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Canada’s Coney 3rd in Women’s Criterium on Stage 4 at Redlands Bicycle Classic

release by the Redlands Bicycle Classic

March 17, 2019 (Redlands, California) – Rachel Langdon (Amy D Foundation) took victory in the Redlands Criterium today, sprinting from the breakaway ahead of sprint leader Lily Williams (Hagens Berman Supermint) and Helena Coney (Instafund La Prima). Langdon didn’t hold back around the final turn to the line and wound up a sprint that only Williams could challenge.

Women’s podium  ©  Dan Munson
Putting herself into the early move of six which included Williams, Coney, Abby Mickey, Emily Newsom, and Lauren Stephens, Langdon wasn’t guaranteed the breakaway would stick in the later part of the race, when Rally and Supermint began to drive the peloton closer.

“It kept dangling and I thought for sure we were going to get caught,” Langdon said. “And every time we came around the turn, Hagens would drive it a little bit more. With two to go I was planning on the break sticking and thinking about what my plan would be from there.”

The hour long criterium in downtown Redlands has traditionally seen surprise finales and today’s action was no exception.

“I love Redlands Classic, the circuits and the road race, but obviously in the crit I get to have a little bit more fun,” Langdon said. “I didn’t have a great day yesterday, so I think that fueled my fire a little bit more today to get into the break and play a smart race.”

Race leader Amber Neben finished safely in the bunch and starts tomorrow’s Sunset Loop Road Race a minute and one second ahead of Emily Newsom (Tibco).

“Tibco, Sho – Air, Rally – all three teams are in the mix for GC, so it’s going to be a super hard day. There’s a lot of racing ahead and there are no guarantees at this point,” Neben said.

After the criterium, Neben was honored with the annual Redlands Classic Legends award, a testament to her ongoing legacy, on and off the bike. The award is usually reserved for a retired athlete, but Neben was this year’s exception.

“I was surprised because I’m still racing, but it’s such an honor,” Neben said. “I love this race and it has such and place in the history of the sport, you look at all the riders who have come through here and to be on that list is super special.”

Men’s Race
Noah Granigan outsprinted Scott Mcgill to win the Downtown Redlands Criterium Race on Saturday. A break of nine riders was established a few laps into the 90-minute stage, working together in order to fight for the win in the final lap. The 9-corner circuit was marred by several crashes that caused the race to be neutralized a number of times. Granigan had the extra kick in the final meters to earn the first Pro Road Tour stage victory for his new team, Floyd’s Pro Cyclery and the best result of his career. Scott Mcgill (Gateway Devo) finished just behind in second, with First Internet Bike Cycling, Jarret Oldham in third.

Noah Granigan wins  ©  Dan Munson
“The crashes are just something that happens with racing,” Granigan said of the stage. “The first time was actually one of my teammates, Noah Simms on the ground, so I’m hoping he’s okay. Each time coming out, the legs were locked up, just from sitting around a few minutes. It’s definitely not ideal but you just kind of roll with it. It’s great winning, Floyd’s Cycling got a lot of support from Floyd Landis, and all of his partners, so it’s good to have really good people helping us and supporting us.”

Hagens Berman Axeon kept a tight leash on the escapees throughout the race, mostly to keep GC leader Kevin Vermaerke safe from the chaos of the day. The break also included Michael Hernandez and Alex Hoehn of Aevolo Pro Cycling, Hugo Scala Jr (Gateway Devo) and Michael Garrison helping his Landis Trek teammate, Quinn Simmons, extend his lead in the points classification.

Simmons had initially missed the early move, until Garrison pulled him up to join the break, in order to fight Hernandez (Aevolo) for the 6 sprint lines available on the stage. The 17-year-old now holds a 10-point lead over the Aevolo rider.

“Overall it went well, I didn’t exactly expect the break to make it all the way to the end so that was a nice surprise,” Simmons said. “Right as the break formed, Michael Garrison called us both up there, which was the biggest thing because I missed the initial break. He pulled super strong all day to keep the time gap up and help me go for the sprint points. Sadly I wasn’t strong enough to hold it off until the end when we went for it, but still a good day.”

Alex Hoehn (Aevolo) was the highest placed rider in the break, sitting over 3 minutes down on GC. Back in the field, Elevate’s Jordan Cheyne, crashed upon crossing the line with 2 laps to go. The Canadian was unable to finish the stage due to damage to his bike, but crashing in the final 3 laps allowed him to maintain his third place on GC.

The leader classifications and top ten on GC remained the same ahead of the final day of racing on the Sunset Loop Sunday. Kevin Vermaerke (Axeon) leads the general classification, 24 seconds ahead of Eder Frayre and 27 seconds ahead of Cheyne (Elevate – KHS).

The Beaver Medical Group Sunset Road Race men’s 94.1mile road race will begin Sunday at 2 p.m. LIVE streaming presented by Wildlife Generation and CycleStream.TV begins at 9:30 a.m. with our amateur races, before the pro races finale.

Results coming





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