Club Triatlón Madrid Breaking Records as Young Squad Eyes European Championships
The capital's most ambitious endurance collective has transformed recruitment and training methods, propelling five athletes toward continental glory.
The capital's most ambitious endurance collective has transformed recruitment and training methods, propelling five athletes toward continental glory.

Club Triatlón Madrid is experiencing a renaissance. The organisation, based in the Polígono de San Blas industrial zone where they maintain their primary training facility, has quietly assembled one of Spain's most competitive triathlon rosters in a decade, with several members now ranked in the European top 50 across sprint and Olympic distances.
What distinguishes this moment is structural. Under new director Carmen Varela—who took the helm in early 2025—the club has modernised its approach to athlete development through partnerships with Universidad Autónoma de Madrid's sports science department and the physiotherapy clinics along Calle de Alcalá. This collaborative model has already yielded measurable improvements: five of their competing athletes have cut their Olympic-distance times by an average of eight minutes since January.
The club's open-water swimming sessions, conducted at the newly refurbished Polideportivo Municipal de la Piscina del Sur in Arganzuela, have become legendary among Madrid's triathlon community. Weekend mornings see upwards of thirty swimmers rotating through the lanes, with club membership currently standing at 847—a 34 percent increase from two years prior. Monthly fees remain accessible at €35, significantly undercutting private facilities across the Madrid metropolitan area.
Their cycling contingent trains primarily along the Vías Verdes routes radiating from the capital, particularly the popular routes toward El Escorial and through the Sierra de Guadarrama. Several riders have recently transitioned from amateur cycling clubs specifically to pursue triathlon's integrated demands, bringing fresh momentum to the competitive cohort.
The European Triathlon Union's continental championships take place in mid-August in Portugal. Club Triatlón Madrid has qualified five athletes for the Olympic distance event—their strongest showing since 2019. While individual performances will ultimately determine outcomes, the collective investment and structural improvements suggest the club is building sustainable competitive infrastructure rather than chasing isolated successes.
Local sponsors, including sports nutrition companies based in the Chamartín business district and equipment retailers throughout the Salamanca neighbourhood, have increasingly backed club initiatives. This financial support has enabled subsidised training camps and nutrition workshops previously unavailable to Madrid's amateur athletes.
For endurance sport enthusiasts across Madrid, Club Triatlón's trajectory offers validation that rigorous, organised club environments—rooted in the city's existing sporting infrastructure—remain vital to developing competitive athletes. The next eight weeks will test whether this renewed organisation translates to medals.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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