Held on June 8, 2024, the San Francisco T100 Triathlon will see the new men’s PTO World #1 Sam Long in action on home soil, as the Professional Triathletes Organisation (PTO) and World Triathlon confirmed the contracted T100 male athletes on the start list.
American elite triathlete Sam Long (PTO’s January athlete of the month) has secured two recent wins [IRONMAN 70.3 Pucon and IRONMAN 70.3 St George] and a hat-trick of second places already [Miami T100, IRONMAN 70.3 Oceanside & Singapore T100], taking him to the summit of PTO’s long distance triathlon ranking for the first time. It’s also the first time any American male has been #1 since the PTO rankings were formally introduced in 2019.
Long will line up against a men’s field which sees 16 of the contracted T100 athletes towing the line, including Denmark’s Magnus Ditlev, a strong cohort of Americans featuring Jason West, Rudy von Berg and four-time Escape From Alcatraz winner Ben Kanute. Also in the mix are double Olympic Champion from Great Britain Alistair Brownlee and Olympic silver medallist from Spain Javier Gomez.
The race will also see the introduction of Belgium’s Marten Van Riel for his first T100 race, before his Olympic date in Paris later this summer. The full list of contracted T100 men who will compete in the San Francisco T100 includes:
- Sam Long (USA)
- Magnus Ditlev (DEN)
- Pieter Heemeryck (BEL)
- Jason West (USA)
- Mathis Margirier (FRA)
- Rudy von Berg (USA)
- David McNamee (GBR)
- Frederic Funk (GER)
- Bradley Weiss (RSA)
- Aaron Royle (AUS)
- Clement Mignon (FRA)
- Rico Bogen (GER)
- Alistair Brownlee (GBR)
- Ben Kanute (USA)
- Marten Van Riel (BEL)
- Javier Gomez (ESP)
The 100km race in San Francisco (2km swim, 80km bike, 18km run) will start in time-honoured fashion by plunging into the cold water adjacent to Alcatraz Island.
Since the first race in 1981, the Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon has hosted top professional and amateur triathletes to escape from Alcatraz Island. The infamy of Alcatraz Island is part of the attraction that draws more than 2,000 triathletes to San Francisco each year.
The mystique of the island and technicality of the course, most notably the challenging open water swim in San Francisco Bay, has meant the event has continued to be a bucket list for triathletes for more than 40 years.
There are no comments
Please login to post comments