Supertri

Nonstandard triathlon league From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Supertri organises three types of triathlon races under its brand pillars: Supertri League, Supertri E, and By Supertri.

Formation and test event

Michael D'hulst met Chris McCormack while running the Challenge Taiwan event, and the pair struck up a friendship and often discussed their shared passion for elevating the sport. As they worked together on multiple projects in Asia, they started to refine the concept behind what was to be christened as Super League Triathlon.

An encounter with Leonid Boguslavsky, who had been inspired to take up the sport at the age 62 after reading McCormack's book 'I'm Here To Win', led to a meeting at a hotel in London, and the three decided to launch a one-off test event to see whether their concept that professional triathlon could be an inspirational spectator sport could be achieved.[1]

They held the test event on Hamilton Island, and it was a success[citation needed], leading them to grow the concept into an annual series, initially known as the Championship Series, and later Supertri League. D'hulst took on the role as the permanent CEO of the company.

Building a series

The key differentiator for Supertri was its short formats, tight broadcast times, stadium-like courses with technical elements often missing from triathlon racing, and a closed-league.

The Championship Series quickly grew, with 3 events per Series in 2018 and 2019 before COVID.

In 2019, the business moved its headquarters from Singapore to London.

COVID and the birth of Supertri E

The spread of COVID and the associated lockdowns saw the cancellation of sports events worldwide. D'hulst, Boguslavksy and McCormack opted against hibernating the business created an indoor Esports racing series that could be run with social distancing rules in place.

Arena Games Triathlon, now Supertri E, debuted in Rotterdam in 2020 and has gone on to become a core part of the business.

By 2021 and the end of lockdowns, the indoor Esports series and the Championship Series grew to seven events, and to eight in 2022.

Move to participation events and a rebrand

Super League Triathlon acquired the Malibu Triathlon in 2020. At that stage the theory was to trial a participation offering while also acquiring an established US base for a Super League professional event.

After three events in Malibu local permitting laws saw the event change operator, but the concept of expanding mass participation focussed on short and accessible race formats had been proven.

In 2023, the company acquired Chicago Triathlon, New York City Triathlon, and established the Long Beach Legacy Triathlon at the site of the LA 2028 Olympics. It went on to acquire Austin Triathlon, Kerrville Triathlon in 2024, and announced the acquisitions of Toronto Triathlon Festival, Blenheim Palace Triathlon and New Jersey State Triathlon in 2025, while also launching the Toulouse Triathlon alongside the established professional Supertri League event in the city.

Super League Triathlon was also no more, as the company rebranded to Supertri, with three clear pillars: Supertri League (professional outdoor racing), Supertri E (indoor Esports hybrid racing) and By Supertri (mass participation).

Supertri League

The Supertri League season normally runs between August and November. Over the course of the season, Rounds are held at locations around the world. There are Women's, Men's and Teams Supertri League champions each year.

Contracts

Being a closed League, only athletes who have a contract for the current season compete. Athletes are recruited either by the League or by the Teams where franchises are owned, aiming for a blend of the world's best and most high-profile athletes and up and coming stars of the future.

Teams

Triathlon has traditionally been an individual sport but Supertri has introduced Teams. Athletes race together and accumulate points as a team, with different stages to win points and a redistribution of prize money of all athletes who contribute and are supported. It aims to increase fandom of the sport and encourages outside franchise owners to help drive the League forward.

After its early trial years, Supertri opened franchises up to potential ownership in 2024, with would be owners vetted to ensure they will bring value to growing the League and the sport. Two initial franchises were acquired by Brownlee Racing, led by Jonathan Brownlee and Alistair Brownlee, and Podium Racing, led by John Anthony and managed by Tim Don.

The Teams all have managers who oversee the athletes and make tactical decisions during the racing. In 2024, Brownlee Racing was managed by Non Stanford, Crown Racing by Chris McCormack, Podium Racing by Tim Don, and Stars & Stripes Racing by Parker Spencer.

Courses

Supertri League courses are built on 1 mile loops for multiple spectator and broadcast angles. It also minimizes disruption for hosts without widespread road closures associated with endurance sports events, and makes it possible for city centre locations. All courses are unique, from cobbles and lakes, to seas and open desert.

