Potter wins the Grand Final ahead of teammate Kate Waugh, who collects her first WTCS medal; Cassandre Beaugrand finishes third in the race and runner-up in the series

By Liz Barrett

Published: Sunday, 24 September 2023 at 16:39 PM


*This piece is being updated

Great Britain has a new World Triathlon champion. Scotland’s Beth Potter pulled out a near perfect performance in the 2023 Grand Final to claim her first world title.

The victory was the first series-long championship win for Team GB since Vicky Holland in 2018 (Georgia Taylor-Brown won a one-off race title in 2020).

Heading into the Grand Final, Beaugrand was a sliver in front of Potter in the championship rankings, leaving the title chase wide open for the final race of the season.

What happened in the swim?

Italy’s Bianca Seregni led the group of 59 women out of the water after the first lap in 9:28mins. Just behind was GB’s
GB’s Olivia Mathias, USA’s Summer Rappaport in third, GB’s Sophie Coldwell in fifth, Taylor Spivey (USA) eighth, Beaugrand ninth, Potter 10th, Emma Lombardi 11th, Gwen Jorgensen 22nd (21secs back) and Katie Zaferes 23secs in arrears.

There was also a race within a race taking place as Team USA was chasing the final two Olympic slots; 70.3 world champion Taylor Knibb – not racing in Pontevedra – having taken the first one at the Paris Test Event. Spivey, Rappaport, Jorgensen, Kirsten Kasper and Zaferes were now all vying to finish as high as possible in the top eight to meet the US criteria.

By the end of the 1.5km swim, it was Mathias into T1 first, bringing Seregni, Maya Kingma (NED), Coldwell, Rappaport, Vittoria Lopes (BRA), Minori Ikeno (JPN), Spivey and Beaugrand,  was the first out.

Potter was 16secs off the pace, alongside compatriot Kate Waugh.

Jorgensen lost more time on the second lap to leave the water 32secs back.

What happened on the bike?

An early group of six – Coldwell, Mathias, Lopes, Kingma, Beaugrand and Sophie Linn (AUS) – formed at the front for the eight-lap 40k, but within the same lap the next chasing packs had merged to make 15, meaning Potter, Waugh, Lombardi, Spivey and Laura Lindemann (GER) were all together.

Nearly 30secs back came the one and only chase group, into which Rappaport had dropped after a poor transition.

At the start of lap three, the gap had stretched by 10secs.

Rapapport was the first big name to clock a DNF, the fifth-place in the standings pre-race succumbing to a mechanical.

Two of the strongest runners Potter and Beaugrand played it smart over the 40k, rarely putting in a stint at the front, instead conserving precious leg speed for the final 10km run.

Halfway though and the gap to the chasers had edged up ever so slightly, at 45secs, but another lap in and the deficit was down to 37secs. Soon after, Jorgensen was seen limping off the back of the chase group, a suspected puncture derailing her Olympic ambitions.

The third chase group of 13 – which housed France’s Léonie Périault – was still hanging on, 2:21mins down, while the fourth and final group of seven were ticking on over 3mins behind the leaders.

By the start of the bell lap the gap was down to 25secs, but with Jorgensen swiftly dropping back through the groups there was no one else who could realistically challenge the top contenders on the 10k.

What happened on the run?

Mathias, Coldwell and Waugh made for an arresting sight, the Brit trio running into the T2 side by side.

But Lombardi was the first to strike out, as Potter and Beaugrand joined her at the front alongside a terrifically strong looking Waugh.

Potter soon edged ahead, the technical course playing to her strengths, but Waugh kept her honest as the GB pair played pacers for the French pair of Lombardi and Beaugrand. But the latter was soon seen dropping down to fourth, losing 6secs to the leading trio by the start of lap two.

Beaugrand was now settled in another trio alongside Coldwell and Jeanne Lehair (LUX).

5km in and the top three were unchanged, but Lehair had fallen back, leaving Coldwell and Beaugrand fighting for fourth 13secs behind.

Lap three and Lombardi was dropped by the two the brilliant Brits; Beaugrand a further 8secs behind; Coldwell another nine.

Potter kicked towards the end of lap three to start the bell lap with a gap of 5secs over Waugh. Lombardi was 23secs adrift, Beaugrand just 2secs behind her, while Coldwell now was in eighth.

Beaugrand was soon in third place, but in of no danger to Potter, who by now was racing solo upfront, Waugh unable to stay with her more experienced teammate.

Who won the 220 World Triathon women’s title?

Beth Potter.

2023 World Triathlon Grand Final women’s results – top 10

1 #2Beth Potter GBR00:05:0001:53:19
2 #12Kate Waugh GBR00:05:0301:53:37 +00:00:18
3 #1Cassandre Beaugrand FRA00:04:5601:53:50 +00:00:31
4 #11Lisa Tertsch GER00:04:5901:54:01 +00:00:43
5 #26Rachel Klamer NED00:05:0201:54:08 +00:00:49
6 #3Emma Lombardi FRA00:05:0901:54:09 +00:00:50
7 #8Sophie Coldwell GBR00:04:5801:54:12 +00:00:53
8 #28Julie Derron SUI00:05:0301:54:14 +00:00:55
9 #46Noelia Juan ESP00:05:0701:54:31 +00:01:12
10 #43 Alice Betto ITA 00:05:09 01:54:35 +00:01:16

2023 World Triathlon Championship Series Women’s Final Standings 

Top image credit: World Triathlon