Tour de Berne World Cup, Switzerland
23 April 2006 - 120km
(6 laps x 20km)
The Tour de Berne world cup course consisted of a 20km circuit
that we did 6 times. The only major climb was 5km from the start
so I did a few fast intervals to make sure my legs were ready
to go hard from the start. I felt tired all over as I warmed up
which I tried to ignore. I still don't think I was fully adjusted
to the time zone change.
The entire race was fast and aggressive. Within 1 minute of the
start, the field was racing at 50km/hr as everyone tried to get
to the front by the base of the climb. The climb wound its way
up through a little village for 1.5km and was approximately 8%
in steepness. Points were awarded to the first 3 riders to reach
the summit each lap so the pace was on as the climbers fought
for points.
Tmobile's objective was to protect Ina Teutenberg, the leader
of the world cup series, however Swiss based team, Bigla were
looking for their first win in the their own backyard, and launched
countless attacks all day. The fast pace saw many riders struggling
after 3 laps. Amber Neben (Buitenpoort Flexpoint) attacked after
three and a half laps and held a significant gap which forced
Tmobile and Univega teams to chase.
I was gapped from the main field on lap 4 and as I chased through
the cars, the convoy of team cars came to an abrupt stop, completely
blocking the road. I narrowly avoided rear ending a car and had
to unclip and wait. I couldn't get through anywhere. Once the
cars moved, I resumed my chase for the next 5km but ahead of me,
on a fast technical descent, there had been a crash so when I
got there, the road was again blocked with team cars and I was
forced to a stop.
I looked beyond the crash and saw the main field about 1km ahead
stretched out into a single line. I knew my race was over. A group
of 8 of us chased hard but we never made it back. We caught many
other dropped riders and rode to the finish in a group of 40 riders.
Unfortunately we were all time cut as we finished outside the
5% allowance of the winners time.
The Univega team caught Neben (Buitenpoort Flexpoint) on the
fifth time up the climb. The strong climbers including my teammate
Annette Beutler (Elk Haus) and Nicole Brandli (Bigla Cycling Team)
continued to power up the climb splitting the field with only
20 girls making it over in the front group. Left behind was World
Cup leader Ina Teutenberg (T-Mobile). The T-Mobile team chased
after the climb and got Teutenberg back as they reached the finish
line with one lap to go.
On the final climb, the climbers attacked hard again with Beutler
(Elk Haus) earning enough points to win the mountains jersey.
Only 17 girls made it over the top and the Bigla team continued
their attacks. One by one they went making the pace really fast
until the finish. Nicole Cooke (Univega) was responsible from
chasing a lot of the Bigla attacks and also attacked herself,
but it was the attack from Zoulfia Zabirova (Team Bigla) that
worked.
Zabirova did another successful last minute attack that has
seen her win many races this way. With 1km to go, she found picked
the right moment and rode solo to the finish, taking out the fifth
round of the Women's World Cup Series. Coming in the take the
sprint for second was Wood, followed by Olga Slyusareva (Rus)
Russian National Team and team mate, Annette Beutler finished
8th to now move up to 6th position in the overall world cup series.
But the big news is that Nicole Cooke managed to win enough points
to take the lead in the World Cup series with Oenone Wood moving
into second place and Teutenberg slipping back to third.
Round 6 - Castilla y Leon World Cup, Spain is scheduled for 7
May 2006.
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