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Kat Matthews
Kat Matthews
from Wikipedia

Katrina Matthews (born 13 March 1991, née Rye) is an English professional triathlete who races in non-drafting, long-distance events. Major results include second places at the 2021 Ironman World Championship in Utah, USA, the 2024 Ironman World Championship in Nice, France, the 2025 Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii, USA, the 2023 Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Lahti, Finland and the 2024 Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Taupō, New Zealand.[1][2][3][4][5] Matthews won the inaugural Ironman Pro Series in 2024.[6] In April 2025 Matthews recorded an Ironman_Triathlon World best of all time: 8:10:34 winning Ironman Texas.[7] She was a member of the BMC Pro triathlon team and previously worked as a physiotherapist officer in the British Army.[8]

Key Information

Triathlon career

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In 2018, as an amateur, Matthews won Ironman 70.3 Calgary as well as the UK National Championships later on in the year.[9][10] Early in the 2019 season, Matthews won Challenge Gran Canaria as an amateur thus securing her pro licence and, as a professional went on to podium at four middle distance events including winning the ETU European Championships.[11] In her first Ironman: IM Western Australia she was 4th with a debut time of 8:53:58.

In 2020 Matthews won the first post-pandemic IM 70.3 (Tallinn) and the first post-pandemic Ironman: Ironman Florida with a time of 8:40:50 (at the time the 3rd fastest ever British woman).[12][13] Notably she also won the UK national 100-mile cycling TT in 3 hours and 55 minutes.[14][15]

In 2021, Matthews finished fourth at the Ironman 70.3 World Championship in St George. In the inaugural PTO Collins Cup she had the 4th fastest time, winning her match.[16][17] She also won IM UK in Bolton[18] and came 2nd to Daniela Ryf at IM Tulsa.[19]

In 2022, Matthews won Ironman Lanzarote 70.3 beating the reigning Ironman world champion Anne Haug by over 3 minutes.[20][21] Racing in her first Ironman World Championships in St George, Utah in May 2022 she was second to Daniela Ryf.[22] She had been invited to participate in the Sub7Sub8 challenge racing against Nicola Spirig.[23] Matthews smashed the 8-hour 'barrier' finishing ahead of Spirig with a time of 7:31:57, the fastest ever Ironman distance time.[24] While acclimatizing in Texas for the 2022 Ironman World Championships in Kona, Hawaii, a driver drove into her resulting in very serious injuries.[25][26] Once sufficiently recovered her structured rehabilitation moved to an active return to training in December.[27] She was ranked ninth in the Professional Triathletes Organisation 2022 ranking list.[28] Matthews was named British Army and UK Armed Forces Sportswoman of the Year 2022.[29]

In 2023, recovered and rehabilitated,[30] Matthews returned to racing 'grateful' to finish third at IM 70.3 Oceanside behind Tamara Jewett and the current world champion Chelsea Sodaro.[31] and followed this 3 weeks later with a win at Ironman Texas in a new best Ironman time for a British woman of 8:32:51.[32][33] In the 2023 Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Lahti, Finland, Matthews finished second to Taylor Knibb.[34] With a win in the IM 70.3 Bahrain[35] Matthews was ranked sixth in the Professional Triathletes Organisation 2023 world ranking list.[36]

In 2024 with the inaugural Professional Triathletes Organisation T100 Tour and the first Ironman Pro Series she set out to be the only athlete in the world to race both series.[37] Wins at Ironman Texas,[38] Ironman Vitoria-Gasteiz (in a new British fastest ever Ironman time of 8:24:23) and podia at T100 San Francisco, T100 London and Ironman 70.3 Tallinn set up success in both the Ironman Pro Series[39][40] and the T100 Tour.[41] In the autumn Matthews was second in the 2024 Ironman World Championship in Nice to Laura Philipp,[42] finished the Professional Triathletes Organisation T100 World Tour in fourth place[43] and in the 2024 Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Taupō, New Zealand, Matthews finished second to Taylor Knibb.[44] With that result Matthews won the Ironman Pro Series with an overall score of 20,761 (out of 21,500 max).[45][46]

