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Hamblin Hits Jackpot at Cox
Charities Cycling Classic
by Peter Pezzelli
PROVIDENCE — (Sunday, June 13) With
a pile of cash sitting on the table, just waiting for
someone to reach out and grab it, Jon Hamblin (FiordiFrutta)
broke away from a hesitant lead group and cruised home
all alone to take victory in the Third Annual Cox Charities
Cycling Classic. Along the way he snatched one of the
biggest prime lap payoffs ever seen in New England cycling
history.
“I was focused on that prime,”
joked Hamblin when his day’s work was completed.
“After that the win was just a bonus.”
The win, however, was clearly something
he and his nine FiordiFrutta teammates had on their
minds from the outset.
It was a bright but blustery afternoon
when the riders rolled up to the start line. The air
was crisp and comfortably warm with a gusty wind out
of the southwest rippling the colorful banners lining
the podium area. As Providence Mayor David Cicilline
addressed the crowd, all eyes in the peloton were fixed
on race favorite Mark McCormack (Colavita Olive Oil
Cycling Team).
McCormack is a threat to win any race
he enters, but on this day, with no teammates to support
him and virtually no allies in the peloton, he well
understood that he would be forced to fend for himself.
Louis Garneau, Racksmith.com, and FiordiFrutta had brought
sizable contingents to the fray. They would all take
their shot at the 2003 U.S. Pro Road Champion.
“Our plan was simple,” explained
Hamblin afterwards. “Make Mark McCormack hurt.”
The strategy worked.
From the opening lap, the FiordiFrutta
team pressed the pace at the front of the pack. Also
animating the early action were U.S. National CycloCross
Champion Jonathan Page (Hot Tubes), Oscar Pineda (Stelvio
TeamWear), and Amos Brumble (CCB/Volkswagen), all of
whom would figure prominently later in the race. The
constant pressure forced McCormack to respond to almost
every move up the road, repeated efforts that would
eventually take their toll.
Just the same, the Colavita rider managed
to stay in contention for the win, thanks in part to
the technical, six-cornered course.
After winding past the Rhode Island State
House, the course featured a plunging descent that delivered
the field into the face of a stiff headwind rushing
across WaterPlace Park. When the riders finally turned
away from the wind, they found themselves staring up
a long, leg-stinging climb to the finishing straight.
Both combined to blunt any individual attempts to escape.
Despite the relentless pressure at the
front, the peloton stayed together for nearly three
quarters of the forty-mile race. Then, with fifteen
laps remaining, Emilito Heredia (GS Gotham/TOGA) slipped
off the front to take a prime. He kept the hammer down,
igniting the first serious breakaway of the day. Ten
riders quickly joined him, Brumble, Pineda, and Page
among them. Hamblin trailed close behind with two other
chasers.
The eleven riders quickly established
a gap of thirty seconds on the main field where Mark
McCormack watched and waited. With all of the big teams
represented in the break, the peloton had little incentive
to chase, but the lead group never gelled. The gap held
at thirty seconds, and the break remained in striking
distance.
Back at the start/finish area, race announcers
Joel Brown and Skip Kuzel were busy flogging the crowd
for cash to fund a prime lap payoff big enough to fire
up the peloton. The enthusiastic gathering anteed up
to the tune of eight hundred and thirty dollars. A short
time later, with seven laps to go, Jon Hamblin bridged
across the gap to join teammate Josh Gewirtz in the
break.
“I knew I would go right through
them,” said Hamblin of the lead group. “I
took a breather for a lap and then attacked.”
The blistering attack caught the other
riders in the break by surprise. The group fell into
disarray and within moments Hamblin had a yawning gap.
When the bell rang a lap later, he was all alone on
his way to picking up the huge prime.
With the big prime money off the table,
the dismayed chasers tried to reorganize themselves
to pull Hamblin back before the finish. Amos Brumble
tried to take command, surging to the front of the group,
but an ill-timed puncture with two laps to go put a
cruel end to what had been a valiant, daylong effort
by the Westerly, Rhode Island native.
Uncontested the rest of the way, Hamblin
cruised home with arms held high to take victory and
over two thousand dollars in cash and prizes. Heredia
and Pineda soon followed to take second and third respectively.
McCormack settled for a hard-earned ninth place.
With his win a week earlier at Lake Auburn,
Hamblin looks to be on a roll as the race season enters
the summer. Just the same, he saved all the praise for
his FiordiFrutta teammates.
“The team worked perfectly today,”
he said after the race. “We came in with a plan
and everybody executed it.” |