Hayden Wilde feared Jonny Brownlee meltdown moment in Paris finale at Olympics
Hayden Wilde said he briefly feared a Jonny Brownlee-esque Cozumel collapse as he tried to hang on for the gold medal at the Paris Olympics.
The Kiwi had taken the race by the scruff of its neck when he powered clear on the run in the French capital but his reserves hit empty in the final kilometre as his great rival Alex Yee cut down the deficit and surged past.
And talking in fascinating detail about what unfolded in Paris on supertriās āFace to Faceā series with Adam Leitch, which is embedded below, Wilde also explained why the switch in start time potentially proved so crucial in what is a race that is already etched into triathlon folklore.
The only āflawā in the plan
Rightly proud of his silver ā a step up from bronze in Tokyo ā and while in no way bitter about what unfolded, Wildeās words do illustrate the difficult position all athletes were put in thanks to the ongoing concerns over water quality in the River Seine.
That led to the menās race being postponed on the Tuesday just four hours before it should have started at 8am local time.
And then rather than taking place at the same time on the nominated reserve day, it instead was rescheduled for 10:45 the following day, after the womenās race and in what proved searing temperatures.
Wilde explained: āI look back at the race and IĀ am proud of the way I raced, proud ofĀ the way I executed the race, the preparation, everything ā I did all I could.Ā
āThe preparation, as IĀ said, was perfect and the race tactic that we went forĀ is what we wanted [to do] and was going very, very well.Ā
āWe were prepared for the change of date, whichĀ was absolutely fine, but it was more so theĀ change of time, which we werenāt prepared for.Ā And the extreme weather that happened onĀ that day, we didnāt do any heat training.Ā That was the only flaw I think weĀ had in the plan.ā
Derailed by the heat
Wilde revealed the lengths heād gone to ā and the sacrifices made ā in the weeks and months leading into Paris.
He said: āThe last three months before that race, I was inĀ altitude training by myself, and I was getting up every singleĀ day at 5:45 just to get used to that. Getting up, warming up at 7:30, then starting myĀ workout at 8:00 to make sure that my body was dialled for that time.Ā
āAnd then it got changed. I was still training between 8:00 and midday so it was absolutely fine, but it was just the heatĀ that I feel derailed me a little bit.ā
Wilde had carefully regulated his pace on the 10k run, carrying his watch in his hand, with Yee taking an early lead before the Kiwi eased to the front and opened up a 15-seconds gap.
He added: āThe third lap (of four) was my most reserved lap.Ā I really wanted reserves because I knew IĀ had to pull a big last lap.Ā So I actually relaxed a little bit into that,Ā that third lap, running 3:05/km or something like that.
āI was doing some calculations in my head ā if I run a 3:00/km pace, Iāll be fine. I know that Alex will have to close in 2:55/km or 2:50 and the way the heat was going, it was going to be like, yeah, fair play if he caught me at that pace.ā
Brothers in arms
But things would change dramatically on the last lap and for a moment or two Wilde wondered if he would even make it to the finish line as he recalled that ābrothers in armsā moment when triathlon make headlines around the world ā with Alistair Brownlee almost carrying brother Jonny to the finish line in Cozumel after he was overcome by the heat and humidity.
That was in 2016, just a month after the pair took gold and silver respectively at the Rio Olympics.
Fast forward eight years to Paris and Wilde added: āComing to that last lap, I tried to get the pace up and my body just didnāt respond at all. And at that point, I was now fighting to actually get to the finish line.
āI started to see 3:10/km. That last 1,500m I started to see 3:23, 3: 30, I was definitely in trouble and I didnāt want to look back.
āAnd then I saw him and I tried to accelerate, but I was just done. My finish line was at nine-and-a-half k ā thatās all I had.
When he passed, I tried to go, but I just had absolutely nothing, I was just completely depleted.
āAnd, yeah, I think at the end of the day, thatās how you want to finish a race. You want to know that you gave it everything.
ā[But] if I pushed even more, I felt like I might have gone into maybe like a Johnny Brownlee in the Cozumel Grand Final, and didnāt even know if I would be able to finish. So there was a point of, do I risk putting my body on the absolute line and, you know, depleting myself and collapsing 200 metres before the line? Or do I just say no, thatās all Iāve got.
āAnd I think it was the right decision or I could have lost everything in one blink. I gave it absolutely everything and Iāll never kind of die not knowing I tried.ā
And the great news for all triathlon fans is that Wilde and Yee will lock horns again at supertri London on Sunday, with everything to play for after one win for each of them in the series so far.
Hayden Wilde congratulates great rival Alex Yee after the British star beat him to win Olympic Games triathlon gold at Paris 2024 (Photo ā World Triathlon).