Saturday, April 27, 2024

World Road Championships 2012 – Day Three; U23 Time Trial World Championship

-

HomeInterviewsWorld Road Championships 2012 - Day Three; U23 Time Trial World Championship

The party’s over following the U23 Time Trial World Championship, there’s no more nice wee room in Valkenburg and ambling down for breakfast, with the patron asking if you’d like a fried egg to go with your rolls, cheese and ham.

Its camper van time – but at least I won’t have that four kilometre forced march to the press room, we can drive.

There were two races today, the junior time trial and the U23 time trial.

When you’re at the Worlds, you have to decide what you’re going to write about, bearing in mind what the reader wants to read.

No disrespect to the junior races but it’s not going to get most folks ‘clicking’ – so I allowed the junior race to run its course whilst I wrote up a piece on the Cauberg.

The Cauberg isn’t the biggest hill in the world, it’s not that steep or long, but it tears races apart – the TTT was a good example, there were riders getting fired out the back, left right and centre.

It’ll be the same on Sunday – no doubt.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
The Cauberg bridge.

The U23 time trial was a good race, the suspense held to the end with the Russian Anton Vorobyev upsetting the form book by beating pre-race favourite, Rohan Dennis.

The Danish rider Lasse Norman Hansen, who won the omnium at the London Olympics, was leading with another 21 riders still to start.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
Anton Vorobyev.
U23 Time Trial World Championship
Rohan Dennis.

It looked as if the Danes might dominate; he displaced team mate and long term leader Rasmus Sterebo, with last year’s silver medal winner, Rasmus Quaade still to come.

But board flat Copenhagen isn’t lumpy Limburg with those nasty hills; this course is about flexibility, not just battering a mega gear.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
Lasse Norman Hansen.

Albeit Hansen is a beast of a boy, at the Copenhagen Six Day back in February, our mechanic Dirk asked him what gear he wanted to use in the time trials – ‘50 x 13‘ said the Dane.

But you’re only 20 years-old’ pleaded Dirk, but Hansen got his way and duly won the time trial every night.

Hansen held the lead for a long time, right up until Aussie Damien Howson finished, just two seconds faster.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
Damien Howson.
Howson caused a stir by lying down in the road after his effort – but was soon up and chaperoned to the ‘hot seat.’

The rider who was expected to ‘do the biz’ came and went – Bob Jungels who’s had an excellent season, winning two top quality stage races.

He won the Fleche du Sud in Luxembourg and the Triptyque des Monts et Chateaux – both are death races.

I interviewed Jungels when he won the junior Worlds TT in 2010 and was struck by the level of professionalism around him.

Bob Jungels.

His website was as good if not better than most pros and he had a coaching team around him which would do Sky proud. But this wasn’t ‘his’ day.

And then it was Vorobyev, he looks like the Russian bears from the Milk Race days of yore.

But those boys wouldn’t want to ride a trendy Canyon TT bike (even though it does look like a re-badged Trek Speed Concept to me) they’d want battered gas tubing Colnagos.

The new Champion of the World is Russian!

It was apparent that Dennis wasn’t going to beat the Russian who was 51 seconds clear of Howson; and it was tight between the two Aussies.

If you look at the gap from second to third it was seven seconds, third to fourth was two, fourth to fifth nine and it’s like that right down the finish sheet – except for the gap between first and second, which was 44 seconds.

And Dennis is a quality boy, he’s Australian U23 road race and TT champion and rode with Rabo Continental last year – but didn’t enjoy the experience.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
I also managed a chat with Sylvain Dillier of Switzerland – he rode the six days last winter and is a strong rider.

Diller was impressive at Gent and Zurich in particular – but he’s good on the road, too.

He took a stage in the Tour de l’Avenir and held the jersey four three days.

Despite that, the big teams haven’t yet come knocking, it demonstrates the level you need to be at to have the pro teams chase you.

U23 Time Trial World Championship
The press conference with the podium placers.

And two good things about the camper; there’ll be no bars open until ‘yon time’ below my window – and the bucket motor won’t arrive in the small hours.

At least I hope not.

As we say here in Limburg, ‘tot straks.’

U23 Time Trial World Championship
See you tomorrow!

