We Noticed: Free WTCS Alghero Coverage, Enhanced Games Flop and More

Alex Yee wins the 2023 WTCS Cagliari race. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

We previewed the big World Triathlon Championship Series Race taking place in Sardinia this weekend – WTCS Alghero – and now we get to offer our readers the chance to watch the race for free. World Triathlon is offering free access to TriathlonLive.tv for the weekend so you can take in the race, which is the first WTCS race of the 2028 Olympic qualification period.

The women’s race goes at 11:00 am local time (5 am EST) and the men start at 14:00 local time (8 am EST).

Here’s how to access the free coverage:

  1. Head to TriathlonLive using this link: https://www.triathlonlive.tv/paywalls?context=LZsgS2Dedeac~JTm0Vr4UN~0xnVdKGtB
  2. Click watch now on the Alghero Race Pass option 
  3. Sign in or SIgn up for TriathlonLive – don’t worry it’s free! 

You will be redirected to the check out page. Enter code MYRACEPASS and ‘complete order’. No payment, no credit card details required.

Here are a few more facts about this weekend’s race:

  • There are nine WTCS winners competing: Alex Yee, Matt Hauser, Hayden Wilde, Miguel Hidalsgo, Vasco Vilaça, Dorian Conninx, Cassandre Beaugrand, Georgia Taylor-Brown and Beth Potter.
  • Alex Yee won the race in Sardinia (WTCS Cagliari) three years in a row from 2022 to 2024. Georgia Taylor-Brown won two years in a row (2022 and 2023), while Cassandre Beaugrand took the 2024 and 2025 victories. The men’s defending champion is Miguel Hidalgo.
  • This was one of the few times Matt Hauser didn’t win a draft-legal race when he competed last year – he competed in seven WTCS races and missed the podium once. His four wins (Yokohama, Hamburg, French Riviera and the Wollongong Grand Final) were a record. He finished second in Abu Dhabi and Alghero and eighth in Karlovy Vary.
  • There are 55 men racing and 44 women.
  • It’s an Olympic distance race, although the bike is a touch long at 40.5 km. (1.5 km swim and 10 km run.)
  • The winners take home US$19,000, with prize money dropping to $3,000 for 10th. Prize money is paid out to 30th spot.

Enhanced Games Underwhelms

We wrote about the Enhanced Games earlier this year (see below), and last weekend’s racing didn’t exactly produce the results organizers had hoped for.

The Enhanced Games: Dangerous Gimmick or Harmless Stunt?

In fact things went so badly that investors in Enhanced Group Inc., the publicly traded parent company of the Enhanced Games, “watched its stock fall by almost half,” according to Marathon Handbook.

The event was supposed to be a marketing avenue for Enhanced Group Inc., which is set to become an online pharmacy for testosterone and other performance drugs, along with various supplements. According to SwimSam, the company saw almost $800 million in market value disappear once the New York Stock Exchange opened on Tuesday.

The Enhanced Games took place last Sunday night on the Las Vegas Strip. The world records organizers had promised never materialized – the only record set was by Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev, who swam 20.81 for 50 m using a banned swim suit and while doping. Three other events were won by athletes who said they were racing without taking any illegal drugs.

As USA Today put it, the Enhanced Games “failed to live up to their own hype” and also showed “that doping can only help athletes who are already elite rather than make a ‘pretty good’ swimmer an Olympic medalist.”

Which probably isn’t the marketing message Enhanced Group Inc. was hoping for.

IRONMAN 70.3 Happy Valley Start List Announced

Graphic: IRONMAN

The field for the next IRONMAN Pro Series race in North America has been announced. The IRONMAN 70.3 North American Championship will take place in Happy Valley, Pennsylvania on June 14. There will be US$75,000 up for grabs at the race.

Defending women’s champion Lydia Russell will wear race #1 in Happy Valley, but she’ll have some stiff competition, including Americans Jackie Hering, who hasn’t finished a race outside the top five this year and won IRONMAN 70.3 Dallas in March, Danielle Lewis and Grace Alexander (who has been on a roll with wins at IRONMAN 70.3 Gulf Coast and Chattanooga). Add to that mix Canadians Paula Findlay, who bounced back from a DNF in Oceanside to take second in Chattanooga, and Tamara Jewett, who started her season off with a win at Challenge Wanaka and took third at 70.3 Geelong. The down under crew will be represented by Kiwi Hannah Berry, who was second at IRONMAN New Zealand, and Australia’s Grace Thek, who finished one spot ahead of Jewett in Geelong. Here’s the full women’s start list:

WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib First Name Last Name Country
F1 Lydia Russell USA
F2 Paula Findlay CAN
F3 Hannah Berry NZL
F4 Grace Alexander USA
F5 Grace Thek AUS
F6 Tamara Jewett CAN
F7 Jackie Hering USA
F8 Danielle Lewis USA
F9 Gabrielle Lumkes USA
F10 Annamarie Strehlow USA
F11 Amber Ferreira USA
F12 Kelly Barton USA
F13 Abbie Sullivan USA
F14 Adele Likin USA
F15 Caroline Kaplan USA
F16 Anne Basso FRA
F17 Emily Pincus USA
F18 Rebecca Yunginger USA
F19 Annie Fuller USA
F20 Sarah Karpinski USA
F21 Corinne Mouw USA
F22 Annette Rogers USA
F23 Kristen Marchant CAN
F24 Katie Spoelman USA
F25 Jenna Campbell USA
F27 Rachael Tatko USA
F28 Shylah Andrews USA

Sam Long, who bounced back from a tough day at IRONMAN Texas with a win at IRONMAN 70.3 Gulf Coast and a fourth at 70.3 Chattanooga, will certainly be one of the pre-race favourites, but there are more than a few big names who are legitimate contenders for the win, or at least a podium finish. Long’s countrymen Matt Hanson (currently second in the IRONMAN Pro Series standings), Ben Kanute, Trevor Foley (this year’s IRONMAN New Zealand winner) and Matthew Marquardt (this year’s IRONMAN South Africa winner) are more than likely to be in the mix, while Aussie Sam Appleton is another to watch. One name that is well down the start list but could be a factor is Morgan Pearson, who won T100 Dubai last year and took second at the T100 Final in Qatar, and another short-course specialist, Matthew McGoey, who just took third at Supertri Austin.

MEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib First Name Last Name Country
M1 Matt Hanson USA
M2 Sam Long USA
M3 Ben Kanute USA
M4 Sam Appleton AUS
M5 Trevor Foley USA
M6 Matthew Marquardt USA
M7 Justin Riele USA
M8 Marc Dubrick USA
M9 Andy Krueger USA
M10 Morgan Pearson USA
M11 John Killeen USA
M12 Jason West USA
M13 Federico Scarabino URY
M15 Hunter Lussi USA
M16 Casimir Moine FRA
M17 Matt McWilliams USA
M18 Matt Schafer USA
M19 Rasmus Svenningsson SWE
M20 Vant Lammers USA
M21 Levi Lukacs HUN
M22 Miguel Mattox USA
M23 Yannick Fischbach DEU
M24 Adam Feigh USA
M25 Tommy Doubleday USA
M26 Ross Baldwin USA
M27 Sam Osborne NZL
M28 Jamie Hayes USA
M29 Luke Davis USA
M30 Jordan Bendura USA
M31 Benjamin Randall USA
M32 Mitchell Ott USA
M33 Ethan Sunseri USA
M34 Jonathan Fecik USA
M35 Reed Legg USA
M36 Robby Webster USA
M37 Max Kohll USA
M38 Luke Jones USA
M39 Yang Pan USA
M40 Brad Bischoff USA
M41 Nicholas Holmes USA
M42 Matthew McGoey USA
M43 Alec Shields USA
M44 Blake Harris CAN
M45 Matt Kerr NZL
M46 Thomas Inigo USA
M47 Brian Reynolds USA
M49 David Reynolds USA
M50 Cole Kynoch USA
M51 Matthew Dochnal USA
M52 Matthew Richard USA
M53 Mark Romano USA
M54 Avraham Mana ISR
M55 John Reed USA
M56 Blake Selm USA
M57 Alejandro Garcia Sanchez ESP
M58 Thomas Gordon USA
M59 Matthew Guenter USA
1 Like

Late DNSs (Wilde said this morning he got sick - presumably didn’t travel? - but hopes to make the T100 in 6 days’ time) must be super frustrating for you (and him)(and Yee and others, needing wild firepower to hold the breakaway to less than a minute’s gap).
Quick scan of the ‘WTCS Alghero’ thread on Slowtwitch would have alerted you to this (7 hours ago).

Add to your WTCS winners competing list another 5: Leonie Periault, Henry Graf, Jeanne Lehair, Lisa Tertsch, Taylor Knibb
NB Hidalgo, Coninx

I am glad WTCS went to free coverage, hopefully they continue on this way, and use sponsors to cover these costs. unfortunately the actual time of the race didnt allow me to view it, but I would have.. It would be a great follow up article to see what the viewship for this race was, and what is next