ABSA Cape Epic

  • South Africa (ZAF)
  • Off-Road Cycling

Investec Songo Specialized Teams Tighten Their Grip on Stage 5

Press Release / 23.03.2018See All Event Posts Follow Event
The stage 5 winners
The stage 5 winners / © Andrew MacFadden/ABSA Cape Epic/Sportzpics

Yellow and Orange are increasingly beginning to look like gold as the men’s and women’s leader jersey wearers consolidated their leads in Friday’s Absa Cape Epic Stage 5 time-trial.

With just two more stages to go the men’s and women’s Investec Songo Specialized teams have built up leads that they should defend comfortably barring serious health or mechanical setbacks.

In a day of soaring temperatures, Czech Jaroslav Kulhavy and Howard Grotts of the USA tightened their hold on the Men’s category yellow jersey as they added another three minutes to their overall cushion.

On paper the course, with an eye-watering 1430m of vertical gain, looked to favour the cross-country specialists – more specifically the Cannondale Factory Racing team and Prologue winners, Centurion Vaude.

But Cannondale were the biggest losers of the day, a result of Thursday’s  heroic efforts having caught up with them. German Manuel Fumic and Brazilian Henrique Avancini looked out of sorts for most of the route, the latter of whom took tremendous strain on the climbs.

“We rode really hard and took some risks,” said Avancini. “We gave it a shot but had no legs … it is what it is.”

Cannondale would eventually finish in fifth place, and with that result, drop one place to third below Austria’s Alban Lakata and the Czech Republic’s Kristian Hynek (Canyon Topeak) on the general classification.

Hynek said Lakata was making him “suffer” for a large part of the time-trial but he eventually “found my legs”.

Although Canyon Topeak trail Kulhavy and Grotts by over seven minutes, Lakata believes he and Hynek are still in with a shot of winning the Absa Cape Epic: “We are still in it to win it and the next two stages suit us – more climbing, less flats.”

After winning Thursday’s Queen Stage, Centurion Vaude’s Daniel Geismayr and Nicola Rohrbach would finish in a disappointing seventh place – 3.39,9 off the pace.

The day however, belonged to Investec Songo Specialized. It was a flawless display in which Kulhavy and Grotts asserted their dominance by closing down Cannondale, who started three minutes ahead of them, within the first 20km.

“It was amazing for us. We are really happy because we went at our own tempo and when we caught Cannondale we felt confident,” said Kulhavy. “It felt like the hardest stage because of the elevation and steep climbs.”

Investec Songo Specialized now carry a 7.15,8 lead going into Stage 6 – a tough 76km/2000m day out on the Wellington trail network.

In the Absa African Men’s special jersey race it was NAD MTB that posted the fastest time of the day, a solid result considering just a few days ago Matthew Beers was nursing a stomach bug.

For red Absa African special jersey wearers PYGA Euro Steel it was a day of consolidation.

“It was a really nice route and we started fast and tried to gain on the flats with me on the front and Julian (Jessop) in my slip,” said Matthys Beukes. “We raced hard on flats and backed off on the climbs. That was our strategy.”

Meanwhile the seemingly indomitable Langvad and Courtney collected their sixth win from six days of racing.

However, for the first time in the 2018 event there was some doubt about the result in the Women’s category for most of the stage. A resurgent Sabine Spitz and Robyn de Groot (Ascendis Health) led by 31 seconds through halfway and ended up just 12.5 seconds down at the end of the tough ride.

While the margin of victory was small, the Danish multiple World Champion and her young American partner extended their overall lead by two minutes 52 seconds over Annie Last and Mariske Strauss (Silverback-KMC), who are currently second overall and were third on the stage.

The gap from Investec Songo Specialized to Silverback KMC on general classification has now grown to just over 35 minutes.

Langvad, who has never been beaten in her three previous attempts at the Absa Cape Epic, said: “One of the proper challenges of this race is to concentrate all the time. Eight days is a long, long time and just the tiniest little mishap and everything can be gone in the blink of an eye.”

Courtney said their tactic was to ride a controlled stage: “The time-trial is a different challenge. Everything is tough in its own way out here at the Absa Cape Epic. I think today was hard after a long day yesterday, but we were able to ride in control and especially on the descents, where there were a lot of rocky and sandy corners, and we were able to pull back and avoid having any big mishaps.”

Despite nearly becoming the first team to get the better of the potent Investec Songo Specialized duo this week, German Spitz and local champion De Groot seemed surprised at the result.

“I did not realise we had done so well,” said the South African. “I felt better than I expected. After four days of over 100kays we expected it to be really tough but we rode nicely together and paced ourselves well.”

With the temperature climbing the pro riders enjoyed the best of the weather, but Englishwoman Last said it was still uncomfortably hot.

“On the first climb you could feel the heat was already there. It was a 39kay time-trial with 1 400 metres of climbing and (on Thursday) we did 113km with 1 800 metres, so there was a lot of climbing for a lot less distance.”

In the Dimension Data Masters category, Massimo Debertolis and Ondrej Fojtik from team Wilier Force 7C 2 fought back and are right back in contention after a stage winning time-trial on Friday.

On Thursday the Italian/Czech combination suffered an unfixable puncture and Debertolis rode into the finish on a back wheel with a completely flat tyre cable tied to the rim.

With Bart Brentjens and Abraao Azevedo (CST Sandd A. Eagle AAZ) enjoying a storming day before the time-trial, Debertolis and Fojtik lost over 20 minutes and with it the honour of wearing the blue Dimension Data Masters category blue jerseys.

However, on Friday the Wilier Force pair were on a mission and stormed to a 2:48 lead over secoind-placed Americans George Hincapie and Christian Vande Velde (Absa-WBR). South Africans Nic Lamond and Paris Basson (Podium-Today’s Plan) claimed third on the stage.

Brentjens and Azevedo, still suffering from their efforts the previous day, limped home fourth and five minutes behind the team they displaced as leaders the previous day.

The Dimension Data Masters category is now set up for a thrilling final two days into Val de Vie Estate. Brentjens and Azevedo will be wearing blue on Saturday but only have a two-minute lead over Debertolis and Ondrej Fojtik.

In the Grand Masters category, Robert Sim and Udo Boelts (Robert Daniel) extended their already big lead to over 22 minutes by beating their nearest challengers, Barti Bucher and Hans Juerg Gerber (Meerendal CBC 2), by three minutes and 23 seconds.

After the stage Sim summed up the feelings of almost the entire field who set off after the professional riders when he said: “It was a really tough day out there today. This is more of an uphill time-trial than a normal time-trial and that has made it tough.”

In the Virgin Active Mixed category, the Team Merida Argentina pair of Agustina Maria Apaza and Cesar Lettoli ensured they would be contenders right to the end when they won the Stage 5.

It was the fourth stage win of the 15th Absa Cape Epic for the Argentinians, who won the first three days and had held the lead until struggling on the third and fourth stages. South Africa’s Nicky Giliomee and Brennan Anderson (Journey by Junto), the Virgin Active Mixed category leaders, came home in second, two minutes and four seconds behind, but still retain a 25 minute and 39 second advantage with just two days left.

Lucky Mlangeni and Tshepo Tlou (Exxaro/PWC 1) won their sixth stage of the 15th Absa Cape Epic to move further ahead in the Exxaro special jersey competition. Rilamulele Gadabeni and Patrick Rengane (Exxaro / RMB) were second, while Luyanda Thobigunya and Baphelele Mbobo (BMT Fairtree Academy) were third. Mlangeni and Tlou are now almost an hour ahead of Thobigunya and Mbobo in second overall.

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