Results and Reports for April 7-8, 2001

Australia

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Canberra to Goulburn
2001 Queensland Criterium Championship
Gold Coast CATS CC Criterium
Parramatta CC, Oakville

Victorian Vets CC Waddell Aggregate Point Series

Canberra to Goulburn

Sunday April 8, 2001

121km Canberra-Sutton-Gundaroo-Gunning-Goulburn

By Mark Carter (Canberra CC)

Canberra and Goulburn turned on a great day for bike racing, with high cloud covering the riders on a mild 25 degree day. The perfectly calm morning gave way to steadily increasing winds. The wind kicked in about the same time the riders starting at 9.30am.

A big congratulations to the Goulburn Cycling Club who host this event every year, with a small club base of only 42 members.

The Club puts the race on each year without the assistance of any sponsors and attracts a large invoice from the NSW Police for their services, escorting five races over 121km. This year the race attracted around 350 riders, one of the larger fields ever assembled for this race and it is a credit that such a small club can organise an event of such grand proportions.

Again hats off to Freda Bush, Adam Lambert and the rest of the Goulburn crew.

Men's A Grade

The men's A grade race fielded around 50 starters and was aggressive from the outset. Canberra brothers John and Paul Forrest attacked on Majura Road with less than 10km covered, they were joined by Denis Mungoven, also of Canberra.

By the top of Majura Road, a group of about 15 had formed with the initial three protaganists. This group included Pell, Stojanow, Sieper, Hennessy, Lindsay, Burke and Brook.

The chasing peloton got to within 100m at the Sutton shops at the 20km mark, but the margin blew out again shortly after. The two groups safely negotiated the Roubaix style 1.5km dirt sector just beyond Sutton, whilst the gap yo-yoed continuously.

The entire field was stopped and given three minutes respite at Gunning, due to the main field continually disobeying commissaries, riding on the right side of the road (due to the left to right cross wind).

The breakaway group was allowed to restart with its 30 second advantage.

The groups stayed together over the tough feed station climb, before David Pell from Bendigo and Glenn Stojanow of Parramatta attacked on the final long climb up over the railway line and rode away from the front group, whose numbers were starting to dwindle.

The pair worked well together holding the chasers at bay. With 4km remaining, shortly before the short sharp hill leading to the exit of the Hume Highway, 10 chasers from the main field bridged across to the other second group of eight or nine. This caused a massive reaction on the power climb, obliterating the group.

The finish had changed this year, with a tight right hander, then a short downhill of 220m before the ball-tearing left hander, which was quite wide, but difficult to work with after generating so much speed on the descent.

In the two up sprint David Pell again showed his supreme strength for the day by beating Stojanow, while Phil Thuaux stormed home to take the bunch sprint from Mark Renshaw and Kristjan Snorrasen.

The main field came in over one minute down.

Results

Men's A Grade (approx 50 starters)  
 
1 David Pell (Bendigo Vic)            2.59.27 (40.45km/h)
2 Glenn Stojanow (Parramatta)
3 Phill Thuaux (Caravello)
4 Mark Renshaw (Bathurst)
5 Kristjan Snorrason (Carnegie Vic)
6 Tom Brook (Parramatta)
7 Wayne Anderson (Caravelloi)
8 Brian Appleyard 
9 Jonathon Davis (St George)
10 Allan Sieper (Canberra)
 
Men's B Grade (approx 60 starters) 
 
1 Brendan Shipp (St George)          3.04.19 (39.39 km/h)
2 Daniel Doyle (Hunter)
3 Lachlan Seegers 
4 Greg Burns (Hunter)
5 Tim Buchanan (Canberra)
6 Brent Miller (Canberra)
7 Richard Vollebregt (Sth Highlands)
8 Tim Morris (Illawarra)
9 Scott Provest (Manning Valley)
10 James Meadley (Canberra)
 
Men's C Grade (approx 90 starters)  
 
1 Luis Trueba (Marconi)             3.05.53 (39.06 km/h)
2 Paul Richards (Warregal)
3 Joe Pearson (Warregal)
4 Nathan Keane (Tolland)
5 John Ebeling (Hunter)
6 George Bunt (Canberra)
7 Richard Moffat (Wagga)
8 Marcus Hayman (Canberra)
 
Men's D Grade (approx 120 starters) 
 
1 Alan Dillon (Hunter)              3.15.55 (37.05km/h)
2 Brett Hadley (Hunter)
3 Ben McComb (Hunter)
4 Stan Genaris (Sydney)
5 Mark Fozzard (Lidcombe)

Women's A Grade

A field of about twenty riders lined up for the combined women's A & B grades.

The race started at a fairly cruisy tempo up Majura Road, before Alison Wright launched the first attack of the day, as the bunch exited the Federal Highway, bound for Sutton.

The race sustained many short attacks on the undulating hills from Sutton to Gunning. The main protaganists being Alison Wright and Emma James. None of the attacks were sticking, however it was causing some grief for some of the weaker riders who were getting dropped, then chasing back on during the lull.

