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Matt Hauser’s breakthrough World Cup win in Chengdu


Matt Hauser’s breakthrough World Cup win in Chengdu

Hauser then conquered the super sprint distance (400m swim; 10km bike and 2.5km run) to earn the winner takes all prize of standing on his first WC podium with the silver medal going to Rostislav Pevtsov to (AZE), who for the third year in a row finished with the silver.
 
The bronze then went to Hauser’s fellow Aussie, the equally impressive Warwick Dalziel-coached Willian who collected his second World Cup medal this year after winning in Mooloolaba in March and his seventh place finish in the WTS Gold Coast.
Hauser admitted he knew it would all come down to the run.
 
 “I’m absolutely stoked, it was my debut World Cup after doing Gold Coast WTS race a couple of weeks ago and I’m really pleased with the effort and I’m (now) looking forward to the rest of the year,” Hauser said.
 
“I knew I conserved a lot of energy yesterday in the heats and just did what I could to get to the final. I knew it was always going to be a running race today, so I tried to conserve on the swim and bike and save it for the run and I managed to execute the processes right.”
 
The 10-kilometre bike ride deemed unhelpful to separate any frontrunners in the men’s race as the entire field except for one rider cycled together as a mass pack. Hungary’s Gabor Faldum and Bob Haller (LUX) made it out of T2 first, but they were quickly swallowed up by a sea of men behind him. 
 
As the frantic 2.5-kilometre run lap carried on it seemed that it would be another photo finish, but Hauser managed to get out in front and avoid the close call and pull off the win. 
 
Pevtsov and Willian then followed right behind to finish off the top three and Willian said: “After just near missing the podium on my last race, I feel great today. Everyone knew that it was going to be all to the running, and that’s what happened.”
 
Australia’s Kenji Nener capped a solid day’s racing for the Australians, finishing 11th.
 
Jeffcoat, who has also had a major breakthrough year, qualifying for her second World Championship team in the under 23s led the Australian women with another encouraging performance to finish seventh in a race that saw former Australian Junior star Sophie Malowiecki 27th and triple Olympian Erin Densham 24th.
 
While she is no stranger to winning, Great Britain’s  Non Stanford - a former ITU World Triathlon Series World Champion of 2013 has never won a World Cup race in her career, until today. 
 
The Brit earned her first career World Cup gold after surviving two days of racing at the 2017 Chengdu ITU Triathlon World Cup in her first World Cup race since 2011.
 
Joining Stanford on her first World Cup podium was Germany’s  Laura Lindemann who earned the silver. While she also is a two-time World Champion for U23 and Junior racing, she debuts to the World Cup podium in Chengdu. Kirsten Kasper (USA)  finished off the World Cup podium returns for the first time since winning in Salinas last year.

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