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DUBAI T100 TRIATHLON
13-16 November 2025
Dubai T100 entries are open! Dive into pristine water and take to the stunning city streets as you race around one of T100โ€™s most iconic courses! Dubai T100 entries are open! Dive into pristine water and take to the stunning city streets as you race around one of T100โ€™s most iconic courses!

Morgan Pearson Takes First T100 Victory At Dramatic Dubai T100 Triathlon

by

T100 Communications

2025 Dubai T100 Triathlon winner Morgan Pearson (USA)

Dubai, UAE: The USAโ€™s Morgan Pearson added a first T100 Triathlon victory to his Olympic palmares by running to a dramatic victory at the Dubai T100 Triathlon, tackling the heat and challenging race dynamics – as well as navigating a timing issue on the run and taking advantage of three leading athletes who did an extra bike lap.ย 

Leading after the 2km swim, the American limited his losses with a strong performance over the 80km bike. As race favourites โ€“ series leader Hayden Wilde of New Zealand and Belgiumโ€™s Marten Van Riel โ€“ accidentally continued onto an unnecessary additional bike leg along with France’s Mathis Margirier, Pearson left T2 in 4th place and in contention for the win.

With the tremendous foot speed that helped Team USA secure two Olympic mixed relay triathlon silver medals, Pearson stormed into first place and the victory despite more lap-counting confusion for athletes on the run.

Due to technical issues with the lap counting board and timing, some athletes completed 7 rather than 8 run laps, leaving the official result for the menโ€™s race determined after the 7th lap –ย  the last known official timing point – which followed World Triathlon guidelines. The Competition Jury also dismissed an athlete protest on the bike leg after Hayden Wilde, Mathis Margirier and Marten Van Riel missed T2 and did an extra bike lap.ย 

Germanyโ€™s Mika Noodt underlined his astounding consistency with his third second-place performance of the 2025 T100 season while Italyโ€™s Gregory Barnaby came home in third place.

The top of the T100 Race To Qatar standings remains the same, with Wilde taking a perfect four-win score of 140 points into the Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championships, which take place on 12 December. Second to fourth remain the same with Belgiumโ€™s Jelle Geens, Noodt and Germanyโ€™s Rico Bogen maintaining their positions while Pearsonโ€™s victory saw the American leap 10 places to 5th.

HOW THE RACE UNFOLDEDย 

Reading the currents perfectly, Vincent Luis (FRA) coursed through 2km swim, driving a front group โ€“ including Morgan Pearson (USA), Marten Van Riel (BEL), Jonas Schomburg (GER) and Sam Dickinson (GBR) โ€“ away from the rest of the field.

Distancing race favourites Hayden Wilde (NZL) and Mika Noodt (GER) by over a minute, Pearson led out of the water and once onto the 80km bike course, the American shared the work with Dickinson and Van Riel as the race rolled towards the iconic Meydan race course.

If the plan was to escape the seemingly unstoppable Wilde, it was quickly thwarted โ€“ the Kiwi was at the front and dictating terms by 20km in.

As the bike wore on, the trio of Wilde, Mathis Margirier (FRA) and Van Riel pulled away, eking out over 2 minutes to Noodt and Dickinson as the bike neared its conclusion.

Then: catastrophe for the frontrunners as Wilde continued past transition, leading Margirier and Van Riel onto an additional โ€“ and unrequired โ€“ bike lap.

That left a bemused Dickinson to enter T2 first followed shortly by Noodt with Gregory Barnaby (ITA) 1:40 back in 3rd. As the temperatures rose, the ever consistent and capable Noodt took the lead at 8km โ€“ but Pearson was up to 3rd and running fastest on course. Behind, Barnaby was running strong while Dickinson faded.

Overhauling Noodt with 5km to go, Pearson โ€“ the American star twice an Olympic mixed-team relay silver medallist โ€“ surged on towards the finish.

In a challenging turn of events due to technical issues with the lap counting board and timing, some athletes completed 7 rather than 8 run laps meaning the official result for the Dubai T100 menโ€™s race was determined after the 7th lap, which was the last known timing point and follows World Triathlon guidelines.

That put Pearson on top with his first ever T100 victory, clocking a time of 3:06:17 to take $25,000 and 35 points, moving himself up 10 places in the T100 Race to Qatar standings from 15th to 5th.

Noodt was 2nd for the 3rd time this season, taking $17,000 and bettering his series tally by 3 points.

