Organisers of the Santos Tour Down Under, which takes place in and around Adelaide, South Australia from 15-22 January 2012, have revealed the Team Sky line-up for the race that is now established as the curtain-raiser to the UCI WorldTour season. World champion Mark Cavedish, who endured a miserable time in his debut race at the start of this year, won't be racing.
Three Australians are named in the British team’s line-up, with Chris Sutton, winner of Stage 6 of the 2010 race in Team Sky’s debut season joining Michael Rogers, and Mat Hayman.
Rogers, overall winner of the 2002 race, is back after a debut season with Team Sky that came to a premature end in the spring when he as struck by glandular fever.
Geraint Thomas, whose main target next year will be the team pursuit at London 2012, is also in the squad, alongside British national time trial champion Alex Dowsett and Edvald Boasson Hagen and new signing Danny Pate.
In January this year, Pate rode in the race for HTC-Highroad alongside Cavendish, but the Manxman had a week to forget, crashing heavily on one stage and having to mix it with the traffic on another when he was trailing the peloton and the roads were opened prematurely.
"We are really excited about the inclusion of Edvald Boasson Hagen in the team,” said race director Mike Turtur.
“He is the current Norwegian National Time Trial Champion for the fifth year running and a two time Tour de France stage winner. He is fiercely competitive, young and hungry for a win.
"Geraint Thomas and Alex Dowsett have both had strong 2011 seasons and we look forward to that form continuing with their start to the 2012 season at our race."
"We look forward to seeing Sutton's form continue and it is always good to see Hayman racing at our event, a crowd favourite and one of the good guys of Australian cycling - he always races hard.
"USA's Danny Pate was first overall in the King of the Mountains Competition at the 2011 Grand Prix Cycliste de Montreal, making him one to watch for the ŠKODA King of the Mountain points here," Turtur concluded
Let's hope he doesn't read Road CC, the amount of articles they write putting a downer on him.
Only reading the headline on the homepage, not the rest of the article, but I only ride mountain bikes and I still get close passed...
Fair enough, personal experience may trump (not that one) theory. However, the bonking I have experienced has been due to lack of carbs. Your point...
Agreed, but he was still right to publicise the event. The police, if they're anything like Lancashire, will do nothing at all.
mdavidfrodo?
How can anybody reject the beauty of that? It's a wonderful mix of modern tech yet absolutely functional.
Not unless theVED is made eye wateringly expensive....
in the UK we have policing which to a greater or lesser extent relies on assistance from members of the public......
Just wanted to share a quick thank you to everyone who helped out in this thread....
So...don't cycle on it. Lots of other routes around that area. Source: I used to work there.