Taylor Brown digs deep to earn first Yokohama win in style

British Olympic medallist Georgia Taylor-Brown showed magnificent form to claim the first victory of the year at the 2022 World Triathlon Championship Series Yokohama, a win that puts her for now on top of the Maurice Lacroix World Triathlon Rankings. Her powerful run was only contested by France’s Leonie Periault, who claimed the second place, while Olympic champion Flora Duffy had to battle hard to finish in third place.

Over 40 women lined up in Yokohama to kick off the year of racing at the Championship Series, the official return to competition almost ‘like normal’ after two years of events being hit by covid-19 hit. And five months after the last event of the World Triathlon Championship Series, it was the time to check what was the real form of each and every athlete on the field, with some athletes coming from experimenting on other distances -Beth Potter, Georgia Taylor-Brown or Cassandre Beaugrand at the Arena Games Triathlon; Taylor Knibb winning the Ocean Side 70.3 in April-.

All of them showed up this Saturday morning in Yokohama ready to battle. The morning was grey and cloudy, after heavy rains flooded the streets right before the start of the race, forcing the officials to modify the bike course slightly to avoid the more technical sections.

And once again, it was Bermuda’s golden girl Flora Duffy who took the lead from the first strokes, with great swimmers like Maya Kingma (NED), Natalie Van Coevorden (AUS) and Emma Lombardi (FRA) right on her toes until they got out of the water for the second lap. On the second 750m of the swim, Kingma opened a small gap to leave the water in the first place, but with Duffy, Lombardi, Taylor-Brown and Taylor Knibb not far behind.

All of them had an easy transition that lead them to form a group of 12 riders in front, setting a really fast pace on the wet streets of the Yamashita Park until at the end of the second lap, Laura Lindemann lost control of her bike on a turn and crashed, taking with her Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) and Van Coevorden. The French woman was not able to continue, while Lindemann and Van Coevorden got back up on their bikes and joined the chase group, with the Australian determined to keep on the fight for the automatic Australian selection for the Commonwealth Games.

Halfway through the slippery 40km bike course, only nine women stayed in front: Kingma, Duffy, Taylor Spivey (USA), Knibb, Periault, Taylor-Brown, Kirsten Kasper (USA), Anabel Knoll (GER) and Lombardi, with the chasers over 30 seconds behind. But with the athletes being cautious to avoid more crashes, the chasers kept losing time lap after lap, and by the time the athletes made it to the second transition, the leaders had a comfortable lead of almost three minutes.

Maya Kingma was the one hitting first, to lead out of transition with Knoll on her feet, with Taylor-Brown, Periault, Lombardi and Duffy behind them. It was just a matter of 1km that the strong runner group passed Kingma and Knoll, and it was right then when the Brit decided to give her all, never looking back.

Taylor-Brown started opening a breach while the two French woman, Duffy and Knoll ran shoulder to shoulder for a few kilometers. By the time they hit the bell lap, Taylor-Brown was comfortable on the lead, but the fight for the podium was fierce. Knoll was the first one to be dropped, and even though Duffy tried a few times to show her experience and leave behind the two young French athletes, she couldn’t. It was then when Periault showed once again that she still had an extra gear on her, pushing with the blue carpet on sight to claim the second place, the second WTCS podium of her career.

Behind her, Lombardi showed an incredible cool mind on a 21 year old woman in her first ever WTCS race battling with Olympic gold medallist Duffy for the bronze, but in the last meters the Bermudian showed that experience is always a must, to sprint Lombardi on the blue carpet and claim the bronze medal. Maya Kingma closed the top 5 in Yokohama, while the winner in 2021 Knibb finished in 6th. Periault’s bronze position got her the first place on the Maurice Lacroix World Triathlon Championship Series Rankings.

“I’d like to say it feels amazing but it’s actually really painful. It’s hard being back, it’s a long way. I’ve been doing Arena Games Triathlon and it’s a lot longer than this”, said Taylor-Brown after crossing the finish line. “On the run I went out hard because I thought I’ve got nothing to lose. They got back onto me and I just told myself right you’ve got to sit on them now and just empty everything out. I just wanted to try and sit in and stay towards the front of that group for any little surges because I knew that was going to happen because there were five of us and only three of us can finish with a medal. I gave it everything and I was gutsy. Pressure is on now,” she explained.

Leonie Periault said: “It was a very good race for me, a very good start to the season. I am very happy with the race, with the swim and the bike, even thought it was very hard. The run was very good, it was great to have Emma (Lombardi) with me, I feel very happy for her”, she explained.

“It’s nice to be back, and I am happy with my race today. I have a lot to work on and I knew I had to push if I wanted to have a good result, but I am overall happy with third place today, it’s good for the Series”, said Duffy. “I love racing here in Japan, I have lots of fond memories. It was cool to race in the wet streets of Yokohama. I had a terrible T2 and really had to push to bridge up to the two French girls and Georgia (Taylor-Brown), they were running really strong. It’s great to see these young athletes up there, I think Emma (Lombardi) is just U23 and it’s great to see her up there and really pushing at the front.”

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Results

1
Georgia Taylor-Brown
GBR
01:51:44
2
Leonie Periault
FRA
01:51:50
3
Flora Duffy
BER
01:51:55
4
Emma Lombardi
FRA
01:52:03
5
Maya Kingma
NED
01:52:12
1
Alex Yee
GBR
01:43:30
2
Hayden Wilde
NZL
01:43:40
3
Léo Bergere
FRA
01:43:59
4
Matthew Hauser
AUS
01:44:09
5
Pierre Le Corre
FRA
01:44:17
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