Cyclingnews TV   News  Tech   Features   Road   MTB   BMX   Cyclo-cross   Track    Photos    Fitness    Letters   Search   Forum  
Home

Recently on Cyclingnews.com


Dauphiné Libéré
Photo ©: Sirotti

 UCI codes explained

Great Britain Road National Championships - CN

Saffron Walden, Great Britain, August 19, 2007

2006 Results    Results    

Eighth Heaven for Cooke

Welsh Wonder once again invincible in British Championships

By Ben Atkins, UK Editor, in Saffron Walden, England

Nicole Cooke (Raleigh-Lifeforce)
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)

Nicole Cooke won an unprecedented eighth British National Championships - and her seventh in a row - on the roads of Essex today. She attacked the rest of the breakaway group of seven, containing most of the pre-race favourites, on the last of five twenty-kilometre laps to solo away to take victory by nearly a minute.

Probably the strongest ever women's championship field took the start just outside Saffron Waldon, Essex in the re-scheduled race - postponed from July 1 because of flooding on and around the original Yorkshire course. The most serious competition to Cooke looked like it would come from multiple medallist Rachel Heal (Webcor Builders) and a strong Global Racing team led by national cyclo-cross champion Helen Wyman and including a number of the British endurance track squad, as well as last year's bronze medallist and under-23 champion Jo Rowson. A strong performance was also expected from Specialized Designs for Women rider Emma Pooley who recently added a solo stage win at the Thüringen-Rundfahrt to her third place at the Grand Boucle Feminine (behind Cooke) in June.

In the end, the quality of the opposition proved to be inconsequential, and Cooke's superiority showed on a predominantly flat course, that featured two not-too-testing climbs in the second half of each lap.

The dismal British summer weather, that caused the original race to be postponed on July, continued today, as riders were forced to endure several heavy showers in the early stages of the race.

How it unfolded

The field awaits the start
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)

The first attack, which didn't occur until near the end of the second lap, was put in by Katie Curtis (Global Racing), forcing Cooke's Raleigh-Lifeforce team-mate, Tanja Slater to lead the chase. The move was countered mid-way through the third lap though, and a group of seven pulled clear containing most of the pre-race favourites.

The breakaway group - consisting of Nicole Cooke, Rachel Heal, Catherine Hare (Rapha-Condor), Emma Pooley, and the Global Racing trio of Helen Wyman, Nikki Harris and Lizzie Armitstead - worked well together and soon established an unassailable lead over the rest of the bunch, which didn't contain any teams strong enough to make any ground on the strong riders ahead.

One major absentee from the break was last year's bronze medallist and U23 champion Jo Rowson, who punctured as the move was made. She managed to regain the main bunch without too much trouble, but with three team-mates up the road, her own personal race was all but over.

The main peloton
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)

With three in the lead group, Global Racing looked to make their numerical superiority count as they allowed Cooke and Pooley to do the lion's share of the work in the flatter sections.

With the lead over the main peloton meaning that the winner would come from the leading seven, it only remained to be seen whether the Global Racing team could make their superior numbers count, or if one or more riders would be able to get away.

The bunch follows the break up the climb
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
(Click for larger image)

Unsurprisingly, it was Cooke who put in the decisive move, attacking on a small rise halfway between the course's two climbs, and quickly opening a gap. On the lap's second climb, after only a few kilometres, her lead was already twenty seconds, and it continued to grow, as her former companions had no answer to her power.

As the race left the main circuit to the last two-kilometre drag to the finish line, Cooke continued to apply the pressure and took a comfortable solo victory and her eighth British title in nine years.

The remaining six breakaway riders stayed together to the finish, and Rachel Heal brought her superior sprint to bear, beating Helen Wyman in the sprint for the silver medal. Hare beat Harris to fourth, but she was compensated by the satisfaction of winning the U23 championship. Pooley and Armitstead, who took the U23 silver, followed.

The bunch was led home by Leanne Thompson (Lune RCC), taking eighth place, over seven and a half minutes back. Dianne Moss (Team Luciano) took ninth and Alice Monger-Godfrey (Glendene CC) completed the top ten and the U23 podium.

Photography

For a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here

Images by Ben Atkins/Cyclingnews.com

Results

Elite Women - 109km

1 Nicole Cooke (Raleigh / Lifeforce / Creation / HB)    3.44.39
2 Rachel Heal (Webcor Builders)                            0.59
3 Helen Wyman (Global RT, Billato / Bioracer)                  
4 Catherine Hare (Rapha Condor RT)                             
5 Nikki Harris (Global RT, Billato / Bioracer)                 
6 Emma Pooley (Team Specialized Designs for Women)             
7 Elizabeth Armistead (Global RT, Billato / Bioracer)          
8 Leanne Thompson (Lune RCC)                               7.33
9 Dianne Moss (Team Luciano)
10 Alice Monger-Godfrey (Glendene CC)