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British Ironman success - Men (UPDATED)
Posted by: John Levison
Posted on: Wednesday 24th November 2010


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[UPDATED following 2011 Ironman Arizona].

Yesterday we brought you part one [updated] of a series of articles looking at the history and performances of British athletes over the most iconic of triathlon distances. I hope that these, in aggregate, will form an appropriate record, recognition and information resource for the sport, and recognise excellence not just of recent years, but since the inception of the sport. History is important... it is easy to forget!

In part one I looked at British female performances within the Ironman® series of races - I will be talking about other iron-distance races and records in due course (!) - and today I provide a similar [also updated...] analysis in relation to the British men.

From time-to-time your Editor has been known to enjoy a statistic or two - but with good reason. Having asked myself the question of "how many podium finishes have British athletes achieved in Ironman racing?", the only thing to do was get researching and try and find out.

A couple of notes before I start. For the purposes of this analysis, the subject is limited to full distance Ironman branded (M-Dot / WTC) races. There are of course many iron-distance events around the world (including the likes of Challenge Roth, Almere, Forestman, Outlaw, Norseman...), many of which - Roth especially - rival any Ironman branded race in terms of spectacle, size and quality. That said, there is little doubt of the impact that the Ironman® brand has made within the triathlon world over the past 30 years and that for many, winning an Ironman race is a career goal.

So, what follows here is my attempt to create the definitive record of Ironman® podium finishes by British male athletes.

Is it complete? Good question! If you think any performance is missing from the list, email me via editor@tri247.com.


British male Ironman® podium finishes by year *

Athlete
Position
Event
Year
Paul Amey
2nd
Arizona
2011
Nick Saunders
3rd
UK
2011
Tom Lowe
3rd
Arizona
2010
Joe Gambles**
1st
Wisconsin
2010
Paul Ambrose**
1st
Louisville
2010
Fraser Cartmell
1st
UK
2010
Stephen Bayliss
2nd
UK
2010
Scott Neyedli
2nd
Australia
2010
Philip Graves
1st
UK
2009
Scott Neyedli
2nd
Western Australia
2009
Stephen Bayliss
2nd
UK
2009
Stephen Bayliss
3rd
Austria
2009
Stephen Bayliss
1st
UK
2008
Stephen Bayliss
1st
South Africa
2008
Scott Neyedli
2nd
UK
2008
Stephen Bayliss
2nd
Austria
2008
Scott Neyedli
1st
UK
2007
Stephen Bayliss
2nd
UK
2007
Andrew Johns
2nd
Malaysia
2007
Spencer Smith
2nd
Arizona
2006
Simon Lessing
1st
Lake Placid
2004
Spencer Smith
1st
Brazil
2002
Spencer Smith
1st
Florida
2001
Matthew Belfield
1st
Lanzarote
1999
Matthew Belfield
2nd
Lanzarote
1998

(* For the purposes of this analysis I have taken overall positions, 1/2/3 as 'podium' finishes, irrespective of race category or event (as in some races, there may be ten athletes physically 'on the podium')).

(** Both Joe and Paul were born in the UK and raised in Australia, holding passports of both countries. Both are included within this listing for completeness as they have represented Great Britain in ETU/ITU Long Course championships).

Position
1998
1999
2001
2002
2004
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Total
1st
 
1
1
1
1
 
1
2
1
 3
11
2nd
1
 
 
 
 
1
2
2
2
2
1
11
3rd
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
1
1
3
Total
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
4
4
6
2
25

Phil Graves, Stephen Bayliss and Spencer Smith

British male Ironman® podium finishes - 'medal table' style

Athlete
No. 1st places
No. 2nd places
No. 3rd places
Podiums
Stephen Bayliss
2
4
1
7
Spencer Smith
2
1
 
3
Scott Neyedli
1
3
 
4
Matthew Belfield
1
1
 
2
Philip Graves
1
 
 
1
Simon Lessing
1
 
 
1
Fraser Cartmell
1
 
 
1
Joe Gambles
1
 
 
1
Paul Ambrose
1
 
 
1
Andrew Johns
 
1
 
1
Paul Amey
 
1
 
1
Tom Lowe
 
 
1
1
Nick Saunders
 
 
1
1
12 Athletes
11
11
3
25

This table is the data above presented in the style you would typically see for the Olympic medal tables. Overall order is determined initially by number of 1st places, then by 2nd places, then by 3rd places. For example, though Spencer Smith has three podium Ironman® finishes versus the four of Scott Neyedli, Spencer is placed ahead of Scott in the 'medal table' by virtue of two wins (Florida 01 / Brazil 02) to one for Scott (UK 07).

Aside from summarising an athletes podium history, how much value this adds is...debatable! By this analysis, Stephen Bayliss sits on top of the Ironman® British rankings in terms of volume, as does wife Bella for the ladies. It is worth noting however that Spencer Smith achieved a fifth place finish in Kona 1998 (and an eighth in 2000), which is still the best British male (position) finish on the big island.

Phil Graves won his first attempt at the distance in Bolton in 2009, but we may have to wait a couple of years for Phil to add to his tally, following his Lanzarote 2010 DNF and subsequent Steve Redgrave style comment of "if you see me entering an Ironman in the next 18 months, shoot me"! He has plenty of years ahead of him. After all, his win at Ironman UK aged 20 made him the youngest ever Ironman winner.

A recent addition to the listing is Tom Lowe. His third place at Ironman Arizona 2010 represented not only a great debut, but was also a British Ironman record - until he broke it again at Ironman Austria 2011. With clear scope for improvement in his swim, we hope to be seeing a lot more from Tom over the next few years - and with a debut (2011) 11th place, 8:29:02 in Kona, he is certainly capable of some significant results over the next couple of seasons.

There was another British record performance at Ironman Arizona 2011, but it wasn't Tom Lowe this time. Paul Amey. after several Ironman races in recent years finally 'nailed' one, and in spectacular style. His 8:01:29 finish slices 10:02 from the 8:11:31 finish of Tom at Ironman Austria 2011. A fine way to end his 2011 season and he'll be hoping to take the lessons learned into 2012.

It is also worth bearing in mind the way that the Ironman circuit has changed over the past 15/20 years. While there are around 25 Ironman events on the annual calendar now, that wasn't always the case, and hence the opportunities to race were few and far between. With this increase in volume, not surprisingly some events can be considered 'softer', in terms of depth of professional field, and hence 'not all races are equal'!


Tri247 Iron-Distance Statistics Library

Do you believe there is a performance missing here? If so, please do let me know via editor@tri247.com.


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