News – Page 86 – Cycling Canada Cyclisme

CYCLING CANADA ANNOUNCES NEW BOARD MEMBERS

Ottawa, September 28, 2017 – Cycling Canada is pleased to announce the election of new members to the Board of Directors, following the Annual General Meeting on Tuesday, September 26th.

John Tolkamp of Vancouver was acclaimed for a third term as President of the Association.  Elections were also held for three Board positions.  Robin Porter of Toronto was re-elected for a second term, while two new members joined the Board – Pierre Laflamme of Quebec City, and Dennis Kim of Vancouver.  Stepping down from the Board are Chris Reid of Ottawa and Lyne Bessette of Knowlton, Quebec.  Returning members of the Board not up for election this year are Hannah Parish of Toronto, Bill Kinash of Regina and Kevin Baldwin of St John’s.

Laflamme has a long history as a cyclist, both competitively and recreationally, and brings his financial experience to the Board as a CPA.  He has been a member of the Board of Excellence Sportive Quebec Levis, and has worked with many of Canada’s top cyclists, including Raphaël Gagné, Antoine Duchesne, Hugo Houle, Simone Boilard, Pierrick Naud and Benjamin Perry.

Dennis Kim brings a wealth of sports marketing experience to the Board.  He is the Director of Global Marketing at Dorel for the Sugoi and Sombrio cycling brands, and previously worked for the Canadian Olympic Committee and the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics in Branding and Merchandising.

“First of all, on behalf of the Board, I want to pass on my sincere thanks to Chris Reid and Lyne Bessette, who are stepping down from the Board,” said John Tolkamp, President of Cycling Canada.  “Both Lyne and Chris have been valuable contributors over the past years to moving the whole organization forward.  I, along with the whole Board, welcome Pierre Laflamme and Dennis Kim to the organization.  It is a healthy sign to see new individuals put their names forward, and for the membership to give them a mandate, and I welcome the new experiences and skills both Dennis and Pierre bring to the table.  I look forward to their contribution to Cycling Canada’s growth and future.”

EVENT OF THE YEAR VOTE NOW OPEN

Ottawa, September 26, 2017 – After a very exciting season of racing throughout the country, Cycling Canada invites all cycling fans to vote online over the next few weeks to determine the 2017 Cycling Canada Events of the Year. Fan vote will count for 50% of the overall consideration for Road, Track, Mountain Bike, BMX, Para-cycling and Cyclo-cross events of the year.

2017 Event of the Year winners will be determined by an equal proportion of public voting (this survey) and evaluation of the review of the following criteria by relevant staff & committees:

  • Communication with Stakeholders
  • Event Promotion
  • Event Presentation & Execution
  • Organizing & Planning

Cycling Canada would like to take this opportunity to say thank you to all of the organizers with whom we have collaborated this season. Great Canadian events contribute to international success and to the growth of the sport in Canada. 

The survey will be live until October 10th at 11:59PM EST. Category winners will be announced at the 2017 Cycling Canada Annual General Meeting.

Click here to access the survey.

BOIVIN TOP CANADIAN IN MEN’S ROAD RACE

Bergen, September 25, 2017 – The 2017 Road World Championships in Bergen, Norway, concluded on Sunday with the Elite men’s 267.5 kilometre road race.  Guillaume Boivin of Montreal, Quebec, was Canada’s top finisher in 35th place.  Peter Sagan of Slovakia took a record third consecutive title in a sprint finish with Alexander Kristoff of Norway.

The race was one of attrition, with Boivin’s team mates Hugo Houle of Sainte-Perpetue, Quebec, and Antoine Duchesne of Saguenay, Quebec, working to get Boivin in position for the final critical kilometres. Boivin just missed making the key move on the last climb, coming in one minute and 20 seconds behind the lead group of 28 riders. Houle finished 81st.

“It was a pretty hard race,” admitted Boivin, “a hard tempo all day on a very technical circuit.  It was just a race of elimination.  Thanks to Antoine and Hugo, in the final three laps they helped me move forward. I wasn’t missing much to make the split of the final climb, just one percent maybe … I was right there, so it was heartbreaking not to make it.  But at the same time, it is probably one of the best world championships we have done with this group, so I think we can build some confidence and maybe next year we can be there at the end.”

“I think for the most part it went to plan,” said Kevin Field, Road Team Manager, “and I was really happy with how the guys rode.  We realized after a few races that the course is a lot more difficult than we expected coming in, and to have our three guys right up there on the last lap, that’s an impressive ride for us.  Guillaume was very, very close, and that’s a really good performance for our guys.”

