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cs124
03-19-2006, 04:45 AM
some of you might have heard, we've got the Commonwealth Games going on down here in Melbourne at the moment...so this morning I meet up with the guys from the LBS for the regular Sunday ride and it turns out we're hosting some international visitors...the men's road teams from Belize and Cameroon!

OK, so Belize and Cameroon are not exactly cycling powerhouses, but that's cool. We all had fun and a bunch of us current and ex club level racers managed to (almost) keep up with these guys over a lumpy 80km course.

The coolest part of the ride was being escorted by two team vans with their hazard lights flashing the whole way...felt like king of the road.

Gratuitous Serotta content: one of the Belize riders was on an all Ti Concours...sweet bike.

We get back to the shop for coffee and some tall tales but the bros ask for directions for another circuit...seems like they needed to get in another 100 or so km. ;)

The Spider
03-20-2006, 01:07 AM
Now THAT is getting involved!

Sounds like a pretty good day.

One Sunday a mate drove support vehicle for a ride up black spur and lake mountain. We even replayed the "road to paris" starting scene at one point when the rain was joined by fog. being followed by cars with hazard lights is pretty cool.

for your sprint work....ride your bike on one of the blue "games lanes"...boy do the coppers chase hard!

cs124
03-20-2006, 01:51 AM
... We even replayed the "road to paris" starting scene at one point when the rain was joined by fog...


I love that bit, especially when Johan tells Lance that "the guy" has told him the road further up the mountain is closed. Lance gives him the look and says "who's this guy?" and keeps riding.

andy mac
03-20-2006, 08:30 PM
this sounds like fun:


Commonwealth Games riders race at club crit

By Mal Sawford

Riders from the Isle of Man, Jersey, Canada, Wales, Northern Ireland , Scotland and Malaysia have sharpened up for the Commonwealth Games by racing with the Carnegie Caulfield Cycling Club, Australia’s biggest racing club, over the past few weeks. Clearly they have enjoyed the experience, and with the time trial, MTB and road races now only days away, riders from England, New Zealand, Jamaica, the Bahamas, Guyana, the Cayman Islands, and Bermuda got in on the action at Glenvale Crescent, a 1.2 kilometre criterium circuit in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs.

As expected, the action in the ‘internationals’ race was fast and furious with many of the visitors fresh off the plane and keen to stretch their legs. British National Champion Russell Downing (DFL/cyclingnews) attacked early and often, and a strong Welsh squad all took their turn off the front of the field. Australian MTB medal chance Chris Jongewaard (Savings & Loans) ripped out some huge turns to keep the field in single file.

Julian Winn (Wales) joined locals Danny Kah and Nick Culvenor in a promising move at the thirty minute mark which Robin Reid (Marco Polo) tried to reach, but the bunch used him to leapfrog to the leaders. Pat Shaw (Giant/VIS), the leading rider in the host club’s summer series, counter attacked and held off the field for two laps before surrendering to the relentless chase. The final break of note saw Dale Appleby (Wales), Cam Carlysle (BikeNOW), Anwar Manan (Malaysia) and Shaw clear, but once again, within two laps the field regrouped. The Malaysian team, led by their flag bearer at the Comm Games opening ceremony Shahrulneeza Razali took control in the final two laps, setting up the sprint for their fast man, Mohd Jasmin.

A final lap flyer from local Mark Howard (O’Mara Cycles) wasn’t enough to upset the sprinters, and Jasmin duly delivered with an impressive finishing burst, ahead of Downing who made ground late to sneak in ahead of Winn and the best of the locals, Aaron Salisbury (HLP).

Russell Downing (DFL/Cyclingnews)
Photo ©: David O'Leary

A dozen of the Comm Games women joined the B Grade field, and made life unpleasant for those locals more used to a fast but steady pace. The girls from New Zealand, including Michelle Hyland, Sonia Foote and Rosara Joseph launched a succession of attacks, matched by similar aggression from Amy Moore (T-mobile/Canada) and Amy Hunt (England). Tess Downing (Drapac/Porsche Development Program) showed no sign of tiredness after a series of late nights in the Under 19 exhibition races at the Games, and stayed at the front of the big bunch, shoulder to shoulder with defending Games champion Nicole Cooke (Univega/Wales) and Helen Kelly (VIS).

Canadian trackies Gina Grain and Mandy Poitras opted for an easier ride at the back of the bunch, but Grain made her way up to the pointy end with little trouble at the call of three to go. In the final lap, Grain’s team mates positioned her perfectly to hit the lead 150 metres from the line, but she couldn’t match the horsepower of local sprinters Clint Van Beveren and Russell Collins and had to settle for third. Cooke was close behind in outright fifth, with Amy Hunt the third placed female finisher.