Team USA Wins Silver In Triathlon’s Mixed Relay
But in triathlons mixed relay, Taylor Knibb pulled the Americans into a three-way battle for the medals.
6'2"
48
Colorado Springs, CO
Lake Brantley High School Wake Forest University '98, Business
Elite Triathlon CareerPosted top-five finishes in back-to-back weeks in May, with a third-place finish at the Monterrey CAMTRI Triathlon on May 1 and a fourth-place effort at the Chengdu ITU World Cup on May 9 • Began the season on March 14 with a sixth-place finish at the Sarasota CAMTRI Sprint Triathlon American Cup
2014: Logged back-to-back top-10 finishes in ITU World Cups in October, finishing seventh in Cartagena on Oct. 12 and sixth in Tongyeong on Oct. 18 • Finished as the second American and 23rd overall at ITU World Triathlon Chicago, which also served as the USA Triathlon Elite National Championships • Made his return to ITU racing after nearly one year off the circuit with a fourth-place finish at the Dallas PATCO Triathlon Pan American Championships
2013: Placed third at the USA Triathlon National Championships on March 20 • Finished 25th at the ITU World Triathlon San Diego on April 19
2012: USA Triathlon National Team member and a 2012 U.S. Olympian • Finished as the No. 4 American and 50th overall in the 2012 ITU World Triathlon Series rankings • Finished second in the 2012 Race to the Toyota Cup series standings • Took third at the Toyota U.S. Open Triathlon in Rockwell, Texas • Placed fourth at the Los Angeles Triathlon • Placed second at the Hy-Vee Triathlon • First-place finisher at the Chicago Triathlon • Made fourth career Olympic Games appearance in London • Placed 14th at the Games to rank as the top U.S. men’s finisher for the fourth consecutive Olympic Triathlon • Won the Life Time Fitness Triathlon in Minneapolis • Winner of the Capital of Texas Triathlon in Austin, Texas • Qualified for an unprecedented fourth U.S. Olympic Triathlon Team with a fifth-place finish at the ITU World Triathlon San Diego • In his first race in seven months, Kemper posted a 30:27 10k split and moved his way into Olympic-qualifying position on the final lap of the run in San Diego • Kemper and Canada’s Simon Whitfield are the only two men to have qualified for all four Olympic triathlons; Kemper is the only male to finish all four Olympic triathlons
2011: Runner-up in the five-event 2011 USA Triathlon Elite Race Series • Suffered a broken elbow in the series finale in Myrtle Beach, forcing him to miss the 2011 Pan American Games • Won a record seventh men’s USA Triathlon Elite National Championship title in Buffalo, N.Y., in 2011 • Wrapped up the 2011 ITU World Championship Series as the No. 2 American and 45th overall • Finished second at the 2011 Hy-Vee Triathlon Elite Cup • Earned his third ITU World Cup podium finish of the 2011 season, taking bronze in Edmonton • Winner of the second stop of the 2011 USA Triathlon Elite Race Series in Monroe, Wash. • Finished second at the 2011 Capitol of Texas Triathlon • Earned a second straight 2011 World Cup podium finish by taking third in Monterrey, Mexico • Broke away on the run to earn gold at the 2011 Ishigaki ITU World Cup • The victory marked his first World Cup title since 2005 and the fourth of his career • Named the USOC’s male Athlete of the Month for April 2011 following his win in Ishigaki
2010: Limited by injury for much of 2010 • Winner of the 2010 Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon • Finished 10th at the 2010 ITU World Championship Series opener in Sydney
2009: Saw limited race action in 2009 due to injury but was still fourth among Americans and 47th overall in the 2009 ITU World Championship rankings • Posted top-five finishes in both ITU races on U.S. soil in 2009, finishing second in Oklahoma City and fifth in Washington, D.C.
