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January 7, 2024
National Championships 2023 โ Australia ๐ฆ๐บ โ Road Race – Buninyong – Buninyong : 185,6 km
The Aussie Criterium Championships have been held annually ever since 1994 and have seen some of the nationโs most successful riders claim the coveted green and yellow stripes.
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January 7, 2024
National Championships 2023 โ Australia ๐ฆ๐บ โ Road Race – Buninyong – Buninyong : 185,6 km
The Aussie Criterium Championships have been held annually ever since 1994 and have seen some of the nationโs most successful riders claim the coveted green and yellow stripes. Taking place in late December or early January, the event has often marked the unofficial start of the road season โ a sign to cycling fans all over the world that road racing is slowly returning. Criterium racing is a little different to the classic road racing we all know and love, but at its core itโs very much the same. Races consist of several laps of a short, sometimes technical circuit and often end in scrappy bunch sprints. Laps are typically quite short, meaning races only last for a couple of hours at most. Organisers also like to include a ton of corners and tricky bends in their circuits to really test a riderโs technical skills. In short, criteriums are road races on overdrive โ action-packed, hour-long exhibitions where the nationโs best sprinters go toe to toe for the win and โ most importantly โ the bragging rights.
Luke Plapp won his third elite men’s road race at the Federation University Australian Road National Championships in a row, bringing the jersey back to his new team, Jayco-AlUla after he and teammate Chris Harper clipped off the front with more than 100km to go.
With such a big gap the Jayco-AlUla pair had had time to chat and celebrate en route to victory, with Plapp ultimately clinching gold and Harper adding a silver medal to the one he claimed in 2019 with BridgeLane before heading to the WorldTour.
It then came down to a sprint of three, minutes later, to decide who would take bronze in the 185.6km race – which marked both the end of the titles battle for another year and the end of the Ballarat area’s nearly two-decade reign as home of the National Championships.
Kelland O’Brien took the sprint comfortably, making it a clean sweep of the podium for Jayco-AIUAa even as Australia’s only WorldTour team also secured the national road race title for the first time since 2021.
โWe were able to counter off all the amazing work the team did for us,” said Plapp. “They set us up beautifully. I donโt think it was ever in the plan to go that early but me and Chris had some amazing legs and we just made the most of it.โ
Earlier in the Championships Plapp also won the elite time trial, recapturing the jersey for the race against the clock that he last wore in 2021, while Caleb Ewan claimed his fourth criterium title and started off his return to the Australian squad with a victory. That meant the Australian WorldTour team delivered both a clean sweep of the elite men’s titles as well as a clean sweep of the men’s road race and time trial podiums.
How it unfolded
The rain that had been present for the Elite/U23 womenโs race cleared before the elite men’s event set off, once the course had been cleared of a handful of protesters targeting the presence of the Israel-Premier Tech team.
There may have been 16 laps of an 11.6km circuit including the pivotal Mount Buninyong Road climb to shape the race but there was no waiting for the latter stages to spur the action. The peloton was blown apart early and a big part of the field removed from contention.
Plapp, Miles Scotson (Arkรฉa-B&B) and Simon Clarke (Israel-Premier Tech) were in the lead with 130km to go, but that group swelled to eight โ Jayco-AlUla holding the advantage with three riders in the group after Harper bridged from the chase behind.
He turned out to be a valuable ally in the next round of attacks, with Plapp and Harper taking off together to build a gap of around one and a half minutes at the 100km mark of the race. They worked their way through the light rain, swapping off turns and appearing to get advice from the team car along the way to keep a lid on their enthusiasm and conserve energy for the latter stages of the race.
By this point Jayco-AIUIa looked to be in complete control of the race, with Plapp and Harper out front and their teammates, both in the chase closest group and in the main peloton, which included Caleb Ewan, able to sit back and let the other squads do the work.
At five laps to go there were a group of three in pursuit – Michael Storer (Tudor), Liam Walsh and Rudy Porter- while riders who were clearly out of contention were just making the most of their last runs up Buninyong. Jensen Plowright (Alpecin-Deceuninck) was particularly active at pulling wheelies and playing up to the crowds.
With a gap of 4:30 with less than three laps to go, the duo out front looked to have it all sewn up and the positioning for bronze began behind. The chase of three containing Storer, Walsh and Porter was swept up and another trio formed containing Elliot Schultz (Team BridgeLane), Chris Hamilton (dsm-firmenich Post NL) and Kelland OโBrien (Jayco-AlUla). OโBrienโs presence, it turned out, was enough to give Jayco-AlUla the clean sweep, with Team BridgeLane’s Schultz taking fourth ahead of Hamilton.
Results :