Format

Supertri League is raced over the Supertri format, which is three back-to-back rounds of swim, bike and run with no breaks. The distances for each discipline are 300m swim, 4 km bike and 1.6 km run. The format places an emphasis on athletes being able to produce both speed and endurance, as well as on transitions with eight required during the course of a race, rather than two in a traditional triathlon.

Over the years Supertri has also used other formats, including the Triple Mix, Eliminator and Equalizer, but in 2024 moved to standardise racing under the Supertri format.

Short Chute

The Short Chute is an opportunity for athletes to win a shortcut on the course for their team through their racing, which is then allocated to an athlete of their choosing by the Team manager. Each team can only allocate one Short Chute per race regardless of how many they win. In the Supertri format, there are three Short Chutes available. All are won during the first swim, bike and run legs and taken on the final run as follows:

  • First across the Mount Line after the first swim
  • First across the Mount Line after the first bike
  • First across the Dismount Line after first run

Points

During each Round athletes are awarded points depending on where they finish in the race. The points are accumulated to crown the champions of the Women's and Men's Leagues at the end of the League season. In addition, there are separate discipline Leagues to recognise the fastest swim, bike and runners across the season.

Each athlete's individual points plus points any won by athletes in each discipline all go towards the overall Teams League to crown the Teams champions at the end of the season. In the case of a tie in the Leagues, the athlete or Team with the best result in the final race of the League will finish ahead of the other athletes or Teams

More information Place ...
Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Standard round points 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Grand Final points 20 18 16 14 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 0
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Discipline Leagues are awarded as follow:

  • Swim: Points allocated at each Round based on time of the first or second swim discipline of the day measured at the swim exit.
  • Bike: Points allocated at each Round based on time of the fastest lap measured from Mount to Dismount Line of the first or second bike discipline of the day.
  • Run: Points allocated at each Round based on time of the fastest lap measured from Mount Line to Dismount Line of the first or second run discipline of the day
More information Place ...
Place 1 2 3
Swim 4 2 1
Bike 4 2 1
Run 4 2 1
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90 Second Rule

Any athlete that falls 90 seconds behind the leader is eliminated from the race. This is implemented every lap, measured from the first athlete passing the Mount Line, executed at the Mount Line and prevents lapping.

Supertri League champions

Men's League Champions

More information Year, First ...
Year First Second Third
2018  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Jonny Brownlee (GBR)
2019  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Pierre Le Corre (FRA)
2021  Alex Yee (GBR) (Eagles)  Hayden Wilde (NZL) (Sharks)  Jonny Brownlee (GBR) (Cheetahs)
2022  Hayden Wilde (NZL) (Sharks)  Matthew Hauser (AUS) (Eagles)  Jonny Brownlee (GBR) (Cheetahs)
2023  Léo Bergère (FRA) (Eagles)  Hayden Wilde (NZL) (Scorpions)  Alex Yee (GBR) (Sharks)
2024  Hayden Wilde (NZL) (Crown Racing)  Léo Bergère (FRA) (Podium Racing)  Tim Hellwig (GER) (Stars & Stripes Racing)
2025  Csongor Lehmann (HUN) (Stars & Stripes Racing)  Vasco Vilaça (POR) (Crown Racing)  Ricardo Batista (POR) (Crown Racing)
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*There were two test events held in 2017 which were raced as one-offs. Hamilton Island:[2] 1) Richard Murray, 2) Mario Mola, 3) Jake Birtwhistle. Jersey: [3]1) Kristian Blummenfelt, 2) Jonathan Brownlee, 3) Richard Murray.

