Le Tour du Grande Montréal 2002
| Monday 3rd June 2002 |
| Stage 1 - Individual Time Trial |
3.5km out and back on a narrow peninsula |
Conditions: 60°F (15°C) really strong winds |
The time trial was held on a peninsula that was only 200m wide. The course was
a narrow horse shoe shape, where we rode out the left side negotiating a left
hand 90 degree corner followed immediately by a right 90 degree corner in the
first 500m, then tackled a roaring head wind for 1km, turned at the top and came
home with a cross tailwind.
Genevieve Jeanson (RONA) rode the course in 3min57sec, averaging 45.3km/hr to
win the stage, while I came home in 55th place, clocking 4min28sec, an average
speed of 40.1km/hr. The field was 103 strong with the top 60 riders all riding
within 31 seconds of Jeanson. Dede Demet Murray (Talgo America) took 2nd place
while Clara Hughes (Sélection Provinciale du Québec) rode strongly
to finish 3rd.
| Monday 3rd June 2002 |
| Stage 2 - 50km Criterium |
50km - 50 laps of a 1km clockwise circuit |
Conditions: 68°F (18°C) light wind |
After resting for the afternoon, we packed the car and drove to Little Italy
to ride a fast and furious 50km evening criterium. The criterium was a 1km
square loop held in down town little Italy, where the home straight was lined
with restaurants and cafes. The sun was beginning to dip in the sky as we started
our race, shining straight into our eyes down the home straight. The sun glare and
the screaming fans thumping their hands on the metal barriers certainly added to
the excitement of the race.
There were dozens of sprint primes as well as time bonus primes which worked well
to keep the pace up. My legs felt back to normal today and I positioned myself
about 10th wheel the entire race watching Team T-mobile, Saturn and RONA fight
it out. I went with a few attacks on the back straight but each attempt by one
team was quickly neutralised by the others. My prediction of a sprint finish seemed inevitable.
With about 10 laps to go I lost my position a little and ended up about 18th wheel.
I needed to move up quickly but the pace had really picked up and the peloton had
become one single line. We were doing 55km/hr down the straights and almost as fast
through the corners. On the bell lap, on the 2nd last corner I was right on Andrea
Hannos's (RONA) wheel when she got bumped violently from the right causing her
to almost hit the gutter. She jumped on the brakes, while I did too, so I didn't end
up eating her back wheel, which caused us both to lose all our momentum. I salvaged
what I could and came home in 37th place.
My lesson well learnt from today is to position myself better so I can manoeuvre
away from those incidents without losing speed. Laura Van Gilder (Trek Plus
Volkswagen) won the criterium in 1hr10mins followed closely by Anna Millward
(Saturn) and Dede Demet Barry (Talgo America).
| Tuesday 4thJune 2002 |
| Stage 3 - 113km Road Race |
55km loop |
Conditions: 70°F (20°C) steady wind |
Todays, final road race stage started at 5pm in the evening in a town called Terribonne,
an hour north of Montréal. With a misinformed estimation of the driving time,
we got to the start with only 40mins to go, so we all moved frantically, getting bikes
organised and warming up but doing laps of the starting circuit.
The course commenced with 5 laps of a small 1km circuit, before we headed out to do a
technical and relatively flat 50km loop. We returned to the circuit, completed one lap
and then headed out around the same 50km, for a second time before returning to the
circuit and finish line. I was worried about a fast start and early attacks as any break
could set up the overall win with almost 70 riders only separated by 45 seconds. Luckily,
they neutralised the 5 laps and we watched in amusement as a Canadian racing car driver
mounted a bicycle and lead us around for the first lap.
After 5 laps they opened the circuit which ended the neutralised zone. I was sitting
midfield on the left side of the peloton and I saw the road narrow considerably and before
I knew it my front wheel was heading straight for the gutter. I tried to pop the front
wheel up but I twisted it and it skidded along the lip of the gutter and sent me sliding
sideways down the sidewalk. I landed heavily on my back, ripped my shorts and took some
skin off my hip and calf.
Ironically, there was another crash right beside me that both Petra and Hiroko were caught
up in. Hiroko jumped up quickly and got back into the peleton before any of us were even
up off the ground. I had someone help me get my chain back on, then I waited for Petra and
we did a team time trial back to towards the peloton. The peloton was out of sight but we
caught the caravan within a few minutes and then used the cars to thred our way back to
the peloton. The crash had buckled my back wheel so I fully released the back brake to
avoid any rubbing on the brake pads. Unfortunately the course was technical and had numerous
90 degree corners so it became interesting negotiating these without the back brake working
properly.
The race was being controlled by RONA, Talgo America, Saturn and
T Mobile with all teams
attacking each other. I got into a shortlived break with Amber Neben (T Mobile), a
French rider, and Catherine Powers (xxxxx) and Joan Wilson (Talgo America). We hovered at
15sec for about 4km but the active peloton soon brought us back. The pace picked up as we
approached the final circuit. The corner leading onto the circuit was tight and as predicted
someone took it too hard and slid across the road, taking several riders with her. The
fortunate 15 riders in front of this crash motored on towards the finish, while the rest
of us dodged the bodies and then did our best to close down the gap.
Laura Vangilder (USA) (Trek Plus Volkswagen) won in 2hrs42min, followed by Clara Hughes
(Sélection Provinciale du Québec) and Anna Millward (Saturn)
in third. I finished in 37th place, 10sec back.
In the overall classification, Laura Van Gilder (Trek Plus Volkswagen) won the tour, only
a second ahead of Dede Demet-Barry (Talgo America) and Clara Hughes
(Sélection Provinciale du Québec), respectively. I finished 44th, 49sec down.
Now we have a few days to get some rest in New Jersey, let the bruising heal and head to
Philadelphia for the First Union Liberty Classic.
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