05 January, 2017, Buninyong (AUS)
Rohan Dennis has claimed the gold medal for the second consecutive year in the individual time trial at the Australian Road National Cycling Championships, with a dominant performance that saw him take the win with a 58-second margin.
As defending champion, Dennis was the last rider to roll down the start ramp for the 40.9km and put in a solid first half of the race.
Although he crossed the line at the intermediate checkpoint three seconds behind Luke Durbridge (ORICA-SCOTT), Dennis put in a blistering run into the finish line to clock 50:59″, 58 seconds in front of Durbridge and 1:38″ ahead of Ben Dyball.
Dennis’ victory marks his third consecutive year on the podium, and the first win of the season for BMC Racing Team.
Miles Scotson put in a solid effort in his first race for BMC Racing Team. The neo pro crossed the line with the fifth-fastest time for the day, 2:29″ behind Dennis.
The Winner’s Interview with Rohan Dennis
As defending champion, you were marked as the pre-race favorite. How confident were you?
“Two weeks ago I was fairly confident and then on New Year’s Day I was really confident but then that night I came down with something. This gave me a bit of doubt as I didn’t know how I was going to go. A lot of it was severe hay fever symptoms and I think it was more than that, but I woke up this morning and I was feeling a lot better. So I just hoped that it would all come together today.”
You know the course well. How were the conditions out there today?
“The head wind was huge on the way back and it just kills you as you are fighting it the whole time. It was harder than last year and more like the conditions we had two years ago. The last 5km hurt a fair bit.”
At the intermediate checkpoint you were three seconds behind Luke Durbridge and then went on to finish 58 seconds ahead. Talk us through the last half of the race.
“Durbridge really threw it down on the way out and this stressed me out a little bit as I didn’t expect him to be up by three seconds. It was a fight all the way to finish and we weren’t getting time checks after the top of the climb so after 12km to go I didn’t have a time check. So I didn’t know if he held back on the climb and really booted it for the last 10-12km, so it was an absolute battle. I did blow up a little bit in the last 5km but I told myself to just not have massive power differences on the uphills and downhills and keep it a bit more even. It was more of a mental battle then. I just had to back myself and the power I was putting out which isn’t always easy when you’re on the limit. It’s a bit of a learning curve again.”
With a win already in the bag, how are you approaching this first part of the season with the Santos Tour Down Under?
“I can take a lot of positives from today. I’m lighter than last year and basically put out the same power. I haven’t done a lot of time trial-specific training for the nationals so that’s a huge bonus. We’re moving towards going for GC so I still have to be good in time trials, so obviously I haven’t neglected that. There’s bigger goals than the Santos Tour Down Under but I’d like to be up around the mark in Adelaide and we’re there for Richie so I can be there to help him get the win.”
Sports Director Jackson Stewart on Dennis’ victory:
“It was pretty windy, stronger than last year I think. Rohan was wearing a radio so he knew that he was behind at the intermediate point. By the time he reached the last 10km we were pretty confident that he was in a good place but there were no official time checks at that point. He was probably up by around 40 seconds or so. But in any case it wasn’t easy. I know when he went out he paced himself but he definitely didn’t hold much back. Durbridge was on a great run so we didn’t think Rohan would end up winning by close to a minute. Rohan dug really deep in the last 5km and I think that’s where he picked up a good 20 seconds.”