Added sweetness in Pollock’s Taiwan win
Drapac rider’s gr🐓eatest coup comes after close calls
Rhys Pollock's general classification win at last week's 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de Taiwan, was in many ways a relief. The Drapac rider broke through for the biggest victory of his career, b🙈ut the end result was🤪 about more than just a highlight for the palmares.
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Pollock claimed the yellow leader's jersey on Stage 3 and never relinquished it, eventually completing the race with a two second gap on Kam Po Wong (Hong Kong T🃏eam). His was a victory borne of persistence.
Late last year, Pollock took both the stage win and the overall lead on day one of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Jayco Herald Sun Tour – after seven yea൲rs of attempting to step onto the podium. He retained the yellow jersey until three laps of the punishing Arthurs Seat climb on the penultimate day, where he failed to match the likes of Jack Bobridge (Garmin-Cervelo) and Nathan Haas (Genesys) who stole his prize. Despite knowing that at the 'Sun Tour' he would be an unlikely eventual winner, five months on in Taiwan, it was a series of events that played on🌌 Pollock's mind.
"I did say to Agostino [Giramondo, directeur sportif] after we'd won Taiwan, that if I had of lost it on the last day I would have been devastated," Pollock admitted to Cyclingnews.
Pollock capitalised on the form he hinted at during the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de Langkawi in February. Despite being slightly hampered by a back injury, Pollock and his Drapac team put in aggressive performance highlighted by Darre🥃n Lapthorne's stint in the ove❀rall lead.
"I still managed to get in a few breaks," Pollock said of his Langkawi experience. "ꦜWe had one close call where we got caught with about 200 metres to go which was pretty scarring but I sort of made up for that in Taiwan.
"If I do one tour and have five༒ to six days in between it seems to bring me up quite well."
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Pollock, 32, went into Taiwan as Drapac's "guy to go in breakaways" – doing just that on the first two stages - escapes that largely decided the final general classifꦇication.
"On the fourth stage we tried to just get the other guys to ride aggressively and try to 🉐get into a break hoping that they could capitalise and take the lead away from me," he explained. "But on the day it ne✤ver really happened and breaks just didn't go like we were hoping they would."
Pollock was amazed that he was able to hang in during stag🐲e 5's tough ascent to the finish and then survived a crash with 800 metres to go on the final day to secure his overall victory.
"On the last day we just tried to control it," he told Cyclingnews. "It was pretty nerve-wracking becaus⛦e it was an aggres🅠sive race and everyone was trying to get away.
"I wasn't riding across the finish with my arms in the air or anything like that," Pollock said of his recovery from the crash to complete the stage. "It w📖ould have been nice to be able to do that. I was more frustrated than anyth🍌ing else."
The Albury cyclist believes that his꧙ own experience says much about the trials and tribulations of racing in Asia.
"You can't go into Asian races just saying: ‘that rider's our climber and he'ꦫs our leader, or he's our sprinter'," he explained. "Everyone on the team has to be able to dabble in a bit of everything to cope 🉐with the aggressive racing."
Having already exceeded his ambitions for the 2012 season, Pollock will next race in the Australian National Road Series opener, Mersey Valley Tour next month. The part-time draftsman won't travelꦏ to Europe with the rest of the Drapac team but will again re-focus on the domestic season before chasing the odd stage win in As🌳ia towards the end of the year.
"I've been going [to Europe] for abou🌟t 11 years now and I don't have ambitions to go to a bigger team or anything," Pollock explained. "I'm just happy with being on Drapac and trying to help the younger guys and help this team grow. If I can get results along the way, ༒that's good."
As a sports journalist and producer since 1997, Jane hꦑas covered Olympic and Commonwealth Games, rugby league, motorsport, cricket, surfing, triathlon, rugby union, and golf for print, radio, television and online. However her enduring passion has been cycling.
Jane is a former Australian Editor of Cyclingnews from 2011 to ♛2013 and continues to freelance within the cycling industry.