From Gunning, the Parramatta girls swung into action, with Natalie Bates and Jennifer Manefield displaying aggression, particularly on the final long climb of the day, after the feed zone.

Natalie Bates, Alison Wright and Rochelle Gilmore crested this climb off the front, with Olivia Gollan, Jeanette Schwartz, Kate Bates and Jennifer Manefield chasing back on shortly after the crest.

On the run into Goulburn, Parramatta was looking good with Jennifer Manefield off the front with about 10km to go, while the Bates sisters could sit in play the role of the Policemen. After some disharmony amongst the ranks, Manefield was eventually caught about 5km from the finish, setting up a final sprint for the front bunch.

Kate Bates led the fast downhill sprint, with Wright kicking round in the final straight. Gilmore came past Wright with only metres to spare, relegating Wright to second, with Bates in third.


Women's A Grade (combined A&B approx 20 starters) 
 
1 Rochelle Gilmore (Bankstown)        3.27.37 (34.97km/h)
2 Alison Wright (Canberra)
3 Kate Bates (Parramatta)
4 Jeanette Schwartz (Dubbo)
5 Jennifer Mansfield (Parramatta)
 
Women's B Grade  
 
1 Lesley Farthing (Hunter)            3.27.40 (34.96km/h)
2 Terry Moore (Canberra)
3 Bronwyn Wiseman (Canberra)

2001 Queensland Criterium Championship

Chandler, Qld, April 8  

Results

Senior Men (19 - 34)
1 Ben Day (St Kilda)
2 Ben Litchfield (University CC)
3 Leigh Palmer (Velo CC)
 
Senior Women
1  Anna Perrin (University CC)
2 Kym Shirley (University CC / QAS)
3 Liz Young (University CC)
 
Masters 1
1 Dale McMenamin (Hamilton Pine Rivers CC)
2 David Costanzo (Murwillumbah CC)
3 Vince McLachlan (Kangaroo Point CC)
 
Masters 2
1 Tim Bartlett (Victor CC)
2 Kevin Menz (Victor CC)
3 Richard Walker (Ffast)
 
Masters 3
1 Paul Wild (Gold Coast CATS)
2 Laurence Mann (Sunshine Coast CC)
3 Alan Mumford (Gold Coast CATS)
 
Masters 4
1  Terry Peters (ASTRA)
2 Peter Kidd (Gold Coast CATS)
3 Chris Neal (Logan City CC)
 
Masters 5
1  Chas Matters (Logan City CC)
2 Mike Griffen (Gold Coast CATS)
3 Keith McCormack (Gold Coast CATS)
 
Masters 7
1  Ron Truman (Gold Coast CATS)
2  Clive Bongers (Ipswich Amateur Cycling Club)
3 Martin Davis (Gold Coast CATS)

Gold Coast CATS CC Criterium

Nerang Qld, April 8, 2001

The heavens opened early on Sunday morning, but that didn't deter a hardy group of riders who showed up at Nerang, ready to race. Because of the depleted numbers A & B Grades rode a handicap, and C & D Grades raced their normal crits.

A Grade gave away 2 minutes to B Grade, but such was the slow pace of B Grade that they were caught within 15 minutes, with the exception of Ian Walker who had blasted off the front and was able to hold off A Grade for another 10 minutes. When the two groups finally came together the speed dropped considerably, and it was left until late in the race for first John Kane and then Ben Groth to have a go at getting away. Neither was successful, and as the bunch approached the hill for the last time Crackles Cahill launched off the front and was never headed, crossing the line well clear of Greg Pooley and John Kane.

Under 17 rider Ben Mockridge was fourth across the line and first B Grader, a terrific effort considering he is spinning 42x14 against the senior riders' 53x11's in the downhill sprint.

C Grade was won in a mass sprint by the effervescent Master's champ Freddy Mason, 70 years young and still climbing and sprinting with the best, from John Mildenhall and David Sheppard, with Corey Turnbull nudging out Rob Payne in D Grade.

Results

A & B Grade - 60 minutes Combined Handicap
 
1 Crackles Cahill
2 Greg Pooley
3 John Kane
4 Ben Groth
 
1st B Grade (4th overall): Ben Mockridge
 
C Grade -  40 minutes + 3 laps
 
1 Freddy Mason
2 John Mildenhall
3 David Sheppard
4 Luke Anderson
 
D Grade - 30 minutes + 3 laps
 
1 Corey Turnbull
2 Rob Payne
3 Greg Aroney
4 Frank Betschart
 
Courtesy of Geoff Frost

Parramatta CC Racing

Oakville 7 April, 2001

A-B Grades - 36km
     
1 Brett Warden
2 Hayden Kegg
3 Tony Womsley
 
C Grade - 29km
 
1 Todd Greenland
2 Peter Greenland
3 John Beatty
 
D Grade - 21km
 
1 Craig Leckie
2 M Logan
3 Frank Coyle
 
Junior TT - 3.2km 
      
1 Chris Ubergang      5.40
2 James Smale         5.51
3 Tristan Zoulkowski  5.54
 
Junior Scratch Race - 6.4km
 
1 Chris Ubergang
2 James Smale
3 Raph Muller


Courtesy Parramatta CC


Victorian Vets CC Waddell Aggregate Point Series

 

Round Three "Stan Howard Memorial"

Report by Steve Di Tullio

The third round of the VVCC Waddell aggregate points series was held Sunday 8 April 2001 at Paraparap, a small suburb approximately 30 km from Geelong, Victoria.

