HYROX Brisbane winner
Australian athlete Calypso Sheridan won the 2026 HYROX APAC Elite 15 Female Singles race in Brisbane with a time of 1:00:33 — a handy benchmark if you’re tracking elite times in hybrid fitness events. (boxrox.com).
Calypso Sheridan won the Brisbane Elite 15 race in 1:00:33, and the gap to second place was just 34 seconds over a format built on 8 kilometers of running and 8 workout stations. Gabrielle Nikora-Baker finished second in 1:01:07, and Jess Pettrow took third in 1:01:59. (trainrox.com) This was not the mass-participation women’s race with hundreds of entrants. It was the Asia-Pacific Regional Championship Elite 15 field in Brisbane, a 15-athlete race reserved for the top women in the sport. (trainrox.com, roxradar.com) HYROX is a hybrid fitness race that keeps the order fixed, so every athlete runs 1 kilometer, hits one workout station, and repeats that pattern 8 times. The Brisbane event page describes the race as “8 x 1km of running plus 8 workout stations,” which is why a one-hour finish is treated like a top-end benchmark. (hyrox.com) Sheridan’s Brisbane win followed another Elite 15 victory in Taipei earlier in the season. BoxRox reported that the Brisbane result secured her a qualifying place for the 2026 World Championships in Stockholm. (boxrox.com) The Brisbane race sat inside a five-day HYROX event running from April 9 to April 13, 2026, at the Brisbane Convention Centre. That bigger meet included standard women’s divisions with more than 500 results listed, which shows how different the Elite 15 race is from the open field. (hyrox.com, trainrox.com) The finishing times show how compressed the top of women’s HYROX has become in the Asia-Pacific region. First through fourth were separated by 2 minutes and 42 seconds, with Anna Bramley in fourth at 1:03:15. (trainrox.com) Sheridan is not a one-off name on this leaderboard. Her athlete page on HyResult lists 12 HYROX races across 3 seasons, which fits the pattern of an athlete building enough results to reach the sport’s top invitational tier. (hyresult.com) For anyone tracking elite women’s HYROX, 1:00:33 is the useful number from Brisbane. It is fast enough to win a regional championship, fast enough to beat two already-qualified rivals, and close enough to the one-hour line that every lost transition and every slow station starts to matter. (trainrox.com, boxrox.com)