Women's League Champions

More information Year, First ...
Year First Second Third
2018  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)
2019  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)  Taylor Spivey (USA)
2021  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) (Scorpions)  Jess Learmonth (GBR) (Eagles)  Katie Zaferes (USA) (Rhinos)
2022  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) (Scorpions)  Taylor Spivey (USA) (Rhinos)  Sophie Coldwell (GBR) (Cheetahs)
2023  Kate Waugh (GBR) (Sharks)  Jeanne Lehair (LUX) (Eagles)  Emma Lombardi (FRA) (Eagles)
2024  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) (Crown Racing)  Jeanne Lehair (LUX) (Podium Racing)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) (Crown Racing)
2025  Jeanne Lehair (LUX) (Podium Racing)  Léonie Périault (FRA) (Podium Racing)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) (Crown Racing)
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*There was one event held in 2017 which was raced as a one-off. Jersey:[3] 1) Katie Zaferes, 2) Summer Cook, 3) Nicola Spirig.

Teams League Champions

More information Year, First ...
Year First Second Third
2021 SLT Eagles SLT Sharks SLT Scorpions
2022 SLT Scorpions SLT Sharks SLT Cheetahs
2023 SLT Eagles SLT Scorpions SLT Sharks
2024 Crown Racing Podium Racing Stars & Stripes Racing
2025 Podium Racing Crown Racing Brownlee Racing
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Supertri League individual race results

2017

Men

More information Event, First ...
Event First Second Third
Hamilton Island  Richard Murray (RSA)  Mario Mola (ESP)  Jacob Birtwhistle (AUS)
Jersey  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Richard Murray (RSA)
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Women

More information Event, First ...
Event First Second Third
Jersey  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Summer Cook (USA)  Nicola Spirig (SUI)
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2018

Men

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
Jersey Triple Mix[4]  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR)
Enduro[5]  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Richard Murray (RSA)
Overall  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR)
Malta Eliminator[6] Richard Murray (RSA) Vincent Luis (FRA) Henri Schoeman (RSA)
Equalizer[7] Vincent Luis (FRA) Henri Schoeman (RSA) Tyler Mislawchuk (CAN)
Overall  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Richard Murray (RSA)
Mallorca Triple Mix[8]  Henri Schoeman (RSA) Vincent Luis (FRA) Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)
Sprint Enduro[9]  Vincent Luis (FRA) Jonathan Brownlee (GBR) Henri Schoeman (RSA)
Overall  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)
Singapore Eliminator[10]  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR) Tyler Mislawchuk (CAN) Hayden Wilde (NZ)
Enduro[10]  Vincent Luis (FRA) Jonathan Brownlee (GBR) Henri Schoeman (RSA)
Overall  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Tyler Mislawchuk (CAN)
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Women

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
Jersey Triple Mix[4]  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Ashleigh Gentle (AUS)
Enduro[5]  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Kirsten Kasper (USA)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)
Overall  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Kirsten Kasper (USA)
Malta Eliminator[11] Katie Zaferes (USA) Rachel Klamer (NED) Joanna Brown (CAN)
Equalizer[12] Katie Zaferes (USA) Kirsten Kasper (USA) Summer Cook (USA)
Overall  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)  Kirsten Kasper (USA)
Mallorca Triple Mix[13]  Katie Zaferes (USA) Taylor Spivey (USA) Kirsten Kasper (USA)
Sprint Enduro[14]  Taylor Spivey (USA) Kirsten Kasper (USA) Katie Zaferes (USA)
Overall  Taylor Spivey (USA)  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Kirsten Kasper (USA)
Singapore Eliminator[15]  Katie Zaferes (USA) Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) Ashleigh Gentle (AUS)
Enduro[15]  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA) Katie Zaferes (USA) Rachel Klamer (NED)
Overall  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)
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2019

Men

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
Jersey Enduro*  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Pierre Le Corre (FRA)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)
Malta Equaliser  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)
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*Due to extreme weather conditions the event took place as an aquathlon over 3 x swim and run

Women

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
Jersey Triple Mix[4]  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)
Malta Equalizer  Katie Zaferes (USA)  Rachel Klamer (NED)  Yuko Takahashi (JPN)
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*Due to extreme weather conditions the event took place as an aquathlon over 3 x swim and run

2021

Men

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
London Triple Mix  Hayden Wilde (NZ)  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)
Munich Equalizer  Vincent Luis (FRA)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Alex Yee (GBR)
Jersey Enduro  Alex Yee (GBR)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Hayden Wilde (NZ)
Malibu Eliminator  Alex Yee (GBR)  Marten Van Riel (BEL)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)
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Women

