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AAP
AAP
Ian Chadband

Triathlete Gentle scoops $217,000 pay-day in world T100

Ashleigh Gentle was runner-up in the T100 series after finishing third at the world championships. (John Cowpland/AAP PHOTOS)

Ashleigh Gentle has collapsed to her knees after battling home third in the inaugural T100 triathlon world championships in Dubai, but the Australian Olympian was able to celebrate a huge pay day for her achievement in finishing second in the season's overall series.

American Taylor Knibb lifted the first-ever global crown with a commanding victory  on Saturday, delivering a brilliant performance in the blazing heat as temperatures reached 31 degrees Celsius during a two-kilometre swim, 80km on the bike and a concluding 18km run.

It completed the 26-year-old's perfect streak after wins in San Francisco, Ibiza, Lake Las Vegas, and Dubai, leaving her with a $US310,000 ($A480,000) prize in the lucrative new series.

Behind Knibb and Swiss Olympic silver medallist Julie Derron, Queenslander Gentle, who had at one point looked a potential winner during the run, battled on courageously after hitting the wall in the sweltering conditions, and ended up stumbling along on her knees after walking shattered across the line.

The 33-year-old's ample reward for the brutal test, though, was a $US140,000 ($A217,000) pay day for her series second-place.

"I went for the win and it was so painful," said the former world triathlon mixed relay champion Gentle.

"I gave it everything and got third in the end but I'm proud of my effort. It was pretty brutal. When I wasn't feeling too good and Derron just flew past me on the run, it was super soul-crushing, but I did what I could.

"All the athletes I've been racing this year have been motivating me and inspiring me in training. I feel like I've been applying myself more, better than I ever have, because the level of the women's field is just getting better and better and just trying to keep up is pretty difficult.

"Taylor has just been dominating and when you're racing an athlete like that, it is sometimes really difficult to truly believe that you can beat them. 

"But I had this little fire in my belly… I have no reason to believe that I can beat her, but I'm on the start line and that means I have got a chance, so I just had to believe that. 

"I didn't beat her but feel like I was a step closer today and did everything I could to try and get there."

Knibb reckoned she was "kind of shocked" by her victory. "It only came together in the last three kilometres when everyone else fell apart, but it was very step-by-step."

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