Jacques Landry, Chief Technical Officer at Cycling Canada, commented, “Reflecting on the Elite men and women, we have all the bases covered, I think, to prepare our riders for Road Worlds.  The programs they have are obviously through their trade teams, but we had good team cohesiveness and tactics.  For the Junior and Under-23 categories, to really be competitive we would need to step up our programs considerably through training camps and racing in Europe.  We have some exceptions, like Simone Boilard [8th, Junior women road race], but we need to be developing more riders like Simone, and not counting on phenoms just showing up.  I do strongly believe that the track endurance program is the way to get things going to fast track these athletes into the road scene; we see it through other countries, such as Great Britain and Australia.  There’s some work to do, but we have a lot of talent and we just need to find the resources and the most efficient pathway to develop these athletes properly.”

KIRCHMANN 12TH IN WORLD ROAD RACE

Bergen, September 24, 2017 – Leah Kirchmann of Winnipeg, Manitoba, finished 12th in the Elite women’s road race on Saturday at the Road World Championships in Bergen, Norway.

Canada fielded a strong team of six riders for the women’s 152.8 kilometre race.  The team suffered a blow at the midpoint of the race when Kirsti Lay of Montreal, Quebec, crashed and was unable to rejoin the peloton.  The rest of the team worked well to protect designated sprinter Kirchmann.  In the final lap, Chantal Blaak of the Netherlands broke clear to solo in the for the title, while Kirchmann and Karol-Ann Canuel of Gatineau, Quebec, were in the chase group of 35 riders that sprinted for the silver and bronze medals.  In other Canadian results, Alison Jackson of Vermilion, Alberta, was 57th, Lex Albrecht of Montreal, Quebec, was 67th, Sara Bergen of Coquitlam, BC, was 68th, and Lay was 73rd.

“It was a really hard race because this course doesn’t offer a lot of places to rest,” said Kirchmann.  “It was quite aggressive, but we used our team well in the first laps.  Unfortunately, we lost Kirsti [Lay] to a crash about halfway through, and it was down to Karol-Anne [Canuel] and myself for the final.  It got really chaotic with a lot of moves going off the front, especially on the climbs.  I tried to do my best in the sprint, but it was pretty crazy in the last couple of kilometres.”

“I think we saw the race we expected,” said Zach Bell, women’s coach.  “The Dutch were really strong towards the end.  For us, we had a really strong first half, with the girls riding on the front and being attentive.  Unfortunately, we had Kirsti go down in a crash coming into a key lap, and from there we just couldn’t follow the big moves.  Did it go to plan?  Yes and no – we saved our key riders for the end, but when the important moves went they didn’t quite have the legs to be there.  We had a shout at a medal but they didn’t have a chance to set up for the finish the way they wanted to.”

Earlier in the day, the Junior men raced 133.8 kilometres, with Charles-Etienne Chretien of Amos, Quebec, the top finisher in 45th place.  Julius Johansen of Denmark won the title in a solo breakaway.  Graydon Staples of Orillia, Ontario, went in the early breakaway move that stayed away for most of the race, taking the pressure of Chretien and the rest of the team.  Staples finished 107th after the break was caught late in the race.  Kurt Penno of Brandon, Manitoba, was 116th.

“It was pretty tough,” admitted Staples, ” we went pretty early, just me and one other guy attacked maybe 15k into the race.  We rode well together and a group of about six bridged up to us after another 15k.  It started to get pretty fast later in the race and I got disconnected on the second last climb.”

BOILARD EIGHTH AT ROAD WORLDS

Bergen, September 23, 2017 – Simone Boilard of Quebec City, Quebec, put in a strong performance on Friday, finishing eighth in the Junior women’s road race at the Road World Championships in Bergen, Norway.

Boilard, a first year Junior at her first world championships, rode near the front of the field for most of the 76.4 kilometre race.  After Elena Pirrone of Italy attacked to solo in for the title, Boilard was part of the nine rider chase group contesting the silver and bronze medals.

“The race went super well for me,” said Boilard.  “It was fun to race here in Norway on such a strong course with technical sections.  I had so much fun.  The Italians are so strong as a team that it was great to be able to race with them and see how they race.  I was really anxious about positioning because we were starting at the back and it was my first experience in a big peloton.  I think I did pretty well, although I maybe spent too much time at the front, but I’ve learned from this.”

In other Canadian results, Erin Attwell of Victoria, BC finished 37th, Laurie Jussaume of Contrecoeur, Quebec, was 63rd and Maggie Coles-Lyster of Maple Ridge, BC, was 70th.

In the Under-23 men’s competition, Nickolas Zukowsky of Ste Agathe, Quebec, was the only Canadian finisher in the 191 kilometre race, finishing 93rd.  Benoit Cosnefroy of France won the title.