In 2025 Matthews started her Ironman Pro Series campaign with a third consecutive win at Ironman Texas, notably beating Taylor Knibb the current Ironman 70.3 World Champion.[47] Her time was an Ironman_Triathlon World best of all time: 8:10:34, beating the previous mark by 8 minutes. A month later she backed this up placing second to the World Champion Laura Philipp at Ironman Hamburg in an even faster time of 8:05:13.[48] In the 2025 Ironman World Championship in Kona on 11 October 2025 she placed second behind Solveig Løvseth and ahead of Philipp, setting a record for the run: 2:47:23.[49]

Notable results

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Matthews' notable achievements include:

Date Event Rank
7 November 2020 Ironman Florida 1[50]
23 May 2021 Ironman Tulsa 2[51]
4 July 2021 Ironman UK 1[52]
28 August 2021 Collins Cup 4[53]
19 March 2022 Ironman 70.3 Lanzarote 1[54]
6 May 2022 2021 Ironman World Championship 2[55]
22 April 2023 Ironman Texas 1[56]
26 August 2023 Ironman 70.3 World Championship 2[57]
27 April 2024 Ironman Texas 1[58]
8 June 2024 T100 San Francisco 2[59]
14 July 2024 Ironman Vitoria-Gasteiz 1[60]
27 July 2024 T100 London 3[61]
22 September 2024 Ironman World Championships 2024 2[62]
14 December 2024 Ironman 70.3 World Championship 2[63]
26 April 2025 Ironman Texas 1[64]
1 June 2025 Ironman Hamburg 2[65]
12 October 2025 Ironman World Championships 2025 2

[66]

Competitions

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Tours/Series

Year Tour/Series Rank
2024 T100 World Championships Tour 4[67]
2024 Ironman Pro Series 1[68]

Results

[edit]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Kat Matthews (born Katrina Rye; 13 March 1991) is a British professional specializing in long-distance, non-drafting events such as IRONMAN and races. Born in , , she began her athletic career in triathlon in 2015 after serving as a physiotherapist in the British Army's , where she earned a BSc in Physiotherapy. Matthews transitioned to full-time professional racing in 2019, quickly establishing herself as a top competitor in the sport. Throughout her career, Matthews has achieved numerous podium finishes, including three victories at IRONMAN Texas, with her most recent win in April 2025 setting an all-time IRONMAN world best time of 8:10:34. She earned silver medals at the IRONMAN World Championships in both 2024 and 2025, the latter in Kona, , where she overcame a 14-minute deficit to finish just 35 seconds behind the winner while breaking the run course record despite challenging conditions. In 2025, Matthews defended her title as the inaugural winner of the IRONMAN Pro Series from 2024, securing the women's points championship and a $200,000 bonus despite withdrawing from the World Championship in , , due to a mid-race calf . Known for her resilience, she rebounded from a serious 2022 bike accident to continue podiuming at major events.

Early life

Childhood and upbringing

Katrina Rye, later known as Kat Matthews, was born on 13 March 1991 in , , . Her father served in the Royal Marines, and the family resided on military bases for her early years, instilling a sense of discipline from a young age. At the age of four, the family moved to , , where Matthews spent her childhood in a coastal town surrounded by beaches and proximity to the Devon countryside, including . Growing up in Exmouth's seaside environment played a key role in shaping her active lifestyle, with the local beaches and roads providing natural venues for family runs that built her endurance and love for outdoor pursuits. The area's coastal setting also encouraged water-based activities, fostering early comfort in and contributing to her physical resilience amid the rugged terrain of nearby moors and shores. Matthews developed a sporty foundation through involvement in various local activities, including hockey, , , cross-country running, and with the swimming club under coach Dave Smith, training twice a week purely for enjoyment. These experiences in Exmouth's community scene laid the groundwork for her lifelong commitment to , with the from her early military-influenced home life naturally progressing into structured athletic endeavors.

Education and initial career interests

Matthews attended St Peter’s School in Lympstone for and a secondary school in before pursuing higher education. Matthews pursued her higher education at , where she earned a (BSc) degree in Physiotherapy from September 2010 to June 2013. This program provided her with a strong foundation in health sciences, emphasizing physical rehabilitation, , and therapeutic interventions, which aligned with her developing interest in supporting athletic performance and recovery. Her academic choice was influenced by a longstanding personal enthusiasm for sports and fitness, stemming from her childhood activities in , , where she excelled in , cross-country running, and team sports like hockey and . This background fostered an early inclination toward healthcare professions that could combine her passion for physical activity with helping others overcome injuries and enhance mobility. Following graduation, Matthews spent a couple of years in other pursuits before enlisting in the . Prior to her military enlistment, her initial career interests centered on physical rehabilitation and , driven by a desire to apply physiological knowledge to real-world athletic and medical contexts. These pursuits reflected her proactive engagement with fitness coaching and rehabilitation principles, preparing her for roles in healthcare delivery within high-demand settings.

