Friday, April 19, 2024

The Drummond Trophy 2007

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsThe Drummond Trophy 2007

A beautiful day greeted the 53 riders who took the start of The Drummond Trophy, the 56th sponsored edition. In glorious sunshine the race rolled out of the small town of Strathaven, situated in the heart of the Avon Valley, Scotland.

The rugged course incorporated a large loop of about 45 miles in length, and three smaller loops covering close to 15 miles.

– Reported by Owen Jeffries –

The Drummond Trophy
Paul Rennie and Gordon Murdoch.

Racing began in the early miles as the top guys tried to establish their dominance on the race, a split coming just before the first long climb of the day at the 20 mile mark.

Under the pressure of the 2.5 mile climb, the front break split in two with 3 riders including Velo Ecosse’s Lewis Oliphant, coming back to the bunch.

An unsuccessful bridging attempt by Graham Obree was also nullified. Obree, uniquely innovative as ever, rode a self constructed bicycle frame specked with an over extended top tube positioning his body in a moderate superman-like position, similar to that which shot him to fame as the world hour record holder in the mid 90’s.

Six riders remained in front (Kopp, Wilson, Ward, Rennie, Hand and Brown) that would fight out the rest of the race leaving the strong men remaining in the bunch to scavenge the crumbs from the top table.

With the Professional’s Paris-Roubaix road race over northern France’s terrifying cobbled pavé sections (run on the same day) in mind, the riders took a sharp left off the main road and onto a pavé-like section, with all the ingredients – narrow, twisty, dusty, potholed and sprinkled with gravel on every corner.

The bunch was not making any progress as the break drove through the crucial minute mark. It became a dogfight as groups chased the break, attacking and surrendering repetitively until entering the smaller circuit ,where a small group forced itself from the bunch under the driving power and narration of recent Tour of the North stage winner, Gordon Murdoch (East Kilbride RC).

Up front, the break worked solidly extending the lead to over five minutes by the end of the race. Behind the lead, the chasing group split again under the pressure of Murdoch and Paul Coats (Squadra via Mazzini), whose attacking riding awarded him ‘most aggressive rider’ at the end of the race.

The break worked steadily together even managing to stay together over the final accent up the steep 20% gradient hill that lay about 8 miles from the finish line.

Daylight opened when Phil Brown and Jonathon Copp slipped off the front holding a tentative lead over their breakaway companions.

Driving hard on the front was Ray Wilson who couldn’t pull them back, at which point Gary Hand and Paul Rennie jumped across, Copp being dropped as the pressure went down again.

In the finish, Phil Brown jumped early with 500 metres to go, letting adrenaline dictate his final position and effectively leading out the sprint with Paul Rennie (Edge Racing) the fastest man of the day, taking the sprint and a well deserved win (his 3rd Drummond win in total) ahead of Gary Hand (KFS special).

Family man Phil Brown, best Scot in the recent Girvan Stage Race finishing 19th overall, took an excellent 3rd and carried the kids onto the stage with him in the presentation hall.

Once again thanks go to the Drummond family, who supported the race by putting up a prize list which totaled over £10,000, attracting a top quality field of riders from all over Scotland, to provide a day of great aggressive racing.

The Drummond Trophy Result

1. Paul Rennie (Edge Racing) in 3 hrs 15 mins
2. Gary Hand (KFS Special) s.t.
3. Phil Brown (Velo Ecosse) s.t.
4. Stephen Ward (VC Azzurri) at 10″
5. Ray Wilson (Dunfermline CC) s.t.
6. Jonathan Copp (Dundee Thistle CC) s.t.
7. Gordon Murdoch (East Kilbride RC) at 5’48”
8. Paul Coats (Squadra via Mazzini) s.t. (Most Aggressive Rider)
9. Alistair Watt (Granite City RC) s.t.
10. Cameron Wood (Bicycle Works) at 8’23”
11. Calum McGregor (Bicycle Works) s.t.
12. Brian Pool (Andersons) s.t.
13. Danny McShane (Omagh Wheelers) s.t.
14. Owen Jeffries (Velo Ecosse) s.t.
15. Stuart McGregor (Velo Ecosse) at 9’34”
16. Calum Wilkinson (Pedal Power RT) at 9’42”
17. Chris Mather (VC Azzurri) at 9’56”
18. Michael Mallen (GS Metro) s.t.
19. Donald Scally (Glasgow Couriers) s.t.
20. Ewan Pope (Rock Hard Racing) s.t.

