Léo Bergere: Background, career highlights, quotes
World champion and Olympic bronze medallist Léo Bergere is France's top male triathlete. Here's how he got there…
A multiple champion as part of France’s impeccable relay teams, Léo Bergere was propelled into the spotlight in November 2022 when he took his first-ever solo victory at the Grand Final – and with it the world title.
Two years later and at his home Olympic Games, his consistency is rewarded with a bronze medal. Here’s how he got there…
Who is Léo Bergere?
The jungle isn’t the obvious proving ground for future triathlon champions. But this is where French dynamo Léo Bergere spent several of his formative years, having moved as a young child to the wilds of New Caledonia in the South Pacific after his mother was appointed to a teaching job there.
He explains how the experience taught him “how to be independent, how to be strong”, attributes that have shaped him into being one of the most focused, headstrong competitors in triathlon today.
Having taken the sport up in his teens after the family had moved back to France, something of an avalanche of major championship titles came his way in his early years of competition: European and world golds at junior, U23 and elite level as part of France’s highly decorated relay teams.
The past couple of seasons have seen Bergere truly make his mark in his own right. A strong all-rounder with no discernible weaker discipline, he is consistently in the hunt whenever a race reaches its pointy end.
No stranger to a sprint finish, Bergere is also well acquainted with the podiums of the World Triathlon Championship Series (WTCS) – and until the Grand Final in November 2022, in Abu Dhabi, had yet to taste victory.
Lying in third place before the final race of the season, Bergere flew into the desert very much under the radar, as all the title-chase chat was firmly focussed on NZ’s Hayden Wilde and GB’s Alex Yee.
1:45hrs later and the tri world had a new short-course king, as Bergere put in the race of his life while Wilde and Yee faltered.
But his biggest race was yet to come – the Paris Olympic Games. Alongside teammates Pierre Le Corre and 2023 world champion Dorian Coninx the pressure was on the home side to deliver its first Olympic medal.
The women were meant to race second but poor water quality meant the men’s race was moved back a day. As such Bergere’s teammate Cassandre Beaugrand took the limelight along with the title.
Just a few hours later though, and it was Bergere’s time to soak up the adulation as he crossed the line for a jubilant third and to win France its first men’s Olympic triathlon medal.
Sadly an expected mixed team relay medal didn’t materialise after an early bike spill for Le Corre saw the French finish fourth.
He ends a triumphant 2024 with a bronze at the 70.3 world champs in Taupo, New Zealand.
How old is Léo Bergere?
Léo Bergere was born on 28 June 1996, making him 28 years of age.
Léo Bergere’s career highlights
June 2013: Champion of Europe at sweet 16
The day before his 17th birthday, Bergere becomes a European champion, as part of the gold medal-winning youth men’s relay team at this year’s champs in Holten, the Netherlands.
May 2014: Individual European Cup triumph
In central France, Bergere takes his first individual win, breaking the tape in the junior European Cup race in Vierzon having held off the challenge of another youngster destined for great things – one Gustav Iden – by two seconds.
July 2015: A second Euro title
As part of France’s junior mixed relay squad, Bergere is again crowned a European champion in Geneva, having come fifth in the junior men’s race the day before.
September 2015: Podium finish as a WTCS junior
The teenager heads across the Atlantic where, at the World Triathlon Championship Series Grand Final in Chicago, he takes junior bronze and climbs onto a WTCS podium for the first time.
July 2017: An elite eighth in Hamburg
After spending the 2016 season (his first full campaign in the elite ranks) largely racing in European Cup and World Cup competitions, Bergere has now become a regular on the WTCS circuit. His first top-10 finish comes this month with an eighth place in Hamburg.
March 2018: A maiden top-five WTCS finish
In the dry heat of Abu Dhabi, Bergere finishes fourth, ahead of seasoned, been-around-the-block competitors like Jonny Brownlee and Richard Murray.
September 2018: On top of the world
At the Grand Final on Queensland’s Gold Coast, Bergere is part of the victorious French U23/junior mixed relay squad who conquer the world. Having come fourth in the U23 men’s race two days earlier, he leads the quartet home in a dramatic photo-finish sprint.
July 2019: World title number two
Bergere becomes a world champ twice over in Hamburg. He’s now part of the French elite mixed relay team who swat all-comers aside in the northern German port city.
September 2020: A first WTCS podium
Back on familiar territory in Hamburg, Bergere takes third place, showing a clean pair of heels to the likes of Alex Yee, Alistair Brownlee, Kristian Blummenfelt and Iden. The following day comes a third world title, again courtesy of the exploits of the French mixed relay quartet.
