Bull has best climbing legs to win fourth round
Bull has best climbing legs to win fourth round of the
Calder Stewart Cycling Series in Dunedin
10 September
2016
Adam Bull had the best climbing legs to win the
elite men’s race in the fourth round of the Calder Stewart
Cycling Series, the Armstrong Prestige Dunedin Classic,
riding away on the final climb to win in three hours and
fifty three minutes.
Bull cleared out from the leaders
with five kilometres of the 14 kilometre final climb of the
day up Lee Stream Valley left, finishing 20 seconds ahead of
Jake Marryatt (Modus Construct) who held off Scott Thomas
(TotalPOS Solutions) in the 135 kilometre elite men’s race
to claim second.
Tim Rush (Mike Greer Homes) came home
tenth which was enough to claim the elite series individual
lead while his team mate Ben Johnstone was eleventh,
consolidating his lead in the Under 23
classification.
“I was really happy with how I climbed
today,” Bull said. “I’ve had a really good build up
racing and training overseas so felt confident about the
hill today. There were a few really good climbers in the
race so I was pretty happy to be able to hold them all
off.”
Wanaka’s Gavin Mason (Christchurch Mitsubishi)
crossed the line ahead of the unbeaten masters 35 to 44
classification series leader, his team mate Dave Rowlands,
to win the overall 105 kilometre masters race in two hours
and fifty one minutes.
Mason rode a smart race, staying
out of trouble and conserving energy for the final climb,
only being pressured once after he had to get back in
contact with the race after a puncture on the flat.
Last
year’s women’s series winner Sharlotte Lucas (Benchmark
Homes) got her first win of this year’s racing in dominant
fashion riding away from the field on the final climb
beating Jeannie Blackmore (Vidasana Thule) and Amy Hollamby
(Cycleworld Fairweather ) to win in three hours and 17
minutes. It was especially satisfying for Lucas who has
battled illness and injury this winter.
Michaela Kerr
(Mike Greer Homes Womens Black) came home tenth to cling
onto her series lead in the senior and Under 19
classifications, holding onto the senior lead by only one
point.
“My team were so good on the flat, I didn’t
have to do anything,” Lucas said. “I just hit the climb
and knew what sort of power I could do for a 30 minute
effort uphill and no one else was strong enough to come with
me so I’m pretty happy.”
Reon Nolan (TotalPOS
Solutions) got away early in the elite men’s race, and
once caught there was a series of attacks that resulted in a
group of eight riders, that included TOtalPOS Solution’s
Joe Hutchinson and Jeffery Tuck, Max Beckert (Mike Greer
Homes), Louis Brown (PKF Cycling) and Central
Benchmarkers-Willbike’s Hyden Strong and Jordon Gilmour,
getting away after 54 kilometres of racing.
Strong
punctured leaving the remaining seven riders to try to build
a lead before the final climb, but it proved unsuccessful
with the break getting caught before the hill with 35
kilometres left to race.
Once on the climb the attacks
were quick to come with Bull, Thomas, Marryatt and Cycling
New Zealand’s Oscar Elworthy getting away with Bull making
his winning move with five kilometres remaining, inching
ahead to eventually ride the last three kilometres with a
comfortable lead.
The Champion System and Christchurch
Mitsubishi teams were dominant in the master’s race that
features three age group classifications with very active,
fast racing on the flat circuits of the Taieri plains that
eventually saw a group of 10 riders get away after only 10
kilometres of racing.
The breakaway, that included Mason,
and riders well suited to pushing the pace on the flat like
Champion System’s Peter Murphy and Craig Domigan, Glenn
Gould (Cycle World Red) and Placemakers Mike White and
Brendan Acrkeoyd, worked well to build up a lead of over
five minutes as they approached the final climb.
Domigan
and Gould attacked the group before the climb but were
caught with Mason, Scott McDonnell (Champion System) and
Acrkeoyd breaking clear on the climb with McDonnell hitting
it hard with nine kilometres left to climb to build a lead
of 30 seconds only to get caught by Mason first, with just
over two kilometres left, then Rowlands, in an impressive
display of strength that saw him bridge across in the final
kilometre.
Rowlands and Mason had a quick chat with the
finish line in sight that saw Mason jump away with McDonnell
unable to follow while Rowlands was happy to sit up to take
second in the overall race and 35 to 44 age group
classification to further consolidate his series lead over
McDonnell.
Lee Johnstone (Champion System) added to his
lead in the 45 to 49 series classification, finishing ninth,
the first rider in his age group to finish while Blair
Stuthridge (Protocol Mackleys) was the first over 50 rider
to come home, finishing fifth, to build on his narrow over
50s series lead over Paul Gough (Cycle World Fluros).
“I just needed to conserve as much as I could while in
the break as our team leader (Rowlands) was back in the
bunch, then just needed to keep it together up the hill so I
was pretty happy with the result,” Mason said.
The
women’s race saw several breakaways on the flat with none
of them sticking for long with the race all together heading
into the final climb. Lucas and Blackmore quickly went to
work to distance the rest of the field with Lucas eventually
able to distance the gusty Blackmore in the last third of
the climb.
The next race in the series is in Methven on
Saturday 1 October.
Ends
Results: http://www.eliteseries.co.nz/results/
.