Team Cyclingnews.com - 2005
Team Journal Entry - August 15, 2005, by Cam Jennings
Holes in Hungarian roads
Hi all,
Glen wins stage 5
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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Well, back from the Tour of Hungary and it was a mixed bag for the Cyclingnews/Fondriest
boys. We were all travelling well and succeeded in scoring two stage wins plus
numerous top 10 placings, but we lost Hamish whilst in yellow to a bad stomach
bug and Leigh to a broken collarbone and cracked elbow on the last stage. So
how did all this happen?
Prologue - Veszprem
Arrived in Veszprem Monday after flying into Budapest on Sunday night. Had
a good two hour ride and team presentation and checked out prologue course.
Turned out to be a very technical course with two cobbled hills and a third
tarmac one, and a cobbled finish. No need for fancy time trial bikes in this
one. Fortunately we don't have any.
Prologue did not go too well for me as I missed my start by a good 10 seconds.
I arrived at the marshaling area a good four minutes before the start and continued
to ride around and stay warm. Lost track of time and did not hear my name called
out. Perhaps it was their Hungarian pronunciation of my name and I didn't register.
I also took my watch off before the start for reasons I'm yet to find. Anyway,
missed the start by a good 10 seconds and any chance of a good result. Felt
good though, and my time minus 10 seconds indicated that I was not going slow.
Nevermind, no one to blame but me. Sort of thing you do once in your life -
this is my first and only.
Glen and Hamish had great rides and finished third and fifth respectively.
Results
Stage 1 - Balatonfured
The Cyclingnews boys are presented
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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40km crit at Balatonfured, a beautiful town by lake Balaton. A pretty simple
course with one hairpin turn and long flowing straight up and over a little
hill. Nothing was getting away despite our best efforts, and we got organised
and led Cody into the sprint. I was his last man and got him to the last turn
in about fifth spot and he stayed there till the line. Not a bad way to start.
Glen and the guys were strong in the morning and Cody seemed to have a clean
set of wheels, and the team was gelling well together.
Results
Stage 2 - Balatonfoldvar - Keskemet
160km over a relatively flat terrain. Only real obstacle today was the weather
that unfortunately turned a little sour by the time our 1:30pm start time rolled
around. So the wet weather stuff was dragged out of our bags and put on and
we set off. The stage had 20km of neutral by the shore of the Balaton, which
lengthened the day to 180km but gave us a nice chance to warm up and also get
dirty.
Action from the stage 1 crit
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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Stage started and all was going well, getting into breaks. Little hiccup when
four guys got away with none of us but Kane, Leigh and myself got on the front
and brought that back. Kane then slipped off the front in an unlikely looking
move with seven other riders, including Hamish. The bunch let them go. Surprisingly
no team organised themselves to bring the break back and with our GC rider,
Glen, sitting in the bunch it was not ideal when the break was getting close
to six minutes up the road. Glen tried numerous times to get away but they were
all on him. So, despite having two up front Leigh and myself started to work
on the front so Glen would not get too far behind. Come the finish the break
was back to three minutes, with Hamish winning the stage and the yellow and
Glen not getting too far out of the picture. Cody had a good sprint for the
minor placings and we all missed the crash 2km out.
Results
Stage 3 - Csongrad - Bekesceba
A bit wet on stage 2
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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120km pan flat today to Bekesceba, a town not too far from the Romanian border.
With Hamish in yellow we had to defend the jersey a little but we were not going
to get on the front from km zero and set the pace all day. We were going to
look for breaks and see what happened. Cody won the intermediate sprint at 4km
and then Glen attacked. I followed the wheels and looked around as we had a
break of six with a small advantage on the bunch. Break got out to a minute
but that was as far as it got and with only a select few working in the group
we were bought back after 30km.
When we were caught the dark clouds rolled in and it poured for the remainder
of the stage. A few of the German teams attacked and tried to split it up and
on dangerous roads with little visibility we decided it was better/safer for
all concerned to sit on the front and control the race rather then chase attacks
all day. So Leigh, Kane and myself ploughed away on the front for the next 70km
in the slop until other teams got to the front and wound it up. The dodgy finish
in Bekesceba resulted in a big crash; luckily none of us were involved. Hamish
was still in yellow, and the rain still coming down.
Results
Stage 4 - Szeghalom - Mezokovesd
Hamish takes the win on stage 2
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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150km pan flat. Similar objectives to yesterday. Chase attacks for the first
bit and see what happened. Start of the stage was interrupted due to bad road
conditions that arose from the incessant rain over the previous days, and at
the 32km mark, just after the first sprint the race was neutralised for 15km
as we tip toed our way around holes, rocks and puddles. Race got going again
and Glen and I found ourselves on the wrong end of the bunch in a cross wind
section and had to do a bit of work to get back. We got back after a 20km chase
and Glen went to the front and had a go himself. Caused a bit of panic in the
bunch and a few riders got across to him but unfortunately it came back and
Leigh, Kane and myself got back up front and chopped along.
Unbeknown to me, Hamish started to feel sick some 30km from home. Not sure
what brought it on but it all came on pretty quickly. With 10km to go he was
in a right mess and struggling to keep going. By this time some of the teams
with sprinters had taken over on the front so we had to help Hamish to the line.
