Pendrel prevails in Olympic Test Event
Gould, Bresset complete podium
The test event for the 2012 Olympic Mountain Bike races pr💯oved to be a stunning success, with the small but select fields putting on an exciting show for some 4000-plus spectators. Catharine Pendrel (Canada) and Julien Absalon (France) proved to be the strongest riders on the day, taking solo victories in the women's and men's races, respectively.
After cool weather earlier in the week, race day dawned sunny, and t🌸he wide-open venue heated up quickly, with the heat♑ becoming a significant factor in the latter laps of the races.
Pendrel and World Cup leader Julie Bresset (France) broke away on the first lap of the women's race, as they have done at almost every World Cup this season. They wer🐻e joined part wa෴y through the first lap (of six) by Pendrel's Luna teammate Georgia Gould (USA). Behind, Elisabeth Osl (Austria), Eva Lechner (Italy) and Nathalie Schneitter (Switzerland) battled for fourth, but were never in medal contention.
Pendrel attacked at the midpoint of the race, gaining 11 seconds by the time she started the fourth lap. Behind, Gould was marking Bresset, and when the French rider made no move to chase, Gould dropped her and soloed up to Pendrel. The North American p⛎air rode together until the last half lap, whe🍌n a crash in a loose, gravel corner knocked Gould out of contention. Pendrel soloed in 56 seconds ahead of Gould, with Bresset at 1:32.
"You appreciate the hardness of the climbs in race cond🍸itions," said Pendrel. "I think it races well; it's a hard course, a fast course, I think it's anyone's course. A lot of the Europeans were training through this, I think, preparing for the European cham𒆙pionships next week, so this result is not indicative of what we will see next year."
Gould was clearly pleased with her result, despite her cra🍬sh. "I was following [Catharine Pendrel] a bit too closely through a big left hand turn and I completely washed out and full-on slid on my hip for a long time. It was enough to give her that gap, and then I had to nurse it in because my brake lever broke and I had no rear brake. I was surprised at how tactical it was; there was never any section long enough that someone good at it could create an uncloseable gap, so I think it is a really exciting course."
1 | Catharine Pendrel (Canada) | 1:32:04 |
2 | Georgia Gould (United States Of America) | 0:00:56 |
3 | Julie Bresset (France) | 0:01:32 |
4 | Elisabeth Osl (Austria) | 0:03:40 |
5 | Eva Lechner (Italy) | 0:03:51 |
6 | Nathalie Schneitter (Switzerland) | 0:04:00 |
7 | Alexandra Engen (Sweden) | 0:04:29 |
8 | Sabine Spitz (Germany) | 0:05:00 |
9 | Shi Quinglan (Chile) | 0:05:32 |
10 | Esther Süss (Switzerland) | 0:06:24 |
11 | Katrin Leumann (Switzerland) | 0:06:57 |
12 | Annika Langvad (Denmark) | 0:07:32 |
13 | Rosara Joseph (New Zealand) | 0:09:23 |
14 | Amanda Sin (Canada) | 0:10:05 |
15 | Pauline Ferrand Prevot (France) | 0:11:21 |
16 | Angela Carolina Parra Sierra (Colombia) | 0:11:53 |
17 | Lisa Mitterbauer (Austria) | 0:12:12 |
18 | Laura Lorenza Morfin Macouzet (Mexico) | 0:12:51 |
19 | Melanie Spath (Germany) | 0:13:38 |
20 | Elisabeth Brandau (Germany) | -1lap |
21 | Serena Calvetti (Italy) | Row 20 - Cell 2 |
22 | Oksana Rybakova (Russian Federation) | Row 21 - Cell 2 |
23 | Rebecca Henderson (Australia) | Row 22 - Cell 2 |
24 | Rozanne Slik (Netherlands) | Row 23 - Cell 2 |
25 | Caitlin Elliott (Ireland) | -2laps |
26 | Jessica Roberts (Great Britain) | -3laps |
27 | Carla Haines (Great Britain) | Row 26 - Cell 2 |
DNF | Sabrina Enaux (France) | Row 27 - Cell 2 |
DNF | Maxine Filby (Great Britain) | Row 28 - Cell 2 |
DNF | Roberta Kelly Stopa (Brazil) | Row 29 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Lene Byberg (Norway) | Row 30 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Rowena Fry (Australia) | Row 31 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Maddie Horton (Great Britain) | Row 32 - Cell 2 |
The latest race content, 🃏interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
Tour de France stage 20 LIVE – Big breakaway brawl expected on unpredictable penultimate race day
Following the mountains, it's a day for the breakaway as the peloton tackles four smaller climbs on the road to Pontarlier -
Tour de France stage finish infiltrator handed eight-month suspended prison sentence
Man forced to pay €500 to police officer who knocked him off bike in Valence, after attempting to ride through line minutes before sprinters on stage 17 -
Watch Tour de France stage 20 online: All the broadcasters and streams for the penultimate day
After the Alps comes an undulating route that should see breakaway action -
The 11 riders flying the flag for Australia and New Zealand at the 2025 Tour de France Femmes
From GC contender Niamh Fisher-Black to climber Sarah Gigante and the fast finishing Ally Wollaston, both nations have every reason to expect to be in the thick of the action