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Cole Punchard’s ascent: From Novar to the national champs podium

Cole Punchard's ascent: From Novar to the national champs podium

Cole Punchard grew up in Novar, Ontario. A quiet speck of a place just north of Huntsville. The kind of town with a grocery store, a gas station and not much else. But from those humble beginnings, he’s now wearing the Canadian champ’s jersey and lining up against the best in the world.

“I’m from Novar actually,” he says with a laugh. “It’s like 25 minutes north of Huntsville. Middle of nowhere.”

He started riding at Buckwallow, a local trail centre many Ontario riders cut their teeth on. It’s gone now, but Punchard’s career certainly isn’t. He just took the elite men’s XCO title at Canadian Nationals. His first time winning the big one. And he’s feeling pretty good about it.

“Last year I won the short track, but it was sort of unexpected,” he says. “This year, nationals was a big goal. I wear the jersey with a lot of pride.”

A jersey that means more

The elite national champion’s jersey means a lot in cross-country mountain biking. And for Punchard, it marks a shift in mindset.

“It’s not like the short track doesn’t count,” he says. “But this is the real one. The big one that you want to win.”

It didn’t come easy, even if the course wasn’t the most technical.

“It was just a double track climb and then a green trail down,” he says of the Langford course. “There was one rock in the descent that a lot of people were catching. I don’t really know what happened, but Carter Woods flatted on it and I came out of the descent with a big gap.”

He held that gap to the finish.

The deep end: choosing elite over U23s

Punchard is still technically U23, but chose to race elite this year with Cannondale Factory Racing. It’s a bold move. But it’s how Cannodale Factory does it. Charlie Adridge did the same thing.

“It was a bit scary, because I mean, you’re just gonna get the crap kicked out of you for an entire year,” he says. “But I thought that in the long term, this would be better for me. So I just committed to it.”

Cannondale made the offer and with teammates like Jolanda Neff and Charlie Aldridge, it was a no-brainer. He showed up at team camp in South Africa, wide-eyed and ready.

“It was pretty cool when I showed up to team camp for the first time… all the staff, all the riders, all the bikes. It was just unreal.”

Still learning, still hungry

Racing elite comes with hard lessons. But Punchard’s already had his moments.

“In the short track in Nove Mesto, on the…

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