Vink Holds on to Take Out 2018 Tour of Southland
Vink Holds on to Take Out 2018 Tour of Southland
For
immediate release
3/11/18 - After nine attempts, and
after being jilted twice at the altar, Michael Vink is
finally a Tour of Southland champion.
It was third
time lucky for the lanky Cantabrian after finishing
runner-up in both 2016 and 2017, Vink clinging onto a 16sec
lead during the final, frantic 77km stage from Winton to
Invercargill this afternoon.
“I’m pinching myself.
I’ve been close so many times and to finally finish it off
in the way we did - defending the yellow jersey for three
days,” Vink said.
“We lost a guy after Bluff,
which was unfortunate, so for five guys to defend it against
such a quality field was fantastic.”
Hamish Bond
finished second overall, trailing by 16sec, with Sam Gaze
third at 2min 59sec, while defending champion James Piccoli
had to settle for fourth at 3min 22sec.
It was
anything but a procession on the final day of the SBS
Bank-sponsored race, with Vink seeing an overnight lead of
1min 32sec decimated by a fantastic individual time trial by
Bond in Winton.
Like Bond, Vink is a national time
trial champion, and a four-time Winton time trial winner,
but he could do nothing to stop a determined Bond from
putting himself in a position to win the race.
“To
be honest, a gap was a gap. All I had to do was follow
Hamish’s wheel and if he had’ve gotten away he would
have won the tour - it didn’t matter if it was 18sec or
two minutes,” Vink said.
“I thought I had a really
good time trial but Hamish was next level and full credit to
him.”
The final stage into Invercargill was taken
out by Dylan Kennett, who had been challenging for a stage
win all week.
“I had to be patient. I had to take
second in Te Anau, then Gore, then the TT, and third in the
prologue. I was really hungry for it this afternoon,” he
said.
Southland’s Matt Zenovich, a stage winner on
Monday and tour leader for two days, completed a great week
by claiming the Sprint Ace classification, while Paul Odlin
was the race’s leading over 35 rider and Kia Motors-Ascot
Park Hotel took out the teams classification.
It was a
massive week for Vink’s WPC South-Joyride Apparel squad
with teammate Ethan Batt picking up both the King of the
Mountain and under 23 jerseys.
There will be little
time for Vink to reflect on the win, with both the Tour of
Tasmania and Pioneer mountainbike race later this month, but
now that he’s finally won Southland, he’s determined to
come back and defend the title.
“Hopefully now it
will come a bit easier. They say the first one is the
hardest, I’d love to come back and have more. I love this
race,” Vink said.
“There’s so much more than
just a bike race going on here, it’s a real event that the
whole of Southland gets behind, which is what makes it so
special.”