Martin Williamson
Martin Williamson
Martin is our Editor and web site Designer/Manager. He concentrates on photography. He's been involved in cycle racing for over four decades and raced for much of that time, having a varied career which included time trials, road and track racing - and triathlons. Martin has been the Scottish 25 Mile TT and 100 Mile TT Champion, the British Points Race League Champion on the track, and he won a few time trials in his day, particularly hilly ones like the Tour de Trossachs and the Meldons MTT.

Related Articles

Le Tour de France 2009 – Stage 2: Monaco > Brignoles, 187km

Mark Cavendish blasted to his first victory of the Tour today at Brignoles, a victory that also places him in the green jersey as the leader of the race's points classification, for the first time in his career.

Le Tour de France 2009, Stage 4: Montpellier > Montpellier, 39km TTT

The team time trial here in Montpellier, it’s beautiful; speed, strength, skill, trust, unity, honour — everything that makes pro bike racing special.

Giro d’Italia 2016 – Stages 17 & 18; Roger Kluge and Matteo Trentin Take the Wins

It looked like Pippo was going to send Italia into raptures on Wednesday's Stage 17 - but big, bad Six Day man and omnium specialist, Roger Kluge (IAM & Germany) spoiled the dream, jumping early from an uncontrolled peloton to take a beautiful stage win. IAM are folding at the end of this year but Rodge will have no bother finding a contract. With so many of the big sprinters gone - Kittel, Greipel, Demare, Ewan, Mezgec and Viviani - there was no one capable or willing to control the last kilometre except Lampre for Modolo and/or Trek for Nizzolo.

Giro d’Italia 2013 – Stage 17: Caravaggio – Vicenza 214km. Visconti’s Second!

In the 'small world' file, there we are near the top of the final climb on the way to Caravaggio - which would be Cav's undoing - when this lady hear our Scottish accents and asks us if we know La Favorita Pizzeria in Edinburgh? Well! Are they no' just about to open a branch in Portobello, just round the corner from me? It transpires that it's her brother, Davide's business. Cue smiles all round and photo op with Sarah and hubby in 'see you Jimmy' wig.

At Random

About Iñigo Cuesta and Gerard

Sunday, I did my hour on the bike this morning; had my shower, washed me vest and hat - time to amble down to the newsagents to pick up The Observer, just to see the prologue result in print; there might even be a paragraph or two, a mention of Iñigo Cuesta...but no - "nada."

Harry Tanfield – the UK’s number one rated Elite rider in 2016

We first spoke to Harry Tanfield a couple of years ago having seen him ride well in the Gordon Arms time trial – most recently we spoke to him after he won the David Campbell Memorial road race in Fife back in the spring of 2016. So when we opened this week’s ‘Cycling Weekly’ and there he was spread across two pages as the UK’s number one rated Elite rider we thought we best ‘have a word’...

James McCallum – on His Third Place at Rutland

We always like to celebrate great rides by great riders, particularly when they're friends or we feel a connection with them for one reason or another, so when VeloVeritas regular James McCallum (Rapha Condor Sharp) bagged third place in the super-tough UCI Europe Tour-ranked Rutland - Melton International CiCLE Classic yesterday, we knew we had to find out what happened.

The Drummond Trophy 2009

"I hit 'em hard!" was how Pete Williams (Pinarello/Candi TV/ Marshalls Pasta) explained his race winning move in Sunday's 54th Drummond Trophy, held in bright sunshine on the sinuous back roads west of Eaglesham and the M77. With a new Scottish sponsor's name on their jerseys (Marshalls) and the commanding figure of team boss Phil Griffiths there in the flesh, there was never any doubt that Pinarello were going to win.