Girdlestone keen to defend Coffee Culture Le Race title
19 March 2015
Seventeen year old South African born Christchurch cyclist Keagan Girdlestone is one year stronger and wiser and keen to
defend his break through win in last year’s Coffee Culture Le Race on Saturday.
Girdlestone, the youngest ever winner in the event’s history, knows he carries a bigger target on his back this year and
is very aware it will be harder than last year to make it two wins in a row, but is still confident of backing up with
another winning effort.
“I had a big year in the NRS (Australia’s National Road Series) last year where I was able to learn a whole lot more
about racing from my teammates and staff at Charter Mason Giant Racing as well as from other riders in the peloton,” he
said.
“I have gotten a lot more physically stronger over the past year so I am interested to see how I will feel in Saturday’s
race.”
Girdlestone said his form is good after a busy start to the year where he competed well in two major Australian races,
the Bay Crits where he held his own against a number of top professionals, and the Oceania Champs where he managed a
silver in the junior men’s time trial and was fourth in the road race.
Riding for the NZ Road Youth Academy team Girdlestone was second in the opening round of the Calder Stewart Elite Series
three weeks ago, claiming the leader’s jersey for the Under 23 classification.
Girdlestone will have a number of leading domestic based riders keen to challenge him for the win, including Kiwi based
professionals Dan Barry and Sam Horgan who ride for Australian Continental team Budget Forklifts, Breads of Europe All
About Plumping team mates Tim Rush, Ben Robertson and Tom Hubbard, Adam Bull (Mike Greer Homes Racing), former national
elite champion James Williamson, Callum Gordon (Nature Valley Avanti) and Sam Lindsay (Total POS).
Horgan is more of a time trial and rolling terrain specialist but has shown he can climb winning the event in 2012 and
he made the podium two years ago.
Girdlestone said he thought there were a number of riders on the start line that have the potential to win, pointing out
his training partner Bull was an ‘underdog’ well worth keeping an eye on.
2013 women’s winner and last year’s runner up Sharlotte Lucas (Benchmark Homes) has been back training hard since
recovering from a crash in late February’s Trust House women’s tour of New Zealand, saying she is probably at ‘80
percent’ in terms of form for Saturdays race.
Lucas, who had a recent confidence boast in the recreational event Ride the Rakaia where she was a dominant women’s
winner after staying in the leading group of males, said she was ‘really looking forward’ to Le Race.
“It's a pretty important race for me as the hard and hilly course suits me and it is one of the bigger races in the
region, “ she said. Lucas is focused on a podium finish providing everything goes well during the race; she has crashed,
won and come second in the last three years.
National junior representative Georgia Catterick (Cycle World Fairweather) from Marlborough, Benchmark Homes team mates
Elyse Fraser, Haley Mercer and Julia Grant, Jennifer Haskell (Vidasana Thule), Maddi Campbell (Black Magic) and Lydia
Rippon (Cycle World Fairweather) are all women that could threaten Lucas.
The 100 kilometre event will have its largest field since the 2011 earthquakes with 780 entered, wellexceeding last
year’s 570.
Ends