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6th Clarendon Cup - NEUSA, June 1, 20032002 Results Results Past winners Different strokes as Carney and Van Gilder take Clarendon CupBy Ray Easterling Jonas Carney (Prime Alliance) won the sprint to the line in a turbulent sixth edition of the Clarendong Cup in Arlington, Va. Carney pulled away in the final meters to best Victor Rapinski (Saturn) and Hayden Godfrey (7-UP/Maxxis). Only 27 of the 150-man field survived the 100 laps to the finish on the six-turn, 1-kilometer course. The women's race was a different story all together with Laura Van Gilder (Saturn) making a strong solo break early and lapping the field. Her teammate Ina Teutenberg beat 18-year-old Magen Long (Oklahoma Bicycle) in the two-up finale. Women: Van Gilders powers to lap fieldThe preceding day's rain and hail storms gave way to a blustery first of June and wind gusts near 30 miles per hour would factor in both the men's and women's races. In the early event, Van Gilder hopped off the front of the field with Helen Kelly in tow. Van Gilder jumped again with 34 laps remaining, dropping the TDS Telecom rider in the course's wide right-hand turn. Through the remainder of the race, members of Diet Rite were pushing hard at the front but both the course and the wind favored the former national criterium champion, as Van Gilder eventually lapped the field, taking up residence back in the main pack late in the race. With Van Gilder safely ensconced in the field, her teammate and two-time Olympian Ina Teutenberg was free to hunt for second. Teutenberg exploded off the front of the field with eight laps remaining, and only the young rider from Oklahoma Bicycle Racing, Magen Long, could catch on. With three laps remaining, the two riders had 25 seconds on the field. The Saturn sprint specialist hit another gear in the last lap, cruising across the line to claim second. "Having three teammates in the field is really helpful," Van Gilder said of her solo break. "I felt very confident coming in today. When you have three riders helping you out back in the field ... you can really go for it. "[The wind] put the field at a disadvantage," she said. "I felt if I just persevered I could put seconds into [the field]. I'm very happy with the result." Van Gilder has taken both second and third at the Clarendon Cup previously, but this is her first trip to the top of the podium at this event. Men: Carney battles wind, dodges crashesThe wind and the rapid pace played havoc with the men's field, paring the field down from 150 to a mere 27. The infighting began almost immediately, with Trent Klasna (Saturn) and Alex Candelario (Prime Alliance) off the front after just three of the one hundred laps on the day. Two laps later, a persistent Klasna was barely hanging off the front only to be reeled in soon thereafter. The race continued this way with multiple breaks leaping off the front only to be swallowed whole again by the charging field. What riders were not simply ridden off the back wheel had to contend with crashes littered throughout the six-turn course. Klasna was off the front again in another break with 42 laps to go, only to get jettisoned from the back of the pack due to a wheel change. Klasna clawed his way back through the pack and, with 35 laps remaining, he and six other riders made a break that had the makings of a race winner. Klasna was joined by team-mate Victor Rapinski, Dan Schmatz (7-UP/Maxxis), Danny Pate (Prime Alliance) and David O'Loughlin (Ofoto/Lombardi Sports), among others. The 7-UP rider eventually fell off the back of the group, causing a renewed charge from the remaining team members in the field. A break that was within 13 seconds of lapping the field started to unravel with 19 laps to go. Klasna went out the back of the field, leaving teammate Rapinski looking to others in the break for help but getting none. The lead group fell apart and was caught with 16 laps remaining. The field remained together until the final laps when Phil Zajicek (Saturn) made a solo move off