July 2021: Another top-three finish on the WTCS circuit
After what has to be regarded as a disappointing Olympics in Tokyo, where he finished 21st, Bergere claims bronze in the super-sprint race in Montreal in a French clean sweep behind Dorian Coninx and Vincent Luis.
A week later, further east, he repeats the trick in Edmonton – although he is a whisker away from winning as he loses out in a three-way sprint with the Norwegian Blummenfelt and Belgium’s Marten van Riel. The following month, a hat-trick of successive bronzes arrives in Hamburg.
March 2022: An unexpected half-Iron gold
Bergere enters the Ironman 70.3 Lanzarote and, despite being yet to win a WTCS race, he takes victory in the Canaries in his first stab at half-Iron racing.
June 2022: World champion in waiting?
Bergere continues his fine Olympic-distance form from 2021 into a new season, scoring a silver in Leeds to add to the third he managed in Yokohama the previous month.
Another super-sprint bronze in Montreal later in the month puts him in a very strong position for an overall medal as the series enters its final races.
August 2022: Individual European glory
After all his relay championship titles, Bergere strikes out to take a crown for himself in Munich. Thanks to a trademark strong run, he is now champion of Europe. A second Euro title is added two days later as France continue their impressive grasp on all matters mixed relay.
November 2022: Wins his first World Triathlon race… and the world title
Stuns everyone, including himself, as he crosses the line for his first World Triathlon victory at the Grand Final in Abu Dhabi.
Only Alex Yee could beat him to the title chase at this point but Jelle Geens owes Bergere several pints, as he takes the third place Yee needs to leapfrog Bergere for the crown.
Bergere only finds out the title is his during the post-race TV interview.
April 2023: No fool in Ironside
On 1 April, Bergere races and wins his second Ironman 70.3 in 3:45:25, and this time against some of the very best in the pro middle-distance world.
September 2023: Wins Toulouse Super League and finishes third in the 2023 WTCS
In front of his home crowd, Bergere has a red letter day to to take the second round of the 2023 SLT series.
Three weeks later he finishes fourth at the Grand Final in Pontevedra, Spain, to finish third in the 2023 World Triathlon Championship Series.
It caps another stellar season for the Frenchman who hasn’t finished lower than sixth in seven race starts. Agonisingly, he’s still yet to book his slot at his home Games in 2024, with one slot left up for grabs.
October 2023: Wins the 2023 Super League Series
Wins the final race in Saudi Arabia to take the overall SLT title.
April 2024: Wins 70.3 Valencia
Makes it three wins from three half-Ironman starts, wining by over 3mins in Spain.
June 2024: It’s a go for Paris
He officially gets the word, he’s off to Paris. So strong is the men’s french team that two-time world champion Vincent Luis is left on the sidelines.
July 2024: A brilliant bronze for Bergere
You’d think the Frenchman had won the Olympic title given his reaction to taking third, but it’s the perfect result for Bergere. Le Corre follows in fourth.
Five days later and a fourth place follows in the mixed team relay after the favourites spend the morning playing catch-up due to an early crash with Wilde for Le Corre.
September-November: A silver finish
It’s silver in Weihai, silver in the Grand Final, silver overall in the 2024 WTCS series and, yep, a silver overall in the 2024 supertri series for the ever-reliable Bergere.
December 2024: Bronze at the 70.3 Worlds
In his debut half-Ironman world championships, he mounts the podium in third place behind fellow debutants Hayden Wilde and Jelle Geens.
Léo Bergere in quotes
On his unusual upbringing in the jungles of New Caledonia in the South Pacific: “We lived amongst a tribe and I was cared for by elders within this bigger family. For a child, it was pure magic.”
On his teenage motivation to become one of the world’s best triathletes: “I had to commit entirely if I wanted to reach the top. I decided to leave the comforts of my family and home to spend time in a sport training facility when I was 15.”
On life at the sport’s top table: “Being a triathlete is like nothing else. I’m outside and amongst nature every day when I train. For me, this is a life that I dreamed of living.”
On winning the 2023 Super League Series: “Until 400me from the line I was scared to look behind my shoulder. I knew Hayden [Wilde] would be right behind me, but I could hear my coach Tim Don saying you’ve got this. And I have to thank Tim, my team and Matt Hauser today for giving me the Short Chutes, without the help of everyone I wouldn’t have had the victory.”
On taking third on debut at the 70.3 Worlds in 2024: “I’ve learned a lot today and at the end of the bike the guys went crazy again and I decided to save myself for the run. I was expecting to have a good race and targeting the title coming in, but Jelle [Geens] was so strong today, even on the bike he was aggressive, and he deserved it, and a special mention to Hayden [Wilde] as well, he just made the race exciting.”
What’s next for Léo Bergere?
Probably hoping to upgrade those many silvers to golds in 2025.