GP Liberazione
| GP Liberazione |
Italy |
2004 |
Team Rona flew from Belgium to Milan the day after the Fleche Wallonne World Cup.
Alessandro Colnago was at the airport to meet us and took us to our hotel right by
the Colnago office and factory. We spent the next 4 days training, eating pizza
and visiting the many wonderful villages and sites around Bergamo and Milan.
It was fascinating to spend time in the Colnago factory to watch exactly how our
bikes are made - by hand.
April 25 is a commemorative day for all Australians where we celebrate our involvement
with the British Empire in Gallipoli, Turkey in 1915. It was a fitting day for us
to race the GP Liberazione (GP Liberation) held in Crema, near Milan.
The race was 10 laps of a flat 10-km course around the town of Crema. The race
was aggressive, very fast and was marked by numerous attacks. The peloton was
vigilant if any initiative became threatening and were focused on keeping things
together for a bunch sprint. One breakaway lasted almost one lap, with about 15
riders on board, including the eventual podium (Slyusareva, Alessio, Longhin),
as well as Oenone Wood (AIS), Geneviève Jeanson (RONA), Hayley Rutherford
(Michela Fanini) and others, but the pack bridged to them. Then two fellow Aussies,
Rutherford and Carigan managed to build a 20-second gap, before the field came back on them.
I had great legs today and felt like I could just power on the pedals all day.
I dropped back to the car for water bottles for the girls just before a narrow 6ft
wide goat path that formed part of the 10km loop. And without any of the nervousness
that ruined my race in Belgium, I squeezed past the entire peloton along this section
to distribute bottles to my team mates who were up near the front. I focused on being
relaxed, riding confidently, staying near the front and going with attacks. I was
hoping today would be my day.
On bell lap, I moved up to 6th wheel with Genevieve right behind me. With 5km to
go, our director asked me to attack. This was a do or die move and I gave it everything
knowing that if I got caught, I would have nothing left for the sprint. I survived about
1km before the peloton swamped me. I tried to recover but knew my day was done. At 2km
to go, Gen asked me to take her to the front. I pulled out into the headwind, buried it,
but could only get her to 10th wheel before I blew up.
Any women's European race that ends in a sprint finish is rough and scary. With pushing,
bumping and verbal abuse flying around, today's final 1km dash was not for the faint hearted.
Russian Olga Slyusareva (SC Nobili) outsprinted Italian Valentina Alessio (Team Bianchi -
Aliverti La Rocca) and Katia Longhin (Michela Fanini Record Box). Genevieve finished 32nd,
I was 36th, while Katrina and Katheryn were 41st and 58th, respectively. Although we didn't
get the podium finish we all wished for, it was a fun race and we raced well.
Well, our brief visit to Europe is over and now it is back to California for some rest
before some hard training again.
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