‘Cross: Adams Wins London League R4

Navigation:
Home » Cyclo-Cross


Location: Herne Hill Velodrome, London
Event: 2 October 2011
Report: Snowdon Sports


Sigma Sport's Steve Adams took victory in the fourth round of the Mosquito Bikes London League staged on a tight and twisty circuit around the Herne Hill Velodrome in London on Sunday.

The 22-year-old Harpenden-based rider crossed the line 35 seconds ahead of his nearest rival after patiently pulling away over a number of laps of a testing circuit, which attracted a massive field to the event and stretched the venue to the max.

Second spot went to La Fuga-Sigma rider Sylvain Garde from Croydon, while Gary Record (Bike Tars) was another 17 seconds off the pace in third place.

While London Phoenix rider Matt Webber took fourth, fifth spot went to London Fire Brigade veteran Mick Bell, while first junior was Jack Finch (VC Deal) in seventh.

Louise Mahe (Mule Bars) was the fastest woman, while in the youth race VC Jubilee's Jake Marley managed to put around 35 seconds of daylight between himself and rival Thomas Butler (VC Deal).

Results:

1 Steve Adams (Sigma Sport-Specialized)
2 Sylvain Garde (La Fuga-Sigma) @ 35sec
3 Gary Record (Bike Tarts) @ 52sec
4 Matt Webber (London Phoenix) @ 1:50
5 Mick Bell (London Fire Brigade) @ 2:05
6 James Duguid (London Dynamo) @ 2:10
7 Jack Finch (VC Deal) @ same time
8 Philip Glowinski (VC Londres) @ 2:38
9 Simon Bird (Vicious Velo) @ 2:55
10 Josh Parkin (Arctic RT) @ 3:10
Veterans: Mick Bell. Juniors: Jack Finch. Women: Louise Mahe (Mule Bars).
Youth:
1 Jake Marley (VC Jubilee) 30:02
2 Thomas Butler (VC Deal) @ 35sec
3 David Barnes (unattached) @ 1:22
4 Anthony Anderson (Kingston Wheelers) @ 2:25
Girls: Abi Van Twist (VC Londres).
Under-12s:
1 Luke Mitchie (Team Darenth)
2 Nathan Martin (Team Darenth)
3 Arlo Ludgewick (unattached)
Under-10s:
1 Chris Moore
2 Bar Grossman
3 Joe Blackmore


British Cycling would like to thank the organising team, officials and everyone else who helped promote this event. Our sport could not exist without the hundreds of people, many of them unpaid volunteers, who put in many hours of hard work running events, activities and clubs.