How Much Money Did Athletes Win at WFP London Tour Stop 1?

| May 20, 2026 / 3 min read
Hannah Black

The World Fitness Project (WFP) is a global professional functional fitness league launched in 2025, designed to bring a season-based structure to the sport through multiple tour stops, cumulative points standings, and a final championship showdown.

Alongside elite individual competition, the league also includes Challenger and Team divisions, helping create a more professional and sustainable format for functional fitness athletes worldwide.

At the London Tour Stop 1, the women’s division was dominated by consistency from Aimee Cringle, who secured the overall victory and the top prize of $35,000 after becoming the only athlete to finish inside the top 10 in all seven events. Laura Horvath finished second overall with $30,000 despite winning two of the seven workouts, the only female athlete to win multiple events.

The women’s field also showcased how volatile the competition format can be, with three event winners finishing outside the top 20 overall, including Dana Paran (28th) and Elena Carratalá (21st). Event 1 proved especially brutal, as half the field either hit the time cap or failed to finish.

The men’s competition was even tighter at the top. Roman Khrennikov claimed the overall win and $35,000, narrowly edging James Sprague and Tudor Magda in a podium race separated by just 28 points. Khrennikov and Sprague each won two events during the weekend, accounting for 57.2% of all event victories between them.

The results also highlighted the importance of consistency across the entire competition. Spain’s Aniol Ekai earned three top-two event finishes but still placed fourth overall due to several mid-pack results, while Philroy Peters won the heavy lifting Event 4A with an enormous 645 lb lift yet finished only 21st overall.

How Much Money Did Athletes Win at WFP London Tour Stop 1? The Women

RankAthleteCountryPrize Money
1Aimee CringleUnited Kingdom$35,000
2Laura HorvathHungary$30,000
3Emma TallSweden$20,000
4Oda LundekvamNorway$15,000
5Andrea SolbergNorway$12,000
6Vår Thurmann-MoeNorway$10,000
7Matilde Oyen GarnesNorway$9,000
8Sydney WellsUnited States$8,000
9Jennifer MuirScotland$7,000
10Ella WilkinsonUnited Kingdom$6,000
11Hannah BlackUnited States$5,000
12Lydia FishUnited States$5,000
13Olivia KerstetterUnited States$5,000
14Leah StorenNorway$5,000
15Morgane ThyssensBelgium$5,000
16Emily RolfeCanada$2,500
17Bergrós BjörnsdóttirIceland$2,500
18Janie CheverieCanada$2,500
19Arielle LoewenUnited States$2,500
20Astrid TindDenmark$2,500
21Elena CarratalaSpain$2,000
22Fee SaghafiUnited States$2,000
23Amanda JorsSweden$2,000
24Carolyne PrevostCanada$2,000
25Anja KellerGermany$2,000
26Connie EasbyUnited Kingdom$1,500
27Sydney MichalyshenCanada$1,500
28Dana ParanUnited States$1,500
29Amanda FischerUnited States$1,500
30Manon AngoneseBelgium$1,500

How Much Money Did Athletes Win at WFP London Tour Stop 1? The Men

RankAthleteCountryPrize Money
1Roman KhrennikovUnited States$35,000
2James SpragueUnited States$30,000
3Tudor MagdaUnited States$20,000
4Aniol EkaiSpain$15,000
5Nate AckermannUnited States$12,000
6Chandler SmithUnited States$10,000
7Jonne KoskiFinland$9,000
8Jack FarlowCanada$8,000
9Ty JenkinsUnited States$7,000
10Chris IbarraUnited States$6,000
11Quinn RobinsonUnited States$5,000
12Samuel CournoyerCanada$5,000
13Jelle HosteBelgium$5,000
14Travis MayerUnited States$5,000
15Tom KingdonUnited Kingdom$5,000
16Victor HellsinghofNorway$2,500
17Roldan GoldbaumMexico$2,500
18Spencer PanchikUnited States$2,500
19Patrick VellnerCanada$2,500
20Julius KieserGermany$2,500
21Philroy PetersUnited Kingdom$2,000
22Victor Garcia de ValSpain$2,000
23Giorgos KaravisGreece$2,000
24Alex KotoulasGreece$2,000
25Luka ĐukićSerbia$2,000
26Nick MathewUnited States$1,500
27B. Karl GudmundssonIceland$1,500
28Fabian Beneito SellesSpain$1,500
29Noah WilsonUnited States$1,500
30Gui MalheirosBrazil$1,500

London Tour Stop 1 delivered exactly what the World Fitness Project aims to create, high-level competition where consistency matters just as much as event wins.

Across both divisions, athletes who could avoid major mistakes and stay near the top throughout the weekend ultimately separated themselves from the field. While standout moments and individual event victories grabbed attention, the final leaderboard showed that surviving every test was the real key to success.

With strong prize purses, dramatic finishes, and deep international fields, the WFP’s debut season is already establishing itself as one of the most competitive formats in professional functional fitness.

Read More: Jayson Hopper and Mirjam von Rohr Win the 2026 French Throwdown

Tags:
prize money world fitness project

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