the front and the Prime Alliance team gave chase. A crash in the third-from-last lap took out several riders including members of the Saturn team. In the final lap, Alex Candelario (Prime Alliance) chased down Zajicek's move and teammate Danny Pate led out Jonas Carney to the final turn. Carney outsprinted Rapinski and Hayden Godfrey (7-UP/Maxxis) to the line for the win. Carney gave a lot of credit to his team-mates. "Without them, I couldn't have done anything today." "I saw 50 laps to go and I thought 'Are you kidding me?'" Carney said of the fast pace. "The field was really tough today. Last year was hard but this year was even harder. Coming out of the third corner was like hitting a wall [due to the wind]. If you didn't have good legs today, you aren't going to finish." "Today I feel very good, my teammates did very good work," Victor Rapinski said, "but on the last lap, Chris Horner and Ivan Dominguez crashed." Crashes, wind and the difficult pace-setting served to disrupt the field throughout the race. "The crits here are really, really hard and really dangerous," said New Zealander Hayden Godfrey. "We heard on our radios that our man got pipped from the front, so we got the order to move to the front." "The wind actually played a big part of [the crash with two laps remaining]," Godfrey said. "The wind just played carnage." "Two and a half laps to go, somebody must have just clipped a pedal," Carney added. "I hope they're all all right. I kind of got stuck in [the crash] but didn't go down." "I've been trying to win this race since they started doing it," Carney added. "I've been close, and I've crashed." Now, Carney has a win. PhotosCyclingnews reader Steve Berry correctly picked the winner of the men's division of the Clarendon Cup even before a pedal stroke was turned in anger, thus managing to perfectly capture the "before and after" expressions of Prime Alliance sprinter Jonas Carney. Images by Steve Berry
Images by Ray Easterling
Results (provisional)Men 1 Jonas Carney (USA) Prime Alliance 2 Victor Rapinski (Blr) Saturn 3 Hayden Godfrey (NZl) 7-UP/Maxxis 4 Danny Pate (USA) Prime Alliance 5 Siro Camponogara (Ita) Navigators 6 Greg Henderson (NZl) 7-UP/Maxxis 7 Trent Klasna (USA) Saturn 8 John Lieswyn (USA) 7-UP/Maxxis 9 Jackson Stewart (USA) Ofoto/Lombardi Sports 10 Greg Wolf (USA) Colavita-Bolla Racing 11 Alvaro Tardaguila (Uru) UPMC 12 Alex Candelario (USA) Prime Alliance 13 Chris Baldwin (USA) Navigators 14 David O'Loughlin (Ire) Ofoto/Lombardi Sports 15 Todd Littlehales (USA) Sierra-Nevada/Clif Bar 16 Mike Tillman (USA) Schroeder Iron 17 Erik Saunders (USA) Ofoto/Lombardi Sports 18 Marty Nothstein (USA) Navigators 19 Mark McCormack (USA) Saturn 20 Phil Zajicek (USA) Saturn 21 Scott Zwizanski (USA) Snow Valley 22 Chris Wherry (USA) Navigators 23 Svein Tuft (USA) Prime Alliance 24 Tim Larkin (USA) Ofoto/Lombardi Sports 25 Cameron Hughes (USA) Schroeder Iron 26 Johnathan Page (USA) Prime Alliance 27 Patrick O'Donnell (USA) West Virginia Cycling Team Women 1 Laura Van Gilder (USA) Saturn 2 Ina Teutenberg (Ger) Saturn 3 Magen Long (USA) Oklahoma Bicycle 4 Sarah Uhl (USA) Saturn 5 Tina Mayolo-Pic (USA) Diet Rite 6 Julia Oh (USA) Independent Fabrications 7 Lynn Gaggioli (USA) Velo Bella 8 Tania Duff-Miller (USA) Diet Rite 9 Charmain Breon (USA) Freddie Fu 10 Jo Kiesanowski (USA) Diet Rite 11 Emily Gloeckner (USA) TDS 12 Joan Wilson (USA) TDS 13 Helen Kelly (USA) TDS 14 Melissa Sanborn (USA) Unattached 15 Betsy Sellers (USA) Revolution/Rock Creek 16 Elizabeth Begosh (USA) Team Snow Valley 17 Rebecca McClintock (USA) Colavita-Bolla Racing 18 Lenora Felker (USA) Freddie Fu 19 Kori Kelly (USA) Diet Rite 20 Megan Elliott (USA) Saturn 21 Cybil DiGuistini (USA) Diet Rite 22 Kristy Scheffenacker (USA) ABRT/Team Snow Valley 23 Brooke O'Connor (USA) Colavita-Bolla Racing 24 Tina Skelly-Kunstbeck (USA) Lateral Stress Velo/Trek/VW 25 Sandra Kolb (USA) Los Gatos Bicycle Racing Past winners2002 Vasili Davidenko (Navigators) Ina Teutenberg (Saturn) |
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