We Noticed: Frankfurt Field, Paralympian’s Cross-Country Triathlon and More

Illustration: IRONMAN

While the Challenge Roth field promises to be quite something, the event’s big rival race the IRONMAN European Championship in Frankfurt promises to be a barnburner, too. After the women’s pro event in Hamburg, Frankfurt serves as the men’s only race this year and will feature a huge field of roughly 70 athletes.

Leading the way is reigning IRONMAN world champion, Norway’s Casper Stornes, who has a pair of third-place finishes so far this year at IRONMAN Pro Series races at Oceanside 70.3 and IRONMAN Texas. He’ll take on countryman Gustav Iden, the 2022 IRONMAN world champion and two-time 70.3 world champ who took second to Stornes in Nice last year and finished eighth in Texas earlier this year. Those two will face some stiff competition from Denmark’s Magnus Ditlev, who was forced to pull out of the Texas race due to illness. Ditlev will no-doubt be looking for redemption after a tough day in Frankfurt last year where he was given a red-card penalty (disqualification) on the run course that was later overturned and he would eventually finish eighth.

Some other men expected to compete for the podium and/ or win include France’s Vincent Luis, who made his debut at the full-distance last year in Roth, where he finished fourth, and is coming off a solid performance in Texas where he finished fourth, too. South Africa’s Jamie Riddle hammered through the early stages of IRONMAN South Africa before things unravelled on the run, so he’ll be expected to be a factor at the front of the race early on. Kieran Lindars had a breakthrough runner-up finish in Frankfurt two years ago, so knows what is required for a good day. Canadian Brock Hoel, who took sixth in Texas, is also back in the hunt for more pro series points.

There’s also a huge German contingent on hand including Jonas Hoffman, who was fifth last year, along with Finn Große-Freese, Wilhelm Hirsch, Jan Stratmann, Florian Angert and Paul Schuster.

The race offers US$87,500 in prize money and six qualifying spots for the 2026 IRONMAN World Championship in Kona. Here’s the full pro start list:

#NameCountry
M1Casper StornesNorway
M2Gustav IdenNorway
M3Magnus DitlevDenmark
M4Jamie RiddleSouth Africa
M5Finn Große-FreeseGermany
M6Vincent LuisFrance
M7Jonas HoffmannGermany
M8Kieran LindarsGreat Britain
M9Nathan GuerbeurFrance
M10Henrik GoeschFinland
M11Brock HoelCanada
M12Paul SchusterGermany
M13Dylan MagnienFrance
M14Jon Saeveras BreivoldNorway
M15Cameron WurfAustralia
M16Wilhelm HirschGermany
M17Antonio Benito LopesSpain
M18Joe SkipperGreat Britain
M19Kacper StepniakPoland
M20Gregory BarnabyItaly
M21Mattia CeccarelliItaly
M22Kyle SmithNew Zealand
M23Jan StratmannGermany
M24Leon ChevalierFrance
M25Michele BortolamediItaly
M26Pieter HeemeryckBelgium
M28Florian AngertGermany
M29Michael WeissAustria
M30Robert WilkowieckiPoland
M31Michiel StockmanBelgium
M32Maximilian SperlGermany
M33Valentin RouvierFrance
M34Yvan JarrigeFrance
M35Quentin BarreauFrance
M36Andrea SalvisbergSwitzerland
M37Nick EmdeGermany
M38Lukas StahlGermany
M39Sven ThalmannSwitzerland
M40Ruben ZepuntkeGermany
M41Mathias Lyngsø PetersenDenmark
M42Chris BeckmansAustralia
M43Kristian GrueNorway
M44William MennessonFrance
M45Piotr LawickiPoland
M46Michele SarzillaItaly
M47Pamphiel PareynBelgium
M48Vincent GrößerGermany
M49Marc EggelingGermany
M50Robbie DeckardUnited States
M51Fabian DutliSwitzerland
M52João FerreiraPortugal
M53Niek HeldoornNetherlands
M54Mathieu MerlandFrance
M55Dries MatthysBelgium
M56Maxence CastelFrance
M57Elliot BachUnited States
M58Zoran NikolicsHungary
M59Thomas BoschGermany
M60Florian KandutschAustria
M61Dylan ThissenNetherlands
M62Julian BeckerGermany
M63Pascal TischlerGermany
M64Brecht Van VoorenBelgium
M65Sander HeemeryckBelgium
M66Louis HeukemesBelgium
M67Raphael JunghansGermany
M68Andrzej MichalskiPoland
M69Mikel TxopiteaSpain
M70Michael WegrichtGermany
M71Eyal WeinsteinIsrael

Lahna Launches Triathlon Across America

Photo courtesy Mohamed Lahna

Two-time Paralympic medalist (bronze representing Morocco in 2016, and silver representing the USA in 2024) Mohamed Lahna will start a cross-country triathlon tomorrow, beginning with a 28.5-mile swim around Manhattan Island, followed by a 3,000-mile bike ride from New York City to Las Vegas that will included over 100,000 feet of elevation gain. Once he’s through all of that, he’ll finish off with a 350-mile run from Las Vegas to Los Angeles. The goal is to raise US$250,000 for charity – specifically the Challenged Athletes Foundation and Save the Children.

