Team Cyclingnews.com - 2005
Team Journal Entry - May 26, 2005, by Cam Jennings
Three hilly days in the Ardennes
Sven De Weerdt
Photo ©: Team CN
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The final podium
Photo ©: Team CN
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Cam Jennings
Photo ©: Team CN
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On sunday the team finished Tryptique Ardennes and everything went well.
The team for this very tough three-day tour was Glen, Hamish, Tom, Kane, Henry,
Sven and myself. Had a good bunch of staff along for the trip including my brother
Warren, who came down to rub legs, fill bottles, hand out bottles, take photos
and drink some beer at night with Daniel (DS) and the other soigneurs and mechanics.
Stage 1 - May 20: Libramont - Libramont, 155km
First stage started and finished at Libramont. Was important not too lose any
time if possible today so we were given our orders to be in the breaks and race
aggressively. All was going well early but a group did get away and at the 50km
mark had a lead of about a minute. The team got on the front and rode good tempo
up the longest climb of the day and gradually whittled the lead down. Over the
top amongst all the attacks the group did come back and we were all still feeling
good and racing at the front. Approaching the finish two riders slipped away
and were let go thinking they will be back. Unfortunately they slipped a little
further up the road than what the bunch expected and despite some good chasing
by Kane and others and numerous attacks they ended up staying away by 47 seconds.
We all finished safely in the bunch.
Results
Stage 2 - May 21: Sprimont - Sprimont, 71km
Split day today. 80km in the morning and 80km in the arvo [That's 'afternoon'
for non-Australians - multi-lingual Ed]. A stage around Sprimont was on the
cards this morning with a climb every 10 or so minutes. Tough little finish
lap with a 2km climb that needed to be done three times. Glen was having a pearler
and got away in a group on the last lap. I chased with a group of three and
it looked like we might bridge across but VC Roubaix got us back. On the last
climb a Euro Gifts rider attacked and crossed the line first and Glen sprinted
the group home for second. Sven and I were in the next group a few seconds back.
Results
Stage 3 - May 21: Soumagne - Soumagne
The arvo stage saw the race head to Soumagne. Not us tough as the morning's
stage with more Cat 2 climbs and fewer Cat 1 but still meant climbing every
couple of minutes. Once again Glen was steaming and in pursuit of the KOM jersey.
After a number of attacks he got away with two others; they dropped one and
the other guy just ended up sitting on. I followed a move with two riders who
chased Glen and after 10km made contact. Still had 40km to go around a 10km
circuit and we were doing our best to keep the bunch at 40 seconds. Glen was
picking up the points and I was swapping off as best I could keeping the pace
high. In the end a group of 13 caught us and we finished 30 seconds ahead of
the bunch. I placed eighth on the stage and picked up a watch for winning a
special prime on the road and Glen had the KOM jersey. Two Rocky riders on the
podium in Europe with our Ian Weigh caps on. Not bad!
Results
Stage 4 - May 22: Aywaille - Aywaille, 170km
The king stage starting and finishing in Aywaille. The 170km stage consisted
of 16 climbs with six of them in the last 60km. Two of these hills were the
famous wall, La Redoute. Daniel our DS, who was third in the 1979 edition of
Liege-Bastogne-Liege explained to us, "yes we do La Redoute twice... why, I
don't know, but that is what we are doing."
Glen was up for a win only being 17 seconds behind the leader and I was well
placed in 13th before the stage. Glen also needed to keep his KOM jersey so
he had a busy day ahead.
First climb, 9km into the race Glen went for the points and blew nearly everyone
away and found himself in a break with four others. Probably not ideal but he
kept going with the break and secured his lead in the KOM comp. Coming into
the finish laps after 110km, the group was still away but was caught at the
bottom of the steep Chambral climb. I felt good as I went over Chambral with
Glen, then still good over the 5km Cote de Niaster and still with the front
over La Redoute. Glen was feeling good and my legs still felt like they could
do something. The second time over Chambral I was just off the back but got
back on. Niaster was good and then I kept the pace high before La Redoute setting
it up for Glen. The yellow jersey attacked and Glen just missed the wheel. He
finished 10 seconds back on him at the bottom in third and ended up equal fourth
overall with the KOM jersey. I slipped back a bit on La Redoute but caught back
up and then won the sprint for 15th, finishing 16th overall. After sheltering
me and Glen for the three days, Tom, Kane, Sven, Henry and Hamish finished the
stage in one of the later groups. Thanks for the help!
Well there we are. The team had a good showing at Tryptique, one of the hardest
tours both at a professional and amateur level in Belgium. A few days easy and
then some more good races coming up like Wavre-Rijneman next weekend.
Results
Till next time we meet,
Cameron
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