)
3 Rudy Von Berg United States of America (USA)
4 Léon Chevalier France (FRA)
5 Sam Laidlow France (FRA)
6 Gustav Iden Norway (NOR)
7 Kristian Blummenfelt Norway (NOR)
8 Cameron Wurf AUS (Australia)
9 Kieran Lindars United Kingdom (GBR)
10 Kristian Høgenhaug Denmark (DNK)
11 Matt Hanson United States of America (USA)
12 Bart Aernouts Belgium (BEL)
14 Fernando Toldi Brazil (BRA)
15 Matthew Marquardt United States of America (USA)
16 Finn Große-freese Germany (GER)
17 Sam Long USA (United States of America)
18 Jan Stratmann Germany (GER)
19 Mike Phillips New Zealand (NZL)
20 Lucciano Taccone Argentina (ARG)
21 Dylan Magnien France (FRA)
22 Harry Palmer United Kingdom (GBR)
23 Henrik Goesch Finland (FIN)
24 Kacper Stepniak Poland (POL)
25 Marten Van Riel Belgium (BEL)
27 Mathias Lyngsø Petersen Denmark (DNK)
28 Paul Schuster Germany (GER)
29 Casper Stornes Norway (NOR)
30 Mattia Ceccarelli Italy (ITA)
31 Dominik Sowieja Germany (GER)
32 Jonas Hoffmann Germany (GER)
33 Jonas Schomburg Germany (GER)
34 Nick Thompson Australia (AUS)
35 Trevor Foley United States of America (USA)
36 Jamie Riddle South Africa (ZAF)
37 Andrea Salvisberg Switzerland (CHE)
38 Ben Hill Australia (AUS)
39 Bradley Weiss South Africa (ZAF)
40 Antonio Benito Spain (ESP)
41 Nathan Guerbeur France (FRA)
42 Daniel Bækkegård Denmark (DNK)
43 Jason West United States of America (USA)
44 Benjamin Zorgnotti French Polynesia (PYF)
45 Chris Leiferman United States of America (USA)
47 Jon Saeveras Breivold Norway (NOR)
48 Wilhelm Hirsch Germany (GER)
49 Federico Scarabino Uruguay (URY)
50 Andreas Dreitz Germany (GER)
51 Andre Lopes Brazil (BRA)
52 Jordi Montraveta Moya Spain (ESP)
53 Joe Skipper United Kingdom (GBR)
54 Kristian Grue Norway (NOR)
55 Jack Moody New Zealand (NZL)
56 Filipe Azevedo Portugal (POR)
57 Dario Giovine Italy (ITA)
58 Zack Cooper United Kingdom (GBR)
59 Sven Thalmann Switzerland (CHE)

Why do they put the older age groups in the line of fire like not only do they want them to get swam over the whole swim they want them to get passed all day too.

2 Likes

A couple of ‘hot takes’
Writing that Marquardt ‘still has a 70.3 race to add’ is a bit misleading as there are only 2 70.3 races left which would have enabled him to score, yet he won’t race any of them as the 1st is Zell Am See which takes place this week end and he is not on the start list and the 2nd is Marbella for which he is not qualified (and can no longer qualify for) .

I think that Zorgnotti should be considered as a Frenchman because he only holds a french passport as French Polynesia is a french overseas territory. As mentionned before it’s like putting Scotland instead of Uk for Mc Namee.

Sven Thalmann is a late and strange addition, i checked his best recent result at IM is a 5th at Barcelona 2024 so there must a story there.

1 Like

I’m just wondering if they’ll have an instant replay available. Even if I get up at 5, the pro race will already be over.

Great point re. Matt Marquardt - thanks for catching that. (I I wrestled with the French Polynesia vs France question, too! Since IRONMAN listed it, I figured I would just stick to their designation. And, finally, re. Sven Thalmann, he posted after Lanzarote on his social media that he’d been given a wildcard slot after racing in Lanzarote - he was led off course by the police lead vehicles while leading the bike. According to his post he appealed to IRONMAN and they gave him a wildcard spot. Those aren’t “made official” until the end of the qualifying period.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DJ9cOactbhm/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

1 Like

Regarding Sven… basically was led off course on the bike by race vehicles and was given a slot… he sent us a pdf of the whole thing. It’s quite detailed

https://www.instagram.com/p/DJ9cOactbhm/?igsh=dGl3YmcxY3NmZ2pv

Høgenhaug starting in the balance: depends on when the bun comes out of the oven, or the timer rings.

On IM Pro Series
(in that thread) I suggested that if Marquardt’s IMLP went OK he would travel over to Nice, do his recces and get comfortable with the descents, drive up to Zell-am-See and score his second 70.3, before Nice.
and that Hoffmann would do the same
Marquardt isn’t racing on Sunday; Hoffman is bib M4 so a win can reduce the ‘no Marbella’ hit to 500.

I shared a ‘Points Lost’ table for the men.

Name Seconds lost 70.3WCQ Comments
Blummenfelt 0 Q
Hoegenhaug 665 Q May not race IMWC; 3583 hit
Marquardt 994 No Marbella means a 3000 hit
Stornes 1026 Q
Von Berg 1430 Q
Goesch 1683 Q
Chevalier 1692 No Marbella means an 865 hit
Ditlev 1860 Q
Iden 2154 Q
Schuster 2295 No Marbella means a 987 hit
Hoffmann 2366 No Marbella means a 3000 hit but ZaS can reduce to 500
Wurf 2418 No Marbella means a 1296 hit
Stepniak 2622 Q
Hanson 2726 Q

Baby was born last week

1 Like

timing of road closures I assume. IE: many in those AGs would take 15+hrs. But yeah as a 54 year old I am not really looking that forward to the carnage.

Do we have an idea at water temp ? Should I bring the wetsuit? Is it 50/50 ??? It’s looks like it’s warm at

VPN to somewhere in Europe and it will be available on YouTube as both a live stream and as a replayable race

1 Like

Swimskin if you’re a pro. Wetsuit may just feel too hot even if allowed for AG.

Water temperature in Nice today (30th August) is 25.7°C. . . . Sea water temperature in Nice is expected to drop to 24.1°C in the next 10 days.”
Section 4.02
WETSUIT RULES
(a) For age-group athletes. . . wetsuits may be worn in water temperature up to and including 24.5 degrees C/76.1 degrees F

Good luck @rhys ! You took a slot at Penticton last Aug?

Yes sir! And last weekend in Penticton was perfect weather and no race or other tourist event in town. Times change i guess!

I would have to imagine that’s exactly what Marquardt would have done if he didn’t have his academic commitments.