Lahna’s journey to sports has been an interesting one. He was born with a proximal femoral focal deficiency, a rare congenital condition that left him without a right femur. As a child he was told he would never live independently. He didn’t get his first functional prosthesis for his leg until he was 20. He wasn’t on a bicycle until he was 25. A year after that he would cross Morocco’s Atlas Mountains and he would run his first marathon at 27.

He would go on to compete at three Paralympics and finish on the podium at more than 30 World Paratriathlon events.

“This challenge represents a monumental undertaking, the size and impact of which is commensurate with the immense heart, courage and sheer iron will that World Triathlon Para athletes display week in, week out, on and off the blue carpet. The swim-bike-run across America will put our ever-growing Paralympic sport and its superb athletes even further into the spotlight, inspiring and motivating in equal measure all who it touches,” said Antonio F Arimany, World Triathlon President.

Photo courtesy Mohamed Lahna

You can contribute to the campaign and follow Lahna’s progress here.

IRONMAN Cairns Celebrates 15th anniversary

It’s not part of the IRONMAN Pro Series this year, but there is still U$100,000 up for grabs at IRONMAN Cairns on Sunday. The 15th anniversary race’s men’s field includes Matt Burton, the only returning champion in the field – he won in 2024 just months after suffering a foot infection that almost saw him loose part of his leg. This will be his 11th time competing in the race. The man considered the favourite this weekend is another Western Australian, Nick Thompson, who had a breakthrough 2025 that included a seventh-place finish at the IRONMAN World Championship in Nice and a fourth-place finish in the IRONMAN Pro Series. Former pro cyclist Ben Hill will likely look to rip things apart on the beautiful Cairns bike course, while Kiwi Jack Moody is expected to be one of the fastest on the run. The two men who finished second and third at IRONMAN Western Australia last year – Aussie Caleb Noble and Japan’s Jumpei Furuya will likely be in the mix, as will American Colin Such and New Zealand’s Ben Hamilton.

In the women’s race, three-time IRONMAN champion Regan Hollioake (Australia and Malaysia in 2024, New Zealand last year) will look for another title, having overcome some health issues “that were holding me up earlier this year” after the Australian started the year off with a fifth-place finish in New Zealand and most recently made the podium at IRONMAN 70.3 Western Sydney. Kiwi Rebecca Clarke will no-doubt be among the swim leaders, while Penny Slater (Australia) will look for another top Cairns finish – she has three fourths and a third in her four appearances. Former pro Australian Rules Football player Kate Gillespie-Jones has also finished in the top-five in Cairns.

There are two pro men’s and two pro women’s qualifying slots for Kona on the line in addition to the impressive prize purse.

#NameCountry
F1Regan HollioakeAustralia
F2Rebecca ClarkeNew Zealand
F3Penny SlaterAustralia
F4Kate Gillespie-JonesAustralia
F5Chloe HartnettAustralia
F6Danyella EberleAustralia
F7Caitlin DavisAustralia
F8Laura DennisAustralia
F9Skye WallaceAustralia
F10Emily DonkerAustralia
#NameCountry
M1Nick ThompsonAustralia
M2Jack MoodyNew Zealand
M3Caleb NobleAustralia
M4Colin SzuchUnited States
M5Benjamin HillAustralia
M6Jumpei FuruyaJapan
M8Jarrod OsborneAustralia
M9Matt BurtonAustralia
M10Jack SosinskiAustralia
M11Benjamin HamiltonNew Zealand
M12Kosuke TerasawaJapan
M14Patrick BleaselAustralia
M15Tristan PriceAustralia
M16Kaito ToharaJapan
M17Hamish LongmuirAustralia
M18Kyle TremayneAustralia
M20Rhys CorbishleyAustralia
M21Roland CrantockAustralia
M22Scott HarphamNew Zealand
M23Calvin AmosAustralia
M24Thomas PageAustralia
M25Nathan DortmannAustralia

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