Canadian Cyclist

 

July 12/09 22:35 pm - Tour de Delta: Stage 2


Posted by Editoress on 07/12/09
 

Pinfold, Anderson, Jazz Apple continue to shine at BC Superweek

A lot of things changed for Andrew Pinfold at BC Superweek this year.

The final result at the Tour de Delta Road Race wasn’t one of them.

Pinfold put himself in a four-man break early in the last 8-kilometre lap, then sprinted to victory down the long final straightaway to claim his third-straight White Spot Road Race on a windy Sunday, completing the 140-kilometre race in three hours, 18 minutes and 57.9 seconds.

“I went as hard as I could over the top and was cramping a little bit but was able to get rid of it and was able to take the kick,” said Pinfold, a North Vancouver native racing for California-based Ouch Pro Cycling.

Pinfold finished just ahead of Ryan Anderson (Kelly Benefit Strategies), reversing the order from a photo finish in the Brenco Criterium Saturday night. American Morgan Schmitt (BISSELL Pro Cycling), who led the break early in the last lap, was third, while Will Routley (Jelly Belly Pro Cycling), who started the Tour de Delta by winning Friday’s Prologue, was fourth.

“The last lap everyone put their heads down,” said Pinfold, who also won a $2,500 crowd prime lap in Saturday’s Criterium. “Ryan, Will and myself were top-3 in the overall, so we weren’t interested in screwing around, and Morgan was looking to move up so we worked really well together.”

While the face atop the podium was familiar, the path Pinfold took to get there was a lot different. After winning the last two races as part of a deep Symmetrics team that dominated BC Superweek before folding after last year, Pinfold returned as part of California-based Ouch Pro Cycling.

Instead of a full team, Pinfold only had Ouch teammate Roman Kilun for support. Instead of Anderson working for him, he had to go head-to-head against him in a sprint. And then there was the gusting wind.

“It was so windy. We’ve never had a Tour de Delta like this,” said Pinfold.

Neither has Anderson, who worked hard for his Symmetrics teammates in past years. This time he had Zach Bell, a Canadian Olympian who also moved from Symmetrics to the Minneapolis-based Kelly Benefits team, working for him. The result was Anderson winning Tour de Delta’s overall title ahead of Pinfold and Routley, another ex-Symmetrics teammate.

“Last year with Symmetrics we won the overall but I was the workhorse,” said Anderson, a Vancouver native. “This is a new feeling for me. To get the victory and the stage win (Saturday), it’s a great feeling. I do a lot of work for the team so when I get to win like this it is awesome for me.”

Not that there weren’t some anxious moments.

Early in the race, which started with four and a half laps in North Delta, a strong group of 16 riders that included Pinfold, Bell and ProTour rider Dominique Rollin (Cervelo TestTeam) broke away. They stayed ahead as the race made its way through nasty crosswinds in the flats, and crossed into Tsawwassen to finish with 10 laps of the final 8-kilometre circuit.

Two laps later that gap was bridged, but a group of five counterattacked quickly. With five laps left, the breakaway, which included two-time New Zealand Olympian, Peter Latham (BISSELL Pro Cycling), Jim Camut (Land Rover-ORBEA) and locals Tim Abercrombie (Garneau Evolution), Steven Villalobos (Specialized Dizzy Cycles), and Justin Kerr (Liquid Fitness) had opened a two-minute gap on the chase group filled with top names.

“I was definitely worried, we were at 40 kilometres to go and it was about two minutes and I didn’t realize they were that far out there,” Anderson said. “So Zach had to calm me down and assure me we could get it back.”

Led by Bell, Pinfold and Rollin, the chase group knocked 30 seconds off the lead each time around the course, and everyone was back together for the final lap. When Schmitt took off towards the big hill just as that bell lap started, the 21-year-old Anderson knew he had to stay with him.

“We knew it was going to be fast,” said Anderson, who also won Top Young Rider. “I just had to bury myself to stay on his wheel.”

Rollin, who was making his return to competitive cycling after getting mononucleosis in late-April, won a bunch sprint among the chase group to finish fifth. The Quebec native and six-time Canadian National champion is returning to his Swiss-based Cervelo team and the European racing circuit this week.

As for that five-man break, Camut can console himself with winning King of Mountain, a points-based award for the top riders each climb up the grueling hill just past the finish line. Kerr was rewarded with the Top Sprinter jersey, and retaining his lead in the ongoing BC Cup series.

There was no such variety among winners in the 85-kilometre women’s race as New Zealand-based Jazz Apple Cycling swept the podium, a repeat of their 1-2-3 finish in the Brenco Criterium the night before.

