Gwen Jorgensen (USA), Lukas Verzbicas (USA) score golden American sweep at Banyoles ITU World Cup

USA's Gwen Jorgensen and Lukas Verzbicas both left it until the last lap of the run to make their move and claim the 2012 ITU Triathlon World Cup Banyoles title. Jorgensen surged past Australia's Erin Densham to take gold and in the men's race a young Verzbicas won his first ever I

Gwen Jorgensen (USA), Lukas Verzbicas (USA) score golden American sweep at Banyoles ITU World Cup
Erin Densham surprised herself with a 2nd – Credit: Triathlon.org | Janos Schmidt / ITU

USA’s Gwen Jorgensen and Lukas Verzbicas both left it until the last lap of the run to make their move and claim the 2012 ITU Triathlon World Cup Banyoles title. Jorgensen surged past Australia’s Erin Densham to take gold and in the men’s race a young Verzbicas won his first ever ITU World Cup in his World Cup debut. This also marks the first time since 26 September 1992 that the U.S. has swept gold at an ITU World Cup.

Australian results

PosAthleteTimeSwimBikeRun
2Erin Densham1:59:550:21:051:01:500:35:30
3Ashleigh Gentle2:00:020:21:381:01:190:35:35
8Felicity Sheedy-Ryan2:01:480:22:281:02:050:35:44
10Tamsyn Moana-Veale2:02:120:21:261:01:270:37:48
12Natalie Van Coevorden2:02:440:21:181:01:400:38:09
14Charlotte McShane2:03:000:21:251:01:310:38:28
      
PosAthleteTimeSwimBikeRun
12Peter Kerr1:49:140:19:260:55:380:32:49
25Ryan Bailie1:50:160:19:320:55:280:33:50
27Jesse Featonby1:50:400:20:080:54:560:34:12
30Matt Brown1:50:550:19:460:55:210:34:24
42Drew Box1:52:130:19:230:55:430:35:46
44Taylor Cecil1:52:490:19:450:55:180:36:25

Elite Women’s Review

The elite women were met with clear blue skies and rising temperatures at the 2012 Banyoles ITU Triathlon World Cup. A race brimming with athletes heading to London, triathlon newcomer Gwen Jorgensen  (USA) gave her competition reason to fear her presence in England with a win in Spain on Sunday.

“It was a really great course,” Jorgensen said. “Those girls really made me work. There are some really good runners out there and when Erin took it out, I really tried to keep the distance.”

From the start, amphibious Lucy Hall (GBR) and Banyoles local  Carolina Routier (ESP) wasted no time in creating a 20-meter distance on the two-lap swim. Routier swam on Hall ´s hip throughout the swim, exiting to cheers from her compatriots.

Together, the young athletes headed out on the bike with a minute lead over favorites Andrea Hewitt  (NZL) and  Erin Densham  (AUS). While they were expected to reign in the two runaways, the opposite actually happened.

Hall and Routier continued hammering out even splits, while the chase pack failed to find a rhythm. However, the group lost nearly 40 seconds on the final two laps.  Unfortunately for them, even one minute and 40 seconds wasn’t enough to secure a podium position. The pair was quickly overtaken by a swift Densham. The Aussie pulled even with Routier on the first lap and trailed Hall by just 14 seconds.

By midway through the second of three run laps, Hall was nowhere to been seen, while the Spaniard had fallen out of contention. Meanwhile, Densham continued ahead, while teammate  Ashleigh Gentle  and Jorgensen pulled up third. Hewitt trailed close behind.

On the final lap, Densham owned a nine-second lead over Jorgensen. Her lead, however, was soon destroyed. With a final surge, Jorgensen overtook a fatiguing Densham early on in the final lap. She breezed over the finish line 16 seconds ahead of the competition to claim her second world cup title. Densham cruised into second, while her teammate Gentle gave Australia a two-three finish with bronze.

Final Results – Elite Women – 1.5km swim, 40km bike, 10km run

1.Gwen JorgensenUSA 01:59:39
2.Erin DenshamAUS 01:59:55
3.Ashleigh GentleAUS 02:00:02
4.Andrea HewittNZL 02:00:35
5.Lois RosindaleGBR 02:01:10
6.Arina ShulginaRUS 02:01:27
7.Elena DanilovaRUS 02:01:38
8.Felicity Sheedy-RyanAUS 02:01:48
9.Anna BurovaRUS 02:02:07
10.Tamsyn Moana-VealeAUS 02:02:12

Elite Men’s Review

While the temperatures certainly heated up at the men’s race of the 2012 Banyoles ITU Triathlon World Cup, the competition didn’t get steamy until the final discipline. The race was a game of wait and see, as a pack of more than 50 men competed in one large group until the run.

It was worth the wait for young  Lukas Verzbicas  (USA), as the run proved to be a pivotal moment in the competition and his career. The 19-year old Junior World Champion made his debut on the elite international circuit with a tremendous final run lap to earn him his first World Cup title.
“It was great,” Verzbicas said. “It was my first world cup, as well as my first world cup victory.”

He was followed by favourites Laurent Vidal (FRA) and Dmitry Polyanskiy (RUS) who captured silver and bronze, respectably.

The day began predictably enough when the Polyanskiy brothers quickly moved to the front of the swim.

With a flat course lacking many opportunities for strong or technical riders to pull away, another 20 men joined the lead congregation by the end of the first lap. Only a small assembly of six riders remained trailing.

Vidal, who left the water in 24th place made his way to the front of the ride just in time for Russia’s  Denis Vasiliev  to break away to a 38-second lead. Meanwhile, Polyanskiy opted to fall to the middle of the pack where Verzbicas was nearby. For the final two laps, Vidal pulled the sizable field, while Verzbicas and Polyanskiy conserved energy.

After pushing through a congestive second transition, Verzbicas, Vidal, and Polyanskiy ran shoulder to shoulder, having quickly overtaken Vasiliev and the rest of the competitors. Together, they continued forging further ahead until the final lap when Vidal and Verzbicas dropped Polyanskiy.

Vidal had a slight edge over Verzbicas, but it didn’t last long. Verzbicas kicked into turbo speed with half a lap to go and left the Frenchman behind.

“Polyanskiy and Vidal started the run out well,” Verzbicas said. “Without planning it, I pushed forward and just kept pushing the whole way.”

Wearing number 43, Verzbicas surged over the finish line to his first world cup victory with a 17-second lead.

Vidal claimed second, while Polyanskiy crossed over 36 seconds after the top time of one hour, forty seven minutes and twenty eight seconds.

Final Results – Elite Men – 1.5km swim, 40km bike, 10km run

1.Lukas VerzbicasUSA 01:47:28
2.Laurent VidalFRA 01:47:45
3.Dmitry PolyanskiyRUS 01:48:04
4.Mark BuckinghamGBR 01:48:16
5.Adam BowdenGBR 01:48:22
6.Vladimir TurbaevskiyRUS 01:48:33
7.Fernando AlarzaESP 01:48:35
8.Aaron HarrisGBR 01:48:40
9.Uxio Abuin AresESP 01:48:45
10.Andreas SchillingDEN 01:48:50

Click here for full field results