Date: Monday, 07 May 2012
Posted by: Cycling Southland

This is supposedly our cycling off-season, although you wouldn’t know it. I guess the moment we were awarded the Junior World Track Cycling Champs for this year, we gave up the right to any off-season. Here’s a snap-shot of recent news;

Entries for the 2012 edition of the Harrex Group Corporate Pursuit close on Wednesday. This is one of my favourite events of the year. Yes it hasn’t been the easiest twelve months in the business world so what better way to have some fun with your workmates than entering your team of six into the largest corporate track cycling event in the world. You’ll get fully-coached sessions and two race days out of us and it even qualifies as one of those new-age team building exercises. All the details are at cyclingsouth.org.nz

Individual session passes for the Junior World Champs are now on sale through Stadium Southland. We sold over 3500 seats with our early-bird event passes and we’ve kept the prices at rock-bottom by design – to make sure as many Southlanders have the chance to get a look at our very own World Championships here on our back-door. There are two sessions each day from Wednesday 22 to Saturday 25 August with a single session on Sunday the 26th, the final day of competition. Session tickets start from as low as $10 for adults and $7.50 for children so grab yours and make sure you get one of the best seats in the house in August. They are going fast.

Speaking of the Junior Worlds the Kiwi squad is showing early form at this weekend’s Club Road Nationals in Hawkes Bay. Alexandra’s Sophie Williamson won both women’s time trial and road race while Canterbury’s Dylan Kennett and Hamish Schreurs took out the men’s events. All three will be on the start line as part of a New Zealand squad with high hopes of a strong home-town showing.

We are all very proud of Eddie Dawkins and Natasha Hansen’s naming in the Olympic squad for London. Matt Archibald is also still very much in the mix as part of the wider Men’s sprint squad and if his rapid development over the last 12 months is anything to go by, he could still get himself an Olympic berth with continued gains over the next few months. All three have potentially got years ahead of them on the international scene, and while Rio in 2016 may be a more realistic target in terms of medal prospects, knowing all three of them well, they won’t be lining up at the London Velodrome with anything other than a 2012 medal on their minds. 

Somehow I have (been) volunteered to ride from Queenstown to Invercargill in a few weeks as part of Westpac’s annual Chopper Appeal. Fortunately it’s a great cause. Unfortunately it’s not that far away. But if you say 180 kilometres quickly enough, it doesn’t sound that far.

So, like I say, nice quiet time of year then?

Nick Jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive

 

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