“It was an awesome race and pretty hard right from the gun,” said Zukowsky.  “After the break went it settled into a good tempo until about five laps to go when the attacks started.  I felt pretty good until about two laps to go, and then I was dropped on the second to last time up the climb.  Overall, I feel pretty good, but it was hard.  I was doing pretty well with positioning until about halfway through the race when I fell back a bit and then got caught in a crash.  But first time at Worlds as a U23, I’m pretty happy with my race.”

CYCLING CANADA TRACK ENDURANCE NEXTGEN PROGRAM APPLICATION NOW OPEN

Ottawa, September 22, 2017 – The Cycling Canada Men’s Track Endurance NextGen Program is now accepting athlete applications for the 2018 season. This program is focused on providing targeted athletes with an elevated level of support to deliver international podium performances and transition seamlessly into the elite ranks.

Selected athletes will receive a world class Daily Training Environment with personalized and periodized coaching from the National coach, and integrated support services such as nutrition, mental performance, physiology and strength & conditioning. On top of working closely with the Elite track program riders, these athletes will also be wearing the colors of Team RaceClean during the 2018 racing season.

“Our program has been progressing a lot over the past 4 years,” says NextGen MTE Coach Luc Arseneau. “It’s an exciting time for Canadian cycling with growing programs getting World Cup results and starting to feed athletes into the professional ranks.”

“ MTE has taken significant leaps in the past couple of years” added Pathway Development Manager Jesse Korf. “Recent successes of the men’s team in Trinidad & Tobago highlight these developments. The addition of the MTE elite program that NextGen riders can graduate into allow us to keep making steps in our national programming. With a narrower focus for the NextGen group and the addition of the elite program, we are very excited about the future of MTE”.

Applications can be completed online HERE.

APPLICATION DEADLINE: 17:00 PDT, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6TH, 2017.

Any questions can be directed to NextGen Coach Luc Arseneau at Luc.Arseneau@cyclingcanada.ca

CYCLING CANADA MOUNTAIN BIKE NEXTGEN PROGRAM APPLICATION NOW OPEN

Ottawa, September 22, 2017 – The Cycling Canada Mountain Bike NextGen Program is now accepting athlete applications for the 2018 season. This program is focused on providing targeted athletes with an elevated level of support to deliver international podium performances and transition seamlessly into the elite ranks.

Selected athletes will receive a world class Daily Training Environment with personalized and periodized coaching from the National NextGen coach, and integrated support services such as nutrition, mental performance, physiology and strength & conditioning.

“We have all the tools set up for Canadian mountain bike athletes to progress through their development years towards elite competition,” says NextGen Coach Jeff Ain. “It’s an exciting time for Canadian mountain biking with growing provincial programs feeding athletes into the National Program stream.”

Pathway Development Manager Jesse Korf added: “The NextGen programs are an important part within our High Performance Pathway, providing world class services that are aimed to help our athletes make those final steps towards the worlds elite. We are excited to launch a new cycle of programming this upcoming season and are looking forward to help shape the future of Canadian elite mountain biking together with our continuing and prospective athletes” 

Applications can be completed online HERE.

APPLICATION DEADLINE: 17:00 PDT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10TH, 2017.

Any questions can be directed to NextGen Coach Jeff Ain at jeff.ain@cyclingcanada.ca

HOULE FINISHES TOP-30 IN ELITE MEN’S TIME TRIAL

Bergen, September 21, 2017 – The time trial events at the Road World Championships in Bergen, Norway, concluded on Wednesday with the Elite men’s competition.  Hugo Houle of Sainte-Perpetue, Quebec, finished 29th against a field containing the best professional riders in the world.

The unique 31 kilometre course finished with a 3.4 kilometre climb; the first mountain top finish in the history of the world championships.

Houle was 38th after the first time check and then improved through the second half of the course, completing the course with a time of 47 minutes and 47.61 seconds, to finish three minutes and 6.61 seconds behind eventual winner Tom Dumoulin of the Netherlands.  Canada’s second starter, Rob Britton of Regina, Saskatchewan, finished 48th.

“I think I did a pretty good ride, and I tried to go fast from the start,” said Houle.  “It was a pretty fast course for the two laps [before the climb], and you need to manage your effort to carry your speed.  Then, in the last climb, all you can do is give everything you have.  I’m not there with the fastest guys in the world, but I’m working on it.  The crowds were amazing today; I think it was the biggest crowd I have ever seen.  They screamed so loud that they just pushed you to the line.  I think I delivered a good ride and I enjoyed the experience.”