This race is special to the Geelong Vets Cycling Club as it is held in memory of one of their founding members Stan Howard, who was a tireless worker for the club and is credited as being largely responsible for making the club what it is today.

There were 112 names on the start list and I believe all riders fronted, even though the weather was rapidly deteriorating. The circuit was a 9.5km square, all left hand turns, with the riders facing a slight rise into a block head wind then a right crosswind, a fast tailwind and finally a left crosswind down the 1.5km finishing straight.

The usual 29 minutes separated scratch from the limit riders for the five laps of the circuit giving us about 48km to travel. The first riders set off at 10 am and 29 minutes later all were underway. Then the heavens decided to open up on the bunches.

The first capture that I saw came at the 29km where my bunch (12mins) caught the 14 minutes bunch, there were still two groups ahead and a few straggling riders. Judging by the size of the 14 minute bunch, that we caught, most groups were disintegrating in the crosswinds.

Sprints were on laps 2, 3 and 4. The first two sprints were won by Peter Dickson (29 mins) and the last one on lap 4 was won by Jeremy Tatchell (20 mins).

There was much looking around being done but there was not much coming from behind. Apparently the bunches behind were blowing themselves to bits trying to reel in the front groups too early. This helped the 12 minuteÕs and forward groups to maintain a steady pace and slowly capture the front markers.

With four laps down and one two go from the 12 mins group forward were all together except about six riders, who from the calls from the corner marshalls and spectators had a 4 min lead with 9.5 km to go. Five of those riders were captured with about 4.5 k to go and one lone rider still had a 1 to 1min 30sec lead with just over half a lap to travel.

A consistent group of approximately six riders kept the turns going steadily and smoothly and the lone front rider was in sight. I know I was thinking "well IÕm happy to be in the finishing bunch just donÕt let us be caught from behind".

Perhaps I thought too soon. With 2 km to go, I looked behind to see the 9mins 30 secs bunch steaming up-to us. We turned the corner and Jeremy Tatchell had about 30 secs on the chasing group and just kept going to score an impressive solo win.

With the bunch behind bearing down quickly the remaining riders slowed a bit but with the finish line in sight a few got twitchy and the race for the line commenced very early, I estimate about 600-700m out.

This whittled out a few riders very quickly with a crosswind coming from the left. With 250m to go 77 year-old rider Bill Mantova set sail for the line pushing a massive gear and got a small gap on the other six riders still in the sprint. Behind Bill a rider went to squeeze a quickly closing gap. Unfortunately the gap closed, and with a bit of screaming, shouting and braking another couple of riders lost their momentum to the line. 150m from the line, I kicked from the back of the group and tried to close the gap onto Bill, unfortunately the gap was to big and I had to be content with third. A fast finishing Mick Mitchell (14 mins) was about a bike length behind for fourth.

With the 9mins 30s second bunch, the early romp to the line was enough to hold them off and not allow any into the places. The scratch bunch had killed themselves throughout the day and an unusual occurrence with second scratch taking out fastest time. This went to Marcus Coppock (1min 30 secs bunch).

The two hard luck stories of the day belong to Brian Maloney and Kim Howard. Brian, who most agreed was a certainty for a high place from his group, punctured with about 4 km to go when he was looking strong. Kim Howard had a slow leaking front wheel and discovered this with about 2.5 km to go. Kim had worked tirelessly at the front all day and was certain of a good placing. Fortunately for her she did get some money being the first female to finish.

Another great race was put on and thanks go out to all the sponsors of the race, and the volunteers of the Geelong Veterans Cycling Club. These ladies and men stood on the corners in the wind and rain to maintain the safety of the riders. Another great after race feed was put on as well, not costing the riders a brass razoo.

Results*

58km on an 11.5km circuit 
1 Jeremy Tatchell (25 mins) 
2 Bill Mantova (12 mins) 
3 Steve Di Tullio (12 mins) 
4 Mick Mitchell (14 mins)
5 Noel Symons (12 mins) 
6 Ray Quigley (14 mins)
7 Ray Hodgson (14 mins) 
8 Stan Bunce (17 mins) 
9 Greg Tuabe (12 mins) 
10 Allan Green (12 mins)


 
Fastest time   Marcus Coppock (1 min 30 secs bunch) time: 1h:28m:15s

 
Sprints        lap 2 and 3  Peter Dickson (limit), lap 4 Jeremy Tatchell (25 mins)

 
First woman     Kim Howard (12 mins) 

 
*Brackets ( ) indicates starting handicap time.