Results - World Road Championships 2012, U23 Time Trial World Championship


U23 Time Trial Result


1 Anton Vorobyev (Russian Federation) 0:44:09.02
2 Rohan Dennis (Australia) 0:00:44.39
3 Damien Howson (Australia) 0:00:51.12
4 Lasse Norman Hansen (Denmark) 0:00:53.28
5 Rasmus Christian Quaade (Denmark) 0:01:02.56
6 Marlen Zmorka (Ukraine) 0:01:09.42
7 Rasmus Sterebo (Denmark) 0:01:25.24
8 Jasha Sütterlin (Germany) 0:01:28.70
9 Sergey Chernetski (Russian Federation) 0:01:37.95
10 Tom Dumoulin (Netherlands) 0:01:40.78
11 Johan Le Bon (France) 0:01:50.26
12 Bob Jungels (Luxembourg) 0:01:52.92
13 Hugo Houle (Canada) 0:01:59.72
14 Yoann Paillot (France) 0:02:12.09
15 Gabriel Chavanne (Switzerland) 0:02:17.05
16 Yves Lampaert (Belgium) 0:02:19.25
17 Oleksandr Golovash (Ukraine) 0:02:26.80
18 Alexey Lutsenko (Kazakhstan) 0:02:31.61
19 Eduardo Sepulveda (Argentina) 0:02:40.89
20 Nathan Brown (United States of America) 0:02:41.60
21 Jasper Hamelink (Netherlands) 0:02:41.94
22 Daniil Fominykh (Kazakhstan) 0:02:45.30
23 Patrick Konrad (Austria) 0:02:46.09
24 Jakob Steigmiller (Germany) 0:02:48.80
25 Tsgabu Gebremaryam Grmay (Ethiopia) 0:02:49.91
26 Kevin De Jonghe (Belgium) 0:03:00.44
27 Lawrence Warbasse (United States of America) 0:03:08.34
28 Silvan Dillier (Switzerland) 0:03:09.08
29 Joseph Perrett (Great Britain) 0:03:09.30
30 Sean Patrick Downey (Ireland) 0:03:10.86
31 Daniel Turek (Czech Republic) 0:03:16.71
32 Tobias Ludvigsson (Sweden) 0:03:26.91
33 Andreas Hofer (Austria) 0:03:28.71
34 Omar Fraile Matarranz (Spain) 0:03:29.74
35 Hernando Bohorquez Sanchez (Colombia) 0:03:35.15
36 Louis Meintjes (South Africa) 0:03:42.48
37 James Oram (New Zealand) 0:03:43.95
38 Davide Martinelli (Italy) 0:03:50.26
39 Samuel Harrison (Great Britain) 0:04:07.29
40 Klemen Stimulak (Slovenia) 0:04:12.79
41 David Boily (Canada) 0:04:16.33
42 Andrei Holubeu (Belarus) 0:04:23.48
43 Marcos Jurado Rodriguez (Spain) 0:04:25.85
44 Mark Dzamastagic (Slovenia) 0:04:29.31
45 Jason Christie (New Zealand) 0:04:36.73
46 Soufiane Haddi (Morocco) 0:04:41.75
47 Alex Kirsch (Luxembourg) 0:04:42.42
48 Conor Dunne (Ireland) 0:04:46.77
49 Mattia Cattaneo (Italy) 0:04:51.15
50 Till Drobisch (Namibia) 0:05:15.64
51 Issiaka Cisse (Ivory Coast) 0:05:25.00
52 Tural Isgandarov (Azerbaijan) 0:05:44.66
53 Nikita Zharoven (Belarus) 0:05:55.50
54 Paulius Siskevicius (Lithuania) 0:05:57.04
55 Sarawut Sirironnachai (Thailand) 0:06:25.01
56 Quinten Winkel (Netherlands Antilles) 0:06:39.49
57 Reda Aadel (Morocco) 0:06:53.02
58 Carlos Eduardo Quisphe (Ecuador) 0:06:53.67
59 Piter Campero (Bolivia) 0:07:01.77
60 Manuel Andres Sanchez Cuevas (Dominican Republic) 0:07:04.53
61 Hillard Cijntje (Netherlands Antilles) 0:07:08.26
62 Johann Schwabik (Slovakia) 0:07:12.94
63 Hiroshi Tsubaki (Japan) 0:07:16.61
64 Maxim Rusnac (Republic of Moldova) 0:07:29.65
65 Julio Marcelo Paspuezan Carlozama (Ecuador) 0:07:50.10
66 Ulises Alfredo Castillo Soto (Mexico) 0:08:31.69
67 Stefan Petrovski (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia) 0:09:08.71
DNF Ramon Carretero (Panama)