2008: Member of the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team and was the top American with a seventh-place finish • Took third at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials in Tuscaloosa, Ala. • Also placed sixth at Hy-Vee and 10th at the Lifetime Fitness Triathlon in Minneapolis in 2008 • Finished 2008 ranked fourth among Americans and 50th overall in the 2008 ITU World Cup rankings
2007 and earlier: 2007 Haul to the Great Wall Series Champion • Won ITU Longmont Continental Cup in 2007 • Won unprecedented sixth USAT elite national title in 2006 • 2006 Lifetime Fitness Triathlon champion • Tied career-best with seventh place finish at 2006 ITU World Championship in Lausanne, Switzerland • Earned podium finishes at three World Cup events in 2006 (Edmonton, Ishigaki, Mooloolaba) • In 2005, Kemper became the first U.S. man to be ranked No. 1 in the ITU world rankings • Named 2005 USOC SportsMan of the Year • Named 2005 USOC Male Triathlete of the Year • Recipient of 2005 Jim Thorpe All-Around Award • Qualified for the 2004 Olympic team by finishing as the first American, second overall at the Race to Athens - Honolulu • Qualified for the 2003 ITU World Championships, but did not compete due to illness • Victory at the 2003 ITU World Cup in Madrid, Spain, was the first World Cup win for a U.S. male since Wes Hobson in 1994 • Won the first gold medal ever for a U.S. male at the Pan American Games in 2003 • Qualified for the 2003 Pan American team by finishing as the first U.S. man at the Baker's Breakfast Cookies ITU International Triathlon • Named the USOC Male Triathlete of the Year for 2000 • Helped win three spots for U.S. men at 2000 Games in Sydney when he placed seventh at the ITU World Championships in Perth, Australia, a race he hadn't been planning to do • Once the United States had three spots, Hunter got one of them by virtue of his 11th-place finish at the ITU World Cup in Sydney • Defeated American record holder Steve Scott by almost five seconds at the 2000 Competitor Magazine/Greg Welch Mile, in conjunction with the San Diego (Calif.) Indoor Games • Earned a silver medal at the 1999 Pan American Games.
Amateur Triathlon Career: In 1997, won the USA Triathlon Amateur National Championship at the Columbia (Md.) Triathlon • Won the Goodings Sprint Triathlon in Clermont, Fla. • In 1996, was the first U.S. Amateur and sixth junior at the ITU World Championship in Cleveland, Ohio • Named USA Triathlon Junior Athlete of the Year and All-American by Inside Triathlon • Was the first junior and third overall at the Boulder (Colo.) Peak Triathlon, defeating 1997 world champion Chris McCormack who finished fourth • Was the first junior and second overall at the Monument Park Sprint Triathlon in Colorado Springs, Colo. • Member of the 1996 USA Triathlon Junior National Team • In 1993, won the junior division of the USA Triathlon National Sprint Championship in Miami, Fla. • Was the fourth junior at the USA Triathlon Amateur National Championship at Leon's QEM Triathlon in Hammond, Ind. • Was the first junior and fourth overall at the Wendy's Triathlon in Columbus, Ohio • Named an all-American by Inside Triathlon • In 1992, won the junior division at the USAT National Amateur Championship in Cleveland • From 1986-90, won five consecutive IronKids Triathlon National Championship titles from the age of 10-14.
Athletic Background: Began swimming competitively at age 6 • Swam for Parnell Barracudas Club team in Orlando, Fla. • Was introduced to triathlon at age 10 by friends on his swim team • Ran cross country and track in college to improve his running in triathlons • Sent an inquiry letter to the Wake Forest cross country and track programs and received a letter from the coaches along with a women's media guide • His non-gender specific name and relatively slow times caused the coaches to assume he was a female • Before college, running was his weakest discipline • Took 1994-95 off from triathlon to concentrate on his running • Decided to return to the sport in 1996 because it was his last chance to race as a junior at a World Championship (Cleveland, Ohio) • Four-year letterwinner in cross country and track at Wake Forest University • As a senior, was second in the 10,000 meters at the 1998 ACC Outdoor Track Championship (30:46) and ninth as a junior in 1997 • His 10K personal best is 30:17 • Was eighth at the 1998 ACC Indoor Track Championship • Was the 1996 Florida Cycling Time-Trial Amateur Champion.
But in triathlons mixed relay, Taylor Knibb pulled the Americans into a three-way battle for the medals.
Taylor Knibb came to the Olympic Games Paris 2024 as the only Team USA athlete competing in two separate sports.
On June 7, 2024, Kirsten Kasper received a Zoom call from USA Triathlon’s high performance general manager Scott Schnitzspahn. The 32-year-old triathlete was in her car, in her bathing suit, driving home from a pool workout in Boulder, Colorado. She kn...