“It’s been a magical ride!” Matt Hauser wins gold three years in a row in scorching WTCS Hamburg men’s race, as Wilde picks up a penalty and Hidalgo is DSQ’d
The World Triathlon Championship Series to Hamburg this weekend, where as temperatures rose, five British athletes took part across the men’s and women’s sprint-distance events.
What happened in the swim?
Mark Devay of Hungary took control of the 750m swim, posting the fastest split of the day of 8m30s, and following Hauser out of transition along with Miguel Hidalgo (BRA) and Miguel Tiago Silva (POR) for company.
Series leader and number one Vasco Vilaça was 16 seconds back, with the returning Hayden Wilde (NZL) 45 seconds off the front.
At the end of the swim, Connor Bentley was the lead Brit in 16th, with Max Stapley close behind in 19th and Oli Conway around 30 seconds down in 33rd.
What happened in the bike?
Lap one of the bike saw a large pack of around 27 form, with Stapley and Bentley both in the mix and Devay and Hauser at the front of the pack. Conway was 20 seconds back in 29th in a chasing group. Lap two and it was confirmed Hidalgo and Hayden Wilde of New Zealand had picked up penalties. Both athletes were handed 10-second penalties for altering their race numbers, having modified the bib stickers on their bikes pre-race. Wilde served his penalty during the run and salvaged 27th place, a distant finish for a rider expected to challenge at the front. Hidalgo did not serve his, and was subsequently disqualified.
Into the last lap, Stapley was in ninth and Bentley in 23rd and both in the that large front group and as the athletes completed the six-lap bike leg, Stapley and Bentley stayed in the front pack in 15th and 17th respectively. Conway was in 29th.

What happened in the run?
Out of transition two, Stapley was 15th and Bentley 17th as Alberto Gonzalez Garcia led the field out. French athletes Dorian Coninx and Nils Serre Gehri headed the group tracking him down. Stapley soon moved up the pack, while Bentley climbed to sixth on the first of two run laps and positioned himself on Hauser’s shoulder. Stapley stayed with the leading group of ten, while Bentley maintained sixth. As the final lap began, Stapley started to lose contact with the lead group, while Bentley sat second as Westerman of Switzerland took a turn at the front. Conway had dropped to 36th.
The group dropped to seven athletes on lap two, still including Bentley. Hauser started to push the pace and stretch out the front pack dropping Vilaca and Graf of Germany. Hauser continued to pull ahead to take the gold. Vilaca took silver and Graf bronze. Bentley came in sixth – his highest ever position in a senior World Triathlon Championship Series race.

“It’s been a magical ride for me here in Hamburg,” said Hauser afterwards. “Alghero was obviously a big disappointment for me but my team and I worked hard up at altitude and knew we had to come here and get a good result and good points on the board.”
Gold marked Hauser’s third straight win at WTCS Hamburg, following victories in 2024 and 2025, a hat-trick that makes him the standout name in the race’s 25-year history. Vilaça, meanwhile, cemented his position right at the top of the 2026 Series rankings with three races and the Finals to come.