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
London Triple Mix  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Vicky Holland (GBR)
Munich Equalizer  Jessica Learmonth (GBR) Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR) Beth Potter (GBR)
Jersey Enduro  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)
Malibu Eliminator  Flora Duffy (BER)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Katie Zaferes (USA)
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Teams

More information Rank, Team ...
RankTeamLondonMunichJerseyMalibuTotal Points
C Eagles 93 89 91 89 362
2 Scorpions 71 68 70 68 277
3 Sharks 66 63 58 71 258
4 Cheetahs 61 45 55 71 232
5 Rhinos 35 58 53 53 199
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2022

Men

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
London Triple Mix  Hayden Wilde (NZ)  Matthew Hauser (AUS)  Alex Yee (GBR)
Munich Enduro  Matthew Hauser (AUS) Vasco Vilaça (POR) Hayden Wilde (NZ)
Malibu Eliminator  Hayden Wilde (NZ) Shachar Sagiv (ISR) Vasco Vilaça (POR)
Toulouse Triple Mix  Hayden Wilde (NZ) Dorian Coninx (FRA) Kenji Nener (JPN)
NEOM Enduro  Matthew Hauser (AUS)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)
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Women

More information Round, Race ...
Round RaceFirstSecondThird
London Triple Mix  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Taylor Spivey (USA)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
Munich Enduro  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Sophie Coldwell (GBR)  Taylor Spivey (USA)
Malibu Eliminator  Taylor Spivey (USA)  Miriam Casillas (ESP)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
Toulouse Triple Mix  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GB)  Taylor Spivey (US)  Sophie Coldwell (GB)
NEOM Enduro  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GB)  Sophie Coldwell (GB)  Beth Potter (GB)
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Teams

More information Rank, Team ...
RankTeamLondonMunichToulouseMalibu NEOMTotal Points
C Scorpions 100 64 45 74 102 385
2 Sharks 78 70 87 68 80 383
3 Cheetahs 50 75 91 48 94 358
4 Eagles 54 61 63 85 51 314
5 Rhinos 62 63 58 56 65 304
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2023*

Men

More information Round, First ...
RoundFirstSecondThird
London  Alex Yee (GBR)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Tayler Reid (NZ)
Toulouse  Léo Bergère (FRA)  Jonathan Brownlee (GBR)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)
Malibu  Hayden Wilde (NZ)  Léo Bergère (FRA)  Matthew Hauser (AUS)
NEOM  Léo Bergère (FRA)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Alex Yee (GBR)
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Women

More information Round, First ...
RoundFirstSecondThird
London  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)  Sophie Coldwell (GBR)  Taylor Spivey (USA)
Toulouse  Kate Waugh (GBR)  Léonie Périault (FRA)  Emma Lombardi (FRA)
Malibu  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Emma Lombardi (FRA)  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)
NEOM  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Kate Waugh (GBR)  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)
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*From 2023 onwards all races were over the Supertri format

Teams

More information Rank, Team ...
RankTeamLondonToulouseMalibu NEOMTotal Points
C Eagles 60 100 125 140 425
2 Scorpions 65 100 113 129 407
3 Sharks 148 82 82 94 390
4 Warriors 75 66 66 35 220
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2024

Men

More information Round, First ...
RoundFirstSecondThird
Boston  Alex Yee (GBR)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Dorian Coninx (FRA)
Chicago  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Léo Bergère (FRA)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)
London  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Matthew Hauser (AUS)  Léo Bergère (FRA)
Toulouse  Vasco Vilaça (POR)  Tim Hellwig (GER)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)
NEOM  Alex Yee (GBR)  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Léo Bergère (FRA)
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Women

More information Round, First ...
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Teams

More information Rank, Team ...
RankTeam Boston ChicagoLondonToulouse NEOMTotal Points
C Crown Racing 81 79 88 75 97 420
2 Podium Racing 82 83 75 69 82 391
3 Stars & Stripes Racing 46 63 75 87 67 338
4 Brownlee Racing 73 57 45 51 86 312
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2025

