It was another Australian victory for Adam Blazevic at the Trek UCI Gravel World Series in Beechworth on Sunday with the Pedal Mafia-Giant rider, who won at Seven in Nannup Western Australia, returning from Europe and heading straight to the top step again.
The final climbs of the 115km Gravelista course that took riders past the Murmungee Lookout proved crucial for Blazevic who used the stepped ascents which peaked at around 15km to go to drop his remaining break companion Alex Lack and carve out a solid gap on the rest of the field .
“On that last climb I was able to get away and hold it to the end. Once I got over that climb, I knew I had a pretty decent gap, but I also wanted to play it pretty safe in the last 15km,” ” Blazevic told Cyclingnews after the win. “I didn’t really mind if I lost time as long, as I could just get here in this position.”
Scott came from a chase group of five to win the race for the next spot on the podium, despite having to spend energy early to chase back after a crash which left him with blood running down his hands and leg. He finished seven seconds behind Blazevic, who took the victory with a time of 3:26:45.
“We were just working well together all the way to the finish,” road-focussed rider Cameron Scott (ARA Pro Racing Sunshine Coast) said of the chase. “Adam must have really sat up because we couldn’t see him at all and only just coming down here [toward the finish line] was he in sight. He had the race won and we were racing for second at that point.”
Jack Aitken (Pana Organic-Pedla Racing), who had a dig out the front solo at around 50km into the race, was third, coming over the line 12 seconds back from Blazevic. Lack, who had been out the front with Blazevic in the final 20km, finished nearly two minutes back in seventh after slipping off the back of the chase group.
Blazevic had come into the Beechworth round straight after a mid-week return from Europe, where he had raced across the Gravel World Series rounds in France, Poland, Sweden and Belgium. The 23 year-old took to the podium in France and even with some bad luck in Poland and Sweden was fifth and seventh. Belgium started well, with Blazevic in the front split and feeling that his form was good but then a slashed tyre made Belgium a write-off. A week, however, turned his fortunes around.
“I was pretty determined to come out here and have a good race,” said Blazevic. ”I have been travelling around a lot, I have been to a few different…
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