Les Gets: Canadian Ryder Hesjedal Wins First World Cup, Meirhaeghe Wins Overall

Geplaatst op 13 sep 2002.
1 11 CAN19801209 HESJEDAL Ryder CAN 1:55:01.00
2 3 SUI19760413 SAUSER Christoph SUI 1:55:30.00
3 1 BEL19710305 MEIRHAEGHE Filip BEL 1:55:50.00


15 2 NED19681010 BRENTJENS Bart NED 2:00:03.00
31 58 NED19791010 BAKKER Erwin NED 2:05:44.00
48 52 NED19760514 PETERS Bas NED 2:11:32.00
57 103 NED19760114 HEEMSKERK Tim NED 2:13:04.00
59 75 NED19771105 TJALLINGII Maarten NED 2:13:11.00
73 79 NED19800616 AL Thijs NED 2:18:33.00

Under the sunny blue skies of France's Haute Savoie region and surrounded by thousands of cheering fans in the scenic mountain town of Les Gets, Canadian espoir racer Ryder Hesjedal (Subaru Gary Fisher) earned his career's first world cup win and the overall espoir world cup title - after dominating a hard-charging field with an early attack that left the world's best reeling, and the 22 year-old beaming.

"I can't be happier," said Hesjedal one week after taking bronze in the Espoir (U-23) World Championships. "It's unreal to get my first world cup win. Espoir worlds are one thing, but to come to Europe and get a win, it's great."

Hesjedal is known as a fast starter - especially in U.S. NORBA events where he races with training partner and fellow Canadian Roland Green, who is the current senior World Champion. And today he did just that, starting fast and building a small lead on Filip Meirhaeghe (BEL, Specialized) and Christoph Sauser (SUI, Volvo Cannondale) in the first lap. They would finish almost as they started, as Sauser moved into 2nd place for the finish, and Meirhaeghe 3rd - the Belgian securing the world cup title.

Meirhaeghe needed to finish ahead of #2-ranked Bart Brentjens (NED, Giant Bicycle) to remain #1, and Brentjens was off today, finishing 15th as he recovers from a pre-Worlds training crash. And so after the first lap Meirhaeghe knew he just needed to ride safely to ensure the title.

Beginning the second lap, Roel Paulissen (BEL, Rainer-Wurz) rode in 2nd with Sauser chasing. Roland Green (CAN, Trek-Volkswagen) led a group of 7 chasers, which turned into a group of 9 as the lap ended.

In the 3rd lap, Hesjedal was still fighting to stay in front of Meirhaeghe and Sauser, while behind them Seamus McGrath (CAN, Haro/Lee Dungarees), Green, Paulissen chased. Kashi Leuchs (NZL, Volvo-Cannondale) was in 10th position.

Hesjedal and Meirhaeghe were just in front of Sauser in lap 4, while behind them Green, Leuchs, Paulissen and McGrath chased a half-minute back.

Sauser passed Meirhaeghe just as Leuchs made contact with the chasers in the 4th lap, the three chasing Hesjedal at 22 seconds while McGrath rode at a minute back.

Then in the 5th and final lap Hesjedal was caught, the group of 4 evenly spaced as they flew down the descent, the order Hesjedal, Meirhaeghe, Sauser and Leuchs - with Green chasing a minute back in 5th position.

But Hesjedal was motivated to get his first win, and turned on the power in the final loop of the final lap to drop the Volvo-Cannondale teammates in Sauser and Leuchs. "It's scary when teammates catch you, but I stayed calm, and was patient on the hills," said Hesjedal. "Then on the first rooty climb I kept it in the big chainring and figured I'd go for it alone."

Hesjedal was able to get time on Sauser, who was having problems with his rear wheel. "Catching Ryder gave me motivation in the last lap, but I thought my back wheel was going to fall apart," he said. "So in the end I finished 2nd, and 2nd overall. I just wanted to ride as smooth as possible in that last lap."

"I just decided to do it," asserted Hesjedal. "I had kind of lost that fast start for awhile, but I had good legs all day today - so I wanted to go out hard and not sit back."

While Hesjedal earned his first world cup win in front of Sauser, Meirhaeghe finished third - happy to win the world cup title. "It's a big stress off the shoulders to get the world cup title," said Meirhaeghe.

"I think Bart was nervous at the start, and so was I, and we both missed it a bit at the start. I was around 25th position at the start, and definitely at the beginning I was worried about having problems with my bike; I didn't want to take risks, so I lost some time in the descents. My main goal was to win the world cup."

Leuchs made an impressive move up to 4th place by race's end, giving his Volvo-Cannondale team two podiums in this their last-ever race. Rounding out the podium was Green, who held off McGrath by 4 seconds for the podium.

While Meirhaeghe wins the world cup overall, Sauser finished 2nd and Brentjens 3rd. Green is 4th overall, and Paulissen 5th.

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