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My name is Rhys, a first time dad blogging about my adventures and experiences of being a parent. [email protected]

IRONMAN Pro Series heads to Wales for the first time

IRONMAN is one of the city's major attractions this year. Credit: IRONMAN

On Sunday, 13 July, nearly 60 professional triathletes will head to the south coast of Wales for the first time to compete in the IRONMAN® 70.3® Swansea triathlon, the 12th event in the 2025 IRONMAN® Pro Series. The event will offer a maximum of 2,500 points towards IRONMAN® Pro Series standings, a $50,000 USD event total pro prize purse, and two slots per gender for the 2026 IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship triathlon in Nice, France.

The event can be viewed live in person and will be broadcast across multiple platforms for viewers around the world, including proseries.ironman.com, Outside TV in the US and Canada, DAZN, L’Equipe in France, and ESPN (within Disney+) in Latin American and the Caribbean meaning that triathlon fans from all over the world will be able to experience the stunning Swansea course.

Highlighting a top caliber women’s field will be 2024 IRONMAN Pro Series Champion Kat Matthews (GBR). Matthews, who has had a stellar start to her season with a stunning set of results at the Memorial Hermann IRONMAN Texas North American Championship and the Qatar Airways IRONMAN Hamburg European Championship races, currently sits in second position in the Series and will be on the hunt for points to push into the lead. Looking to retain her overall lead in this year’s Series will be Germany’s Anne Reischmann, whose victory at the ISUZU IRONMAN South Africa African Championship race positioned her as an early season threat.  Wearing bib number one and looking to defend her title in Swansea will be Nikki Bartlett (GBR), who was also the fifth-place finisher at the 2024 IRONMAN World Championship® triathlon in Nice.

In the men’s field, bib number one will belong to defending champion Harry Palmer (GBR), whose win last year was followed by a respectable eighth place finish at the 2024 IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship race in Taupō. Palmer will have his work cut out for him, however, as also heading to Swansea is two-time IRONMAN World Championship podium finisher and 2025 IRONMAN African Champion, Magnus Ditlev (DNK). Coming off the back of an eighth-place finish at the Mainova IRONMAN Frankfurt European Championship triathlon this past weekend, competitors will no doubt be hoping Ditlev’s legs are still feeling the effects.

Below are the professional start lists (subject to change):

WOMEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib First Name Last Name Country Represented
F1 Nikki Bartlett GBR
F2 Kat Matthews GBR
F3 Daniela Kleiser DEU
F4 Hanne De vet BEL
F5 Lizzie Rayner GBR
F6 Megan Mcdonald GBR
F7 Anne Reischmann DEU
F9 Marta Lagownik POL
F10 Penny Slater AUS
F11 Rhianne Hughes GBR
F12 Rebecca Anderbury GBR
F13 Laura Addie GBR
F14 Hannah Knighton NZL
F16 Jenny Jendryschik DEU
F17 Lydia Dant GBR
F18 Eloise Du Luart FRA
F19 Tina Christmann DEU
F20 Dimity-Lee Duke AUS
F21 Daisy Davies GBR
F22 Hannah Munday GBR
F23 Aoibh Clarke IRL
F24 Molly Savill GBR
F25 Jasmine Holmes GBR
F26 Rachel Brown GBR

MEN’S PROFESSIONAL FIELD
Bib First Name Last Name Country Represented
M1 Harry Palmer GBR
M2 Magnus Ditlev DNK
M3 Leon Chevalier FRA
M4 Sam Dickinson GBR
M5 Simon Viain FRA
M6 Matthew Collins GBR
M7 Leonard Arnold DEU
M8 Kieran Lindars GBR
M9 Jannik Schaufler DEU
M10 Cameron Wurf AUS
M12 Paul Schuster DEU
M13 Andrew Horsfall-Turner GBR
M14 Iestyn Harrett GBR
M15 Johnathan Dolan USA
M16 Kurt McDonald AUS
M17 James Teagle GBR
M18 Ollie Turner JEY
M19 Thomas Davis GBR
M20 Sam Wordley GBR
M21 Quentin De Vos BEL
M22 Finn Arentz GBR
M23 Jeremy Maclean USA
M24 Thomas Mcmanners FIN
M25 William Mennesson FRA
M26 Jack Hindle GBR
M27 Lachlan Haycock NZL
M28 Stefan Graf CHE
M29 Josh Lewis GGY
M30 Frederick Webb GBR
M31 Alex Woodman GBR
M32 Matthew Kaminer ZAF
M33 Max Mahoney USA
M34 Liam Lloyd GBR
M35 Will Crudgington GBR
M36 Floren Lefebvre FRA
M37 Simon Davis GBR
M38 Robert Huisman NZL
M39 Malachi Cashmore GBR
M40 Oliver Waymark GBR

The IRONMAN 70.3 Swansea swim course begins at the Prince of Wales Dock kicking-off with a 1.2-mile swim through Swansea Bay. Once out of the water, athletes will head out onto the 56-mile bike course that passes through the seaside village of Mumbles along roads that hug the Gower’s coastal clifftops before cycling out through the rural Welsh countryside and heading back into the city. The event will cap off with a 13.1-mile two loop run course which takes them from the city centre, out past the new eye-catching gold-colored Swansea Arena, towards Mumbles before heading back towards the finish line at the Marina.

In addition to the professional field, 2,500 registered participants will compete at IRONMAN 70.3 Swansea triathlon on the same course, looking to earn age-group qualifying slots to the 2026 IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship triathlon taking place in Nice, France.