Home Aquatic Moesha Johnson & Florian Wellbrock Take Open Water Honours

Moesha Johnson & Florian Wellbrock Take Open Water Honours

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Moesha Johnson & Florian Wellbrock Take The Honours at Open Water World Cup in Somabay

Moesha Johnson and Florian Wellbrock won their respective 10k races at the first stop of the World Aquatics Open Water World Cup in Somabay, Egypt.

A 42-strong field took to the pontoon for the start of the women’s race which followed the men’s event in the turquoise waters of the Red Sea.

Johnson last year emerged as the dominant force in women’s open water, clinching the 5/10k double and sharing 3k sprint bronze with Bettina Fabian despite oppressively hot conditions at the Singapore worlds.

With two-time Olympic champion Sharon van Rouwendaal having retired, it appears the Australian has taken the mantle from the Dutchwoman.

She was marginally ahead of Ginevra Taddeucci approaching the latter stages in Somabay before she powered away to deliver a demonstration in open water swimming.

The Australian – who headed the sprint in 18:45.10 – hit the board in 1:58:26.10 leaving the field trailing in her wake.

Taddeucci, the 2025 overall champion, came home more than 48 seconds behind the Olympic silver medallist in 1:59:14.70.

Lea Boy of Germany was third in 1:59:23.30 followed by Maria da Valdes of Spain, Hungary’s Fabian and Lisa Pou of Monaco.

Wellbrock Wins Second Straight World Cup Opener

The men’s race had got the action underway as a 53-strong field took to the water. Wellbrock won the corresponding race last year and a little over four months later the German would go on claim an historic quadruple at the World Championships in Singapore.

On Friday, he went through the sprint lap first in 17:36.70 and a strong final lap saw him clinch victory in 1:50:59.50.

Dávid Betlehem, who won Olympic bronze at Paris 2024, arrived in Egypt on the back of a big block of training. The Hungarian had endured some sickness last week but he was  second through the sprint in 17:38.30. He followed Wellbrock home to touch the board in 1:51:04.10.

Domenico Acerenza was 26th in the sprint, 15.5secs behind Wellbrock, but he made his way through the field to take third in 1:51:05.60.

Marc-Antoine Olivier, who took time away from the water for two months from October to December last year and recently became a father, was fourth in 1:51:06.10.

Andrea Filadelli was fifth followed by teammates Marcello Guidi, Gregorio Paltrinieri and Dario Verani  as Italians filled five of the top eight places.

Logan Fontaine, who won the overall World Cup crown, was one of two men who DNF.

 

 

 

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