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- 2009. Phila. Int'l Championship . 25th anniversary
- Teutenberg Takes Third Philly Victory with Fast Field Sprint
Teutenberg Takes Third Philly Victory with Fast Field Sprint
- By PCT Admin
- Published 06/7/2009
- 2009. Phila. Int'l Championship . 25th anniversary
- Unrated
PHILADELPHIA (June 7, 2009) – In a turn of the
table, the women racing in the 16th annual Liberty Classic passed the men
racing the TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship, showing just how
fast and hard the women were racing their four laps of the grueling course up
the Manayunk Wall. But in the end, it was a similar story with a large field
sprint, easily won by
"The main
thing was to keep it fast so that nobody could attack," Teutenberg said
about the race strategy. "Allison Powers (Team Type 1) went for solo
attack because she doesn't have a sprint, which was great for me -- I caught
her and then kept going. It was perfect teamwork -- my girls were like
motorbikes in front of me for the last 15 kilometers!"
In the field
sprint, Teutenberg had a significant gap on the rest of the sprinters, enough
to sit up and put her arms in the air to celebrate the win, her third here in
Coming in second
was Joanne Kiesenowski (Team TIBCO). "
Kiesanowski said
that while the speed was high, the course always makes this race difficult.
"This is always a hard race. But it was so much fun on Manayunk, especially
on the last lap. There were so many people out there cheering us
on."
Finishing third was
Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad).
Starting more than
ten minutes behind the men's race the women set off to complete their four laps
of the course. With a high speed set from the gun, breakaways were hard to come
by. Rachel Warner (Salamander Racing) was able to escape the field but only by
herself, which always proves to be a tough challenge.
As the laps wore
on, breakaways were caught and the amount of fans increased on 'The Wall,'
cheering on the riders. Starting the final lap for the women, the rear-end of
the men's race was only 45 seconds ahead of the lead of the women's race. With
the men still facing more than 100 miles of racing the pace was rather slow
compared to the women, so the race officials neutralized the men's field so
that the women could pass by without hindrance. This was the first time in the
16-year history of the women's race that this has happened. The men's field
moved to the right of the road and actually cheered on the remaining women, who
were too busy getting into position for the critical final climb of "The
Wall.'
As a race within a
race, points were given to the top three riders over "The Wall" each
lap, with Ruth Corset taking the most points in a very competitive race. As
well, a separate award was given to the best placed young American rider (under
23,) going to Amy Dombrowski (Webcor).