Military career

Enlistment and training

Following her completion of a degree in Physiotherapy at , Kat Matthews joined the in 2014 as a Physiotherapist Officer in the Royal Army . Matthews underwent officer training that emphasized intense regimens, building her and mental resilience essential for high-performance demands. Her early service included a posting at the Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre at in , where she operated in a demanding environment focused on treating and rehabilitating soldiers with severe injuries, including neurological trauma. Subsequently, Matthews participated in a in , involving large-scale ground and air exercises that exposed her to operational stresses and reinforced the discipline and toughness she would later channel into endurance sports.

Role as physiotherapist

As a Physiotherapist in the Royal Army , Kat Matthews was responsible for delivering clinical physiotherapy services to British , focusing on the treatment and rehabilitation of injuries sustained during rigorous exercises and operational deployments. Her daily duties included assessing and managing musculoskeletal issues, implementing recovery protocols to restore function, and advising on strategies to support soldiers' return to . This work often involved hands-on sessions, tailored exercise programs, and collaboration with multidisciplinary medical teams to address both acute and chronic conditions arising from physical demands of military life. Matthews gained specialized expertise in sports medicine and rehabilitation through her Army service, particularly during her two years as a full-time physiotherapist at the Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre (DMRC) in , where she treated servicemen and women with severe, life-changing injuries from combat zones. At this facility, she concentrated on advanced recovery techniques to restore movement, independence, and , applying principles of and adaptive therapy to help patients regain physical capabilities. Her experience extended to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham and included a deployment to . In addition to clinical practice, Matthews' role encompassed team and soldier , where she oversaw physical conditioning programs and provided guidance on optimizing loads to avoid burnout and overuse . This expertise in recovery and prevention was honed through her physiotherapy degree and practical application in high-stakes settings, informing her approach to maintaining peak physical standards. She balanced these demanding professional responsibilities with her own fitness regimen, using her knowledge to self-monitor and adjust conditioning routines while informally advising peers on and resilience-building strategies. Matthews served in the until May 2025, after which she left to focus full-time on her professional career.

Triathlon career

Introduction to the sport

Kat Matthews first encountered in 2015 while serving as a physiotherapist officer in the , initially taking it up as a casual pursuit to complement her routine. Her background in Army physical training laid a solid foundation for the sport's demands, emphasizing endurance, discipline, and recovery principles central to her role in rehabilitating injured personnel. At the grassroots level, she began participating in short-distance events, such as sprint and standard (Olympic) formats, which allowed her to build experience without immediate competitive pressure. Inspired by a fellow , Matthews decided to attempt her first Ironman-distance event during her honeymoon in 2019, marking a significant step up in challenge and distance. She competed at IRONMAN , finishing fourth overall in a debut time of 8 hours and 53 minutes, an impressive result that highlighted her rapid adaptation to long-distance racing. This event, held in , , combined a 3.8 km swim, 180 km bike, and 42.2 km run, testing her abilities across all disciplines for the first time at full Ironman length. Following her honeymoon race, Matthews returned to the and continued grassroots participation in local events, progressively building from short- and standard-distance triathlons toward middle-distance formats like the 70.3 Ironman (1.9 km swim, 90 km bike, 21.1 km run). These early races, often held in regional venues, helped her refine her pacing, transitions, and overall strategy while balancing her duties. This gradual progression fostered a deeper engagement with the , transforming her casual interest into a more structured pursuit.

