Simon Gerrans of GreenEdge, the only Australian to have won a stage in each of cyling’s three Grand Tours, is the country’s new national road race champion. It is the first time that the 31-year-old former Team Sky rider has won the title.
In what organisers described as a “brutal” race in which only 23 of the 140 starters went into the 16th and final lap of the 10-kilometre circuit in Buninyong, near Ballarat, Victoria, Gerrans outsprinted Lampre-ISD’s Matthew Lloyd, who finished second, and Team Sky’s Richie Porte, third, to take the green and gold jersey.
The trio crossed the line more than a minute ahead of their closest pursuers.
"This is such an honour, it is far and above one of my proudest moments in cycling and to now [I get to] be crowned Australian champion for the next 12 months, and to be able to wear the green and gold through all the big races in Europe," Gerrans said afterwards.
"I just capped off some great team work from GreenEdge today, I am so proud of all of the guys," continued the GreenEdge rider, who went on the attack on the final climb of Mount Buninyong, only Porte and Lloyd able to go with him.
"The way the race unfolded didn't really go to plan, but it went to plan that I won it," he reflected. "I was going to try and save as much as I could for the last few laps of the race, but as it turned out, the race was blown to pieces after about 50 kilometres.
"Then with a couple of laps to go, Cameron Meyer [his GreenEdge team mate] who was out the front ran out of gas and it became an even playing field as we had the same amount of guys at the front as a lot of other teams, so it was pretty much every team for itself and we lost our advantage.
"I have done a lot of hard work over the past couple of months to start the season in good shape, so that's why it is such a thrill that all that hard work has paid off with a win." Gerrans went on.
Initially, Gerrans thought that the Team Sky rider who had set off in pursuit of him was CJ Sutton, which might have posed him more of a challenge in the sprint.
"It was only about five hundred metres before the line when I realised that it was Richie Porte, so I was a little less worried knowing it was him," he revealed. "Coming to the finish after a long tough race like that one with a time triallist and a climber, I knew I had a bit of a kick on me to finish off a race like that, so I was confident coming to the line."
Today’s victory is the first for GreenEdge’s men’s team, and comes 24 hours after Amanda Spratt of GreenEdge-AIS won the women’s title.
Gerrans thanked his team mates for their help during the race, in which they helped chase down a series of breaks, before GreenEdge's own Cameron Meyer went off the front and stayed there for 30 kilometres before he ran out of steam with two laps still to race.
"It is such a great way to start a season with a new team and some big races here in Australia to get the season under way, I was really motivated to start the season in good shape," Gerrans said.
"It was a race that had everything in it we just really tried to dominate the race with numbers at GreenEDGE and try to have guys in the breakaway all day long." He concluded.
The Australian National Championships conclude on Tuesday with the men’s and women’s elite and under-23 time trials.
Help us to fund our site
We’ve noticed you’re using an ad blocker. If you like road.cc, but you don’t like ads, please consider subscribing to the site to support us directly. As a subscriber you can read road.cc ad-free, from as little as £1.99.
If you don’t want to subscribe, please turn your ad blocker off. The revenue from adverts helps to fund our site.
If you’ve enjoyed this article, then please consider subscribing to road.cc from as little as £1.99. Our mission is to bring you all the news that’s relevant to you as a cyclist, independent reviews, impartial buying advice and more. Your subscription will help us to do more.
Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.
So one race in a Greenedge shirt and he's already more-or-less matched what he achieved over 2 years for Team Sky, where he got the overall in Tour of Denmark last year.
Comes across as a decent guy though, so best of luck to him. There are a LOT of classy Australian riders in the peleton right now, so it was a good win - even though the Ballarat course more-or-less eliminates the hopes of any of the quick finishers.
Good to see Matt Lloyd on form too - some people wrote him off.
Ugh, good point. Presumably they must get an 'off-season' at some point though. Perhaps Road.cc need to collate the data and produce a graph showing us the performance trends to demonstrate?!
Just occurred to me what a funny (ie endless) racing year the Aussie and indeed other Southern Hemisphere top pros enjoy. Just at the point where the majority of WorldTour riders can relax *a bit* in the run up to Christmas, they need to maintain their edge for what is obviously, in the case of this Australian championship, a very competitive event.
Add new comment
7 comments
So one race in a Greenedge shirt and he's already more-or-less matched what he achieved over 2 years for Team Sky, where he got the overall in Tour of Denmark last year.
Comes across as a decent guy though, so best of luck to him. There are a LOT of classy Australian riders in the peleton right now, so it was a good win - even though the Ballarat course more-or-less eliminates the hopes of any of the quick finishers.
Good to see Matt Lloyd on form too - some people wrote him off.
Ugh, good point. Presumably they must get an 'off-season' at some point though. Perhaps Road.cc need to collate the data and produce a graph showing us the performance trends to demonstrate?!
Just occurred to me what a funny (ie endless) racing year the Aussie and indeed other Southern Hemisphere top pros enjoy. Just at the point where the majority of WorldTour riders can relax *a bit* in the run up to Christmas, they need to maintain their edge for what is obviously, in the case of this Australian championship, a very competitive event.
Good start to the year for him. Must be a thrill to race a whole season in stripes for your country or the world.
His GreenEdge team mates did a great job for him, have a look here
http://youtu.be/MIAu1lJHz64
http://road.cc/content/forum/49995-australian-road-national-championship
Ahem. Sorry that slipped in there.
Now clarified in article - GreenEdge's own Cam Meyer went on a solo attack after they'd reeled in the earlier ones.
Gerrans thanked his team mates for their help during the race, in which they chased down breaks including 30km effort from ???
who exactly?