Tour de France Champion Dominates ChCh Cycling Festival
Denmark’s Linda Villumsen and Canterbury’s own Hayden Roulston illustrated their world class with dominant wins on day
one of Christchurch’s Armstrong Peugeot Festival of Cycling.
A record field of 1500 riders turned out in perfect conditions for the second annual Armstrong Peugeot Festival Of
Cycling. Today’s first leg of the weekend long event was a 75k race around the mountainous Lyttelton Harbour Bays. But
Roulston and Villumsen made short work of the course and top class competition.
Hayden Roulston has been hot news recently after shaking off a heart condition to win the national road title and the
Tour of Southland. This week he shook off a virus to claim yet another win. Roulston, who won silver on he track at the
Melbourne Commonwealth Games, spent three days in bed before lining up for the Armstrong Peugeot Harbour Ride this
morning. But once the race was underway he showed no signs of anything other than wanting to get on with the job.
The early kilometres from McCormack’s Bay through Cashmere to Halswell were a tactical affair as the star-studded field
of Olympians, Commonwealth Games medallists, world champions and national reps sized one another up. Roulston was active
on the front but once the race hit the Old Tai Tapu Road, after 25k, it was a select threesome of national rep Marc Ryan
(Timaru), Commonwealth Games bronze medallist Hayden Godfrey (ChCh) and Wellington champion Dan Waluszewski that shook
things up.
This breakaway stayed away all the way up Gebbies Pass, with Ryan taking the King Of The Mountain sprint from
Waluszewski. But behind them Roulston and Athens Olympian Heath Blackgrove (Waimate) hammered up and down Gebbies Pass
to join the break at the 50k mark. As they started the rolling hills through Lyttleton Harbour Commonwealth Games bronze
medallist Gordon McCauley also bridged across, and with six riders working together the winner was definitely going to
come from his bunch.
Roulston, however, decided the winner was going to be him and simply rode away. “He decided he wanted to go it alone and
just took off,” said Blackgrove after the race. “Gordon McCauley and I tried to stay close but he went again on Evans
Pass.”
Roulston attacked even harder up and down Evans Pass, clocking 95k per hour on the descent in to Sumner, to open up a 70
second lead with 5k to ride. Even a costly wrong turn just 1.5k from the finish line couldn’t deny him the win as he
cruised across the line with arms out-stretched in 1hr 55min 03secs.
Roulston was pleased with his form after being bed ridden all week. “I was feeling ok on Gebbies Pass and a few of us
started catching the breakaway, so I decided it was time to go,” he said. “I really hit it hard on Evans Pass because
the run in down through Sumner is so fast I knew if I stayed away up Evans they’d have trouble pegging me back.”
Behind Roulston, Gordon McCauley out sprinted Heath Blackgrove for second place in 1hr 55min 56secs. Just under a minute
further back Commonwealth Games mountain biker Clinton Avery illustrated that he’s just as at home on the road to out
sprint the chase bunch.
Not too far behind them, however, came Denmark’s Linda Villumsen. As expected of the current women’s Tour de France
champion, Villumsen dominated the woman’s race, clocking 2hrs 03min 13secs. But the race for line honours turned to out
to be unexpectedly close.
Villumsen illustrated her class by managing to hold on to the lead bunch for the first half of the race. Some of New
Zealand’s top men were suitably impressed with the 21-year-old woman riding beside them. When Villumsen won the 2005
European Time Trial title she was earmarked as a rising talent, but this year’s win in the 2006 Route de France Feminine
(the women’s Tour de France) confirmed her as an international star.
In Christchurch she matched the top men for half of the Armstrong Peugeot Harbour Ride before slipping behind on the 5k
climb up Gebbies Pass. She was then forced to ride solo around the tough Lyttelton bays and over Evans Pass before being
picked up by the second bunch with just 5k to go.
In that bunch was well performed Wellingtonian Gina Waibl, who duly took the Tour de France champion on in the closing
kilometres. Villumsen tucked in behind hoping to recover for a final sprint. Waibl led out over the final 200m and
looked to have the measure of the Dane. But the experienced gained from racing the world’s best on a weekly basis shone
through as Villumsen flashed past in the final few metres to claim the win.
“That was a hard ride,” said Villumsen at the finish line. “I was alone for 20k and I could see a bunch catching me and
I just hoped there were no women in it.”
Gina Waibl smiled ruefully on the finish line: “I’m from Christchurch originally so I know the course and I knew to save
something for the hills. I could see we were catching Linda, but she was too fast in the sprint.”
Villumsen and Waibl will get a rematch tomorrow in the Armstrong Peugeot City Criterium, a multi-lap race around
Christchurch’s Oxford Street café district. The elite men and women are racing for the New Zealand Criterium title.
Villumsen and Waibl face defending national criterium champion Marina Duvnjak, while Hayden Roulston faces a whose-who
of New Zealand cycling.
Favourite is defending national criterium champion Hayden Godfrey (ChCh). The Commonwealth Games bronze medallist
finished 10th today but was saving himself for the criterium, a format where he is considered among the best in the
world. Godfrey will be looking for his 14th national title tomorrow and will have the advantage of the services of his
Subway Cycling Team, who will work exclusively to aid his criterium title defence. But riders like Hayden Roulston,
Gordon McCauley and Olympians Heath Blackgrove and Tim Gudsell (Te Awamutu) are hungry for their first national
criterium title.
The Armstrong Peugeot City Criterium starts from 10:45am outside Rydges Hotel on Oxford Terrace. As well as the
international racing there are recreational events, penny farthing races and the Celebrity Tandem event for the
Armstrong Peugeot Festival of Cycling charity, Cure Kids NZ.
Ends