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Brooklyn Tri Club's Young Squadron Eyes National Dominance After Stunning East Coast Sweep

The borough's fastest-growing triathlon collective has vaulted from scrappy underdog to serious medal contender in just three seasons.

By New York Sport Desk · Published 30 June 2026, 6:16 am

2 min read

The Brooklyn Tri Club has quietly become one of the most formidable endurance sports operations in the Northeast, and their recent dominance across sprint and Olympic-distance events is forcing the national triathlon establishment to take notice. The club's core competitive squad—a mix of finance professionals, educators, and creative-industry workers who train together across the Prospect Park circuit and the Hudson Greenway—swept three major regional championships last month, a feat that's reshaping conversations about grassroots excellence in American triathlon.

Founded in 2023 by former competitive runner Marcus Chen and cycling coach James Delgado, the club operated from a modest shared studio on Franklin Street in Greenpoint before relocating to a 3,500-square-foot headquarters near the Williamsburg waterfront. What began as weekend rides and informal track sessions has evolved into a structured training apparatus. Today, membership stands at 247 active athletes, with approximately 30 competing at elite or competitive levels.

The numbers speak for themselves. At the New England Sprint Triathlon Federation championships in late May, Brooklyn Tri athletes claimed five of the top twelve positions across age categories. Two weeks later, at the Atlantic States Olympic Distance qualifiers held near Atlantic City, they earned seven spots on the regional All-Star roster. Such consistency is rare in a sport where individual athletes typically remain fiercely independent.

What distinguishes Brooklyn Tri from larger, more established clubs like NYAC or the Upper East Side Cycling Club is their deliberate focus on integrated training. Rather than siloing swimmers, runners, and cyclists, the club's coaching staff—bolstered by a part-time sports physiologist from NYU—emphasizes sport-specific periodization alongside collective culture. Monthly team time trials originating from Domino Park in Williamsburg have become local fixtures, drawing spectators and generating organic social media attention that's attracted younger athletes.

The club's geographic advantage matters too. Prospect Park's 3.35-mile loop provides world-class running terrain; the Hudson Greenway extends 32 miles for cycling; and the Asphalt Green facility on the Upper East Side, where many members train, offers Olympic-sized pool access. Few American cities compress such diverse triathlon infrastructure within a single metro area.

Looking ahead to the national championships in August, insiders are watching closely. Three Brooklyn Tri athletes have already qualified for the USA Triathlon elite nationals. Whether the club's young squadron can translate regional dominance into national recognition remains uncertain—but their trajectory suggests the sport's power structure in the Northeast may be shifting.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Topic:#Sport

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