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Slowtwitch · 22 de mayo de 2026 · por Ben Snider-McGrath

Previewing T100 Spain 2026: Kate Waugh Returns To Racing as Defending Champ

Waugh may be the favourite going into the race in Pamplona, but there are several women who could ruin her T100 season debut The post Previewing T100 Spain 2026: Kate Waugh Returns To Racing as Defending Champ first appeared on Slowtwitch News .

Previewing T100 Spain 2026: Kate Waugh Returns To Racing as Defending Champ
Photo: PTO

The T100 Triathlon World Tour is back in action this weekend with the third event of the season, this time hitting the streets of Pamplona, Spain, for another all-women pro race. The women’s T100 season kicked off in March in Gold Coast, Australia, where American Taylor Knibb grabbed the first win of the year. With Knibb absent from this weekend’s starting lineup, there will be a new addition to the list of 2026 T100 winners after what is sure to be an action-packed day of racing in Spain on Saturday.

Waugh vs. the Field

Great Britain’s Kate Waugh has to be the favourite heading into this next race. After a 2025 season that saw her win three races and reach another four podiums, she won the T100 world title handily. Waugh missed the first T100 race of the year, but she has not been sitting on the sidelines waiting to start her season. Instead, she opted to go back to her roots in short-course triathlon for a couple of races, competing at the World Triathlon Cup in Chengdu, China, in early May and at the WTCS event in Yokohama, Japan, this past weekend.

She finished third in China in a thrilling sprint finish that saw her cross the line one second behind first and second place. The field in Yokohama was of course more competitive (not to say that Chengdu wasn’t), with the top short-course specialists all in attendance. Despite having much more of a focus on middle-distance racing these days, Waugh still held her own, finishing in 14th place.

While short course may be where Waugh’s roots lie, the T100 is where she has found most of her success as a pro, and it will be exciting to see her back in action this weekend. She finished second at T100 Spain last year, a full two minutes behind winner and fellow Brit Lucy Charles-Barclay. Charles-Barclay is not racing in Pamplona this year, as she will be busy in another part of Spain at IRONMAN Lanzarote.

Waugh finishes in third in a tight race in China. Photo: World Triathlon

While Waugh lost by a sizeable margin to Charles-Barclay in Spain last year, she still beat third place by the same two-minute gap that separated her from the win. If not for Charles-Barclay, Waugh would have been unbeatable that day and cruised to the win. Will that be the case on Saturday? Not so fast — there are several women who could spoil Waugh’s T100 season debut.

The Top Chasers

Leading the way as the women who are most likely to steal the win from Waugh are Switzerland’s Julie Derron and Imogen Simmonds, along with Waugh’s compatriot Georgia Taylor-Brown. Derron won two T100 races last year, beating Waugh on both occasions. Her first came at T100 San Francisco, where she used the second-fastest bike and run splits on the day to finish well ahead of second-place Knibb and more than four minutes up from Waugh.

Derron’s other win was in Dubai near the end of the season, when she had the fastest bike and run on the day to once again beat Waugh with relative ease, crossing the line more than three minutes ahead of the eventual series champion. Derron finished the season in second place in the tour rankings, capping off a tremendous year that saw her reach the T100 podium four times.

Derron has raced twice so far this season, winning both times. Her first triathlon of 2026 came in mid-April at the Olympic-distance Yangtze River Delta International Triathlon in China. A week later, she threw down a dominant performance in a limited pro field at Challenge Taiwan to take the win by almost 13 minutes. She hasn’t been challenged too much by rivals just yet this season, but Derron looks to be in great form, meaning it could be a fun battle between her and Waugh on Saturday.

As she proved in 2025, Derron is a threat in every race. Photo: Kevin Mackinnon

Derron’s fellow Swiss racer Simmonds is a bit of a question mark going into the race in Spain. She has had a great start to the season with a third-place finish at T100 Gold Coast and second last weekend at 70.3 Pays d’Aix in France. She has only raced against Waugh once before, however, at last year’s T100 finale in Qatar, where she finished well back in 17th.

The T100 Grand Final was her only race of the year, as she spent much of 2025 barred from competition due to a doping infraction of which she was ultimately cleared and retroactively found not guilty. She entered the race in Qatar well out of practice, but she has looked to be back to her usual self after the first couple…

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