World Mountainbike Championships Final Day Wrap
4th September 2011
World Mountainbike
Championships Final Day Wrap; Blenkinsop Wins Elite
Bronze
Sam Blenkinsop (Wanganui) saved his season’s
best performance for the most important race of the year
today, winning the bronze medal at the infamous Champery
Downhill course at the 2011 World Championship event. Right
through this year’s World Cup season, the Elite Mens
competiton has been fierce and a level up from previous
years – Blenkinsop hasn't raced to the form he had
displayed in 2009 and 2010 and took great comfort in being
the first NZ mountainbike athlete to stand on an Elite World
Championships podium today “Initially I was dissappointed
in my run – a couple of crucial mistakes lost me time and
the silver medal today, but the bronze medal is fine by me.
I'm happy to keep pushing the level – winning the first
New Zealand Elite World Cup and now standing on this World
Championship Elite podium, I'm OK with that”
The
day started tough for the NZ Downhill team, with the
expected wet weather kicking in right before the start of
the Junior Women’s race. While the ladies were prepared
with set-ups for muddy and wet conditions, the speed with
which the Champery course deteriorated caught most starters
by surprise. Within minutes the course became treacherous,
with none of the Junior Women going clean for their race
runs. NZ's fastest seed Sarah Atkin off her bike three times
during her run, on what would be termed a blind run given
the course conditions – Atkin 5th and the best of the
kiwis. British World Cup sensation Manon Carpenter won the
rainbow stripes this year in her first attempt.
The
Junior men were next away with the rain continuing to fall.
Long delays with the race start proved difficult to manage,
with most of the Junior Men’s field corralled at the
chairlift base station with limited shelter from the
weather's misery. When racing finally resumed, hopes were
high for success with Nelson's Reuben Olorenshaw 4th to last
starter after his fast qualification run. However,
Olorenshaw couldn't go clean, with lost time due to a couple
of very minor slides off the race line, eventually finishing
8th. Defending World Champion Troy Brosnan (Australia) won
again, and was in a league of his own today in the most
challenging conditions faced this year during the World Cup
season.
Amy Laird wasn't able to convert her
confidence today into a top of the field result in the Elite
Womens, struggling with the conditions and finishing towards
the back of the field. France's Emmeline Ragot won the World
Championship title for her first time today, yet another
European athlete who has used the NZ summer race season to
boost her development and form in previous years.
The
main event on the programme today was the Elite Mens
Downhill race. The weather continued to stew, with rain
falling throughout the 100 strong start list – becoming
more and more intense the closer the start order got to the
fastest ranked riders. Mat Scoles (Alexandra) was the first
NZ athlete to take on the Champery course, and spent some
time in the hot seat as second fastest rider at that stage
of the race. Blenkinsop was on a typically charging run
which took him to the second place position, before Justin
Leov (Dunedin) took the start - Leov went into his race run
with an 80% strategy in place, planning not to push too hard
but to ride cleanly to a competitive time. Things went well
until a slight front wheel stall sent Leov to the deck, and
from there it was all damage control. Last Kiwi starter was
Brook MacDonald (Napier). The Bulldog has shown a talent for
pushing hard in the first half of races he has done well in
this season, but today was off the pace at the first split
and simply couldn't find the gas to gain those lost seconds
in the last half of the course, finishing 9th.
But
the day belonged to British athlete Danny Hart. Hart
audaciously attacked from the very first corner in a
strategy that would either end in disaster or his first
Championship title. Hart displayed the type of brilliance
today that will become the stuff of legend in this sport, on
a course that couldn't have been in worse condition and
against a quality of field that has been dicing closely all
year. Hart was so fast and confident that he even had time
for one of his characteristic 'relaxing' whips over a
massive double jump at the bottom of the course – the huge
crowd knew they had witnessed a sublime and almost arrogant
performance as Hart crossed the line. Five starters were
still to come, but it was clear to all that Hart had done
more than enough to win, when World Cup champion and final
starter Aaron Gwin (USA) slipped off course in the bottom
half. Blenkinsop proudly took the third step on the podium
today, and this backs up his silver medal at the 2006 World
Championships as a Junior. Blenkinsop will now return to his
home base of Wanganui for the NZ summer, to firstly take a
break from racing and then to plan his assault on the 2012
World Cup season.
The Downhill wraps up the NZ MTB
Team's 2011 World Championship campaign, in what is the
teams most successful campaign yet. Anton Cooper's silver
medal in the Junior Mens Cross Country race, Rosara Joseph's
7th in Elite Women's Cross Country, together with
Blenkinsop's bronze today, and a raft of other top ten
results highlights NZ's capacity to punch above its weight
yet again in a true World Championship level sporting
event.
ends