Published May 18, 2026 10:35AM
The road to the Los Angeles Olympics officially begins today as World Triathlon opens the two-year qualification window for the Games. From now until May 18, 2028, athletes and federations will race for ranking points that determine how many starting spots each country earns for the Olympic triathlon events.
For the United States, the basic picture is straightforward: As the host nation, Team USA is guaranteed the ability to field a mixed relay team of two men and two women, provided those athletes meet World Triathlon’s eligibility requirements, including minimum age and a top 160 world ranking.
How Team USA triathletes will qualify for the LA Olympics
The more meaningful battle for the U.S. is not simply getting on the start line. It is building enough depth to earn the maximum three individual spots on the starting line in Venice Beach in July 2028. Under World Triathlon qualification rules, a nation can send as many as three athletes per gender only if it has three athletes of that gender ranked inside the top 30 at the end of the qualification period.
That means that American athletes are not racing to qualify themselves as individuals. They are racing to secure quota places for Team USA. The criteria that will ultimately determine which athletes make the U.S. team for LA28 have not yet been released, and it’s therefore not clear if things will change from the selection process for Paris 2024.
In practical terms, every World Championship Series start, World Cup finish, and ranking point for the next two years matters. The United States has had the depth on the women’s side to field three athletes in recent Olympic cycles, but the men’s side has been thinner, with only two men competing at each of the last two Games in Tokyo and Paris.
The contenders: Established stars and the next wave of triathlon
As the LA28 window opens, the pressure is not only on established names like Taylor Spivey and Morgan Pearson to keep delivering results. It is also on the next wave of American athletes to earn points and climb the rankings to strengthen Team USA’s case for three slots.
On the women’s side, the U.S. Olympic picture begins with a familiar group of established Olympic medalists (Spivey, Gwen Jorgensen, and Taylor Knibb) as well as U.S. elite team members Kirsten Kasper, Erika Ackerland, and Gina Sereno, all of whom have been racing on the WTCS circuit for several seasons. On the men’s side, the best-known contenders include Pearson, Seth Rider, Darr Smith, and Chase McQueen, showcasing a mix of Olympic experience and relay value.
Behind this experienced elite squad is a younger wave of development athletes who are beginning to climb the ladder with podiums in Continental Cup and World Cup racing (third and second tier of elite racing) and a desire to be on WTCS start lines in 2026 and beyond. If Team USA is going to build depth for its home Games in Los Angeles, several of these newer names will need to do more than show promise. They will need to start scoring.
LA28 Olympic triathlon qualifying: Ones to watch for Team USA
Naomi Ruff
Age: 22
Hometown: West Chicago, Ill.
Triathlon background: Ruff’s trajectory in triathlon is perhaps one of the clearest examples of the next American wave starting to translate promise into senior-level results. She has raced triathlon collegiately at D1 Arizona State University for four years and won the 2024 NCAA National Champion title for triathlon.
On the world stage, she placed 11th at the U23 World Championships in Torremolinos, Spain, in 2024 and was on track for a top-10 finish at the U23 World Championships in Wollongong, Australia, in 2025 before collapsing on the blue carpet just shy of the finish line.
That heartbreaking DNF appears behind her in 2026, as she has started the season strong with a 16th place at the World Cup in Lanzarote and an eighth place at the World Cup in Haikou. She’s not yet at the front rank of U.S. women, but she looks increasingly like an athlete who could push her way into that conversation as the LA28 cycle unfolds.
Kelly Wetteland

Age: 22
Hometown: Los Alamos, New Mexico
Triathlon background: New Mexico’s Kelly Wetteland is a little less established internationally, but her results make her hard to ignore. Like Ruff, Wetteland has come up through the NCAA triathlon pipeline. She earned the individual NCAA National Title in 2025 while helping the University of Arizona become National Champions for the second year in a row.
On the World Triathlon stage, she racked up two top-10 finishes in her first season racing at the elite level, with ninth-place finishes at World Cups in Tiszaujvaros and Florianopolis in 2025. Her 2026 season is off to a great start, with a second-place finish at the Americas Cup in La Paz and a victory at the Americas Cup in Gulfport, where she held off a hard-charging Jorgensen to take the tape.
In recent weeks, she has earned a 12th-place finish at the Chengdu World Cup and was part of the Mixed relay team in Chengdu that placed fourth. Wetteland’s swim is her biggest weapon, and it was on full display during her WTCS debut in Yokohama this past weekend when she exited the water in first before ultimately finished in 19th overall. It demonstrated that her bike and run are also competitive at this level, and the trajectory is clearly upward.
Danielle Orie

Age: 27
Hometown: Buffalo, N.Y.
Triathlon background: Orie spent four years running collegiately at the University of Pennsylvania before discovering triathlon while studying for a law degree at the University of Wisconsin.
As a latecomer to the sport, she’s a member of the USA Triathlon elite team on an interim basis, looking to demonstrate her ability to perform at elite-level races every time she lines up. Indeed, she continues to balance elite triathlon with part-time legal work.
In 2025, she earned three top-10 placings on the World Cup circuit with a 10th in Samarkand, second in Saidia, and seventh in Tongyeong. She also dipped her toe into WTCS racing last season, earning a creditable 19th place at the 2025 Grand Final in Wollongong.
Orie is less of a pure newcomer; she’s looking to turn a solid first year in the elite ranks into a real Olympic cycle push.
John Reed

