It was a dramatic day in The Woodlands, where a loaded, world championship-worthy field met cool conditions as Solveig Løvseth and Kristian Blummenfelt proved too strong on the run.
In a thrilling 2026 Ironman Texas showdown, Norway’s Kristian Blummenfelt (center) took the victory, which Belgium’s Marten Van Riel (left) and fellow Norwegian Casper Stornes rounded out the podium. (Photo: Travis Mundell/Triathlete)
Published April 18, 2026 08:03PM
In his fourth race in six weeks, Norway’s Kristian Blummenfelt (NOR) was tested to the very limit, overcoming a slow-leaking flat tire late on the bike that left him with work to do on the run. However, another incredible marathon split outpaced the competition and delivered a 7:21:24 finish – the second-fastest Ironman of all time (just behind his 7:21:11 at Ironman Cozumel, on a current-assisted course).
In her first Ironman since winning the Ironman World Championship in Kona, Solveig Løvseth (NOR) applied pressure to Taylor Knibb (USA) on the bike before taking control early on the run and delivering what she called her “most complete” Ironman performance to take the win ahead of Knibb.
It was arguably the strongest non-world championship field in Ironman history, particularly on the men’s side, which featured 74 starters (compared to 22 on the women’s). With cooler-than-normal temperatures and steady rain during much of the run, conditions suggested a more controlled race, yet mechanicals, aggressive racing for Kona slots, prize money, and Pro Series points led to 19 DNFs across both fields.
The women’s race
On the women’s side, the swim was led by Margarita Ryan (USA), Marta Sanchez (ESP), and Knibb, putting the three-time 70.3 world champion in prime position to extend her lead over Løvseth and Kat Matthews (GBR), who exited around 3:20 down alongside Hannah Berry (NZL).
As expected, Knibb quickly extended her advantage on the bike, distancing Sanchez and putting over 30 seconds into Matthews and Løvseth. But before halfway, that lead began to shrink to just over 3:30. Meanwhile, Pro Series contenders and Kona hopefuls Jackie Hering (USA) and Grace Thek (AUS) had fallen more than 10 minutes back.
Disaster then struck for Matthews, who suffered an irreparable rear flat. She lost over 20 minutes before continuing on a temporary fix from race support after a replacement wheel proved incompatible with her bike. Eventually, she was forced to abandon the race due to safety concerns from the makeshift fix, ending her day on the bike course.

Up front, Løvseth continued to build momentum, making her signature late-bike move to close within a minute of Knibb heading into the run. In doing so, she out-rode Knibb by over two minutes.
At that point, it became a two-athlete race, with Løvseth and Knibb clear of the field. Sanchez had moved into third after passing Berry, while Thek and Hering ran side by side for much of the marathon, much farther back.

Løvseth overtook Knibb around 6 miles into the run and steadily extended her lead all the way to the finish. Even with Knibb running a 10-minute personal best marathon, it was only enough for second behind the reigning world champion, finishing three and a half minutes down.
The victory marks the 26-year-old Løvseth’s third consecutive Ironman win in the U.S. and likely establishes her as the Pro Series favorite, while two-time Pro Series winner Matthews, who had led the standings going into Ironman Texas, shared she probably has to let go of the series to focus on Challenge Roth and Kona.
2026 Ironman Texas women’s results
The men’s race
On the men’s side, the drama continued. A congested swim in a massive field created early chaos, with no clear willingness to push the pace. That resulted in a large front group of around 20 athletes entering T1 together.
Transitions quickly reshuffled the order, as Blummenfelt and Casper Stornes (NOR) took their time and lost contact early, conceding nearly two minutes that persisted deep into the bike leg.
At the front, it was unsurprisingly Germany’s Jonas Schomburg who drove the pace, joined by Belgian duo Marten Van Riel and 70.3 world champion Ironman debutant Jelle Geens.

In the final 10 miles of the bike, late surges from Rudy Von Berg (USA) and Kristian Hogenhaug (DEN) separated themselves from the group and stretched the race further, setting up a compelling run. To further add to the drama, the defending champion, Blummenfelt, was shouting for a mechanic due to a slow tire leak that cost him roughly a minute before T2.
Six miles into the run, it looked like this might be the day Blummenfelt was finally to be beaten, as Schomburg, Van Riel, and Geens matched his pace and held the lead. But by halfway, Geens and Schomburg began to fade.

That left Blummenfelt and Van Riel as the strongest on course, separated by just 10 seconds with 10 miles remaining. The pair had finished third and fourth at the world championships in Nice – and the question was whether Van Riel could reverse that order.
For a time, it looked possible. But with 6 miles to go, Blummenfelt made his move and never looked back. He powered to the finish with a 2:30:47 marathon, capping one of the fastest races in Ironman racing history, and the top 10 all finished in 7:33 or under.
Van Riel’s runner-up finish sent a strong message ahead of Kona, as he crossed the line ahead of reigning Ironman world champion Stornes by nearly a minute. His training partner, Vincent Luis (FRA, fourth place), delivered one of the standout performances of the day to secure a Kona slot in just his second full-distance race, and Canada’s Brock Hoel set a national record of 7:29:56 at just 24 years old.

