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Cadel Evans says Laurence Pithie can become first back-to-back winner of the Great Ocean Road Race

Danish cyclist Tobias Lund Andresen took out Thursday’s Surf Coast Classic, with his runner-up declaring his team was ‘up against the world’. Plus, Cadel Evans’ tips for the road race.

Tobias Lund Andresen of Denmark and Team Picnic PostNL celebrates on the podium after taking out the men’s 2025 Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Tobias Lund Andresen of Denmark and Team Picnic PostNL celebrates on the podium after taking out the men’s 2025 Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images

Danish young gun Tobias Lund Andresen upstaged Aussie Sam Welsford and team Red Bull – BORA – hansgrohe, winning Thursday’s Men’s Surf Coast Classic bunch sprint.

Welsford settled for second as the hard and fast race which came down to the final 1km of the 157km point-to-point trek from Lorne to Torquay, with Germany’s Tim Torn Teutenberg of Lidl-Trek rounding out the podium.

“It means a lot to me, it’s the first one-day race win for me,” Andresen said post-win.

“I said before the season started, I wanted to win a one-day race so that’s already crossed off now.

“And it’s also important for a sprinter for the confidence to get a win on the board.”

Tobias Lund Andresen celebrates at finish line ahead of Samuel Welsford, Tim Torn Teutenberg and Corbin Strong. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Tobias Lund Andresen celebrates at finish line ahead of Samuel Welsford, Tim Torn Teutenberg and Corbin Strong. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images

Andresen, 22, earned the win for Dutch team Picnic PostNL, who he credited as the difference on the day.

“100 per cent … we really put pressure on Bora, they have the fastest guy here and also in the world, so it was good to get in front of them, they used up their whole team, so did we but they made me really save a lot of energy so I had just good enough legs for the finish,” he said.

Sam Welsford of Australia and Team Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe after coming across the line in second. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Sam Welsford of Australia and Team Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe after coming across the line in second. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images

A big split mid-race was eventually closed, though attacks continued to come thick and fast as little stuck, with Lund Andresen confident in his team and himself to make the right moves to keep together for the sprint.

Welsford, who dominated with three stage wins at the Tour Down Under this month, said it felt like ‘Bora against the world’ among the peloton starting with the split at the 62km mark.

“Took us about till 50km, 40km to go to bring that back and then as soon as we did that, we got attacked again,” Welsford, 29, said.

“It was a hard day for the team and I was pretty disappointed not to pay the boys back with the win, I might have waited to long in the sprint I think.”

Evans throws support behind reigning champ despite course difficulty

Cadel Evans believes Laurence Pithie is “in good shape” to become the first-ever back-to-back winner of the Great Ocean Road Race on Sunday, despite declaring the difficulty of consecutive wins on the gruelling 184km elite men’s course.

The 2011 Tour de France winner is also firmly in Aussie cyclist Amanda Spratt’s corner to take out Saturday’s 142km women’s road race, after the 37-year-old placed seventh in the Tour Down Under in South Australia earlier this month.

Laurence Pithie celebrates his Cadel Evans Road Race win in 2024. Picture: Tim de Waele/Getty Images
Laurence Pithie celebrates his Cadel Evans Road Race win in 2024. Picture: Tim de Waele/Getty Images
Australian Amanda Spratt makes an attack during stage 3 of the women's Tour Down Under earlier this month. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Australian Amanda Spratt makes an attack during stage 3 of the women's Tour Down Under earlier this month. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images

Evans said he had become a “fan” of Pithie’s after the New Zealander’s win in Geelong last year, which was described as the tightest finish in the race’s nine-year history after the 22-year-old held off Eritrea’s Natnael Tesfazion and Germany’s Georg Zimmermann in a photo finish on the line.

“He went on to have a fantastic season after his victory here last year,” Evans said of Pithie, who signed with Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe at the end of 2024.

“I’d like to see him go back-to-back which would be the first time ever.

“But I think this race is a really hard one to go back-to-back on because it’s a lot of luck involved in the final, not just being good.

“I think Laurence is in good shape, and guys like French cyclist Bryan Coquard, who won a stage at South Australia last week, he’s a rider I’d be putting money on if I was a betting person.”

Evans is also expecting a number of riders to “try something” on the infamous 1km climb up Challambra Crescent, which the peloton ascends four times on their arrival back into Geelong.

