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Alexis Hanquinquant crowned King of Para Triathlon at Paris 2024
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Alexis Hanquinquant crowned King of Para Triathlon at Paris 2024

02 Sep, 2024 12:49 PM4 min read

The eyes of France were set today on the towering figure of Alexis Hanquinquant, a man that has won every single Para triathlon race he has started in the last seven years. And today it was not any different, just louder. Hanquinquant, flag bearer of the French team in the 2024 Paralympic Games, reigned supreme in Paris to claim his second Paralympic gold of his career. Silver on the day was for USA’s Carson Clough, one of the upcoming talents of the PTS4 class, while another rising star, Spain’s Nil Riudavets Victory rounded up the podium.

Now 38 years old, Hanquinquant knew that today he had a date with destiny, and the Frenchman delivered in am impressive way, cheered by the thousands of spectators that crowded the streets around Pont Alexandre III ready to see him doing his famous side kick when grabbing the finish tape.

Things were looking good for Hanquinquant from the beginning, delivering an impressive swim that saw him out of the water almost ten seconds ahead of Michael Taylor (GBR) and with another Frenchman, Gregoire Berthon, in third place.

The bike was another imperial march for Hanquinqant, opening a lead that was just impossible for anyone else on the field to close. By the time he had finished the five laps of the bike course on the cobblestones of the French capital, he had almost two minutes of clear space. Behind him, his two teammates Gregoire Berthon and Pierre-Antoine Baele were battling with USA’s Carson Clough for the two remaining spots on the podium.

Hanquinquant stormed through the second transition and started the run accompanied by the rar of the crowds, loud enough to clearly spot where he was at any point of the run course. The Frenchman made it to the blue carpet by himself, with nought time to enjoy the moment, clap some hands, grab a french flag and do his famous side-kick before grabbing the tape to claim the Paralympic gold.

“I’m super happy. This is incredible. It’s been a beautiful race. All the ingredients were there to make it work today. My family is here. It’s important to win in front of my family,” he said, after rossing the finish line. “Tokyo 2020 was amazing. It meant a lot for me to be able to pull it off and to get that gold there. I felt there was a very different mindset today because I already had a gold. The goal today was to perform. I knew I was the favourite, but I just wanted to perform as well as possible. I’m happy it led to gold. There was a lot of emotions today,” he explained.

Second on the line was Carson Clough (USA), on his Paralympic debut. “It was painful. I was dying out there on the swim, bike and run. So I was pretty stoked to get to the finish line. It’s been incredible. I have 50, 60 people that bought plane tickets to come watch me and support me and my teammates. I heard them at every different part of the track. When the last two laps on the bike got tough and I did a tiring run, I was just thinking of names and the people that couldn’t come and were still supporting me. Alexis earned what he’s got. He’s an incredible athlete. I did everything in my power to try and catch him. That would’ve been a fun little story. But he made it. I couldn’t do it. I got to give him kudos,” he said.

Bronze was for another Paralympic debutant, Nil Riudavets (ESP), who delivered an impressive run -ten seconds faster than Hanquinquant’s split- to claim the bronze medal. “It was really difficult. I was sixth when I finished the bike and then had to pass three great runners. I had run with a lot of concentration to make sure I would be as fast as possible. It was really fun to get the medal”, he explained.

The other frenchmen, Baele and Berthon, rounded the top five in fourth and fifth place respectively.

Related Event

Sep
2
24
Paris
Major Games, Triathlon, Paratriathlon

Paris 2024 Paralympic Games

Results

1
Jetze Plat H2
NLDNLD
00:58:16
2
Florian Brungraber H2
AUTAUT
00:59:25
3
Geert Schipper H2
NLDNLD
01:00:20
4
Louis Noel H2
FRAFRA
01:03:40
5
Giovanni Achenza H1
ITAITA
01:03:49
1
Lauren Parker H1
AUSAUS
01:06:23
2
Kendall Gretsch H2
USAUSA
01:07:46
3
Leanne Taylor H1
CANCAN
01:12:11
4
Eva María Moral Pedrero H1
ESPESP
01:12:18
5
Emelia Perry H1
USAUSA
01:14:03
1
Dave Ellis B3
GBRGBR
00:58:41
2
Thibaut Rigaudeau B3
FRAFRA
01:00:05
3
Antoine Perel B1
FRAFRA
01:00:25
4
Owen Cravens B3
USAUSA
01:00:43
5
Sam Harding B2
AUSAUS
01:01:21
1
Susana Rodriguez B1
ESPESP
01:04:19
2
Francesca Tarantello B3
ITAITA
01:06:43
3
Anja Renner B3
DEUDEU
01:08:21
4
Alison Peasgood B2
GBRGBR
01:09:21
5
Annouck Curzillat B1
FRAFRA
01:10:28
1
Jules Ribstein
FRAFRA
01:05:47
2
Mohamed Lahna
USAUSA
01:07:18
3
Mark Barr
USAUSA
01:07:33
4
Maurits Morsink
NLDNLD
01:08:27
5
Wim De Paepe
BELBEL
01:09:16
1
Daniel Molina
ESPESP
01:08:05
2
Max Gelhaar
DEUDEU
01:08:43
3
Nico Van Der Burgt
NLDNLD
01:09:24
4
Henry Urand
GBRGBR
01:10:24
5
Cedric Denuziere
FRAFRA
01:10:34
1
Alexis Hanquinquant
FRAFRA
00:58:01
2
Carson Clough
USAUSA
01:00:47
3
Nil Riudavets Victory
ESPESP
01:01:10
4
Pierre-Antoine Baele
FRAFRA
01:01:25
5
Gregoire Berthon
FRAFRA
01:03:03
1
Chris Hammer
USAUSA
00:58:44
2
Ronan Cordeiro
BRABRA
00:59:01
3
Martin Schulz
DEUDEU
00:59:19
4
Filipe Marques
PRTPRT
00:59:59
5
Bence Mocsari
HUNHUN
01:00:03
1
Hailey Danz
USAUSA
01:14:31
2
Veronica Yoko Plebani
ITAITA
01:15:37
3
Allysa Seely
USAUSA
01:16:33
4
Anu Francis
AUSAUS
01:17:48
5
Melissa Stockwell
USAUSA
01:21:06
1
Megan Richter
GBRGBR
01:14:30
2
Marta Francés Gómez
ESPESP
01:15:10
3
Hannah Moore
GBRGBR
01:16:01
4
Camille Seneclauze
FRAFRA
01:16:43
5
Elise Marc
FRAFRA
01:17:00
1
Grace Norman
USAUSA
01:04:40
2
Claire Cashmore
GBRGBR
01:05:55
3
Lauren Steadman
GBRGBR
01:06:45
4
Kamylle Frenette
CANCAN
01:09:50
5
Andrea Miguelez Ranz
ESPESP
01:12:20