Men

More information Round, First ...
RoundFirstSecondThird
Toronto  Alex Yee (GBR)  Csongor Lehmann (HUN)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)
Chicago  Alberto González García (ESP)  Tyler Mislawchuk (CAN)  John Reed (USA)
Jersey  Csongor Lehmann (HUN)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)  Oliver Conway (GBR)
Toulouse  Csongor Lehmann (HUN)  Seth Rider (USA)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)
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Women

More information Round, First ...
RoundFirstSecondThird
Toronto  Jolien Vermeylen (BEL)  Léonie Périault (FRA)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)
Chicago  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)  Fanni Szalai (HUN)
Jersey  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)  Léonie Périault (FRA)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
Toulouse  Jeanne Lehair (LUX)  Léonie Périault (FRA)  Jess Fullagar (GBR)
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Teams

More information Rank, Team ...
RankTeam Toronto ChicagoJerseyToulouseTotal Points
C Podium Racing 69 105 91 90 355
2 Crown Racing 89 77 59 76 301
3 Brownlee Racing 73 48 67 90 278
4 Stars & Stripes Racing 51 52 65 76 244
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Supertri League Hosts

More information Country, Location ...
Country Location Year Total
20172018[16] 20192021[17] 2022 2023 2024 2025
 Australia Hamilton Island 1
 Jersey Saint Helier 5
 Singapore 1
 Malta Bormla 2
 Spain Mallorca, Porto Cristo 1
 Great Britain London 4
 Germany Munich 2
 United States Malibu, California 3
 France Toulouse 4
 Saudi Arabia Neom 3
 United States Boston 1
 United States Chicago 2
 Canada Toronto 1
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Supertri E

Supertri E

Supertri E is a triathlon series that fuses the worlds of real life and virtual racing. It is featured at the IOC's Olympic Esports Week.

The Supertri E World Triathlon Championship crowns official Esports triathlon World Champions. Athletes compete in arenas, swim in Olympic pools, and complete bike and run segments on smart trainers and self-powered curved treadmills.

In 2024, the World Championship took place at the London Aquatic Centre in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park on April 13. British triathlete Beth Potter[18] clinched the women's title and American athlete Chase McQueen[19] secured the men's championship.

Supertri E History

Originally named Arena Games Triathlon, Supertri E was born in the COVID pandemic-era, when lockdowns and restrictions saw global sport forced to either adapt of shut down entirely. As a mass sport that required mass gatherings, triathlon was a sport heavily effected.

Supertri CEO Michael D'hulst had been speaking to technology platform Zwift[20] about the idea of a hybrid real life and virtual event for some time, but the companies agreed to accelerate their development of the concept during the COVID lockdowns, and the concept was established.

Athletes would swim in an indoor pool, and could cycle and run at stations positioned far enough apart that they adhered to social distancing rules. The technology enabled a real race to happen and a global broadcast that was innovative and safe. The first Arena Games Triathlon took place in Rotterdam in 2020, and the event was so successful it won multiple awards and a new triathlon race format was created.

After several years of refining the concept, Supertri partnered with World Triathlon to create official Esports World Champions from the event, and to get it into the IOC's Olympic Esports Week. The event now runs with the technology platform under the title Supertri E World Triathlon Championships is powered by MyWhoosh. It is aiming to be a medal event at the IOC Esports Olympics.

Supertri E Race Format

Supertri E blends real life racing and virtual racing. The swim portions of the race take place in an Olympic standard pool, while the bike and run sections take place on the pool deck or pool's surrounding area, utilizing static bikes and self propelled treadmills. The bike and run sections of the race are captured using cameras, capturing the athlete's reactions as the race unfolds, and through utilizing the training platform MyWhoosh. This includes athletes each having their own race avatar (so that spectators can see the athlete's positions, in relation to each other, on the route selected on Zwift) and real time displays of power output and heart rate data.

