Two big stories to know this week in women's sports
1. The Ironman World Championships come to Nice 🇫🇷
Last year, the first all-women's Ironman World Championship was held in Kona, Hawaii — while the men raced in Nice, France a few weeks earlier. This year, they've swapped locations.
The French Riviera has a long history in triathlon. It's where some of the first international races were held, where the first long-distance world championships happened, where the first meeting of the sport's governing body took place. And so it's seen its share of legends ⭐
LISTEN: We talk all about it on the first episode of our daily podcast from Nice
The Course ⛰️
Part of the drama with the move to a new location (and the first women's Ironman World Championship outside the U.S.) is a different style of course — which could mean different people near the front.
🏊♀️ SWIM: The likely non-wetsuit 2.4-mile (3.8km) swim will be in the blue waters of the Mediterranean
🚴♀️ BIKE: With nearly 8,000ft of elevation and one wicked descent, this 112 miles (180km) is what everyone is talking about
🏃♀️ RUN: Then the women will bang out a fast and flat marathon along the waterfront Promenade des Anglais
WATCH: Ironman's course preview
Some of the Contenders 👑
There are 49 pro women taking the start line. And along with a number of Ironman champions and past world championship podium finishers (and potential upsets), there are three previous world champions racing:
Lucy Charles-Barclay: After four second places (!), she finally won her first Ironman world championship title last year in record-setting fashion. She then set a course record in France (on a similar course) earlier this year. Will she win again?
Anne Haug: The 2019 world champion, she took a third place at the world champs and then a second last year. She's battled with health issues on-and-off this summer, but set a world's fastest time EVER for this distance in Germany in July.
Chelsea Sodaro: This will only be her 5th Ironman full-distance race — but in her second ever Ironman race she won the 2022 world championship in Kona. And (!) she did it just 18 months post-partum, becoming the first young mom and first American to win in decades.
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