The shape of things to come

17 August 2012 | 13:00 - By Kate Bates

While the Olympics have finished, the professional road season is far from over with the UCI Road World Championships only six weeks away.

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Could a rainbow jersey be on offer for Shara Gillow? (Getty Images)

For some, this period is about maintaining fitness, balancing on the precarious knife’s edge between stellar form on one side and DNF’s on the other.

For others, this time is more about finding form. The Olympics brought a few disappointments, and many will be fighting hard to finish the season on a high.

In any non-Olympic year, the back end of the season is always an interesting one.  Riders are scraping the barrel for contracts, others are dawdling after a stellar start to the year, and the rest hope they are able to gain something, even if they aren’t sure what it is.

Post Olympics, attention turns to Vargarda, Sweden, this weekend for round six (teams time trial) and seven (road stage) of the UCI Women’s Road World Cup. The fight for the final podium spots is turning into a combative one.

Once again, Marianne Vos (Stichting Rabo) has all but secured the win and Judith Arndt (Orica-AIS) looks good for second. The remaining podium spot is a close competition with up to ten riders still in points contention.

As is often the case, rider’s teams will play a huge role in this weekend’s racing. This may seem obvious with a team time trial (TTT), but the results on Friday will have a strong influence on what unfolds in Sunday’s race.

Firstly, the TTT will refine the fight for the world cup title, with this result determining the tactical approach to Sunday’s race.  With the classification more defined, we may see the top teams riding for individuals who would normally not be in the hunt, but have found their overall chances boosted after a strong time trial performance.  With a single round remaining in the series (the Grand Prix de Plouay-Bretagne in France next weekend) the race may be more about preservation. Instead of the exciting race we witnessed in London, teams may have to revert to less aggressive tactics to preserve their leaders chances. 

Secondly, this year’s world championships will see the team time trial return as a medal event. While the TTT  has been a world championship and an Olympic event before,  this time around it has a new twist. Riders will represent their professional teams, rather than riding for their country. The time trial in Sweden this weekend will be a showcase for what we can expect in six weeks time.

Orica-AIS has a huge opportunity, and boasts a strong group of riders, spearheaded by reigning time trial world champion Judith Arndt. They won’t go in as favourites though, that title rests with Specialized Lululemon. AA-Drink Leontin.nl will also fielding a competitive team.

The teams will be watching each other closely this weekend in this world championship dress-rehearsal. There will also be an internal battle for a spot in the team for World Championships. 

A TTT provides huge opportunity to riders who otherwise would only dream of pulling on the stripes.  

Australia has not had a female road world champion before, but for the likes of Melissa Hoskins, Amanda Spratt and Shara Gillow this weekend could increase hope that for the Aussies, rainbows aren’t far away.

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23 Aug 2012 12:43 AEST

Superior Market

From: USA

The Racing was amazing

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21 Aug 2012 16:58 AEST

Pete

From: Melbourne

The women's race was exciting but the Aussie girls were a dismal failure. Sad, but true.

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20 Aug 2012 14:44 AEST

Leanne

From: Melbourne

Can't get overexcited about the Aussie women at the moment. The track has Anna, the road...???? Exactly! It's time to groom a female Australian road hero (like Cadel, Robbie, Gossy etc in the men's) otherwise the girls will continue to get lost and lag behind the rest of the world. Kate, you're dreaming.

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18 Aug 2012 22:35 AEST

Simon

From: Tannum Sands

Yes, things haven't gone so well. However stranger things have happened...and on the right day and in the right conditiions our girls are as capable as anyone els of springing an upset. Someone once said we'd never win an Olympic speed skating Gold medal...and yet we have one of those now. I think it more likely that we'll see a rainbow before another one of those!!!

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17 Aug 2012 18:21 AEST

Sam

From: Melbourne

The UCI ledership dont give a stuff about womens cycling - just read some of McQuaid's pearls of wisdom on the subject.

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17 Aug 2012 18:19 AEST

Sam

From: Melbourne

Are you for real? Did you watch the womens Olympic RR? It was exciting and full of attacking riding, and for a lot of people far more exciting than the mens race.

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17 Aug 2012 16:17 AEST

Jess

From:

yeah coz every mens race is OTT exciting - hardly. Cycling needs less of your type James.

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17 Aug 2012 15:00 AEST

James

From: Sydney

Women road cycling is boooooooooooooooring and a yawn fest. Racing in the last 10ks of a 150k gold medal event is not racing.

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17 Aug 2012 14:37 AEST

Janine Taylor

From: Glenelg

You're kidding! Given the dismal failure of the Aussie women in London, I feel an Aussie woman wearing rajnbow is light years away.

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17 Aug 2012 14:35 AEST

Lee

From:

Like every post-olympic period before it, yet again we've got a women's pro tour team (AA Drinks) going under because sponsors pull out. It's hard to get excited about the world champs when women's cycling is being obliterated. Why won't the UCI do what they've done with MTB etc and promote womens cycling alongside the male counterpart? Until we get TV coverage, events etc we're facing an uphill battle to be more than just a once a year (worlds) or once a four year (olympics) proposition.

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