At Supertri E, each swim is 200 m, each bike is 4 km, and each run is 1 km. Supertri E events are competed over heats and a final. Heats see two stages of swim-bike-run, which determine which athletes proceed to the final. 10 athletes qualify for each event final. From 2025, the final is competed over the Supertri race format. This means 3 back to back stages of swim, bike, run. with minimal rest between each stage. Previous editions saw a pursuit style start adopted for the final stage, and the second stage taking the form reversed triathlon (run, bike, swim).[21]

Supertri E results

2020

Men

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Rotterdam  Justus Nieschlag (GER)  Vasco Vilaça (POR)  Javier Gomez (ESP)
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[22]

Women

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Rotterdam  Jess Learmonth (GBR)  Rachel Klamer (NED)  Valerie Barthelemy (BEL)
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[23]

2021

Men

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Rotterdam  Marten Van Riel (BEL)  Alex Yee (GBR)  Aurélien Raphaël (FRA)
London  Marten Van Riel (BEL) Justus Nieschlag (GER) Alex Yee (GBR)
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Women

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Rotterdam  Sophie Coldwell (GBR)  Beth Potter (GBR)  Anna Godoy Contreras (ESP)
London  Beth Potter (GBR) Lucy Charles-Barclay (GBR) Sophie Coldwell (GBR)
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2022: World Championship Final Standings

Men

More information First, Second ...
FirstSecondThird
 Alex Yee (GBR)  Justus Nieschlag (GER)  Aurélien Raphaël (FRA)
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Women

More information First, Second ...
FirstSecondThird
 Beth Potter (GBR)  Zsanett Bragmayer (HUN)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
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2022: Race results

Men

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Munich  Aurélien Raphaël (FRA)  Max Stapley (GBR)  Justus Nieschlag (GER)
London  Justus Nieschlag (GER)  Alex Yee (GBR)  Nicolo Strada (ITA)
Singapore  Hayden Wilde (NZL)  Alex Yee (GBR)  Justus Nieschlag (GER)
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Women

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Munich  Beth Potter (GBR)  Lena Meissner (GER)  Anabel Knoll (GER)
London  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Beth Potter (GBR)  Jessica Learmonth (GBR)
Singapore  Zsanett Bragmayer (HUN)  Beth Potter (GBR)  Georgia Taylor-Brown (GBR)
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2023: World Championship Final Standings

Men

More information First, Second ...
First Second Third
 Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Nicolo Strada (ITA)  Simon Westermann (SUI)
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Women

More information First, Second ...
First Second Third
 Sophie Linn (AUS)  Gina Sereno (USA)  Rani Skrabanja (NED)
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2023: Race results

Men

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Montreal  Chase McQueen (USA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Jack Stanton-Stock (GBR)
Sursee  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Maxime Hueber-Moosbrugger (FRA)  Simon Westermann (SUI)
London  Nicolo Strada (ITA)  Henri Schoeman (RSA)  Kyle Smith (NZL)
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Women

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
Montreal  Gino Soreno (USA)  Sophie Linn (AUS)  Dominika Jamnicky (CAN)
Sursee  Zsanett Bragmayer (HUN)  Olivia Mathias (GBR)  Fanni Szalai (HUN)
London  Beth Potter (GBR)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Sophie Linn (AUS)
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2024

Men

More information Venue, First ...
VenueFirstSecondThird
London  Chase McQueen (USA)  Max Stapley (GBR)  Maxime Hueber-Moosbrugger (FRA)
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Women

More information Venue, First ...
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London  Beth Potter (GBR)  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Katie Zaferes (USA)
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2025

Men

More information Venue, First ...
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London  Maxime Hueber-Moosbrugger (FRA)  Chase McQueen (USA)  Maciej Bruzdziak (POL)
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Women

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London  Cassandre Beaugrand (FRA)  Beth Potter (GBR)  Julia Broecker (GER)
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By Supertri

Supertri launched the By Supertri brand in 2025 to house its mass participation events.[24]

Supertri owns two of the biggest five triathlons in the world in Chicago Triathlon and Blenheim Palace Triathlon.

In North America it owns New York City Triathlon, Long Beach Legacy Triathlon, Austin Triathlon, Kerrville Triathlon and Toronto Triathlon, alongside Chicago. It's also owns Blenheim Palace Triathlon in the UK and Toulouse Triathlon in France.

References

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