Junior Time Trial Result


1 Oskar Svendsen (Norway) 0:35:34.75
2 Matej Mohoric (Slovenia) 0:00:07.04
3 Maximilian Schachmann (Germany) 0:00:11.83
4 Alexander Morgan (Australia) 0:00:12.60
5 Mathias Krigbaum (Denmark) 0:00:13.68
6 Nathan Van Hooydonck (Belgium) 0:00:19.37
7 Brent Luyckx (Belgium) 0:00:20.53
8 Mads Würtz Schmidt (Denmark) 0:00:21.75
9 Ryan Mullen (Ireland) 0:00:26.16
10 T.J. Eisenhart (United States of America) 0:00:26.29
11 Gregory Daniel (United States of America) 0:00:26.71
12 Marcus Fåglum-Karlsson (Sweden) 0:00:29.61
13 Szymon Rekita (Poland) 0:00:36.67
14 Dmitriy Rive (Kazakhstan) 0:00:44.34
15 Elie Gesbert (France) 0:00:48.24
16 Jan Brockhoff (Germany) 0:00:50.37
17 Jonathan Dibben (Great Britain) 0:00:50.76
18 Peter Mathiesen (Denmark) 0:00:58.73
19 Przemyslaw Kasperkiewicz (Poland) 0:01:03.15
20 David Per (Slovenia) 0:01:06.20
21 Viktor Okishev (Kazakhstan) 0:01:08.74
22 Ildar Arslanov (Russian Federation) 0:01:09.15
23 Hayden McCormick (New Zealand) 0:01:10.77
24 Lukas Spengler (Switzerland) 0:01:22.08
25 Jose Tito Hernandez (Colombia) 0:01:23.23
26 Bruno Maltar (Croatia) 0:01:25.15
27 Oscar Gonzalez Del Campo Garcia-Villarrubia (Spain) 0:01:28.60
28 Giacomo Peroni (Italy) 0:01:30.37
29 Mattia Frapporti (Italy) 0:01:32.39
30 Joeri Leijs (Netherlands) 0:01:32.79
31 Nigel Ellsay (Canada) 0:01:37.36
32 Tom Bohli (Switzerland) 0:01:38.11
33 William David Muñoz Perez (Colombia) 0:01:43.10
34 Mario Dasko (Slovakia) 0:01:45.33
35 Tao Geoghegan Hart (Great Britain) 0:01:51.94
36 Chun Wing Leung (Hong Kong, China) 0:01:55.41
37 Benjamin Perry (Canada) 0:01:56.48
38 Fredrik Ludvigsson (Sweden) 0:02:07.02
39 Nick Bain (New Zealand) 0:02:09.62
40 Vladislau Dubovski (Belarus) 0:02:10.07
41 Amund Grøndahl Jansen (Norway) 0:02:11.30
42 Hiroki Nishimura (Japan) 0:02:12.63
43 Rostyslav Chernysh (Ukraine) 0:02:13.11
44 Haitam Gaiz (Morocco) 0:02:18.81
45 Michal Schlegel (Czech Republic) 0:02:27.69
46 Aliaksandr Riabushenko (Belarus) 0:02:29.08
47 Raimondas Rumsas (Lithuania) 0:02:29.73
48 Krists Neilands (Latvia) 0:02:31.06
49 Rohan Du Plooy (South Africa) 0:02:32.65
50 David Klein (Luxembourg) 0:02:36.79
51 Peteris Janevics (Latvia) 0:02:36.95
52 Maxime Piveteau (France) 0:02:37.54
53 Jose Luis Rodriguez (Chile) 0:02:38.94
54 Mantas Petrusevicius (Lithuania) 0:02:41.77
55 Daniil Kondakov (Ukraine) 0:02:43.23
56 Piotr Havik (Netherlands) 0:03:02.32
57 Ferit Can Samli (Turkey) 0:03:15.18
58 Andrei Covalciuc (Republic of Moldova) 0:03:15.75
59 Josip Rumac (Croatia) 0:03:17.43
60 Abderahmane Bechlaghem (Algeria) 0:03:27.07
61 Ali Nouisri (Tunisia) 0:03:56.38
62 Abderrahim Aouida (Morocco) 0:04:21.46
63 Artem Nych (Russian Federation) 0:04:26.65
64 Abderahmane Mansouri (Algeria) 0:04:45.41
65 Anuar Mohamad Azrul Taufiq (Malaysia) 0:06:45.83
66 Hamza Fatnassi (Tunisia) 0:08:45.20