“Whether they have enough gap on Challambra to get to the finish, I don’t know but what they can do is really make it hard on the sprinters behind and guys like Laurence,” he said.

Midweek win primes New Zealander for Cadel Evans road race

New Zealander Ally Wollaston put recent mental struggles on the bike behind her to take out the first-ever Women’s Surf Coast Classic for team FDJ-Suez.

The two-time Paris Olympic medallist came out on top in a bunch sprint ahead of American Chloe Dygert and Tasmanian Georgia Baker in Wednesday’s 118km point-to-point race from Lorne to Torquay.

Runner-up Chloe Dygert, race winner Ally Wollaston and third-place Georgia Baker on the podium of the first-ever Women’s Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images)
Runner-up Chloe Dygert, race winner Ally Wollaston and third-place Georgia Baker on the podium of the first-ever Women’s Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images)

Narrowly missing out on a stage win at last month’s Tour Down Under, Wollaston made the most of her chances in the midweek race, a precursor to the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.

“So nice, I think a bit of bad luck but also some bad decision making in South Australia made for some near misses off the podium but to come to away with the win today is really nice,” Wollaston, 24, said.

“I felt really strong today, I think in the last few races maybe I’ve struggled mentally to really stay present in the race and stay attentive and I guess be confident enough that I’m good enough to be there in the final and today as soon as I started climbing I knew I had a good shot at the win today.

“I felt really comfortable on the climb and my team was there the whole time.”

Ally Wollaston takes out the Women’s Surf Coast Classic on Wednesday afternoon. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Ally Wollaston takes out the Women’s Surf Coast Classic on Wednesday afternoon. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Ally Wollaston celebrates at finish line as race winner of Wednesday’s women’s Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Ally Wollaston celebrates at finish line as race winner of Wednesday’s women’s Surf Coast Classic. Picture: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images

In what was a highly-controlled race which look destined to end in a bunch sprint with 20km left, Wollaston said she and her teammates will take confidence from the ride heading into Saturday’s women’s road race.

“I think we rode really well today and if we can do that again on Saturday, I think for sure we have a strong shot at a podium, or maybe even a win,” she said.

Cadel Evans’ grand plans for road race as event hits 10th year

Cadel Evans believes the race named in his honour can become a bigger player on the international cycling calendar as it celebrates its 10th edition this week.

Fourteen men’s and women’s elite teams arrived in the region this week, with the five-day event kicking off on Wednesday with the 118km women’s Surf Coast Classic ahead of this weekend’s major road races.

Also on the calendar is Friday’s Family ride, with 650 kids already registered, while Saturday’s People’s Ride is expected to sell out with 3000 entries.

Josie Talbot, Lewis Askey, Cadel Evans, Karlijn Swinkels and Georg Zimmermann ahead of the 10th edition of the Great Ocean Road Race. Picture: Alison Wynd
Josie Talbot, Lewis Askey, Cadel Evans, Karlijn Swinkels and Georg Zimmermann ahead of the 10th edition of the Great Ocean Road Race. Picture: Alison Wynd

The 2011 Tour de France winner’s last race before retirement in 2015 was the inaugural Cadel Evans Road Race, with the race later added to the UCI World Tour in 2017.

“Where did that 10 years go?” Evans said with a laugh.

“When we started the race we hoped to have a race for three years and to go beyond that, to be at 10, I feel we’re really getting established now in the peloton.

“And after 10 years I feel we’ve really become accepted by the region, whether that’s businesses or residents of Geelong and the surf coast which is really cool for me as this is our event to embrace and enjoy.

“But I’d also like to think, from here on in, we can still work to be a bigger part of international cycling calendar and a bigger race … that’s what I want to work to.”

Evans, 47, will be keeping a close eye on the talent in the lead-up to weekend’s 142kn women’s and 184km men's road races, which start and finish at Steampacket Gardens in Geelong, with last year’s men’s finish coming down to a matter of centimetres.

“The weekend, it’s always exciting, unpredictable racing, which is exactly what we designed the course to be,” he said.

“It normally comes down to a good thriller … you don’t know until they cross the line.”

Originally published as Cadel Evans says Laurence Pithie can become first back-to-back winner of the Great Ocean Road Race

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Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/cadel-evans-says-great-ocean-road-race-can-become-bigger-part-of-the-international-calendar-in-future/news-story/8d59823570bc3b3b76afce1fbc4447fe