Singapore T100 Triathlon Showdown: Wilde Leads High Calibre Men’s Start List
April 8, 2026

Singapore (April 8, 2026) /ENDURANCE SPORTSWIRE/ – Reigning Singapore T100 champion and PTO World #1 Hayden Wilde leads a high calibre start list for the men’s professional race at the Singapore T100 Triathlon weekend on 25-26 April, 2026.
The Kiwi star, who also won the 2025 T100 Race To Qatar in Doha last December, will take on a field that contains half of the current PTO World Rankings top 10 – including #3 Mika Noodt (GER), #8 Mathis Margirier (FRA), #9 Jonas Schomburg (GER) and #10 Youri Keulen (NED) who won here in 2024 – over the Professional Triathletes Organisation’s signature 100km distance (2km swim, 80km bike, 18km run).
The world class line up also includes returning 2024 T100 series runner-up Kyle Smith (NZL); British Olympian and World #11 Sam Dickinson (GBR); and 2025 World Triathlon Championship Series (WTCS) champion Matt Hauser (AUS), who will be making his T100 debut.
“I’m looking forward to defending my T100 crown and returning to Singapore,” said Wilde, who claimed victory in Singapore on his T100 debut last year by beating Bergère into second place and starting a run of five T100 wins in a row on his way to his first T100 World Championship crown.
“Winning my first T100 last year set me up for a strong season, so I’d love to do the same again later this month. But I know it’s a super hard race with the heat and humidity so you just have to focus on your own race and hope that it’s enough.”
On Australian Matt Hauser lining up for his first T100 race, Wilde commented: “I said after the final in Qatar last year that I wanted to see more short course athletes come and toss it up with us. I saw Matty Hauser did a 10km run at the Gold Coast event with Alex Yee [British Olympic champion] and looked to be enjoying it. Fair play to him for now stepping up and taking on the T100.”
“I love this sort of racing. It’s a great platform to showcase the sport and enable athletes to show how good you can be individually on the bike and the run, so it will be interesting to see how he goes.”
Hauser is excited to step up in distance and renew his rivalry with Wilde.
“I want to continue to challenge and humble myself, Singapore presents a unique opportunity to do just that! I’m looking forward to testing myself against some of the best middle distance males, including Hayden. We’ve had some exciting and close battles in short course triathlon, so I’m hoping to bring that same energy to T100!”
Hauser’s only previous race at this distance came at IRONMAN 70.3 Geelong in 2025, where he recorded a DNF early on the bike due to a mechanical.
The start list of professional men competing in the Singapore T100 is:
- Hayden Wilde (NZL)
- Mika Noodt (GER)
- Mathis Margirier (FRA)
- Jonas Schomburg (GER)
- Youri Keulen (NED)
- Sam Dickinson (GBR)
- Gregory Garnaby (ITA)
- Menno Koolhaas (NED)
- Wilhelm Hirsch (GER)
- Kyle Smith (NZL)
- Jake Birtwhistle (AUS)
- Guillem Montiel (ESP)
- Gregor Payet (LUX)
- Henry Rappo (EST)
- Pieter Heemeryck (BEL)
- Henrik Goesch (FIN)
- Dylan Magnien (FRA)
- Jannik Schaufler (GER)
- Matt Hauser (AUS)
- Henri Schoeman (RSA)
This year’s fourth event in Singapore promises to be the biggest yet, with more than 7,000 amateur participants of all ages and abilities expected. The PTO and its event partners, Sport Singapore and Singapore Tourism Board (STB), having announced for the first time Olympic (1.5km swim, 40km bike, 10km run) and Sprint (750m swim, 20km bike, 5km run) distance triathlons will be included with a new Youth Aquathlon (400m swim & 3km run for 14-18 year olds). Alongside the returning 100km triathlon and Long (9km run, 64km bike, 9km run) and Standard (6km run, 32km bike, 3km run) distance duathlons and 5km Music Run. Whilst the 5km Music Run has already sold out, there are still a few spots left in the other events which people can sign up for here: https://t100triathlon.com/singapore/participate/
For Further Information:
PTO – Anthony Scammell E: Anthony.Scammell@protriathletes.org
About Professional Triathletes Organisation (PTO)
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 ‘official World Championship for long distance triathlon’. This is part of a 12-year strategic partnership with the sport’s international governing body to develop the sport and it will grow further in 2027 with the launch of the new Triathlon World Tour. 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 world’s best triathletes go head-to-head in iconic locations. In 2026, the T100 Tour will deliver its 9-stop T100 Race To Qatar to: the Gold Coast (21-22 March), Singapore (25-26 April), Spain (23-24 May), San Francisco (6-7 June), Vancouver (15-16 August), French Riviera (19-20 September), Dubai (12-15 November), Saudi Arabia (November) & Qatar (11-12 December). T100 weekends are ‘festivals of multisport’ 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
World Triathlon
World Triathlon is the international governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon, cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the programme at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic programme at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development of the sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and transparency at our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the sport to be extraordinary.
