By Tim Heming

Published: Wednesday, 27 July 2022 at 12:00 am


The sight of Kyle Smith leading the 2021 Ironman World Championship, second-youngest in the field, grinning a blood-stained grin against the red rock backdrop with rivals straining to stay on terms, is one that will endure from May’s showpiece showdown in Utah.

But it wasn’t just in St George. Anyone in Lanzarote for the 70.3 in March will have witnessed the same. Seeing Smith hammering away at the front on the bike and hanging tough on the run is something we’re getting used to. As for the blood, we’ll come to that later.

Still just 24, Smith only stepped into the non-drafting world in 2019, but made his mark by winning his first five middle-distance races.

Last summer he was a wildcard pick for Team Internationals in the inaugural Collins Cup, and from there has settled in Girona and become Jan Frodeno’s training partner, lining up a critical role in the German’s assault on a fourth – and perhaps final – Kona title in October.

Whether it’s biking with one tri-bar or running marathons with one sock, it’s been quite the trip for the boy from Blackburn who was brought up riding horses and motorbikes…

Who is Kyle Smith?

  • Age: 24
  • Born: Blackburn
  • Nationality: New Zealand 
  • Height: 183cm
  • PTO ranking: 25

220: Kyle, having finished fifth in the Challenge Championship, a fortnight after 11th place on Ironman worlds debut, you’re back in the UK briefly. Why is that?

Kyle Smith: A few errands. To buy a car, watch my cousin in a boxing match, meet with sponsors, and sell my old TT bike – there’s a better market here than in Spain.  It’s nice to come back, see family, and fill up the soul bucket while I recover from racing.

220: Having grown up in Blackburn with two older brothers, what are your early sporting memories?

KS: Because I left aged 12, everything about the UK is nostalgic. They were my formative years and fun times. I still remember every turn of the 2km run I’d do every day after school. We had a super sporty childhood. Come rain, hail, shine, we were always outside playing football, riding bikes, building jumps.

We grew up in a working-class environment in a terraced house. Mum grew up on a working farm and dad tinkered with motorbikes all the time. My brother Aaron would ride motocross. It was like a Lewis Hamilton story. Aaron didn’t have expensive tuned-up race machines, but relied on his talent, and became national champion.

Ryan hated motorbikes and got into horse-riding, and I think I was only conceived because my parents really wanted a daughter. I grew up doing a bit of everything, and before we left for New Zealand managed top five in the British national champs for modern pentathlon.

Luckily we moved to Taupo, a triathlon town. I could swim, run and ride pretty well, so tried a first duathlon at a local club and ended up beating all the adults.

""
Kyle Smith asks for the numbers of laps to go on the bike track during the men’s U23 race at the 2019 ITU World Triathlon Grand Final in Lausanne, Switzerland (Credit: Jörg Schüler/Getty Images)

220: Why didn’t your short-course career work out quite how you wanted it to?

KS: I showed potential. I won aquathlon junior worlds in 2014 a year after finishing just behind Gustav Iden in the 16-19 age-group world champs in London when I was only just old enough to enter.

To make it in ITU, I came to Europe and was sleeping on people’s floors, scrimping and saving to make it to races. I finished seventh in a World Cup, but felt I was always pushing against the grain.

In 2019, I finished 11th in the U23 worlds in Lausanne, but was dropped from the Tri NZ squad. It was tough, although with hindsight I can accept that I just needed to be a better athlete.

I still have aspirations to make Paris [2024 Olympics] and at the end of this year and next year I’ll have another crack at ITU. I want to qualify off my own back.

220: So you changed tack and tried your hand at going longer?

KS: I stumbled into long-distance tri by accident. I only entered Ironman 70.3 Taupo [2019] because it was my hometown race.  I’d returned from Europe and mum was working at a heritage estate house that needed someone to mow the lawns.

I jokingly said if I win on the weekend I’m not coming in on Monday. I won, but with Ironman not paying for 90 days, I had to go back anyway! I was also barman on Saturday night at functions. It was a cool job. After all, my mum was my boss.

220: After five straight middle-distance wins you travelled to Europe and gained wildcard selection for the Collins Cup in Slovakia [2021] – which turned into an eventful match-up.

KS: The picture of me riding with the one tri-bar is on the wall in Samorin – immortalised. The crash early on the bike snapped the aerobar clean off, but the bigger issue was being stuck in a 58-11 gear grinding 40rpm on an angle that put my back out.

Given it was a unique race and a privilege to be there I wasn’t going to do it an injustice, so ploughed on and ended up in a sprint finish with Collin [Chartier]. I want my mantra to be ‘Never Give Up’.

 

View this post on Instagram