Sunday it was 28-year-old Kiwi Marina Dubnjak who broke away from the group about 800 meters away from the final corner, sprinting to victory down a long final straightaway despite a fierce headwind.

“It just sort of happened,” Dubnjak said of her long break. “(Team leader) Susy (Pryde, a two-time New Zealand Olympian) bridged a gap and I just counterattacked. I didn’t look back. All I could hear was my team yelling in the radio ‘go, go, go’ and I went so hard I thought I was going to pass out. But it was so worth it. I can’t believe I pulled it off. It was cool.”

Dubnjak finished in two hours, 29 minutes and 31.3 seconds, less than two seconds ahead of teammates Steph Roorda and Dotsie Bausch, who won a sprint just ahead of 25 other riders to complete the sweep.

Jazz Apple’s Lauren Ellis, who won Saturday’s criterium ahead of Bausch and Roorda, finished in the group to protect her Tour de Delta overall title. Duvnjak also won the Queen of the Mountain competition, while Jazz Apple teammate Malindi MacLean was the top women’s sprinter.

The only thing Jazz Apple didn’t win was Friday’s Prologue, which was claimed by Calgary native Laura Brown (Local Ride Racing), who finished third in the overall and also took the lead in the BC Cup series.

After that, it was all Jazz Apple, including Ellis winning Top Young Rider.

“I am absolutely stoked to be a part of it,” said Duvnjak, who has been racing for 13 years, including recent stints in Europe, but is in her first year with Jazz Apple. “We worked extremely well together. Although I’ve been around the sport a long time, just to go with a plan, make it work and actually come out with it, this is the first year I’ve had a chance to do this. We’re all absolutely buzzing. I’m going to smile all night tonight.”

Duvnjak’s first taste of BC Superweek has something to do with that too.

“For me this is the best I’ve been at,” she said. “Europe is huge but the excitement about the riders is nowhere near close to this, nothing, unless you’re in the Tour de France. The crowds were just amazing here. I heard about BC Superweek in 2001 when I raced in America for three months. The girls spoke about it being so much fun and heaps of money, so I’d heard about, it but I’m so glad I got the opportunity to experience it.”

BC Superweek continues is the 30th anniversary of the historic Tour de White, another three-stage race running from July 17 to 19.

Report by Kevin Woodley, Media Relations coordinator, Tour de Delta, Tour de White Rock

Stage 2: White Spot Road Race

Women
1 Marina Duvnjak (NZl) Jazz Apple Cycling Team 2:29:31.3
2 Steph Roorda (Can) Jazz Apple Cycling Team 2:29:33.5
3 Dotsie Bausch (NZl) Jazz Apple Cycling Team
4 Chelsea Bilsbarrow (Can) Local Ride Racing
5 Leah Guloien (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
6 Robin Secrist (USA) Veloforma
7 Tiffany Pezzulo (USA) DFT p/b Treads
8 Shailie Sanbrooks (Can) Independent
9 Heather Kay (Can) ERTC/Revolution
10 Amy Herlinveaux (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
11 Lisa Howard (Can) Escape Velocity / DEVO
12 Andrea Bunnin (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
13 Gillian Moody (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
14 Laura Brown (Can) Local Ride Racing
15 Shoshauna Laxson (USA) Local Ride Racing
16 Karen Watson (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
17 Marie-Claude Gagnon (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
18 Rachel Canning (Can) Escape Velocity / DEVO
19 Sarah Nathan (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
20 Lisa Dorian (Can) Mighty Riders
21 Kristine Brynjolfson (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
22 Rachel Mcbride (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
23 Malingly Maclean (NZl) Jazz Apple Cycling Team
24 Lawren Ellis (NZl) Jazz Apple Cycling Team
25 Jessica Hannah (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
26 Sarah Stewart (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
27 Naomi Cooper (Can) Escape Velocity / DEVO
28 Stephanie Ossenbrink (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team all s.t.
29 Susy Pryde (USA) Jazz Apple Cycling Team 2:30:37.3
30 Sarah Mcmillan (Can) Chicks Cycling Club 2:31:30.3
31 Gillian Carleton (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team 2:32:00.0
32 Sara Laliberte (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport s.t.
DNF Leslie Vice (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
DNS Bonnie Catlin (Can) Chicks Cycling Club
DNS Susan Smith (Fra) VC Riomois
 
