Originally published at: Laura Philipp Breaks Ironman World Record in Hamburg After an Incredible Battle with Kat Matthews - Slowtwitch News
Katrina Matthews of Great Britain (r) and Laura Philipp of Germany. (Photo by Alexander Koerner/Getty Images for IRONMAN)
The anticipated showdown between current IRONMAN World Champion Laura Philipp and recent IRONMAN world record holder Kat Matthews proved to be one of the most exciting, tactical and bar-raising races to date. Their head-to-head in Nice for the 2024 world title and their exciting run battle at the T100 in London (not to mention that Matthews took the world record from Philipp) has made for an enticing rivalry that never fails to bring out the best performance in both women.
While both are already qualified for Kona, Matthews said she wanted to get her Pro Series points early to fully focus on the world championship. Thatâs a change from her season strategy last year where she had her heaviest calendar racing both the Pro Series and T100. Sheâs proven sheâs already in top shape after her performance in Texas.
Philipp, on the other hand, has only raced once this year, winning 70.3 Kraichgau only seven days ago. In pre-race interviews, Philipp said she was using Hamburg to build into her season, which is solely focused on peaking for the world championshipâand if this is the calibre of her early season performance, itâs incredible to image what she might be capable of in Kona.
SWIM â T1
Thunderstorms caused a 45-minute delay, leaving the pros a short window to reset and, unfortunately, first year German pro Mareike Guhl to miss the start completely. Noticeably missing from the start line was standout swimmer Stephanie Clutterbuck (GBR) who pulled out due to illness. In her absence, the swim was left open and it was Matthews, wanting to âswim in front of Laura,â who took the reins.
Her efforts split the field creating a front pack with Philipp, 2024 winner Jackie Hering (USA), Solveig Løvseth (NOR) and Johanna Arhans (DEU).
Notably missing from the pack was Marjolaine Pierre. Fresh off her win at 70.3 Aix-en-Provence and in only her third Ironman, the young French woman was in a similar situation in Nice where she finished fourth after coming out of the water in ninth.
Hering would share some of the pace making, but it was Matthews who animated the water, stopping to check the pack a few times and keeping the pace to clock a 54:38. Philipp, seconds behind in third, swam a similar time when she won and set the record on this course in 2022 but, typically at a deficit to Matthews out of the swim, her performance was notable.
Making her full distance debut, Løvseth showed her short course roots getting out of T1 in the lead. Right behind, running shoulder to shoulder in matching aero helmets through the 700 m transition, was no other than Matthews and Philipp.
BIKE
Hitting the damp roads, the trio cleared the city together and the tactics began. Philipp was content to take third wheel for most of the day, looking more controlled. Matthews seemed equally happy to be ahead of Philipp and work with Løvseth.
The biggest early mover was Pierre, who put in a big effort to head up a strong chase pack made up of Hering (who would later suffer a rear puncture and ultimately DNF), Sara Svensk (SWE), Els Visser (NED), Anne Reischmann (DEU) and Jenny Jendryschik (DEU).
Around the 40 km mark, Løvsethâs left aerobar came loose and she would ride another 20 km with one arm in and one hand on the base bar before stopping at the mechanical tent for assistance. It seemed like it was going to be a two horse race from then on, but as they entered the city and started their second loop, Løvseth made up her one minute deficit and passed the two favourites to announce her return.
Matthews, who was disqualified on this course last year, turned up the heat and attacked in the final 20 km to build a 53-second gap over Philipp and 1:23 over Løvseth into T2.
T2 â RUN
Matthews looked fantastic off the bike and had a smooth and fast transition. As she racked her bag, Philipp was grabbing hers, but the two exchanged no words or glances.
Løvseth was a further minute behind and then the chase pack started to flow in with Reischmann at over eight minutes back, Visser, Jendryschik, Lewis, Anderbury and finally Pierre at 13:45 back (who was looking decidedly spent and ended her race there). Visser was forced to withdraw early on the run, accidentally missing the 8.5 km run check point.
Smiling and enjoying the early kilometers, Matthews was flyingâbut so was a stoic Philipp. Although there was a gap between them, they were matching each otherâs paceâand that pace was jaw dropping. Matthews, in the new ultralight Asics, hit the half marathon split at 1:18:22, Philipp a mere five seconds slower.
Philipp has out-run Matthews in the marathon previously (and has four 2:45 Ironman marathons to her name, although the one on this course was short that year), but Matthews has out run Philipp in every T100 last season, proving she has the speed.
The gap grew to 45 seconds before Philipp, who had been calm and calculated all day, threw her cards on the table. With 8 km to go, she surged past Matthews who immediately responded. Within a kilometer, however, Philipp had a 20-second gap, which only continued to grow amid torrential rain. Philipp would run herself to the European Championship title and take back her world record with a 2:38:27 marathon and overall time of 8:03:27.
Matthews finished with an incredible 2:40:58 marathon, 1:59 back. And letâs not forget Løvseth, who made the fastest female full distance debut in history with a time of 8:12:28âwhich is also the fourth-fastest time ever.
PHILIPP ON HER WIN

Photo by Jurij/Getty Images for IRONMAN
â We were glued together for the entire raceâand imagine for eight hours being glued together,â Philipp said in her post race interview. âIt was super tough and for a long time it looked like Kat would run away with it. I just tried to be calm, be patient, because you know, a marathon is a long game and luckily it paid off that I let her go a little bit and just did my own thing. When I overtook Kat, or first caught her, I couldnât believe it. Right now Iâm still speechless. I need to lie down, like Iâm really done, but also super, super proud.â
â I said beforehand, itâs still very early, but of course this is a big boost and I will take it and hopefully recover well and then continue to build strong towards Kona in October,â she continued.
MATTHEWS ON THE BATTLE
â I couldnât shake her all day and she got the better of me at 10 K to go or whenever it was,â said Matthews. âIf an athlete of the caliber of Laura Philipp and the current world champion is in your eyes, youâre not in control.â
TOP FIVE
- Laura Philipp 8:03:27
- Kat Matthews 8:05:13
- Solveig Natvig Løvseth 8:12:28
- Anne Reischmann 8:32:46
- Leonie Konczalla 8:42:39