Amateur competitions

Matthews entered competitive in 2016 following a casual introduction to the sport the previous year, initially focusing on short-course events within the British age-group system. Competing under her maiden name, Katrina , she participated in various UK-based amateur races, building experience through regional and national qualifiers while serving as a captain and physiotherapist in the Royal Army Medical Corps. By 2017, she continued to hone her skills in non-elite amateur competitions, achieving consistent top finishes in standard-distance triathlons across the , which allowed her to represent in age-group selections. Her progression to middle-distance racing accelerated in 2018, where she secured several standout victories in regional events. Notably, she won the overall women's title at the Vitruvian Triathlon in , posting the fastest female bike split of 2:17:37 en route to a finishing time of 4:15:38, earning her the British Triathlon Middle Distance Championship in the process. That same year, Matthews claimed the English Middle Distance Triathlon Championship, demonstrating her growing prowess in non-drafting formats typical of longer amateur races. Internationally, she excelled at , her debut at the distance, winning the F25-29 age-group category with a time of 4:25:15—including a strong bike of 2:18:17—and placing 10th overall among women, which qualified her for the 2019 Ironman 70.3 World Championship. Throughout her amateur phase from 2016 to 2018, Matthews balanced a demanding race schedule with her commitments, often training and competing during allocated leave while stationed in locations like Birmingham, where she supported injured personnel. This dual role contributed to top finishes in non-drafting long-distance qualifiers, such as those for Ironman events, underscoring her resilience and strategic race selection amid logistical challenges.

Professional transition

Following her successes as an , including the 2019 European title in middle-distance , Kat Matthews decided to transition to a full-time , leaving her role as a physiotherapist in the in 2019 to dedicate herself entirely to the sport. In pursuit of elite-level competition, Matthews secured her professional license and entered her first pro races in 2019, focusing on events to build experience in long-distance formats such as and . These early outings marked her shift toward non-drafting, middle-distance triathlons, aligning with her strengths in endurance disciplines honed during . To support her professional ambitions, Matthews joined the BMC-Vifit Pro Team in 2020, racing with the squad through 2022 alongside teammates like Emma Pallant. She continued her team progression by joining the Victorious 13 team and signing with Canyon as a sponsor ahead of the 2023 season.

Key professional victories

Kat Matthews achieved her first major international podium as a professional triathlete with a at the 2022 in , where she finished second behind in a time of 8:46:23, marking a breakthrough in non-drafting long-distance racing. Prior to 2024, Matthews secured multiple victories in IRONMAN and events, including her professional debut win at in 2020 with a time of 4:08:14 and a commanding half-marathon split that built an over-five-minute lead. She followed this with another title at in December 2023, crossing the line in 3:59:07 after a strong bike and run to edge out the field in challenging desert conditions. These successes solidified her transition to long-distance competition. In 2024, Matthews claimed the inaugural IRONMAN Pro Series championship, accumulating 20,761 points across the season's key non-drafting races to earn the $200,000 bonus, highlighting her consistency in full- and half-Ironman distances. She defended the title in 2025 with 20,845 points, surpassing her previous year's total through steady performances, including two wins early in the season, to secure another $200,000 payout despite withdrawing from the World Championship due to injury. Matthews opened her 2025 campaign with a dominant victory at in , setting a new all-time Ironman world best of 8:10:34—shaving over three minutes off the previous record—via a balanced effort that included a 56:24 swim and a 4:20:07 bike. Later that year, at the in Kona, , she earned silver for the third time, finishing 35 seconds behind winner Løvseth in 8:29:02 after overcoming a 14-minute deficit on the bike through a record-breaking 2:47:23 marathon run in adverse windy conditions.

Personal life

Marriage and family

Kat Matthews, formerly known as Katrina Rye, married Mark Matthews in 2019, adopting his surname thereafter. Both were serving officers in the at the time—Matthews as a captain in the Royal Logistic Corps and Rye as a physiotherapist in the Royal Army Medical Corps—where they first connected through their shared passion for as amateur athletes. Their wedding was followed shortly by a that doubled as Matthews' debut full-distance Ironman in , where she finished fourth in under nine hours, marking an early integration of and athletic pursuits. After transitioning to professional in 2019 while still serving in the , the couple has built a family life centered on mutual support and sports. Mark, a former junior triathlete and biathlete for , shares Matthews' athletic background and has become her primary pillar, handling logistics, mechanics, and emotional encouragement during training and races. In 2025, Mark left his military career to dedicate himself full-time to supporting her professional endeavors, including travel for international competitions. The pair has no children, allowing their routine to revolve around , with shared interests in endurance sports fostering a partnership that blends personal and professional elements seamlessly. Matthews' family extends to her parents, Penny and John, who instilled a love for athletics from childhood through encouragement in hockey, , and cross-country running; John, a 32-year Royal Marine veteran, emphasized resilience that aligns with her discipline. This foundational support, combined with Mark's hands-on role—such as providing real-time race updates and motivation during events like the Sub7Sub8 challenge—has been instrumental in enabling Matthews to balance the demands of elite competition with family stability.

