Quiet success for Australia
Australian success at this year's Tour de France has been one of quiet personal achievement, writes Mike Tomalaris.

Saxo Bank's Stuart O'Grady was one of the quiet achievers (Getty)
- 9 Comments | Join the discussion
For the first time since 2000, Australian riders will walk away from a Tour de France empty-handed.
There will
be no stage wins, no final podium finishes and no wearing of green or yellow jerseys by riders
who have figured so prominently in this race for such a long time.
Not that it's been a disappointing Tour, and nor does it mean we're currently going through a lean cyclical period.
In
fact to the contrary, Australians have played a major role without
standing on the winner's podium for the three week duration.
Take the Australian connection in Team Columbia, for example.
Mark Cavendish has praised the incredible workload of Mark Renshaw and Mick Rogers as integral to his record stage haul.
And what
about the workload from 'Mr Reliable' Stuart O'Grady at the front of
the peloton for Saxo Bank? Particularly in the third week through the
Alps, in an effort to guide Andy Schleck to success.
Brett Lancaster has also done a graceful job for Cervelo's green jersey conquerer Thor Hushovd.
And there was the effort of Silence-Lotto's Matthew Lloyd as he rode his first Tour de France, all in support of Cadel Evans.
There
has already written a lot written and said about Australia's best
cyclist, Cadel Evans, but it's important to note that his toughness was
obvious despite any setbacks in this one race. He will be back.
And
let's not forget to acknowledge the directorship of Australian team bosses
Matt White and Allan Peiper for teams Garmin-Slipstream and Columbia-HTC respectively.
Of course, one
of the biggest thrills of the Tour was seeing the raw emotion expressed
by Heinrich Haussler when crossing the finish line as a winner into the
city of Colmar.
Sure, we have claimed the Aussie-born German
from Inverell, but he is technically a German in this race - thankfully
that will change from next year.
It's unfortunate that none of
these achievements and behind-the-scenes successes will be
considered for nomination by Australia's cycling authorities at the
end-of-year-awards.
So
while the trophy cabinet may be bare in
2009, the future remains bright with these performers and the likes of
up-and-coming junior stars such as
Cameron Meyer and Jack Borbridge - both now linked with pro-teams and
both destined to make their Tour de France debut sooner rather than
later.
Comments (9)
--
It may look like quiet success on paper, but take away the Aussies from the tour, and many a team would have gone by the wayside. After all, it is a team, not an individual tour. So Mike, in fact it was a loud and clear TDF.Aussie,Aussie,Aussie.
01 Aug 2009 19:39 AEST
From: Katoomba, NSW
Cycling Frenzy
The full cover of the whole Tour ride and added experience with the commentary is amazing and a total proffessional attribute here. I've been watching for more than 10 year, I can remember. I had to know at that time one day the Tour would be this populary today spread and I am certain have predicted it now and never dissapointed. Craig. Katoomba NSW
31 Jul 2009 22:05 AEST
From: perth
--
will sbs bring us more cycling in the future? would be good to see other races, not just the tour.
31 Jul 2009 4:27 AEST
From: europe
tdf
when will oz get a breath of fresh air on sbs
30 Jul 2009 16:43 AEST
From: Melbuorne
Aussies did well.
I agree with Mike Tomalaris that inspite of the fact that no Aussie cyclist stood on the podium, they all performed very significant roles in the victory of the teams they belong to. Cadel Evans had a very trying tour this year; yet I believe that he was a gentleman during the whole TDF
30 Jul 2009 16:40 AEST
From: Melbuorne
Aussies did well.
I agree with Mike Tomalaris that inspite of the fact that no Aussie cyclist stood on the podium, they all performed very significant roles in the victory of the teams they belong to. Cadel Evans had a very trying tour this year; yet I believe that he was a gentleman during the whole TDF
29 Jul 2009 19:30 AEST
From: dalinghurst
quiet please
i really would have liked to hear some of the banter between the riders on the run into Paris during the final stage,I know mr.Ligget and the team were excited,but just a brief pause here and there in their otherwise impeccable call of the tour would have been great .
27 Jul 2009 15:59 AEST
From: Australia
--
thank you so much for the coverage the cycling is the pinical of sport the commentry was fantastic thanks for making life a better place sol
27 Jul 2009 15:24 AEST
From: East Blaxland NSW
--
What fantastic coverage, given without prejudice & with proffessional integrity. We add our congratulations to all the Austarlian riders, & all riders for that matter. An amazing event. We will travel to France at the end of the year & will ceryainly include some of the districts so well represented in you coverage. Regards, Leonie & Chris Taylor
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Stay in touch with the ProTour road cycling season with SBS's cycling blog, featuring race reports, video highlights and blog coverage of every race of 2010, as well as details of SBS's racing coverage
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09 Aug 2009 20:35 AEST
Trish
From: Melbourne Australia