Urs Huber strongest “rain man” in Koombooloomba

Squidly Didly

Has Been
Staff member
It took only the one terrible climb to Mount Baldy at the beginning of the stage that made the difference and Swiss marathon champion Urs Huber needed only 30 minutes to ride away from the others. For the rest of the stage, some 70 lonesome kilometers, he was able to keep and even to increase his advantage. After another day in the rain, he finished with a 4 minute lead ahead of Dutch rider Jeroen Boelen, Bart Brentjens’ protégé. At the finish line it was clear that a very bad night was going to lie ahead for the riders as it didn’t stop raining onto their small tents. With wind gusts hitting the Croc Trophy camp, news reached riders that it had been the wettest October day in 47 years for North Queensland…

It was not those torrential downpours from Cairns anymore, but it still rained. Heavily. In fact, it never stopped the entire day. “Very unusual for October and the dry season”, even the locals admitted. The wet red clay from Tully Gorge National Park was responsible for most of the 90 competitors, especially the two handbikers, arriving as red devils at the finish line. Fortunately, at least the temperature was favourable and right after the start a nice climb that increased heart rates and body temperatures was waiting for the riders.

“I had watched the roadbook yesterday and had seen that it was a stage that I could win”, explained Urs Huber. “On paper I am the strongest climber of all, but every year you have new competitors. Yesterday already in the neutralized stage I was surprised to see how well the Milka rider [Jeroen Boelen] and one of the Koreans did.”

The two-time Crocodile Trophy winner attacked and was gone. In no time he gained one minute advantage to a quartet consisting of two Dutch riders, Huub Duijn and Jeroen Boelen, Belgian Mike Mulkens and Austrian Wolfgang Krenn. The other Austrian, Josef Benedseder, tried to follow the four but blew up. Kevin Hulsmans did not even try to do so. His “diesel needed some time to warm up”, as he jokingly admitted. Tom Boonen’s former lieutenant climbed very cleverly and consistently and hoped to come back on the descent, but the verdict after the descent and after 35 km of racing was a different one.

The nice solo effort of Urs Huber gave the Swiss rider a two-minute advantage over the three chasers: Boelen, Krenn and Mulkens. At seven minutes: team-mates Hulsmans and Duijn, Geeni Yong Choi from Korea, the Austrian riders Sokoll and Benedseder and the surprising Aussie rider Mark Griffin, best Australian rider but also battling for a position at that stage as best Master 1 rider in this 17th Crocodile Trophy. That’s why, behind Griffin’s back, about one minute behind, other Australian Masters organized the chase. Ashley Hayat, Brad Davies, Justin Morris and Arnott Graeme got the help from Chang Min Park and at the last feed zone, at 35 km from the finish, just when the group Griffin-Hulsmans stopped to take some drinks and food, they passed them all, without taking fuel.

In the mean time also in the front some beaten bodies appeared. Not Urs Huber, though, who was powering towards the finish and was even increasing his lead to 3 minutes. On the contrary - it was the chasing group who litterally exploded. Jeroen Boelen explaine, “Urs was far too strong for us. In that long flat part, following Mount Baldy, we were a group of three, which was our advantage, but still I felt already that Mulkens and Krenn spared some forces. However, when I accelerated at 30 km from the finish, I realised that they could not follow me anymore. From then on I had to chase on my own. The 3 minute gap became a 4 minute gap but I should not complain. In mountain bike racing this is nothing. One bad luck moment of Huber and we could be starting all over again. That’s why I really kept on fighting till the end.”

After 3 hours and 16 minutes in the pouring rain Urs Huber reached Koombaloomba. The overall victory is still far away, but now already it is clear that nobody can beat him on those steep and uphill sections. “It looks good, but the race is not over yet”, said Huber who can change his national champion jersey now for another red jersey, the Crocodile Trophy’s leader’s jersey. “What I did today is impossible to repeat every day and I really need to increase that 4 minute lead to race more comfortable. We will see.”

With Bart Brentjens still in the race, the situation could have been different. The sick Milka-Trek team owner did not start yesterday because of high fever. “I thought about Bart a lot today”, said team-mate and number two in the GC Jeroen Boelen. “Uphill we both cannot follow Huber but we could have helped each other a lot the other 70 km. We could have been able to ride two teeth faster.”

Wolfgang Krenn from Austria finished third and was happy with the unexpected result. “What should I complain about? Huber is hors category and I only had to pass on that acceleration of the Milka guy. It’s far too early to dream of the final podium, but I will go for it. But please, can you give us some better weather?”

Note: The Australians, with Ashley Hayat, Brad Davies and Jessica Douglas, are leading the GC’s in the M1, M2 and women categories. Best M3 rider is Pio Tomaseli from Italy. The Crocodile Trophy again will be missing a rider at the start line as Dirk Abeloos crashed. The Belgian rider broke the neck of the femur. He will undergo surgery in Cairns on Thursday.

When the Crocodile Trophy tomorrow heads to Irvinebank (instead of earlier planned Gunnawarra), it leaves the rain forest. The weather should be better then…?
 

indica

Serial flasher
When the Crocodile Trophy tomorrow heads to Irvinebank (instead of earlier planned Gunnawarra), it leaves the rain forest. The weather should be better then…?
I was talking to one of the support today - apparently the camp site was very wet last night and a squall blew lots of tents down.
This guy had come back to Atherton to do his washing!
 

trailbunny

Rocky Trail Entertainment
Reporting from the Croc

As I am writing this, I am sitting in a 4WD in the middle of nowhere with a Telstra wireless thingy to get the news out - I was at Koombooloomba Dam and it was unbelievable! Ankle-deep in water, each and every tent wet and leaking, a horenduous night! But, today, we were in Irvinebank for Stage 4, the sun was out and the whole atmosphere was lifted. Finally, a bit of Croc heat!

Here is the link to the photo highlights from that Stage 2 to Koombooloomba Dam:
http://www.crocodile-trophy.com/photos/photo_2011/Croc_Stage2/index.html

Juliane
www.rockytrailentertainment.com

PS: Follow us on the Croc Website or the Bernard Rocky Trail Racing Team adventures on our FB site and I'll try to keep posting some updates here also! Thanks Squid for posting the news daily! Awesome!
 
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