"I had a good strong run, it was fast but I was happy with how I went. The field was good today, a few key athletes for London were missing but it still gives me a lot of confidence. Of course it's all geared towards winning a medal and that's what I've been training for."
Meanwhile, Samuels used the Hamburg race to test out some different things that will ultimately make her stronger in London.
"I had a strong swim and worked on the bike early but it didn't quite go to plan. My plan in the first kilometre of the run was to go at max and see if I could recover. It didn't really work out so the rest of the run was quite hard," Samuels said.
"The result didn't matter it was just about trying things and seeing what will work and what won't in London. Training is on track, I've done all the hard yards so it's all about freshening up and working hard on the run."
Triathlon New Zealand national coach Greg Fraine said the women came through the race very well and were able to try out some tactical options that may be important during the Olympic event.
Fraine said the Hamburg race was ideally placed less than two weeks out from London, and it served as a transition from general build-up to becoming solely focussed on the Games.
ITU world triathlon championship; Hamburg, Germany
Sprint (750m swim, 20km bike, 5km run)
Elite Women:
1. Erin Densham (AUS) 56:07
2. Emma Moffatt (AUS) 56:19
3. Sarah Groff (USA) 56:21
4. Anne Haug (GER) 56:35
5. Kate Roberts (RSA) 56:40
Also:
8. Kate McIlroy (NZL) 56:56
15. Nicky Samuels (NZL) 57:22
25. Debbie Tanner (NZL) 57:56