Duyvesteyn claims three jerseys and McIlroy and Hollamby ride away from field in Calder Stewart Series
28 September 2019
Dunedin cyclist Kees Duyvesteyn had an impressive elite men’s win to move into the series lead while Kate McIlroy and
Amy Hollamby combined to ride away from the women’s field as Calder Stewart Cycling Series got underway again in Nelson
today.
After a break for winter round four of the South Island cycling series was held on a tough circuit south of Wakefield
near Nelson with the elite men and under 23 riders tackling 162 kilometres while the women and masters raced 104
kilometres.
David Rowlands from Wellington (Christchurch Mitsubishi) outsprinted breakaway companions Brett Grieve (Cycle Lab
Joyride), Mike Crawford (Armitage Williams Racing) and Scott McDonnell (Cycle World Emersons) to win the masters race
that contained three age groups to move further into the lead in the 45 to 49 age group classification.
Riders had to contend with strong head winds that saw lots of early splits and attacks as teams fought to control the
bunches across the three races.
Sam Guest (BlackMax), Richard Lawson (Moore Stephens Markhams) and Hamish Keast (Transport Engineering Velo South)
eventually got away in the elite men’s race and worked well to build a lead that was eight minutes after 100 kilometres
of racing.
Duyvesteyn (SBS Ricoh NZ) lead the chase, showing the form and strength from a successful winter racing in Europe and
the United States, taking six riders across the gap to catch the leaders in the closing stages before breaking away solo
over the final few kilometres to win.
The result saw him claim three series leader jerseys, taking the elite men’s series leader jersey off Jake Marryatt
(Moore Stephens Markhams), consolidating his Under 23 lead and also picking up the Small Business Accounting Most
Combative Rider jersey.
Ollie Jones (Ridge Homes) came home second followed by Andrew Bidwell (BlackMax Nutrition Cycling Team), Paul Odlin
(Ridge Homes) and Campbell Pithie (Cycle Surgery Tineli).
Logan Currie (Transport Engineering Velo South) stays in the Under 19 leader’s jersey even though he didn’t race as he
is overseas in the UK competing in the World Road Championships.
McIlroy (Lightworkx Development) said her day was “awesome” on what was possibly the hardest course she said she has
ridden.
“The race plan was to race aggressively from the start proving that age doesn’t determine skill on a bike,” the 38 year
old said. “Amy attacked, I then bridged across on the first climb five kilometres in. We then dropped everyone and we
did a two up time trial to take the overall leaders points further away from any other teams and move Amy up.”
The newly crowned cyclocross national champion and New Zealand Commonwealth and Olympic representative across three
sports said her Lightworkx Development team were all very clear on the plan going into today’s women’s race, so it was
“pretty cool it came to fruition.”
With a clear goal of protecting the leader’s jersey 40 year old Hollamby let McIlroy roll over the line to cap off a
strong day for two of the oldest riders in the field that also saw McIlroy build on her lead in the Small Business
Accounting Most Combative Rider competition.
Henrietta Christie (Velo Project) was third ahead of her team mate Elyse Fraser, the pair finishing 10 minutes after
McIlroy and Hollamby, and four minutes ahead of the rest of the women’s field.
After a slow start due to the head winds that saw a number of splits in the masters men’s field, it all came back
together for the combative sprint points at 31 kilometres that saw an Craig Domigan’s Cycle Surgery Anzco Craft Embassy
team try to set him up to build on his lead in the combative competition.
Rowlands managed to sneak through on the inside to claim the points and not long after this effort Christchurch
Mitsubishi teammates Nathan Hood and Darrell Kircher and Ben Hillary (Armitage Williams) and McDonnell escaped
eventually building a three minute lead at the front of the masters race.
Rowlands was happy to watch from the main peloton until he attacked at the bottom of Kerrs Hill Road, with Grieve and
then Crawford managing to follow to make it a strong group of three. They held nothing back on the descent reaching
speeds of over 90 kilometres per hour, catching the leaders in the valley before the next climb.
Crawford applied the pressure with Rowlands, McDonnell and Grieve the only riders able to follow that saw Rowlands claim
more combative points and then taking the sprint to claim the overall win.
“I was pleased to get the result and ride well as I have been sick for two weeks,” Rowlands said. “But credit to team
Mitsubishi boys Darrell, Stu, Nathan and Steve for playing the cards right and also getting rewarded with teams win.”
Kircher was the first over 50 rider home winning a second bunch sprint containing six riders to finish fifth overall
while Grieve’s second place built on his 35 to 44 classification lead.
The series now moves to Canterbury, near Christchurch for the final two rounds on Saturday the 19th and Sunday 20th of
October. Sunday’s race is the iconic Hell of the South that features a number of gravel sections.
ENDS