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Marcin Bialoblocki – “I can win the Worlds”

When Alex Dowsett (Movistar & GB) rode 17:20 to take the British ‘10’ record earlier this year we all thought, ‘wow!’ and that it would take some beating. Enter one Marcin Bialoblocki, Polish professional with the One Pro Cycling team – with a 16:35, hacking 45 seconds off the Dowsett mark. That’s head shakingly quick – but not content with that, the next day Bialoblocki put Dowsett’s ‘25’ record of 44:29 to the sword with 44:04. We just had to ‘have a word.’

Neil Fachie – “When you’re involved in Paralympic Sport, it’s hard not to be inspired”

No appraisal of Scotland’s cycling medal hopes for the 2018 Commonwealth Games would be complete without speaking to multiple Commonwealth, Worlds and Olympic visually impaired tandem champion, Neil Fachie. Here’s what the man had to say to VeloVeritas, recently:

Philipp Walsleben – “To be successful in cyclocross you have to be based in Belgium”

There’s a man from Berlin who has to be viewed as a podium possible for the 2014 Worlds in Hoogerheide; 26 year-old Philipp Walsleben (BKCP-Powerplus). This winter has seen him consistently on the podium in the World Cups, rubbing shoulders with the very best – Nys, Albert, Van Der Haar and all the rest. Philipp took time out from the hectic Xmas/New Year ‘cross frenzy’ to talk to VeloVeritas.

La Vuelta a España 2012 – Stage 16: Gijón – Valgrande-Pajares Negru Cuitu 183.5 km

Dario Cataldo (QuickStep & Italy) took the biggest win of his life in Valgrande-Pajares Negru; Thomas De Gendt (Vacansoleil-DCM & Belgium) had his heart broken; Joaquin Rodriguez (Katusha & Spain) took a huge step towards winning his first Grand Tour; Chris Froome (Sky & GB) realised you really can’t race the Tour and Vuelta to win in the same season.

At Random

The VV View – @TheJensie Sets a New Standard

First of all we have to congratulate Jens Voigt (presumably this is the same person as ‘The Jensie’ whom ‘that commentator’ continually referred to?) – anyone who can cover 51.115 K on a bicycle in one hour unaided by gravity or pace making deserves plaudits. However, I have to argue the point about his, ‘having broken the world record hour record’ – surely he has 'established a new standard' ? To compare his distance to that of the incumbent of the ‘Athlete’s Hour,’ Ondrej Sosenka’s 49.700 is ridiculous.

Harry Tanfield – on his Silver Medal in the Commonwealth Games Times Trial

Scotland’s Mark Stewart may have thwarted Cameron Meyer’s plan to take home a gold medal from the velodrome but the slim Aussie bounced back to take the individual time trial title on a hot day around the testing 37.8 kilometre circuit at Currumbin Beachfront. Taking silver was one of the remarkable brothers, 23 year-old Harry Tanfield, who finished 30 seconds behind the flying Meyer but two seconds ahead of Kiwi rower turned time tester, Hamish Bond.

Toby Perry – Racing with Hagens Berman Axeon in 2022

Since we spoke to Toby Perry in April things have moved on apace for him and by happy coincidence we caught up with his coach, former British champion on road and track, Dean Downing at the Hawick start of the Tour of Britain stage. ‘Deano’ advised us that it might be a good idea to ring Toby in Spain - he had some good news to share.

Rotterdam Six Day 2011 – Day Five, the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

At the Rotterdam Six Day 2011 and I'm sitting next to this chap, drinking my coffee, eating my Vacansoleil cookie and thinking; 'I should know who he is, he's the double of Ezequiel Mosquera.' Then the penny dropped; it was Old Zeke, in person, my - now tarnished - hero from the Vuelta.