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09.03.11 - CANADIAN
CATHARINE PENDREL CROWNED MOUNTAIN BIKE WORLD CHAMPION
Pendrel wins last World Championships before the Olympics
to conclude “best season ever”
(Champéry, SUI – September 3, 2011) Canadian
mountain biker Catharine Pendrel of Kamloops, British
Columbia, who grew up in Harvey Station, New Brunswick
was crowned World Champion on Saturday in the Olympic
disciple of cross-country at the 2011 International
Cycling Union (UCI) Mountain Bike World Championships
in Champéry, Switzerland.
Pendrel (Team Luna Pro), the favourite entering the
event as the #1-ranked rider in the World, crossed the
finish line after 31.8 kilometres of racing with a time
of 1:46:14, and in doing so retains her status as the
best in the World.
“It’s marvellous. I am so happy that I
finally won a medal at World Championships. Not only
it’s a medal, but it’s a Gold one. It was
awesome, with lots of people cheering alongside the
entire course,” said Pendrel, 31. “I really
like this course, I really like the terrain. I think
it’s a challenging course. I knew I could put
it together here. The relay was really good confidence
for me with the fastest lap for the women.”
Canada’s Alison Sydor was the last Canadian women
to win the World Championships title in the cross-country
discipline, back in 1996. Sydor is still Canada’s
greatest women mountain biker with 10 World Championships
medal, including three World titles.
“Welcome home, stripes!” I was probably
the most nervous I have ever been before a race. I knew
I was ready, I knew I had done all my preparations.
The support has been amazing from Team Luna, Team Canada,
and Own the podium who helps out a lot of the athletes
and the program. I was just tried to control the nerves,
and my Canadian teammates were just awesome in keep
me grounded.
Cindy Devine won a World Title in the Elite downhill
category in 1990, while Lauren Rosser won the World
title in the women’s junior downhill race last
season.
Pendrel was fourth at last year’s World Championships
in Canada, and fourth at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Summer
Games. This season, Pendrel finished second of the UCI
World Cup Tour, posting three victories and two silver
medals in seven races, as well as winning the Hadleigh
Farm Invitational, in Essex, the 2012 Olympic test event.
Pendrel first took part in World Championships in 2004,
where she finished 46th. Since then, she went on to
the 2007 Pan-American Games, the 2008 Pan-American Championships
and the 2010 UCI World Cup title.
Throughout her career, Pendrel has 16 World Cup podiums,
including eight victories, as well as winning the last
three Canadian Championships titles.
Emily Batty of Brooklin, ON (Team Subaru-Trek), was
racing for the first time in the Elite category at World
Championships, finishing in eighth position. Batty conlcudes
an excellent season, progressing steadily race after
race to finish in eighth position of the World Cup rankings.
Marie-Hélène Prémont of Chateau
Richer, QC (Team Rocky Mountain-Maxxis) crossed the
finish line in ninth position, 5:01 seconds behind Pendrel’s
winning time. Prémont, a former UCI World Cup
Champion, ranked fourth at the conclusion of the 2011
UCI World Cup Tour this year. Prémont, a pharmacist
by profession in Mont-Sainte-Anne who is currently doing
her apprenticeship, was happy with her performance.
“It was a difficult race as I was fighting a
back injury. During training I crashed and a bottle
of CO2 (used for tire inflation) exploded in my back
pocket, and that incident almost made me miss this race.
My legs felt really good throughout the entire race,”
said the 2004 Olympic silver medallist and 2006 World
Championships bronze medallist.
Canada’s women program is ranked #1 in the world,
largely thanks to the World Cup performances from Pendrel,
Prémont and Batty. Today, Canada posted three
results in the Top 10, showcasing Canada’s strengths.
Jean-Ann Berkenpass finished 30th, followed by Catherine
Vipond in 31st position. Amanda Sin finished the tough
race in 38th position.
KABUSH STRONG PERFORMER ON THE BIG DAY
In the men’s race, Geoff Kabush of Courtenay,
BC (Team Rocky Mountain-Maxxis), a seven-time Canadian
Champion and Olympian, finished his race in tenth position,
in a field that included 2008 Olympic champion and four-time
World Champion Julien Absalon of France, the defending
World Champion Jose Antonio Hermida-Ramos of Spain,
the 2011 World Cup Champion Jaroslav Kuhalev and former
World Champion Nino Schurter to name a few.
In doing so, Kabush, a long-time veteran of the sport
and performer on the big day, posted his best result
of the season. Last year at Worlds, Kabush had also
posted his best finish of the season.
Canadian champion Max Plaxton of Victoria, BC (Team
Specialized Factory) posted the second best Canadian
performance, finishing in 22nd position with a time
of 1:52:53. Last year, Plaxton finished 39th at the
World Championships.
Derek Zandstra of Trenton, ON (3-Rox Racing) also posted
a great result, crossing the line in the 26th position.
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