Ally Wollaston (FDJ-Suez) claimed the first win of the season for her new team FDJ-Suez, charging across the line ahead of Chloe Dygert (Canyon-SRAM) with an assured sprint at the first edition of the women’s 1.1 ranked women’s Surf Coast Classic – a 118km mid-week race to kick off the action before the Women’s WorldTour racing at the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race unfolds on Saturday.
The rider from New Zealand had already showed in South Australia that she had the form, winning the bunch sprint on stage 1 of the Santos Tour Down Under but having to settle for second as it came over the line behind a solo break. The rider needed the opportunity to deliver when the top step was at stake. Wednesday turned out to be her day.
“I felt really, really strong today,” said Wollaston at the end of the race which started in Lorne with a long climb and then also ended on the coast at Torquay after looping inland. “In the last few races maybe I’ve struggled mentally, I think, to really stay present in the race and stay attentive and be confident enough that I’m good enough to be there in the final.
“Today, as soon as I started climbing, I knew I had a good shot at the win.”
It was a clear cut victory for Wollaston, ahead of Dygert but the battle for third was tight, with Georgia Baker (Liv-AlUla-Jayco) making it to the podium steps for a second time this week after having come second at the 1.Pro Schwalbe One Day Classic in Adelaide. The winner of that race, Clara Copponi (Lidl-Trek), was fourth this time.
More to come …..
How it unfolded
There may have still been a summer holiday mood in the coastal town of Lorne which hosted the race start, but it was straight into the hard work for the riders as they confronted a challenging course for the new 1.1 ranked addition to the calendar.
The teams were getting ready to race with the beach just metres away, the red and yellow flags of the life saver patrolled section flapped in the breeze in the background and the inquisitive cockatoos dropped by to the picnic tables where they were getting ready. The nearby water may have been the most popular spot in town when the riders rolled in from Adelaide on Monday to temperatures of around 40°C, but that had almost halved for race day so the water was quiet but the roads weren’t.
The race had barely rolled off the start line before heading straight into a challenging 10km climb as the peloton worked its way inland to Deans Marsh. There were a number of attacks on the climb, with UAE Team ADQ a regular on the front of the peloton, still there were more riders going off the back than off the front. While no move stuck, the pressure was certainly on, causing a split in the peloton as it topped the climb, leaving many with a tough early chase.
As the race headed through Deans Marsh with 96km to go there weren’t any riders off the front but there were behind, including Canyon-SRAM zondacryprto’s Maike van der Duin and Tiffany Cromwell, Silvia Zanardi and Maeve Plouffe (ARA Cycling).
More attacks rolled and were caught and with a little more than 70km of racing to go an attack had caused another substantial split in the field, with 20 riders off the front. The next move was a solo effort with Julie van de Velde (AG Insurance-Soudal) stretching out a gap that hit 30 seconds with around 55km to go. Though in the end it was another of those fleeting breakaways, caught before the feed zone in the farmland alongside the Wurdiboluc Picnic Area with 43km of racing left.
The peloton bunched, surged and then bunched again a number of times as it started to head out of the farmland and draw ever closer to the coast, which didn’t on Wednesday deliver fierce enough cross winds to really help substantially with any splits but there were plenty attempts through the heated race battle nevertheless.
At nearly 10km, heading toward three sisters at Bells Beach the group was still all together and while there were attempts to get away in the run to the line, ultimately it all came down to a bunch sprint, with Wollaston put into position by her teammates and Dygert surfing the wheels after the team plan switched to her halfway through after sprinter Van der Duin got set back by the starting climb.
“It was a good day and the finish, it was super ideal for me getting it strung out,” said Dygert of the run to the finish line. “I was kind of on my own there, so surfing a little bit, and I had to come the long way around but even sprinting against Ally, I think she still would have gotten me even if I had a perfect day.”
The perfect day, however, was all Wollaston’s.
Results
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