Pro 1/2 Men
1 Andrew Pinfold (Can) Ouch Pro Cycling 3:18:57.9
2 Ryan Anderson (Can) Kelly Benefit Strategies
3 Morgan Schmitt (USA) Bissell Pro Cycling LLC both s.t.
4 Will Routley (Can) Jelly Belly Pro Cycling Team 3:19:00.9
5 Dominique Rollin (Can) Cervelo Test Team 3:19:23.9
6 Cody O'Reilly (USA) Bissell Pro Cycling LLC
7 Evan Elken (USA) Land Rover-ORBEA
8 Tyler Trace (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
9 Pablo Araya (CRc) Specialized Dizzy Cycles
10 Mike Sidic (Can) Garneau Evolution
11 Sean Mazich (USA) Team Waste Management
12 Scott Stewart (USA) Team Waste Management
13 Justin Kerr (NZl) Liquid Fitness
14 Tim Abercrombie (Can) Garneau Evolution
15 Zach Bell (Can) Kelly Benefit Strategies
16 Nieves Carrasco (CRc) Specialized Dizzy Cycles
17 Christiaan De Vries (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
18 Aaron Tuckerman (NZl) Land Rover-ORBEA
19 Steven Villalobos (CRc) Specialized Dizzy Cycles
20 Nic Hamilton (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale all s.t.
21 Jim Camut (USA) Land Rover-ORBEA 3:19:43.3
22 Roman Kilun (USA) Ouch Pro Cycling 3:20:01.7
23 Peter Latham (NZl) Bissell Pro Cycling LLC 3:22:50.6
24 Jacob Schwingboth (Can) Garneau Evolution 3:23:36.4
25 Phil Elsasser (USA) Fanatik Bike Co 3:23:37.4
26 Cyrus Kangarloo (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona s.t.
27 Adrian Hegyvary (USA) Hagens Berman Cycling 3:27:11.6
28 Carson Miller (USA) Land Rover-ORBEA
29 Kevin Noiles (Can) TREK - Red Truck Aleboth s.t.
30 Tim Sherstobitoff (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team 3:29:09.9
31 Dan Skinner (Can) Garneau Evolution
32 Aaron Schooler (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
33 Chris Mcneil (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
34 Dustin Andrews (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
35 Larry Warbasse (USA) Team Waste Management
36 Zachary Taylor (Can) Fresh Air
37 Dan Macdonald (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
38 Benjamin Bradshaw (USA) Team Waste Management 3:29:12.9
39 Marvin Guzman (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
40 David Talbott (USA) Team Waste Management
41 Garrett Mcleod (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
42 Spencer Smitheman (Can) NOW-MS Society
43 Bobby Sweeting (USA) Land Rover-ORBEA
44 Carter Jones (USA) Team Waste Management all s.t.
45 Nathan Macdonald (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale 3:29:16.3
46 Anthony Steenbergen (Can) Team Calgary Cycle p/b TOPGEAR 3:29:17.7
47 Jeff Sherstobitoff (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team 3:29:21.9
DNF Mike Northey (NZl) Land Rover-ORBEA
DNF Roman Vanuden (NZl) Land Rover-ORBEA
DNF Josh Bartlett (USA) Land Rover-ORBEA
DNF Stevie Cullinan (USA) Team Waste Management
DNF Matt Potma (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
DNF Marcel Aarden (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
DNF Charlie Bryer (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
DNF Shawn Goulet (Can) Team H&R Block - Kona
DNF Owen Harrison (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
DNF Trevor Haaheim (Can) Total Restoration Cycling Team
DNF Sebastian Salas (Can) Specialized Dizzy Cycles
DNF Jamie Sparling (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Dave Vukets (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Dave Brooks (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Kevin Thorpe (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Andrew Kyle (Can) Garneau Evolution
DNF Guy Biggar (Can) Garneau Evolution
DNF Jesse Reams (Can) Garneau Evolution
DNF Christopher Daifuku (USA) Hagens Berman Cycling
DNF Kenyon Campbell (USA) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
DNF Scott Laliberte (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
DNF Matthew O'hagan (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
DNF Ben Chaddock (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
DNF Curtis Dearden (Can) Westwood Cycle/Cannondale pb Vision Sport
DNF John Perkins (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
DNF Wendell Challenger (Can) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
DNF Adam Thuss (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Chris Christie (Can) TREK - Red Truck Ale
DNF Troy Henry (Can) Independent
DNF Vaughn Hildebrand (Can) IRC p/b Cameron Law
DNF Jason Fluckiger (Can) RepsWest
DNF Matthew Martyniuk (Can) Sprinters Club de Nice
DNF Joseph King (USA) Team Oregon
DNF David Gillam (Can) Independent
DNF Shane Martin (Can) Steed Cycles
DNF Cody Campbell (Can) Trek-Livestrong U23
DNF Rory Mcadams (USA) Glotman Simpson Cycling Team
DNS Kirk O'Bee (USA) Bissell Pro Cycling LLC

 


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