Events

Double Delight for Cornercard and Faces Rola at the Tankwa Trek

Press release supplied by Dryland Event Management.

By Press Office · 10 comments

Stage 2 of the 2022 Momentum Medical Scheme Tankwa Trek, presented by Biogen, saw repeat victories for the men and women in the First Ascent leaders’ jerseys. Nino Schurter and Filippo Colombo, of Team Cornercard, raced patiently before making the stage winning move in the final 25-kilometres. While Faces Rola’s Mariske Strauss and Candice Lill dominated from the gun to win by over 24 minutes.

1A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Filippo Colombo made the stage winning move on the day’s final climb back out of the Witzenberg Valley and into the Koue Bokkeveld. Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

The 89-kilometre-long stage – which took place on Friday, 4 February – featured a clockwise rather than anti-clockwise loop of the Witzenberg Valley. This meant that the day’s toughest climb came just 27-kilometres into the stage; but the technical singletracks then featured later, softening the legs for the final kilometres. Konny Looser, who had started the day in third position, began to struggle well before then. 

The Swiss marathon and stage race specialist lost contact with the leading group on the Old Wagon Trail. Looser’s partner, Alexander Miller, then helped pace him back to the front of the race; where Imbuko {type}DEV equipped by Giant were driving the pace. With the leading group of four teams in sight Miller punctured, putting the MES Electrical Supplies team out of contention for the stage.

4A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Simon Andreassen and his Cannondale Factory Racing partner, Alan Hatherly, started strong before fading out of contention for stage honours. Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

This left Cornercard, Toyota Specialized and Cannondale Factory Racing, at the sharp end with Imbuko {type}DEV equipped by Giant. Schurter and Colombo were content to manage their efforts while the rest of the group worked to drop Alan Hatherly and Simon Andreassen before the long singletrack section along the eastern slopes of the Witzenberg Mountain range. 

For the next 20-kilometres Schurter, Colombo, Wessel Botha, Marco Joubert, Matt Beers and Tristan Nortje played cat and mouse through the twisting trails. Then with 25-kilometres to go Colombo pounced. “Filippo said he recognised the trails from the Cape Epic and went to the front when he thought we could make a difference” Schurter explained. “Even though we were going in the opposite direction I knew where we were and where we were going” Colombo confirmed. “On the last climb of the stage I put in an attack and we were able to distance the other two teams.”

6A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Tristan Nortje struggled in the closing kilometres of the stage, giving up second place on the general classification as a result. Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

“The final 10-kilometres were flat but anything but easy” Schurter added. “There were lots of tricky corners with sand and loose rocks. It would have been easy to make a mistake and crash. So, we were happy to take our second stage win.” 

Behind the stage winners Nortje found the going very tough in the closing kilometres. This allowed Botha and Joubert to race to second on the stage and into second position on the general classification. Beers and Nortje hung on to finish third. The general classification gaps are now 2 minutes and 11 seconds between the Cornercard team in first and Imbuko {type}DEV equipped by Giant in second. Toyota Specialized are a further 2 minutes and 45 seconds back. Cannondale Factory Racing are 8 minutes off the pace in fourth. 

7A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Nino Schurter (left) and Filippo Colombo (right) extended their general classification advantage by 1 minute and 47 seconds with their second stage win of the race. Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

Strauss and Lill’s march towards stage victory started within 5-kilometres of leaving Kaleo. The Faces Rola team rode their rivals from their wheels on the first kick of the course and never looked back. Behind them Samantha Sanders suffered an unlikely mechanical, when her pedal worked itself loose from the crank. This cost the Efficient Insure Infinity Racing team around ten minutes, yet they recovered to finish the stage in third. 

“The reverse route was really fun” Strauss enthused after winning Stage 2. “I preferred the shorter steeper climb, even though it was really steep. Racing on our own for so much of the day was a bit of a challenge. But we treated it as an important training ride and focused on maintaining a good pace throughout.” 

2A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Mariske Strauss and Candice Lill raced to their second dominant stage victory on day two of the 2022 Momentum Medical Scheme Tankwa Trek, presented by Biogen. Photo by Sage Lee Voges / www.zcmc.co.za.

The Faces Rola’s victory margin, of 24 minutes and 22 seconds over Liv Cycling South Africa saw their general classification advantage swell to 30 minutes and 4 seconds. Sarah Hill and Theresa Ralph hold second overall, with Sanders and Kim le Court in third ahead of the Queen Stage. 

Stage 3 includes the infamous Merino Monster, arguably South Africa’s toughest mountain bike climb. It gains nearly 1 000 metres in elevation, from the Ceres Valley floor to the high mountain peak, in 20-kilometres. In total the stage is 99-kilometres long and features 2 200-metres of climbing.