Injuries and comebacks

In September 2022, while training on her bike in ahead of the , Kat Matthews was struck by a that swerved into her path, resulting in a near career-ending collision. The incident caused multiple fractures, including to her , vertebrae, , , , and , along with extensive damage and a moderate evidenced by visible tissue damage on scans. Fortunately, Matthews was riding with fellow triathletes, including , who provided immediate assistance. Drawing on her background as a physiotherapist, Matthews initiated her rehabilitation with an intuitive, self-guided approach that emphasized trusting her body's healing signals and progressively rebuilding strength. This expertise allowed her to manage the complex recovery from her injuries without overexertion, focusing on functional mobility and gradual conditioning over the following months. Her military training in rehabilitation further supported this process, enabling a structured yet adaptive path to regaining fitness. By early 2023, approximately six months after the accident, Matthews had progressed sufficiently to resume full and prepare for competitive racing, marking a significant milestone in her physical and mental recovery. She returned to competition in April 2023, demonstrating remarkable resilience in overcoming what she described as a life-altering ordeal that left her surprised to be alive. In November 2025, during the run segment of the World Championship in , Matthews encountered another setback when a pre-existing calf strain worsened, forcing her to stop abruptly after about 5 km despite an initial strong push. Exhibiting on-course toughness, she briefly sat roadside to assess the injury before attempting to continue, though the intensifying pain ultimately led to her withdrawal from the race. This episode underscored her mental fortitude amid ongoing physical challenges.

Achievements and records

Major championships

Kat Matthews has secured notable podium finishes in several elite-level triathlon championships, highlighting her rise from amateur competitor to professional contender in long-distance events. As an emerging athlete, Matthews claimed gold at the 2019 ETU European Middle Distance Triathlon Championships in , , marking her first elite-level victory and a key step toward her professional career. In the full-distance IRONMAN World Championship, she earned silver medals in 2022 (St. George, Utah), 2024 (Nice, France), and 2025 (Kona, Hawaii). At the 2022 edition in St. George, Utah, Matthews finished second overall in a breakthrough performance that established her as a top global contender. She repeated the silver in 2025 at the iconic Kona course in Hawaii, where her exceptional run split nearly erased a significant deficit to the leader. Matthews dominated the IRONMAN Pro Series, winning the inaugural championship in 2024 through consistent high placements across the season's events. She defended her title successfully in 2025, securing the series victory for the second consecutive year despite challenges in the finale. Regarding the World Championship, Matthews has competed three times, finishing 16th in 2019 and fourth in 2021, both in , which provided valuable experience in the half-distance world title race, and entering but not finishing the 2025 edition in , due to a mid-race calf injury—though her season performance secured the 2025 IRONMAN Pro Series title.

World and national records

In April 2025, Kat Matthews set a world best all-time female time for the full Ironman distance at IRONMAN Texas, completing the race in 8:10:34 and surpassing the previous mark by over eight minutes. This performance not only secured her third consecutive victory at the event but also established a new benchmark in women's long-distance , highlighting her dominance in the discipline. Later that year, in June 2025, Matthews improved her personal best and cemented her status as the fastest British woman in Ironman history by finishing second at IRONMAN Hamburg in 8:05:13, a time that ranks as the second-fastest ever recorded by a female athlete in an official IRONMAN-branded full-distance event. This effort also stands as the British national record for the full Ironman, underscoring her pivotal role in elevating the sport's standards in the . Her earlier Texas time remains the second-fastest British female Ironman performance as of November 2025. At the 2025 IRONMAN World Championship in Kona, Matthews established a new women's run course record of 2:47:23 despite challenging conditions, contributing to her second-place overall finish and demonstrating exceptional running prowess on the iconic course. This mark shaved a full minute off the prior record and highlighted her ability to excel in high-stakes environments. During her amateur career, Matthews set national benchmarks in middle-distance events, including winning the British Middle Distance Triathlon Championships in 2018, which affirmed her early potential in non-drafting formats.

References

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