“I was pretty disappointed,” admitted Britton.  “I think those of us who started early had the wettest conditions, so it was pretty dodgy through the corners.  By the second lap it had dried up quite a bit, but overall pretty disappointed with my ride.  It was a great course and I was pretty excited about it.  The fans were unlike anything I have ever experienced, it was amazing.

CANUEL TOP CANADIAN ON DAY 3 OF ROAD WORLDS

Bergen, September 20, 2017 – Karol-Ann Canuel of Gatineau, Quebec, was Canada’s top finisher on Tuesday at the Road World Championships in Bergen, Norway, finishing 21st in the Elite women’s time trial.  Charles-Etienne Chretien of Amos, Quebec, was the top Junior man in 28th place.

Canuel, who was on the team time trial squad that took the silver medal on Sunday, was 29th at the first intermediate time check, but improved through the middle portion of the 21.1 kilometre race.  The Canadian time trial champion finished two minutes and 18.95 seconds behind winner Annemiek van Vleuten of the Netherlands

“It was really technical and fast, and also a lot of climbing; there was everything today,” commented Canuel.  “The most technical part was wet when I rode it, which made it even more challenging.  I didn’t have a great day out there; maybe I didn’t recover as well as I hoped after the team time trial, but that’s bike racing. Now I’m focussed on the road race for Saturday.”

In the Junior men’s race of 21.1 kilometres, Chretien was 45th after the first split, but improved 16 places over the next two time splits, eventually finishing one minute and 30.91 seconds behind winner Thomas Pidcock of Great Britain.  Canada’s second entrant, Graydon Staples of Orillia, Ontario, struggled during his race, finishing 62nd.

“I’m happy with my effort today,” said Chretien.  “We decided to go hard from the start and in the uphill for the first half, and it paid off for me. I was able to catch my breath in the descent and survive the last part of the circuit.  I was hoping for a top-30, so I’m happy with the result.  It was a beautiful course, but hard to plan when to give more and when to recover.  I can say it was the most technical circuit I have done for a time trial.”

“It was a good day for us,” said Pascal Choquette, the Junior Coach, “because both guys emptied the tank and gave what they had today.  Technically, they were good and they followed our plan on how to distribute their power. Charles-Etienne did a good effort today.”

NYHAUG FINISHES THIRD OVERALL IN BMX WORLD CUP STANDINGS

Santiago del Estero, September 19, 2017 – The UCI BMX World Cup concluded in Santiago del Estero, Argentina, on September 16-17, with Rounds 5 and 6.  Tory Nyhaug of Coquitlam, BC, finished third overall in the Elite Men’s standings.

In Round 5, James Palmer of North Vancouver, BC, made the men’s final, finishing eighth overall.  It was his second World Cup final.  Nyhaug finished 14th overall.  Daina Tuchscherer of Chestermere, Alberta, was Canada’s only entrant in the women’s field, making the quarter-finals and finishing 19th overall.

“I had a rough start to the day after crashing in practice,” said Palmer, “but it was a nice turnaround to finish off the day with a World Cup final.”

“I was really excited to be here in Argentina,” admitted Tuchscherer, “it’s one of my favourite tracks.  I rode to the best of my ability; I’m sad I didn’t make it through to the semi-final, but all-in-all I rode the best I could.”

Round 6, the final event of the season, saw Nyhaug make the men’s final to finish fifth overall.  Palmer was knocked out in the one-eighth final, finishing 35th.  In the women’s competition, Tuchscherer once again made the quarter-finals, finishing 18th overall.

“I’m really proud,” said Nyhaug.  “It’s been a long year. I had a good finish today and it’s been my best overall season, so I’m proud to be on that overall World Cup podium; it’s really big for me. To make five of six Mains … I’m really happy.”

In the final standings for the season, Nyhaug finished with 535 points.  Sylvain Andre of France won the overall title with 645 points, followed by Connor Fields of the USA with 620 points.  James Palmer made the top-25, finishing the season 23rd overall.  Alex Tougas of Pitt Meadows, BC, was 100th, with 15 points.

In the women’s standings, Drew Mechielsen of Langley, BC, was the top Canadian in 25th place with 165 points.  Daina Tuchscherer finished 43rd with 80 points.  Laura Smulders of the Netherlands won the title with 790 points.

National coach Adam Muys said, “we are very happy with the group of riders we brought to this World Cup final, and super excited to see Tory finish out the year with an overall podium.  He has made some good improvements with his starts, and I think that has helped him make the finals. James making his second final was also really great, and he adds some depth to our program. Daina had some injuries earlier in the season, but she is back for the finals and riding technically well.”