8A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
After their second stage victory Candice Lill (left) and Mariske Strauss (right) lead the race by over half an hour. Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

Momentum Medical Scheme Tankwa Trek, presented by Biogen Results
Stage 2 | Men:

1.    Cornercard: Nino Schurter and Filippo Colombo (3:27:13)
2.    Imbuko {type}DEV equipped by Giant (3:29:00| +1:47)
3.    Toyota Specialized: Matt Beers and Tristan Nortje (3:32:01 | +4:48)

Stage 2 | Women:
1.    Faces Rola: Mariske Strauss and Candice Lill (4:15:30)
2.    Liv Cycling South Africa: Sarah Hill and Theresa Ralph (4:39:52 | +24:22)
3.    Efficient Insure Infinity Racing: Kim le Court and Samantha Sanders (4:43:56 | +28:26)

9A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Men’s Stage 2 Podium (from left to right): Marco Joubert and Wessel Botha (2nd) Filippo Colombo and Nino Schurter (1st) and Matt Beers and Tristan Nortje (3rd). Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

10A Tankwa Trek 2022 Stage 2 .jpg
Women’s Stage 2 Podium (from left to right): Sarah Hill and Theresa Ralph (2nd), Mariske Strauss and Candice Lill (1st) and Samantha Sanders and Kim le Court (3rd). Photo by Ewald Sadie/Shift Media Co.

General Classification after Stage 2 | Men:
1.    Cornercard: Nino Schurter and Filippo Colombo (4:30:39)
2.    Imbuko {type}DEV equipped by Giant (4:32:48 | +2:11)
3.    Toyota Specialized: Matt Beers and Tristan Nortje (4:35:33 | +4:54)

General Classification after Stage 2 | Women:
1.    Faces Rola: Mariske Strauss and Candice Lill (5:32:41)
2.    Liv Cycling South Africa: Sarah Hill and Theresa Ralph (6:02:45 | +30:04)
3.    Efficient Insure Infinity Racing: Kim le Court and Samantha Sanders (6:06:57 | +34:16)

Please visit www.tankwatrek.co.za to view the full results from Stage 2. 
 

Tags:

Comments

Old and Slow

Feb 4, 2022, 2:28 PM

Literally 25% of the words above are sponsor's names. Insane.

MBMtbGirl

Feb 4, 2022, 3:03 PM

No news re mixed teams, what a pity. 

KB280DT

Feb 4, 2022, 3:22 PM

53 minutes ago, Trashy said:

Literally 25% of the words above are sponsor's names. Insane.

Tiring more like it 😐

Eugene Oppelt

Feb 4, 2022, 3:23 PM

53 minutes ago, Trashy said:

Literally 25% of the words above are sponsor's names. Insane.

Sponsors make the world of professional cycling turn. They literally buy the retail space with money. Skin in the game. 

Old and Slow

Feb 4, 2022, 4:47 PM

1 hour ago, 'Dale said:

Sponsors make the world of professional cycling turn. They literally buy the retail space with money. Skin in the game. 

I would argue that well written reportive journalism which engages the reader and draws them into the story of the event is a more effective marketing strategy than simply repeating the sponsor's names ad nauseum.

 

Eugene Oppelt

Feb 4, 2022, 5:10 PM

20 minutes ago, Trashy said:

I would argue that well written reportive journalism which engages the reader and draws them into the story of the event is a more effective marketing strategy than simply repeating the sponsor's names ad nauseum.

 

Argument understood @Trashy

It is a team event, so team names will be prominent. The article included quotes, special mention of the upcoming Merino Monster as well as some descriptions of race dynamic on the day. I would rate it as 7/10 with Ewald se kiekies for reporting on a race in the desert.

OVERDRIVE

Feb 4, 2022, 5:37 PM

26 minutes ago, 'Dale said:

Argument understood @Trashy

It is a team event, so team names will be prominent. The article included quotes, special mention of the upcoming Merino Monster as well as some descriptions of race dynamic on the day. I would rate it as 7/10 with Ewald se kiekies for reporting on a race in the desert.

He who pays the piper picks the tune. 

bolt67

Feb 5, 2022, 5:26 AM

Ladies race is a non event , other than Mariska/Candice and Robyn, Amy our ladies are not quite up to scratch. Half an hour win on Day 2 , that’s  a country mile ….. ! No young talent coming through or is it just a lack of sponsorship for the youngsters , stage racing is bloody expensive for sponsors !

NotSoBigBen

Feb 5, 2022, 5:32 AM

12 hours ago, Trashy said:

I would argue that well written reportive journalism which engages the reader and draws them into the story of the event is a more effective marketing strategy than simply repeating the sponsor's names ad nauseum.

 

In fact I would posit that most 'reporters' are merely 'repeaters' ... take the 'Navy shot cannons at the mountain' articles during this week as an example

Ek skud maar net my kop

OVERDRIVE

Feb 5, 2022, 5:46 AM

18 minutes ago, bolt67 said:

Ladies race is a non event , other than Mariska/Candice and Robyn, Amy our ladies are not quite up to scratch. Half an hour win on Day 2 , that’s  a country mile ….. ! No young talent coming through or is it just a lack of sponsorship for the youngsters , stage racing is bloody expensive for sponsors !

30min is a problem. They could actually ride at walking pace and still win it...

Add a comment

You must log in to comment