HYROX

HYROX New York 2026: Results and Podiums

Dylan Scott (55:44) and Rachael Wade (1:00:23) win the Pro divisions at HYROX New York 2026, as 17,765 athletes compete over 10 days at Pier 76 before Saturday storm cancellations.

HYROX athlete pushing hard at a sled station during competition, warm golden light, blurred crowd in background.

HYROX New York 2026: Results and Podiums

From May 28 to June 7, 2026, Pier 76 in Hudson River Park hosted one of the season's biggest HYROX events: 17,765 athletes, 10 days of racing, Manhattan's skyline as a backdrop, and a storm that forced cancellations on Saturday afternoon. Dylan Scott took the Men's Pro title in 55:44, and Rachael Wade won the Women's Pro in 1:00:23.

Key Takeaways

  • Dylan Scott wins Men's Pro in 55:44, beating Stephen Pelkofer (57:00) and Greyson Kilgore (57:03)
  • Rachael Wade dominates Women's Pro in 1:00:23, nearly 5 minutes ahead of the field
  • French duo Benjamin Amsallem and Clement Puaud Canard win Men's Pro Doubles in 52:56
  • Lauren Griffith and Sydney Wells take Women's Pro Doubles in 57:36
  • Saturday June 6 afternoon waves were cancelled due to an incoming storm; vouchers issued to affected athletes

Ten Days of Racing on the Hudson

HYROX New York wasn't a weekend event. The organization spread competition across a full 10 days to handle the sheer volume of registered athletes without crunching wave times. Pier 76 is a stunning outdoor venue, but that also means athletes race in real weather, no climate-controlled arena to hide behind.

That reality bit on Saturday, June 6. An incoming storm rolled through the Hudson in the afternoon, and HYROX made the call to cancel afternoon and evening waves for safety. Athletes who had trained for months and traveled to New York for that specific slot received vouchers for future events. Disappointing? Absolutely. But the right call.

Men's Pro: Dylan Scott Leads Start to Finish

Dylan Scott crossed the line in 55:44 for a clean, controlled Pro Men's victory. Stephen Pelkofer came in second at 57:00, and Greyson Kilgore took third just three seconds later at 57:03. That gap between second and third place, after more than 57 minutes of racing, tells you everything about how tight the American Pro field has gotten this season.

Scott's edge comes from his running-to-sled transitions. Where most athletes bleed 20-30 seconds managing their breathing between the 1 km run and the sled push, Scott barely breaks stride. His stations are strong, but it's the connective tissue between them that separates him from the pack — a reminder that pacing and transition strategy can matter as much as raw fitness.

Women's Pro: Rachael Wade Runs Alone

Rachael Wade didn't give the field a chance. Her 1:00:23 put nearly five minutes between her and Morgan Schulz (1:05:01), who edged Willow Collins (1:05:06) by a single second for the second spot on the podium. That's a genuinely competitive finish for places two and three, with both athletes pushing hard all the way to the end.

A sub-1:01 in outdoor conditions with variable winds is a strong performance. Outdoor HYROX adds subtle friction variables on the sled and different surface resistance on wall balls compared to a standard indoor venue. Wade handled those variables with consistency across all 8 stations.

Pro Doubles: French Duo Amsallem and Puaud Canard Steal the Show

The standout result of the whole event was the Men's Pro Doubles victory for French athletes Benjamin Amsallem and Clement Puaud Canard in 52:56. Doubles racing is a strategy game. You're deciding in real time who takes which station, how long your partner recovers before the next handoff, and how to keep both athletes' heart rates from spiking at the wrong moment. Amsallem and Puaud Canard executed that game plan better than anyone else at Pier 76.

In Women's Pro Doubles, Lauren Griffith and Sydney Wells won in 57:36. If New York has you thinking about finding your own doubles partner, the format rewards complementary strengths far more than matching fitness levels.

What These Results Mean for Stockholm

New York is one of the last major North American stops before the World Championships in Stockholm, which kicks off June 18. With four days between the final New York waves and the opening Elite 15 in Sweden, athletes who raced New York are now managing their taper in real time.

Scott's 55:44 in outdoor conditions is a healthy sign for American competitiveness at Worlds. It's not going to threaten Alexander Roncevic's world record of 51:59, but it confirms a deep, capable Pro field showing up to Stockholm.

Practical Takeaways

  • If you're racing HYROX outdoors, train outdoors at least once a month. Sled friction and wall ball bounce behave differently on outdoor surfaces than on rubber indoor flooring.
  • Transitions are where Pro races are won and lost. If you're not specifically drilling your run-to-station transition at race pace, you're leaving time on the table.
  • Doubles is the most strategic HYROX format. If you want a taste of competitive racing without carrying all the pressure solo, start with Doubles.
  • Always have a backup plan for outdoor HYROX events. The New York cancellation is a reminder: travel insurance and flexible accommodation aren't paranoia, they're prep.

Sources: Keedia HYROX New York 2026 Full Results , Rox Updates , HYRESULT , Rox Lyfe , This Rox Life