World Triathlon Cup

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The World Triathlon Cup is an annual series of triathlon races staged around the world, organised by World Triathlon, the IOC-recognised world governing body of the sport. The events are operated under the standard rules of World Triathlon which, in contrast to the Ironman triathlon formats which are not organised by world Triathlon, allow drafting in the cycle leg, and are held over both 'standard' and 'sprint' (half standard) distances.

Contents

The event has existed in two distinct eras. Between 1991 and 2008, the World Cup was the highest level of season-long draft-legal professional triathlon racing, although a separate World Championship event crowned the formal World Champions of the sport. Following the creation of the World Triathlon Championship Series for 2008, however, the World Cup circuit became the second tier global circuit, below the Championship Series but above the Continental Cups circuit.

The event continues to exist as the second tier in World Triathlon-controlled, draft legal racing, alongside start-up private events such as Super League Triathlon, now known as supertri and the T100 Triathlon format backed by the Professional Triathletes Organisation.

Background

Inaugurated in 1991, the World Cup began as an attempt to create a regular season under the management of the then International Triathlon Union, in tandem with the ITU Triathlon World Championship which was contested as a single winner-takes-all championship race. However, this meant that over the course of a season, there was a World Cup champion as well as a world champion.

Following the 2008 series the ITU reorganized its top level competitions and created the World Triathlon Championship Series , a series of races that was to be the successor of the single race World Championship. Meanwhile, the World Cup was demoted to become a second tier series, and initially as a result the number of races in the World Cup were reduced. [1] Since the reformat, points earned in World Cup racing are now applied only to an athlete's World Ranking. [2]

Points

At its founding the first twenty athletes each race would earn points dependent on their placing and the athletes with the most points at the end of the season would be named the World Cup champion.

Former Scale (1991-2008)
Place1st2nd3rd4567891011121314151617181920
Points50443935312724211815131197654321

With the reorganization in 2009 and the discontinuation of the world cup champion title it was decided that world cup points should contribute to an athlete's world series. This was managed by allowing athletes best two world cup placements could be considered as part of their world series ranking. However, due ranking being based on an athlete's four highest scoring appearances that year along with the fact that world series races were worth 2.5 times as much as a world cup meant that no contribution was made to any athlete in the top 10.

(2009-2014)
Place1st2nd3rd456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930
Points300278257237220203188174161149138127118109101938680746863585450464340373431

After 2014 world cup points totals were increased awarding first place 500 points and each subsequent athlete 7.5% less points that the athlete before for the first 50 athletes as long as they made the time cut (5% to the winner's time in the men's event and 8% in the women's event). [3] However the points would no longer contribute to an athlete's world series score and only to an athlete's world ranking.

World Cup Winners (1991-2008)

World Cup champions were declared annually between 1991 and 2008, based on the final accumulated point totals as earned in each year's series of World Cup races, with double points awarded for results achieved in the ITU Triathlon World Championship race. The declared champions from 1991 to 2008 were:

YearMen's championWomen's champion
1991 Flag of Brazil.svg  Leandro Macedo  (BRA)Flag of the United States.svg  Karen Smyers  (USA)
1992 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Andrew MacMartin  (CAN)
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Brad Beven  (AUS)
Flag of the United States.svg  Melissa Mantak  (USA)
1993 Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Brad Beven  (AUS)Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Joanne Ritchie  (CAN)
1994 Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Brad Beven  (AUS)Flag of New Zealand.svg  Jenny Rose  (NZL)
1995Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Brad Beven  (AUS)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Emma Carney  (AUS)
1996Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Miles Stewart  (AUS)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Emma Carney  (AUS)
1997Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Chris McCormack  (AUS)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Emma Carney  (AUS)
1998Flag of New Zealand.svg  Hamish Carter  (NZL)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Michellie Jones  (AUS)
1999Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Andrew Johns  (GBR)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Loretta Harrop  (AUS)
2000Flag of Kazakhstan.svg  Dmitriy Gaag  (KAZ)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Michellie Jones  (AUS)
2001Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Chris Hill  (AUS)Flag of the United States.svg  Siri Lindley  (USA)
2002Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Greg Bennett  (AUS)Flag of the United States.svg  Siri Lindley  (USA)
2003Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Greg Bennett  (AUS)Flag of the United States.svg  Barbara Lindquist  (USA)
2004Flag of Kazakhstan.svg  Dmitriy Gaag  (KAZ)Flag of Germany.svg  Anja Dittmer  (GER)
2005Flag of the United States.svg  Hunter Kemper  (USA)Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Annabel Luxford  (AUS)
2006Flag of Spain.svg  Javier Gómez  (ESP)Flag of Portugal (official).svg  Vanessa Fernandes  (POR)
2007 Flag of Spain.svg  Javier Gómez  (ESP)Flag of Portugal (official).svg  Vanessa Fernandes  (POR)
2008 Flag of Spain.svg  Javier Gómez  (ESP)Flag of New Zealand.svg  Samantha Warriner  (NZL)

While the series continued after 2008, the events now stood as a series of stand alone races with no overall champion.

See also

References

  1. Carlson, Timothy (12 September 2008). "ITU replaces one-day Elite World Championship with new six-race 'Super Series'". Slowtwitch.com. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  2. "Ranking Criteria" (PDF). International Triathlon Union. 27 February 2012. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  3. "ITU Points List Criteria" (PDF). International Triathlon Union. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 September 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2018.