With 7km to go Glen attacked over an overpass and was away with a few others
trying to get a bit of time back before the mountain the next day. Glen ended
up second on the stage and pulling back 30 seconds. Hamish ended up covered
in vomit as he let go of a Linda Blair escape display 1km from the line. He
was struggling to ride and thanks to a bit of quick thinking from Daniel he
managed to finish the stage with bunch time. Unfortunately he was not to start
tomorrow. After spending the night in hospital with a fever of 40 degrees and
low blood pressure on a drip he was too weak to do anything let lone ride a
bike and had to forfeit his chance in the Tour of Hungary.
Results
Stage 5 - Mezokovesd - Kekesteto
Glen celebrates
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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100km of hilly terrain with a 15km mountaintop finish. As I stated before,
the stage started without Hamish. He was still in hospital and was not allowed
out till the afternoon. This day was the most important day of the tour and
the day Glen was looking forward to.
Early proceedings were controlled by the new yellow jersey team, the German
US Financial Team. The bunch was all together at the bottom of the last climb
but a strong tempo set by the Slovakian team soon whittled the bunch down. After
only a few kilometres of climbing there was a lead group of 10-15 riders with
both Glen and I present. A Dutch rider attacked with about 7km to climb but
the last 3km was at a 10% gradient. He was not getting too far in front and
1km before the steep stuff started Glen attacked from mid-way down the group
and was never headed. He caught the Dutchy and he hung on for a while, but with
1km still to climb he dropped off and Glen won the stage and the KOM jersey.
I came in ninth, 1 minute 30 seconds down. All the other guys finished comfortably.
To add to the jersey Glen also moved to fourth, with the time he lost on stage
2 proving crucial.
Results
Stage 6 - Matrahaza - Kekesteto
Glen takes second on stage 6
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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After a few hours recovering it was time for the afternoon's stage; a time
trial up the last 4km of the climb that we had just done. No need for too much
detail here. I didn't miss my start this time and rode a good tempo up the hill,
keeping my gear ticking over nicely and coming in 19th. Glen had another pearler
and placed second on the stage and moved to third. The other guys did what they
had to do to get the stage out of the way.
Results
Stage 7 - Vac - Dunakeszi
Two stages on the last day - the morning stage was a hilly little 60km trip
and a 50km criterium in Budapest in the afternoon. The stage in the morning
didn't start well for us as Leigh crashed and cracked his collarbone and chipped
his left elbow. Riders failed to point out a massive hole and the rider in front
of Leigh hit it and went down. Kane also came down but luckily he ran off the
road and into the grass. He came back into the bunch looking like he had just
played an entire game of cricket in the slips; grass stains all over. Leigh
and his bad luck - this was the third time in nine months that he had broken
and or cracked his right collarbone.
There was one KOM sprint along the way and Glen cemented his lead in that competition,
getting second on the climb. It was then wound up for the finish by the sprinter's
teams and I did my best to get Cody to the front in a twisty dangerous finish.
Cody once again was in the coin, getting sixth in the kick. The mood later on
after the stage was pretty dull as we all felt for Leigh. He was riding well
and doing heaps of good work for the team. He just didn't deserve it.
Results
Stage 8 - Budapest
Now, you have to eat!'
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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The last stage, a 50km criterium, started at 5pm. With all GC positions safe,
it was going to be a controlled race by the yellow jersey team. Nice simple
course up and down the Danube with no dangerous corners but a few big Hungarian
holes thrown in just to keep us on our toes.
After the first sprint I had an attack that lasted all of 1km as I bogged myself
down up the long finish straight into a headwind. Sat back for a bit and then
after the second sprint with five laps to go I tried again, and this time had
the company of a Slovakian rider. We worked well for a lap but again the strong
wind up the Danube was thwarting everybody's best efforts. Glen had a go as
well but was quickly marked, so it came down to the inevitable bunch kick. Cody
was feeling good and Glen and I led him up to the front. I remember looking
around with about 800m to go and seeing Cody behind me, so I picked the pace
up again and led into the last corner with 400m to go. Started my sprint there,
and as the riders started to come past I didn't see Cody. He pretty much got
knocked off his bike by one of the young arrogant Akud riders from Germany and
lost any chance of a result. Not the best way to finish the race but that's
how it goes.
Results
Setting the pace
Photo ©: Cam Jennings
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So, Glen won a stage and Hamish did as well. We had the yellow for three days
and controlled the race for those three days, and we only lost the jersey to
something out of our control. Glen got the KOM jersey and we were always in
the top 10. Even though we lost Hamish and Leigh it was again a successful tour
of Hungary.
After a few Britney's later on that night down at the Nuclear and good old
look around Budapest on Monday where we threw caution to the wind and experienced
the Budapest Metro with one minor stuff up, we jumped on a plane later that
night and arrived home in Booischot. Big thanks to our staff who drove the long
drive to and from Hungary, while we cruised along at a few thousand feet.
So now for me is a bit of down time. No scheduled race for two weeks, so taken
this first week after Hungary dead easy and relaxing a little bit off the bike.
Have had a consistent race schedule since I arrived so have been switched on
for a few months. A week and a bit dead easy is well earned methinks.
Till next time we meet,
Cameron Jennings
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