USA Triathlon, in partnership with the City of Long Beach, announced plans for the Legacy Triathlon—a new event to be held in Long Beach, CA, starting July 20, 2019. The race will be held at Alamitos Beach, near the proposed site of the triathlon competitions for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

USA Triathlon CEO Rocky Harris announced the event during a press conference Tuesday morning at Shoreline Aquatic Park, and was joined by Rex Richardson, vice mayor of the City of Long Beach; Barry Siff, Iinternational Triathlon Union (ITU) executive board Member and USA Triathlon board of directors president and Ben Kanute, 2016 U.S. Olympic triathlete.

U.S. elite triathletes Summer Cook and Matt McElroy, both of whom train in Southern California, were also in attendance Tuesday morning.

The Legacy Triathlon will begin in 2019 as an age-group race with a cap of 750 athletes. Participants will cover a sprint-distance course featuring a 750-meter swim, 18.9-kilometer bike and 5-kilometer run. Registration is now open at thelegacytriathlon.com, and no qualification is required.

“As the first National Governing Body in the U.S. Olympic family to bring a new annual event to the Los Angeles footprint ahead of the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, USA Triathlon is building its legacy before, rather than after, the Games,” Harris said. “Starting today, we are proudly giving back to the local multi-sport community in Southern California—the birthplace of triathlon—and building the foundation of what will become an international destination race for years to come.”

“We are excited to welcome USA Triathlon to Long Beach,” said Robert Garcia, Mayor of Long Beach. “Today, we marked the beginning of a great partnership that will lead up to the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, which is going to be a historical moment for our city.”

The event will eventually expand into a two-day multisport festival that includes both amateur and elite racing. Plans are for the elite component to begin as an ITU Triathlon World Cup and ultimately become a stop of the ITU World Triathlon Series—the highest level of elite ITU competition—in the lead-up to the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“The triathlon world has been looking to the United States to develop a sustainable, major international competition for years now, and with the Legacy Triathlon in Long Beach this will be achieved,” Siff said. “Speaking for the International Triathlon Union, we are all tremendously enthusiastic to build an event in Southern California that will welcome the best of the best to the United States in the years leading up to the Olympics.”

Ancillary activities such as running and open-water swimming races, community outreach initiatives and live entertainment will join the lineup as the Legacy Triathlon continues to grow. USA Triathlon also plans to increase multi-sport programming in Southern California as part of the Legacy Triathlon, including initiatives like the Splash & Dash Youth Aquathlon Series and USATri60 indoor triathlon series.

The USA Triathlon Foundation has pledged a total of $100,000 ($10,000 per year through 2028) to support local community initiatives in conjunction with the Legacy Triathlon.