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ITU WTS Yokohama Men’s Preview

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Alistair Brownlee is putting in his first ITU appearance of the year at Yokohama

Jonny Brownlee ITU Yokohama 2013 Delly Carr ITU

Jonny Brownlee’s return to action at Yokohama 2013 provided an emphatic victory (Photo: Delly Carr / ITU)

Yokohama will be the first race of the 2014 ITU World Triathlon Series that will see Javier Gomez, Jonathan Brownlee and Alistair Brownlee go head to head in combat. The trio will duke it out over a two-lap swim, nine-lap bike and four-lap standard distance course in the Yokohama harbour on Saturday.

The facts

In the last 20 times that Javier Gomez and Alistair Brownlee have met at WTS races, Alistair has won on 15 of those occasions. But that was then and this is now. Gomez is not waiting to make a move in the Threadneedle rankings, having destroyed the competition, including younger Brownlee brother Jonathan, in the last two WTS events.

But as we saw last year in San Diego when Alistair charged away from the competition for the win, missing the first few races of the season has no impact on his ability to win.

But what Jonathan and Gomez have that Alistair doesn’t is experience racing in Yokohama. This Saturday will mark the first time the London Olympic gold medallist competes on the course, which could fuel his motivation but may also work against him.

Jonathan, however, started his 2013 season with a bang in Yokohama, trudging through a wet and muddy course for the top spot ahead of Gomez. And while Gomez has raced three of the last four Yokohama events, he has yet to win in the Japanese city.

When asked on his expectations for this year’s race, Jonny said:

Gomez vs Brownlee run at ITU WTS Cape Town. Photo: Janos M Schmidt/ITU Media

It’s a familiar story here as Jonny Brownlee and Javier Gomez lead the run at Cape Town.

“Last year I came here for my first race in the season, I had been injured and wasn’t sure what to expect but this year is completely different, it is my third race of the year and the season has started quite well for me. But this year the field is very strong and I am looking forward to racing, training has been going well at home. Having Alistair here changes it, it should make it faster again and it should be a great race.”

On how to beat Javier Gomez, who has won the opening two WTS events this season.

“All I have done is go home and try and get a little faster, I have done a few faster run sessions and I will try my best to run faster on Saturday. Having Alistair here will maybe help a little, especially on the bike. Javier was fast in Auckland and Cape Town and all I can do is try to beat him here.”

Conclusion? You’re just going to want to watch this one.

History on Silva’s side

Portugal’s Joao Silva may have had a slow start to the year, but Yokohama is his hunting ground. Silva has medalled three times at the race, winning it in both 2011 and 2012. Last year his reign slipped to third behind Jonathan and Gomez, but keep an eye on this stealthy athlete on the run to keep his winning record on track.

Alistair Brownlee ITU San Diego 2013 - Delly Carr ITU

Alistair Brownlee raced to victory in San Diego 2013, a week before he recorded 28.32 on the track (Photo: Delly Carr/ITU)

Come from behind

Yokohama’s technical course doesn’t lend itself well to breakaways. But as we learned in Cape Town, that doesn’t much matter to Mario Mola (ESP) and Richard Murray (RSA). These training partners absolutely demolished the competition on the last discipline, running themselves from a minute deficit into the top five with the fastest run splits of the day.

Mola split an eye-popping 29:58 10km time meaning this Spaniard can get business done if he is anywhere near the leaders off the bike. Look out folks. These guys are the new threats.

The underdogs

Dmitry Polyanskiy (RUS) might not have had such a stellar 2013 season, but he successfully reminded the field exactly what he’s capable of when he held Mola at bay in Cape Town for bronze. He will no doubt be a leader out of the water and can hold his own on the bike.

The trick will again be to secure enough lead out of T2 to hold off the likes of Mola and Murray. Similarly, athletes like Aaron Royle (AUS) and Ryan Sissons (NZL) are making names for themselves as all-round triathletes that can do damage.

Click here for the men’s start list

Follow all the events live with timing and text updates, at triathlon.org/live and on Twitter at @triathlonlive. Don’t forget to pick who you think will be on the men’s and women’s podiums with TRIFECTA.

Find more details about this event

Watch the races live. The men’s race will begin at 5am BST.

Originally published: wts.triathlon.org

 

 

 


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