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Slowtwitch · 23 de mayo de 2026 · por Ben Snider-McGrath

Georgia Taylor-Brown Charges to First T100 Victory in Spain

The three-time Olympic medallist took her first T100 win on Saturday The post Georgia Taylor-Brown Charges to First T100 Victory in Spain first appeared on Slowtwitch News .

Georgia Taylor-Brown Charges to First T100 Victory in Spain
Georgia Taylor-Brown has found success across every distance she has tried in triathlon. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Twenty top pro women hit a hot and hilly course in Pamplona, Spain, on Saturday as the T100 Triathlon World Tour made its third stop of 2026. Georgia Taylor-Brown took the win in 3:38:03 in this women-only pro race, taking home her first victory on the T100 tour. Switzerland’s Julie Derron finished 1:19 back in second, while American Taylor Spivey rounded things out in third, also recording a milestone as she secured her first-ever T100 podium finish.

Waugh Misses the Race

Reigning T100 world champion Kate Waugh of Great Britain made waves before the race in Spain, but not in the way she would have hoped, as a calf injury forced her to skip the event. That makes two missed T100 events in a row for the the Brit, as she also didn’t race the season opener in Gold Coast, Australia.

A second race with no points for Waugh is a big blow to her hopes of defending her world championship title. In 2025, she raced seven times on the T100 circuit, and there were nine races available to her and the other pro women and men. This year, the series was cut down significantly, and while there are still nine races on the pro calendar overall, four are women-only events, another four solely feature men, and only one — the T100 finale in Qatar — will see both men and women on the start line.

This pared-down schedule required the T100 to adjust the scoring system for the year-end rankings. In 2025, athletes earned points from their five best races on the year, but this season, their ranking will be determined by just four events. With only three races to go for the women in 2026, Waugh will not be able to maximize her points total, which will make it difficult to defend her T100 crown.

Waugh won three T100 races in 2025, but she has yet to compete in the series this year. Photo: PTO

Perez Sala’s Early Lead

Back to the women who did race in Spain. It was home-country favourite Sara Perez Sala who led most of the way in the water on Saturday. The swim was a two-lap affair in the Alloz Reservoir, and Perez Sala (who was third at T100 Wollongong last year) took charge at the front of the pack early on. After exiting the water and starting the second lap in first, she carried that lead through to T1.

A long string of women followed Perez Sala out of the reservoir, with Spivey right on her heels just a second back. Great Britain’s Sophie Evans, Taylor-Brown and Holly Lawrence were also in the mix, as well as Derron, the 2025 T100 series runner-up.

All in all, there were 12 women within 24 seconds of one another as they hit transition. After that, everyone else was more than a minute back of the leaders.

Perez Sala was first on her bike, but her lead as she started to ride was quite slim. With so many women so tightly packed in T1, it set up a fun opening few miles of riding as various athletes climbed in and out of the lead.

A Three-Woman Race

While most T100 events feature lapped biked courses for the pros, the race in Spain was a point-to-point ride. The course was winding and hilly, with multiple fast descents that required technical care to navigate sharp turns and corners.

Perez Sala didn’t get to enjoy her time at the front of the race too long after leaving T1, as Taylor-Brown flew into the lead just a couple of miles into the ride. Derron faced a 28-second gap as she started the bike, but she wasted very little time erasing that, and soon enough, she found herself in second place behind Taylor-Brown.

Also in the mix early on was Belgium’s Hanne De Vet, who finished fifth at T100 Wollongong last year. About four miles into the ride, she moved into the lead, passing both Taylor-Brown and Derron, but she faced a potential issue, as the race commentary team noted that she seemed to have lost a bottle at some point in those opening miles. In another T100 race, this wouldn’t have been too much of a problem, as the lapped format gives athletes plenty of opportunities to reload their nutrition. In Spain, however, there were just two aid stations on the bike course, making De Vet’s lost bottle a potentially significant blow.

Derron finished second in the T100 ranks in 2025. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Over the next 30 miles, there was a lot of shifting within the top five. Germany’s Bianca Bogen rode her way up to second place for a stint, then dropped back. Switzerland’s Imogen Simmonds moved into second for a while, only to fade away. De Vet regained control of the lead, but Derron eventually blew by her once more.

After 20 miles of riding, it looked like Derron was fed up with this yo-yoing. She dropped the hammer and opened up a gap of 14 seconds over second place. There was still plenty of riding to go, but it was conceivable at that time that Derron would ride away with the lead. Six miles later, though, her compatriot Alanis Siffert came charging down the road, flying by Derron to take the lead.

Siffert had started the ride more than two minutes back of the leaders, so she had put in a hard effort to claw her way through the field. The next few miles saw Derron and Siffert exchanging the lead back and forth, and all the while, Taylor-Brown sat just a few seconds back in third, apparently content to let the two…

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