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Tour de PEI - a few too many seconds
Our audacious plan didn't quite come off: a Selle Italia rider and I were going to go for the early break, lap the field, gain time. I would win the tour, and she would get the stage win that had so far eluded the professional team from Milano. So simple.
Alas, it was not to be. The 11 Canadians were doing their best to control the pace at the front (very remniscent of Cervelo Team Team last week in Tour de Montreal).
So Lauren and I rode the front 10 wheels at 43km/h and relentlessly attacked the bejesus out of Whitten and her 3rd placed rider on GC, in the hope we would demoralise them. Lauren ended up getting in the winning break, with 2 Italians, a Team Speacialised rider, and a Canadian National Team rider. The gap got out to 17s, and despite Loz' expert bike throwing skills, she was outdone for the stage win by the local.
Whitten had gained another 2s time bonus on the 1st intermediate sprint, and so finished the tour in yellow, 5s ahead of me, with her teammate Moriah MacGregor, 45s back in 3rd. We still held on to 4th (Jessie MacLean) and 7th (Amber Halliday) and so won the Teams Classification by 47s.
Australian rider Rochelle Gilmore (Lotto Belisol), won her 2nd points jersey in as many tours, and the South African Carla, Swart (MTN Energade) won the polka dot climber's jersey.
We're now enjoying the thrills of another cross-Canada bus trip, in the pouring rain and cold. We're swapping dvds, eating at bad fast food outlets and generally feeling sleep deprived. Amber, Carlee, Loz and Beth will fly to Varese tomorrow to enjoy some respite before the Giro Donne (women's Giro d'Italia), Jessie will head back to Philly, Davina to race some more domestic road races in the US and I'm heading home to Aus for some chilly weather and much needed family time. Oh, and REAL COFFEE!
June 9/Stage 3 - it don't get closer than this!
We were on the start line in Kensington, and hundreds of school children were wagging play lunch to wave us off, counting down from 10 to 1 in french. And I was reminded of how much more fun this is than being a doctor in a big hospital. I mean, no one ever counted down in french before we started ward rounds! Well, there was that one dermatologist with OCD...
Today was a mission: we were the leading team, with 3 riders in the top 7, and only 1s off the yellow jersey. It was 120km of rolling hills, QOM points, intermediate sprint points and winds. Winds from the left, the right and the front, and occasionally, winds from Greenland. There were a lot of teams with lots of interests, and that meant for an unpredictable 3 and a half hours.
After being vigilant at the front for the first 60km, I went over the top of the 2nd QOM in a good position and the field had split significantly. Sniffing an opportunity, I attacked, taking Rochelle Gilmore, a South African and a Fin rider with me. I drove the break for the next 6km to the 2nd intermediate sprint and we had a good gap on Whitten. A deal was made with the other girls (well, I told them I needed time, and knew I wouldn't outsprint Gilmore, so she got the 3s, I got 2s and moved in to yellow on the road.
Then we had the task of defending it for the next 50km, with Whitten and her teammate (3rd in GC) relentlessly attacking, and plenty of other teams trying to take advantage. After doing more homework on Whitten last night, we knew she is a classy rider. She was 2nd in the Omnium (an all rounder's event) at the World Track Championships this year behind Australian wunderkind, Josie Tomic and consistently places in the scratch and individual pursuit. Clearly, I was not going to outsprint her! So I stuck like clag to her wheel, covered everything and was supported beautifully by Lauren, Carlee, Amber and Jessie.
Poor Davina had suffered in a crash on a descent, and had managed to get back on and finish in a chase group, but there had been some serious injuries: World Champion blood was spilt - Kupfernagel used her nose to stop a chainring, thankfully, she is ok, but did not finish; the lovely Cherise Taylor (South African) looked like she'd taken on Mundine and lost; and a few Frenchies had let out a few blood curdling screams that may ring in our ears for days to come.
No time for breathing out just yet - there are still 2 stages to go!
June 8 - Time bonuses for locals....
Just a quick update:
Stage 1 finished in a bunch sprint, won by the Italian, Georgia Bronzini and Team Australia did a great job being in the mix and looking after me in the windy circuit race around Summerside.
Stage 2, the 14.5km ITT across the Confederation Bridge was held in more favourable conditions than last year (where the winner averaged 33km/h!)
I had a great day out: we modified the road bike up as best we could; I rode the super deep 1080's; I had Marv on the radio being cool, calm and collected; and I used the crazy cross/tail winds as best I could. I was the race leader until it was podium time, and then they discovered that my unofficial time was not official, and my actual time was in fact <1s behind the Canadian pursuit champion, Tara Whitten (Atlantic Cycling Center).
3rd place was her teammate, Moriah MacGregor and a fantastic result for our new teammate, Jessie MacLean in 4th place! Amber got 7th, Carlee 28th, Davina 34th and Lauren 36th. So, we are winning the the teams classification by 30s and are going to take on Atlantic Cycling Center with all our might and get my 1s back to get in yellow! (PS Hanka Kupfernagel was 1.40 down in 17th place, not a great day for her).
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