Gordon McCauley edged out Paul Odlin to take the stage and
the yellow jersey. Photo by NZPA
Cyclist Jeremy Yates fully expected his overall lead in
the Tour of Southland to be threatened during yesterday's third
stage. It came not from his chief rivals but from veteran
former champion Gordon McCauley.
Now 36 and no longer a fulltime rider, McCauley shaded Yates
and title contenders such as defending champion Hayden
Roulston, Heath Blackgrove, Glen Chadwick and Canadian
Dominique Rollin on the longest stage of the tour from
Invercargill to Gore over 165km.
Cycle Surgery's McCauley had enough in the tank to pip
Southland Times Trek's Paul Odlin by 4/1000ths of a second at
the finish even after continually egging on a breakaway of 13
riders while Odlin sat at the back and did no work for about
160km.
With 20km to go, Odlin, McCauley and Kia Motors' Australian
rider Will Dickeson broke from the bunch to set up a
three-way battle for the podium placings.
Odlin surged 100m from the finish line but McCauley got on
his wheel to draw level with 50m left.
Both riders went elbow to elbow but McCauley had the strength
to bump past a fading Odlin and win by the barest of margins.
McCauley clocked three hours 49 minutes 39 seconds with Odlin
at the same time but given second after judges examined video
footage of the finish. Dickeson was another 4sec adrift.
With the main bunch containing chief tour contenders such as
Yates, Chadwick, Roulston, Colourplus' Heath Blackgrove and
Rollin rolling in just over 2-1/2min behind, the top 10 in
the general classification were rewritten.
McCauley, who started the day 2min 1sec behind Yates, now
leads the tour with an overall time of 6hr 7min 35sec, with
teammate Eric Drower second at 13sec and Odlin third at
27sec.
Yates was to start today's fourth stage in sixth at 54sec,
with Blackgrove seventh at 1min 17sec, Chadwick ninth at 1min
25sec, Roulston 14th at 1min 39sec and Rollin 19th at 1min
51sec.
McCauley, who won the race in 1996 and 2005, sniffed his
opportunity less than 5km from the start, leading a group of
nine other riders in a chase to bridge the 40sec gap to
Rollin and Ascot Park's Clinton Avery, who jumped from the
start.
He then marshalled the breakaway to build a gap of more than
4min over the main bunch at some points.
"I don't have climbing legs anymore, I'm getting too old for
GC but I came here to win what I could and to get a stage win
for the team is awesome," said McCauley, whose family lives
in Gore.
Yates said his team had worked hard to cut the gap to the
leaders in a bid to keep him in the yellow jersey.
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