100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

World champion poised for Noosa Triathlon but 10-time winner to miss great race

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Coast pubs to trade at 3am for Socceroos clash

Sunshine Coast pubs and clubs will be among those in the state to open their doors between 3am and 7am for a crunch Socceroos More

Free gardening talks showcase Australia’s top experts

Australia's largest gardening event is set to return to the Sunshine Coast in July. The Queensland Garden Show, from July 10 to 12, will bring More

Jane Stephens: bastardising the English language

My favourite English teacher would roll in her grave and my grandmother would tut-tut and shake her head. ‘Youse’ is now almost as prevalent in More

B2B: less of the two certainties in life

We are all going to pass away but is it possible to escape some of the recently announced tax reforms as we depart this More

Motorbike rider allegedly 82km/h over speed limit

A Sunshine Coast man has had his licence suspended after allegedly travelling well above the speed limit. Officers from Sunshine Coast Highway Patrol allegedly observed More

Sky spectacle: unusual cloud explained

People on the Sunshine Coast have been left impressed and bewildered by a relatively unusual weather phenomenon. Many were left scratching their heads at the More

Freshly minted world champion Matthew Hauser will headline the Noosa Triathlon after a scheduling squeeze ended Ashleigh Gentle’s decade-long event stranglehold.

Queenslander Hauser stormed to gold in this month’s series final in Wollongong to emphatically end Australia’s 15-year world championship drought.

On Sunday, the 27-year-old will perform a 1.5km swim, 40km cycle and 10km victory lap at the 42nd Noosa staging that will be missing the event’s long-time dominator.

Gentle, 34, has won the past 10 Noosa Triathlons and 11 of the past 12.

But a move last year to middle-distance racing has flipped her schedule and thwarted her ability to extend one of Australian sport’s greatest winning streaks.

Want more free local news? Follow Sunshine Coast News on Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram, and sign up for our FREE daily news email.

Now racing on the lucrative T100 Triathlon World Tour, Gentle was second over the half-ironman distance in Wollongong two weeks ago.

The Brisbane native won the French Riviera leg in August and sits third with two races remaining – in Dubai on November 13 and Qatar a month later.

T100 race victories carry a $US25,000 prize, while the overall champion pockets a further $200,000.

Gentle’s 11th Noosa triumph 12 months ago – her only Australian appearance in 2024 – was only possible when one T100 leg was scrapped and she chose to skip another.

Ashleigh Gentle won her 10th Noosa Tri last year but won’t compete this year. Picture: Alex Polizzi.

Second to Gentle last year, Richelle Hill will fancy her chances of a maiden title after clinching the under-23 world championship in a Wollongong sprint finish a fortnight ago.

But France’s reigning Olympic champion Cassandre Beaugrand will assume favouritism, keen to rebound after her world championship bid slipped away when she failed to finish in Wollongong.

Defending champion Brayden Mercer, former winners and Australian Olympians Luke Willian and Aaron Royle, and Argentina’s Valentino Agnelli will keep Hauser honest.

Hauser has only competed once in Noosa, finishing second to New Zealander Hayden Wilde in 2023 as both men beat the course record.

About 8500 participants will compete in the 42nd edition of the Noosa Triathlon on Sunday. Picture: Noosa Triathlon.

“I’m looking forward to trying to get back and try to knock my teammates off the podium,” Hauser said.

“Brayden Mercer winning it last year was great, I was actually able to watch that race and be on the sidelines and cheer him home.

“There’s been a bit of intra-squad banter about the race, so it’ll be good to go up against the defending champ and try and give him a run for his money.

“Seeing Courtney Atkinson and Aaron Royle and Craig Walton and the likes of those names win titles and multiple titles in the past really does motivate me to write a bit of my own history there in Noosa.”

Noosa’s five-day multi-sport festival includes Friday’s 1km ocean swim, Saturday’s 5km Bolt and Australian Open Criterium, before the largest Olympic-distance triathlon in the world on Sunday morning.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share