Barnaby secured 3rd place and $13,000, holding strong to his 10th place spot in the T100 Race To Qatar standings.

Jason West (USA) ran up from 9th to 4th while Luis rounded out the top-5 with his best T100 finish to date.

 

Position Athlete Finish T100 Race To Qatar Points Prize Money
1 Morgan Pearson 3:06:17 35 $25,000
2 Mika Noodt 3:06:53 29 $17,000
3 Gregory Barnaby 3:07:41 26 $13,000
4 Jason West 3:08:18 23 $10,500
5 Vincent Luis 3:08:43 20 $9,000
6 Samuel Dickinson 3:09:09 18 $8,000
7 Jonas Schomburg 3:09:46 16 $7,000
8 Hayden Wilde 3:11:10 14 $6,000
9 Filipe Azevedo 3:11:12 12 $5,000
10 Pieter Heemeryck 3:11:49 11 $4,500
11 Will Draper 3:12:10 10 $4,000
12 Guillem Montiel Moreno 3:13:21 9 $3,500
13 Marten Van Riel 3:13:22 8 $3,000
14 Mike Phillips 3:14:24 7 $2,500
15 Mathis Margirier 3:14:44 6 $2,000
16 Wilhelm Hirsch 3:16:16 5 $1,500
17 Jake Birtwhistle 3:17:05 4 $1,250

 

Notes To Editors

How the 2025 T100 Triathlon World Tour works:

  • Athletes score 35 points for first place to 1 pt for 20th place at each of the nine races, with increased points for 2nd (up from 28 to 29 points); 3rd (up from 25 to 26); and 4th (up from 22 to 23), to encourage more competitive racing
  • The Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final has increased points to up the ante (55 pts down to 4 pts) as well as a similar upweight of points from 2nd (now 46 points from 45) to 13th position.
  • Each athleteโ€™s best four T100 race scores plus the Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final will count towards the womenโ€™s and menโ€™s T100 World Championship titles
  • $250,000 USD prize fund at each T100, totalling $2,250,000 across the nine races (1st place โ€“ $25,000k; 2nd โ€“ $17,000; 3rd โ€“ $13,000 at each race)
  • The series winners following the Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final will be crowned T100 Triathlon World Champion and collect $200,000 USD from an additional total prize pool of $2,940,000
  • The T100 Contenders Rankings will pay 1st to 40th place from a total prize pool of $560,000 (1st place โ€“ $16,000; 2nd place โ€“ $15,000; 3rd place โ€“ $14,000 down to 40th place โ€“ $3,000)
  • Between the athlete contracts, T100 race prize fund, T100 Triathlon World Tour pool and the T100 Contenders Rankings, the series provides more than $8,000,000 in athlete compensation, and is distributed in a way that not only rewards the winners, but also recognises the significant achievement of racing at this level and a pathway that feeds into the T100 series

-ends-ย 

For Further Information:

Anthony Scammell E: [email protected]ย 

About Professional Triathletes Organisation (PTO)ย 

The PTO is a sports body that is co-owned by its professional athletes, seeking to elevate and grow the sport of triathlon and take it to the next level. Its T100 Triathlon World Tour was introduced in January 2024 and is designated by World Triathlon as the โ€˜official World Championship for long distance triathlonโ€™, which is part of a 12-year strategic partnership with the sportโ€™s international governing body. The T100 Triathlon World Tour is a season-long schedule of World Championship level races competed over 100km (2km swim, 80km bike and 18km run), where the worldโ€™s best triathletes go head-to-head in iconic locations on a global broadcast showing the races live around the world in 195+ territories, courtesy of the PTOโ€™s partnership with Warner Bros. Discovery as well as a range of other international, regional and local broadcasters.ย  So far in 2025 these have included: Singapore (5-6 April), San Francisco (31 May-1 June), Vancouver (13-15 June), London (9-10 August), French Riviera (30-31 August), the Spain T100 in Oropesa de Mar (20 September), the Wollongong T100 (18 October) and the Dubai T100 (13-16 November). The first Qatar T100 Triathlon World Championship Final will take place on 12-13 December.ย  T100 weekends are โ€˜festivals of multisportโ€™ and feature a range of opportunities for amateur athletes of all levels to get involved. From experienced amateurs tackling the 100km distance to first-time swim, bike and run participants taking on single discipline, untimed events. For more information visit www.t100triathlon.com

 

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