There is a unique kind of pressure that comes with being the athlete everyone expects to win. It requires not just physical peak performance, but a distinct tactical maturity. At Challenge Gdansk, both Ognjen Stojanović and Marta Lagownik arrived with targets on their backs – and both delivered masterclasses in how to execute a perfect race.
While the destination was the same for both pre-race favorites, the journeys through the swim, bike, and run could not have been more different. One required the patience of a seasoned hunter; the other was a ruthless exhibition of front-running dominance.
The Hunter’s Game: Stojanović’s Clinical Comeback
In the men’s field, Ognjen Stojanović knew he would have to fight for every inch of European asphalt. Emerging from a calm Baltic Sea at the head of a powerhouse seven-man lead group, the Serbian looked comfortable, controlled, and exactly where he needed to be.
But triathlon rarely follows a perfect script. On the 90km bike course, Germany’s Janne Büttel decided to throw caution to the wind. In a spectacular solo effort, Büttel shattered the lead group within the opening kilometres, building a lead that seemed to grow with every revolution of his pedals. By the time he reached the second transition, the German had carved out a massive near-three-minute advantage.
To the untrained eye, the favorite was in trouble. To Stojanović, it was simply time to go to work.
The half-marathon became a war of attrition. While Büttel looked strong early on, Stojanović’s stride remained flawlessly efficient, systematically chipping away at the deficit. The turning point came at the 13-kilometre mark: as the German leader finally began to fade under the relentless pace, Stojanović seamlessly locked onto his shoulder and made his definitive move.
Behind them, Britain’s Simon Davis was mounting a furious late-race charge of his own, eventually overtaking a spent Büttel. But Stojanović had already flown the coop. Crossing the line in 3:43:41, the Serbian proved that experience and pacing are the ultimate weapons, leaving Davis to take a brave second (3:44:42) and France’s Florent Lefebvre (3:46:31) to round out the podium in third.
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The Local Hero: Lagownik’s Flawless Masterclass
If the men’s race was a psychological thriller, the women’s race was a grand symphony conducted entirely by Marta Łagownik. Playing to a passionate home crowd, the Polish star put on a display of front-running so dominant it felt almost inevitable from the first transition.
Lagownik signaled her intentions immediately, leading a tight trio out of the water. But it was on the bike where she truly broke the spirit of her rivals. Kilometer by kilometer, she put on a clinic in time-trialling, steadily extending her gap over Italy’s Marta Bernardi. By the time Lagownik reached T2, a tight race had been transformed into a solo procession, with a commanding three-and-a-half-minute cushion over her nearest pursuer.
With the victory firmly within her grasp, Lagownik didn’t just manage her lead on the run – she extended it, looking entirely untouchable as she crossed the finish line in 4:07:43 to a deafening local reception.
Behind the champion, the race for the remaining steps on the podium was a showcase of pure grit. Great Britain’s Rebecca Anderbury executed a beautifully judged race to secure second place (4:14:06). Meanwhile, the performance of the day on the run belonged to Italy’s Elisabetta Curridori. Flying through the field with a scorching 1:20:36 half-marathon, Curridori ran herself all the way from the secondary chase pack onto the final step of the podium, finishing third in 4:15:42.


