Australians bag swag of medals in final World Cup round
Australia has claimed three gold, four silver and three bronze medals at the final round of the UCI Track World Cup series in Beijing.
The team claimed gold in both the men's and women's team pursuit and teenage elite debutant Megan Dunn won the points race.
Australia's silverware came through junior world record holder Michael Hepburn who scored a medal in his first international 4km individual pursuit. Jason Niblett was second in the kern, Anna Meares the sprint and Team Jayco's Dan Ellis, Shane Perkins and Scott Sunderland finished with silver in the team sprint.
Ellis also claimed a bronze with third place in the keirin and Meares was third in both the 500m time trial and the team sprint in which she paired with Emily Rosemond.
The pursuit lineup of Michael Hepburn, Travis Meyer, Luke Durbridge and Leigh Howard had a rough ride in qualifying but regrouped to overtake the Dutch with a kilometre left in the gold medal ride.
"We were about fourth from the end in qualifying and fastest so far was New Zealand in 4min10 so we knew we had leeway to do a good time," said Durbridge. "We posted 4min05 because we had a few technique issues but we sorted that for the final.
"In the last kilometre on the analysis (split times for each lap) we blow out a bit because we go around the Dutchies and because we played it safe and went wider and high it hurt our legs a fair bit," he explained. "We were a bit messy towards the end."
The team rode on to post a time of 4min01.226sec but there was confusion in the final laps.
"The officials showed us four to go twice and then on the bell the lap board still said two to go so 'Heppy" (Michael Hepburn) kept riding with us yelling at him to stop because we'd finished the four kilometres," laughed Durbridge. "We were probably on a four minute ride except for the time we lost in passing the Dutch but we're all pretty happy."
There was also confusion for Megan Dunn in her points race victory. She finished on 13 points, tied with Russian Evgeniya Romanyuta.
"Initially on points the Russian won but she was disqualified in the final sprint when officials judged she had colluded with a team mate," explains Cycling Australia National Technical Manager, Kevin Tabotta. "First Megan was told she had won and then that she hadn't and then finally they she had.
"It took an hour for that to be decided but as we told her whether she won or not she had put in a fantastic ride and should be proud of herself," he said. "In the scratch race the day before she was just finding her way in her first major international senior competition but she learned a heap in that first race and in the points race came back to her natural style.
"She was really aggressive, rode good position and had real power in the sprints," Tabotta said. "She put up a real fight and demonstrated all the qualities you need for success at the international level in the points race."
The women's pursuit line up of Ashlee Ankudinoff, Sarah Kent and Josie Tomic was half a second slower than New Zealand in the qualifying round but in the final posted a cracking first kilometre to establish a lead that their Kiwi rivals couldn't match. Their winning time of 3min22.879sec set a new Australian record. The victory also gave Australia the World Cup Series crown for the women's team pursuit.
Medals for Australia in the Beijing round of the UCI Track World Cup Classics
Gold
Men’s Team Pursuit
Luke Durbridge (Jayco Skins), Michael Hepburn (Jayco Skins), Leigh Howard (HTC-Columbia), Travis Meyer (Garmin - Transitions)
Women’s Team Pursuit
Ashlee Ankudinoff, Sarah Kent, Josephine Tomic
Women’s Points Race
Megan Dunn
Silver
Individual Pursuit
Michael Hepburn (Jayco Skins)
Men’s Keirin
Jason Niblett (Team Jayco member representing Australia)
Men’s Team Sprint
Team Jayco – Dan Ellis, Shane Perkins & Scott Sunderland
Women’s Sprint
Anna Meares
Bronze
Men’s Keirin
Daniel Ellis (Team Jayco)
Women’s 500m Time Trial
Anna Meares
Women’s Team Sprint
Anna Meares & Emily Rosemund
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