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Australian Junior and Teams Road Championships - NESunshine Coast, Australia, September 2-September 10, 2006Main Page Results Overall standings Previous Race Next Race Race 7 - September 9: Teams Road Championships Road RaceBreakaway success as Lapthorpe wins national teams road raceDrapac double in second leg of teams championshipBy John Michael Flynn in Yandina, Sunshine Coast Victorian Darren Lapthorpe continued the impressive run of form for Melbourne's Drapac Porsche Cycling Team today, with a well deserved breakaway victory in the inaugural Australian Teams Championship road race on Queensland's Sunshine Coast. "A fair dinkum win," was how fellow breakaway protagonist Stuart Cowin (Team Triple Play SEQ) described the ride by the emerging Melbourne cyclist, which dripped with credibility, not to mention a touch of class. Lapthorpe was part of a three man move which went up the road at the 70 kilometre mark of the 169 kilometre race, and contributed better than his share of turns before finishing the stronger of the trio, which included Cowin and FRF Couriers strongman Joe McDonnell. "It's always nice to come away with a win, especially after yesterday as well, we had a tough T.T.," Lapthorpe told Cyclingnews. "Very happy, couldn't be happier, just to see my team-mate (Mitch Docker) come along and get second place as well, it's a great day really." How it unfoldedIf the vision behind the new Australian Teams Championship was to create exciting racing and unpredictable outcomes, then organizers of the inaugural event probably had cause to celebrate today. With ten teams competing, the moves came early and not unexpectedly it was Troy Glennan of the FRF Couriers Excelpro team, who launched the first serious attack. The circumstances were similar to last year's National Club Road Championships (contested on the same course) when Glennan sacrificed himself in an ill-fated breakaway. This time around, the solo effort produced the same result. "It wasn't really the plan but it happened," Glennan said of his impulse to attack. "I had a bit of bad luck out there, I punctured while I was by myself and later on I punctured again." The move that mattered came at seventy kilometres in, when Team Triple Play SEQ's veteran stager Stuart Cowin formed a promising combination with FRF Couriers' powerhouse McDonnell and Drapac's Lapthorpe. Cowin, who was unlucky not to be awarded the Queensland Road Race Title in a photo finish two weeks ago, once again took the race to his younger rivals, before his aging legs eventually had the final say. When cramp set in with twenty kilometres and two laps of the course remaining, the Queenslander was forced to withdraw. "I gave it a nudge, I started it, I couldn't finish it, just a bit old I think," a disappointed Cowin said at race end. "I would have thought we'd have seven or eight riders with us (in the breakaway), not three. Credit to the young guy from the Porsche Drapac team, that was a fair dinkum win." McDonnell also provided valuable support to the breakaway effort. A podium finisher on the same course at last year's National Club Road Championships, the FRF cyclist played a key role in establishing a lead of close to four minutes. "Joe was pulling some big turns, he was coming into the straight in the windier sections, and Stu was good up the climb," Lapthorpe said of his breakaway companions. "I think the three of us working together helped us get that lead." But like Cowin, McDonnell just couldn't hold on. The FRF toughman, who last year managed to finish the demanding Crocodile Trophy, couldn't stay with the Drapac cyclist at the death. "Such a long day, just pretty disappointing in the end," McDonnell told Cyclingnews. "Drapac got one-two and we were up there but Darren was pretty strong and that's the way it was." With two and a half laps to go, the short, testing pinch climb of Yandina's Old Coach Road got the better of McDonnell, who tried in vain to hold on for second before being swallowed up by the next chase group a few kilometres from home. "To be caught with three or four k's to go is a bit disappointing," McDonnell admitted. "I was sort of hurting on the climb a fair bit, I just didn't have it in the legs." Mitch Docker made it a Drapac one-two when he won the sprint for second. The result capping off a great weekend so far for the Victorian team, which also won yesterday's Teams Time Trial. "We're rapt, we set it up for Darren to get the win today, he had really good legs to hold it out there all day in the heat," Docker said.
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