Dorian Coninx the toast of Quiberon with WTCS win
Home hero Dorian Coninx beat Portugal's Vasco Vilaca and Ricardo Batista in northern France on a disappointing day for the Brits
Dorian Coninx delivered a dramatic victory for his home French crowd by edging out series leader Vasco Vilaca in the closest of sprint finishes in Quiberon.
The 2023 world champion and most experienced World Triathlon Championship Series campaigner in the field is now 32, but turned back the clock to take his fourth WTCS career win and first since grand final success in Spain almost three years ago.
It handed Vilaca a first WTCS defeat of 2026, but there were still Portuguese celebrations, as Ricardo Batista finished third to make it two Portuguese triathletes on the podium for the second WTCS race running.
“The crowd helped me a lot,” Coninx said post-race. “It was massive, with a lot of people screaming.”
British hopes were largely dashed before reaching the 5km run leg, with GB’s fastest runners Alex Yee and Hugo Milner stranded in the chase pack with too much ground to make up.
Harry Leleu, who did make the break, finished 11th, with Milner in 15th, Mat Stapley – the early swim leader – in 16th and Yee dropping out on the run.
The fourth stop on the World Triathlon Championship Series in Quiberon, Brittany, France, was contested over a sprint distance of a 750m swim, 22km cycle leg and 5km run.
It was the first sprint-distance race of the season on a new course for the WTCS, and there was added importance on the event with the Olympic qualification period for Los Angeles having opened last month.
The men were first underway in Brittany, followed by the women’s elite race two hours later, with the mixed team relay scheduled for Sunday.
What happened on the swim
It was a windless and overcast day, with the cool Atlantic waters necessitating a wetsuit swim. Stapley led out the field, with Chile’s Diego Moya taking a tighter line to the second turn buoy to hit the front.
Moya was first into transition in 9:40, with a trio of Portuguese and Leleu in close contention. Yee emerged 32sec back in 39th spot.
Yee started in the unfamiliar position of 22nd. The Olympic champion, having returned to triathlon after a focus on marathon running, placed fifth in Yokohama but was unable to finish in Alghero.
What happened on the bike
The bike leg was four laps of a flat coastal course, with no significant climbs.
Through the first lap, a group of 15, including series leader Vilaca, along with Stapley and Leleu, established a small gap at the front.
Germany’s Henry Graf, who crashed out in Alghero, unsuccessfully attempted to bridge up to the front, while Yee and Milner were in the second chase group, around 15sec from the lead.
Austria’s Tjebbe Kaindl and Vilaca continued to drive the pace at the front as the gap opened to almost 30sec by the midway point of the bike leg.
Despite the chase packs coming together behind, they struggled to make inroads before reaching the second transition.
What happened on the run
Australia’s Luke Schofield was first in and out of transition, with the large chase pack facing a 27sec deficit to trouble the podium.
Schofield went out like a rocket on the two-lap course, but with Vilaca, Batista and Coninx laying chase, he was quickly swallowed up.
Italian Nicola Azzano clung on in fourth place until deep into the second lap, with Spain’s David Cantero flying through the field from the chase group.
At the front, it was a shootout between home favourite Coninx and the two Portuguese.
As in Alghero, Vilaca kicked early, but this time failed to gain a decisive gap. He did enough to gain the inside line on the final turn, but after running wide on the exit he slipped into the barrier, allowing Coninx to steal victory by the slimmest of margins.
Vilaca said post-race: “I was looking forward to it. I hadn’t done a sprint distance race this year and it’s another gear you can go to on the run. I tried to stay at the front, push it hard and play it safe.
“I attacked that last u-turn, it made me go into the ditch a little, and I lost a bit of space to Dorian, but I’m happy for him as winning at home is special.”
WTCS Quiberon race results
- Dorian Coninx (FRA) – 53:16
- Vasco Vilaca (POR) – +0:01
- Ricardo Batista (POR) – +0:03
- David Cantero Del Campo (ESP) – +0:14
- Miguel Hidalgo (BRA) – +0:15
- Nicola Azzano (ITA) – +0:16
- Henry Graf (GER) – +0:16
- John Reed (USA) – +0:20
- Tjebbe Kaindl (AUT) – +0:22
- Jawad Abdelmoula (MAR) – +0:23
WTCS rankings (after four races)
- Vasco Vilaca (POR) 2925pts
- Miguel Hidalgo (BRA) 2582
- Ricardo Batista (POR) 2291
- Luke Willian (AUS) 1854
- Dorian Coninx (FRA) 1791

