9th Telekom Malaysia Le Tour de Langkawi - 2.2
Malaysia, February 6-15, 2004
Rider Diaries
Photo: © Mark Sharon
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Mountain Man: The Roland Green diary
Nationality: Canadian
Team: Canada
Dual world MTB champion Roland Green proved his worth on the roads of Malaysia
in 2003, winning the King of the Mountains prize and finishing fourth overall.
This year, Roland wants to win. Stay tuned to see whether the mountain man can
do it.
The big day
Kuala Lumpur, Stage 9 start, February 14, 2004
There may be less pressure on me to do well today, but I always put pressure
on myself - you don't come halfway across the world not to perform. At the same
time, I've got to be realistic about where I'm at and where I'm going this year,
so I'm happy to be here with this form right now. Looking at the way last year
ended up, I'm just happy to have my health back right now and feel that steady
progression of fitness.
The team plan today is to just save all our energy for the climb and cover
the early moves. I don't think anything's going to go away; just going on the
track record of the last few days, I don't think anything's going to be allowed
to get away at all; there's a few hotspot sprints and it looks like the Palmans
rider fighting for second place [Gert V] is really going for that, so I expect
it to be held together before the climb.
About the climb, I definitely won't be attacking like last year! If I do, my
team-mate Dominque [Perras] said he's going to beat the shit out of me... even
though he's got chicken arms and chicken legs, I'm still afraid :)
I really won't know how good my legs are until I do about five or six minutes
of hard climbing, it's just so steep y'know. If you leave yourself some energy
for the end of the race, it could be worth a lot - wheras if you completely
bury yourself in the last five or six k, you stand to lose a lot of time, so
I've just got to play it safe until then and see what I got... it's all I can
do.
Peter's [Wedge] really happy with the way he's riding now. He started the tour
with a stomach bug - he had diarrohea for the first three day and was really
ill, and we didn't expect him to finish, but he's made such a good comeback
and it's a testament to how tough Peter is.
Speaking of Colombia Selle-Italia, any team where there's good comraderie,
you wouldn't want to say going into the climb who really is leader - especially
when you've got the yellow jersey who's obviously very on form right now but
not such a natural climber. I think they're going to wait and see, and whoever's
got the best legs at the end of the climb is going to be the overall man. It's
so close though - you throw a blanket over them at the end and they're all up
there.
For me this year, it's going to be the World Cups and the Olympics - those
are the two main objectives - then of course, the [MTB] World Championships
are two weeks after the Olympics, so if you find form and everything's good
at that time of year and you're all healthy, I think you're going to scoop both
results.
Wish me luck!
rg
Editor's note: Roland finished in 7th place today, 1'36 behind winner
Ruber Marin. He is now placed 9th on the overall classification, 3'45 behind
overall leader Freddy Gonzalez.
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