ITU Aquathlon World Championships

The ITU Aquathlon World Championships have been held annually since 1998, typically a few days preceding and in the same location as the ITU Triathlon World Championships, however since 2007 the championships have been held as totally separate events in different locations. The championships involve a continuous swim-run, typically with run being 5 km and the swim being between 750m and 1 km (however the distances have varied during the event's history). The championships are organised by the International Triathlon Union.

Champions

Men's championship

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1998  Shane Reed (NZL)  Benjamin Sanson (FRA)  Craig Alexander (AUS)
1999  Shane Reed (NZL)  Paul Amey (NZL)  Levi Maxwell (AUS)
2000  Matt Reed (NZL)  Brad Kahlefeldt (AUS)  Paulo Miyasiro (BRA)
2001  Iván Raña (ESP)  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Filip Ospalý (CZE)
2002  Kris Gemmell (NZL)  Andriy Glushchenko (UKR)  Filip Ospalý (CZE)
2003  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Brent Foster (NZL)  Paulo Miyasiro (BRA)
2004  Shane Reed (NZL)  Csaba Kuttor (HUN)  Kris Gemmell (NZL)
2005  Tim Don (GBR)  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Paulo Miyasiro (BRA)
2006  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Daniel Lee (HKG)  Clark Ellice (NZL)
2007  Sergio Sarmiento (MEX)  Antonio Mansur (BRA)  Eder Mejia (MEX)
2008  Brent Foster (NZL)  Antonio Mansur (BRA)  Crisanto Grajales (MEX)
2009  Antonio Mansur (BRA)  Wesley Matos (BRA)  Adam Carlton (AUS)
2010  Richard Varga (SVK)  Daniel Halksworth (GBR)  Attila Fecskovics (HUN)
2011  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Ran Alterman (ISR)  Leandro Barbosa (BRA)
2012  Richard Varga (SVK)  Richard Stannard (GBR)  Ognjen Stojanović (SRB)
2013[1]  Richard Varga (SVK)  Ivan Ivanov (UKR)  Csaba Rendes (HUN)
2014[2]  Yuichi Hosoda (JPN)  Ryosuke Yamamoto (JPN)  Yegor Martynenko (UKR)
2015[3]  Richard Varga (SVK)  Igor Polyanski (RUS)  Matt McElroy (USA)
2016  Alistair Brownlee (GBR)  Richard Varga (SVK)  Tommy Zaferes (USA)

Source:[4]

Women's championship

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1998  Rina Hill (AUS)  Nicole Hackett (AUS)  Melanie Mitchell (AUS)
1999  Rina Hill (AUS)  Nicole Hackett (AUS)  Michelle Dillon (GBR)
2000  Pilar Hidalgo (ESP)  Ana Burgos (ESP)  Pip Taylor (AUS)
2001  Siri Lindley (USA)  Rina Hill (NZL)  Sheila Taormina (USA)
2002  Sandra Soldan (BRA)  Jill Savege (CAN)  Lenka Radová (CZE)
2003  Carla Moreno (BRA)  Elizabeth May (LUX)  Anna Cleaver (NZL)
2004  Samantha Warriner (NZL)  Elizabeth May (LUX)  Charlotte Bonin (ITA)
2005  Sheila Taormina (USA)  Carla Moreno (BRA)  Lenka Radová (CZE)
2006  Sara McLarty (USA)  Eslpeth McGregor (CAN)  Maria Barrett (GBR)
2007  Sarah Groff (USA)  Kelly Cook (USA)  Ayesha Rollinson (CAN)
2008  Claudia Rivas (MEX)  Melody Ramirez (MEX)  Dunia Gomez (MEX)
2009  Samantha Warriner (NZL)  Maxine Seear (AUS)  Lisa Mensink (NED)
2010  Margit Vanek (HUN)  Szandra Szalay (HUN)  Gaia Peron (ITA)
2011  Elizabeth May (LUX)  Jessica Souza Santos (BRA)
2012  Nicky Samuels (NZL)  Emma Davis (IRL)  Tea Milos (CRO)
2013[1]  Irina Abysova (RUS)  Claire Michel (BEL)  Yuliya Yelistratova (UKR)
2014[2]  Anneke Jenkins (NZL)  Yuliya Yelistratova (UKR)  Hannah Kitchen (GBR)
2015[3]  Anastasia Abrosimova (RUS)  Elena Danilova (RUS)  Long Hoi (MAC)
2016  Mariya Shorets (RUS)  Anastasia Abrosimova (RUS)  Valentina Zapatrina (RUS)

Source:[4]

Venues

Year Date Location
1998 8 November Australia Noosa, Australia
1999 31 August Australia Noosa, Australia
2000 28 October Mexico Cancún, Mexico
2001 18 July Canada Edmonton, Canada
2002 3 November Mexico Cancún, Mexico
2003 December New Zealand Queenstown, New Zealand
2004 5 May Portugal Madeira, Portugal
2005 8 September Japan Gamagōri, Japan
2006 30 August Switzerland Lausanne, Switzerland
2007 12 May Mexico Ixtapa, Mexico
2008 28 June Mexico Monterrey, Mexico
2009 9 September Australia Gold Coast, Australia
2010 8 September Hungary Budapest, Hungary
2011 7 September China Beijing, China
2012 7 October New Zealand Auckland, New Zealand
2013 11 September United Kingdom London, England
2014 27 August Canada Edmonton, Canada
2015 16 September United States Chicago, USA
2016 14 September Mexico Cozumel, Mexico

References

  1. 1 2 Sherwood, Merryn (11 September 2013). "Varga (SVK) and Abysova (RUS) collect 2013 Aquathlon World Championships". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  2. 1 2 Greene, Erin (27 August 2014). "Kiwis dominate Aquathlon World Championships". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
  3. 1 2 Greene, Erin (16 September 2015). "Varga victorious at Aquathlon World Champs a fourth time". International Triathlon Union. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  4. 1 2 "Aquathlon ITU World Champions" (PDF). International Triathlon Union. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
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