Age: 25
Hometown: Virginia Beach, Va.
Triathlon background: It’s not really fair to call John Reed “one to watch” since, by all accounts, he’s an established member of Team USA’s elite squad after earning his first-ever WTCS podium in 2025 with a bronze in Weihai, and as a member of Team USA’s silver medal-winning relay team at Abu Dhabi at the start of last season.
The former Navy ROTC scholarship recipient, who walked away from that path to chase pro triathlon, is still early in his career but has already demonstrated his ability to handle senior-level racing. His swim and bike skills currently keep him in the race, but the run is where Reed excels. Indeed, he turned heads earlier this year when he won the Gold Coast 10K in a time of 28:35.
The 2026 season has been a slightly frustrating start for Reed after a reaction to a bug bite disrupted his race in Samarkand and a flat tire in Yokohama left him chasing the race into T2. Even so, he still ran just under 30 minutes for the 10K in Yokohama, the fourth fastest split on the day, reminding us of the run speed that makes him one of the most promising American men in the LA28 cycle.
Reese Vannerson

Age: 21
Hometown: Sugarland, Texas
Triathlon background: Vannerson is perhaps the most intriguing young American, having proven himself at the junior level (second at 2024 and third at 2022 World Championships) and then announcing himself at the elite level with a World Cup victory in Chengdu last May in his debut over the Olympic distance.
Vannerson’s weapon is undoubtedly his run, and as a high school athlete, he won two state championships at 1600m and 3200m. He passed on the opportunity to run at the collegiate level in favor of pursuing triathlon full-time.
Unfortunately, he suffered a minor setback at the start of the 2026 season, breaking a collarbone in a bike crash during the Haikou World Cup in March. However, he has already returned to competition, making appearances at the World Cup in Chengdu and WTCS Yokohama last weekend, though both performances were clearly below the standard he displayed during his 2025 breakout season.
Blake Bullard

Age: 20
Hometown: Southlake, Texas
Triathlon background: Blake Bullard is a little earlier in the development pipeline than others on this list, but he’s the kind of athlete worth knowing, as his swim capabilities put him in the mix from the start of the race.
A member of USAT’s Project Podium development group, Bullard won the 2025 USA Triathlon Junior Draft Legal National Championships and helped the U.S. claim mixed relay gold at the 2025 Junior Pan American Games. Bullard comes from a strong swim background and has the run speed to stay relevant despite his junior pedigree.
Coming from a strong swim background, Bullard has already shown the ability to translate those front-pack skills into elite-level racing. Early in 2026, he earned a runner-up finish at the Americas Cup in La Paz, finished third at the Americas Triathlon Cup in Gulfport, and made his World Cup debut in Haikou, where he exited the water third.
Last weekend in Yokohama, Bullard made both his Olympic distance and WTCS debut, emerging from the swim in third as part of the lead breakaway pack of just seven athletes before ultimately finishing 20th overall. He remains a long-range prospect for LA28, but the talent and development track are in place.
Braxton Legg

Age: 21
Hometown: Tampa, Fla.
Triathlon background: Having raced his first ever triathlon at age six, Legg initially opted to run collegiately at the University of Florida before transitioning to professional triathlon as a member of Team USA’s Project Podium.
He won individual gold at the 2025 Junior Pan American Games and was a member of the gold-medal-winning relay team alongside Bullard. So far in 2026, he’s placed 17th at the World Cup in Lanzarote, 30th at the World Cup in Haikou, and second at the Americas Cup in Gulfport. He was also the anchor leg of Team USA’s mixed relay squad, which placed fourth at the Chengdu World Cup, losing out to Team Canada in a blue carpet sprint finish.
Last weekend in Yokohama, Legg delivered the biggest result of his young career, finishing 10th at the WTCS race as the top American man. The performance also secured his place on Team USA’s elite team.
Legg still sits below the best-known U.S. names, and he needs to gain more experience at the WTCS and World Cup level, but his progression has been steady, and his run background is an obvious asset as he gains more experience against deeper, elite fields.
Sullivan Middaugh

Age: 22
Hometown: Vail, Colo.
Triathlon background: If Middaugh is a familiar name, it’s likely because of his father, Josiah, one of the most successful off-road triathletes of his generation and the 2015 XTERRA World Champion.
But Sullivan is quickly carving his own path. He came up through mountain biking and cross-country running before transitioning into triathlon, bringing a well-rounded endurance background that shows up in his race craft, especially on the bike.
Middaugh has been building momentum with podiums and top fives on the Continental Cup circuit and continues to gain experience against deeper fields in World Cup racing. He’s not showing up consistently on WTCS start lists just yet, but his progression has been steady, and his versatility across all three disciplines gives him a strong foundation to work toward the next level.
