Coverage - Day 7 - Winton TT & Winton to Invercargill

Stage 7 Wrap - Individual Time Trial

 

SJ6_4968

Burnett takes handy lead into final stage of the SBS Bank Tour of Southland

9/11/2024 - Masters rider Glenn Haden has taken out the penultimate stage of the 2024 SBS Bank Tour of Southland, with Josh Burnett carrying an overall lead of almost two minutes into this afternoon’s final beat from Winton to Invercargill.

Haden (Couplands), a noted time trial specialist, finally won the stage seven 13km individual time trial based at Winton in a time of 16min 05sec, 1sec ahead of last year’s stage winner Ben Oliver, with Burnett 3sec behind.

Burnett (Creation Signs-MitoQ-NZ Cycling Project) extended his lead in the general classification over second placed Matthew Wilson (Advanced Personnel) to 1min 57sec as he looks to repeat his 2022 Southland tour title.

Samuel Jenner (Central Benchmakers-Willbike) is in third place overall, 3min 24 sec in arrears.

The final stage, which starts at 1.30pm, is a 77km trip from Winton to Invercargill, a nervous final journey after seven days of hard racing.

While Burnett has also locked up the King of the Mountain classification, and Bailey O’Donnell (Holmes Solutions) owns the Sprint Ace jersey, Southland’s Luke Macpherson (Macaulay Ford-GoodTech) saw his over 35 lead trimmed to just 53sec to Haden after the time trial.

Australian Declan Trezise (Transport Engineering Southland-Deep South) leads Southland’s Marshall Erwood by 5min 44sec in the under 23 classification.

PowerNet also gave away some time to Creation Signs-MitoQ-NZ Cycling Project in the teams classification, but still holds a 2min 20sec lead.

This afternoon’s stage is scheduled to finish in Invercargill at 3pm, but with strong winds building during the day an earlier finish could be on.

Stage 8 Wrap - Saturday 8th November 2024

 

Final11

Josh Burnett adds name to elite list with second SBS Bank Tour of Southland victory

9/11/2024 - Winning a second SBS Bank Tour of Southland in the space of three years is something that will take some time to sink in for Josh Burnett.

The 24-year-old produced a strong final day in the 68th edition of the Southland tour to add his name to an elite list of riders who have won the fabled event multiple times.

Burnett was third in the morning’s individual time trial in Winton, before his Creation Signs-MitoQ-NZ Cycling teammates delivered him safely to Invercargill’s Queens Park over the final 77km stage in gale winds to collect the title.

The win sees him join the likes of Warwick Dalton, Tino Tabak, Stephen Cox, Jack Swart, Brian Fowler, Gordon McCauley, Hayden Roulston and Aaron Gate.

“I definitely don’t hold my name up there with those guys in my own head so it feels surreal when you put me on that list,” Burnett said.

“I was just so focused on the one goal today, I’m going to enjoy this and I’m sure a few more stats and comparisons will come up but those guys had some pretty good careers and I’ve got a bit more to show for myself.”

Burnett’s winning margin was 1min 57sec from Hamilton’s Matthew Wilson (Advanced Personnel), with Samuel Jenner (Central Benchmakers-Willbike) third at 3min 24sec.

Just as it was in 2022 when Burnett became the first Southlander to win their home tour since Doug Bath in 1994, locals turned out to support him over the final stage, with signs and strategically placed hay bales lining the route from Winton to Invercargill.

“I’m just so grateful for all the support. Everyone here in Queens Park and all the signs and everything. You kind of realise what being a Southlander means, it’s such a tight-knit community and just how passionate everyone is about sport.

“It was weird. It was almost less pressure from 2022 with the drought and the Doug Bath thing and a bit more pressure because a lot of people expected the same thing. A lot more riders were watching me so I had to be a lot more selective with when I went and what I did, but I had such a strong team and I basically sat on the back and climbed when I needed to and followed when I needed to.”

Burnett, who will join Spanish Pro Continental team Burgos BH next year, thanked his team for supporting him throughout the year as he looked to regain a professional contract after the demise of Black Spoke.

“They all sacrificed so much for me this week but there’s been plenty of times this year when we’ve ridden for different guys and a big part of this team is everyone getting their opportunities because it’s a development team.”

Australian rider Graeme Frislie (Quality Foods Southland) won the bunch sprint in Gala St to claim the stage eight victory after Southlander Tom Sexton had earlier looked to go solo as the tour lapped Queens Park.

“It’s been a really fun week out here racing, the weather has thrown out a few challenges but it’s really nice to come out here and repay the boys for their efforts during the week with a win,” Frislie said.

Fellow Australian Declan Trezise (Transport Engineering Southland-Deep South) came home safely in the bunch to claim the under 23 classification, finishing fourth overall.

Burnett also won the King of the Mountain jersey, while Bailey O’Donnell (Holmes Solutions) took out the Sprint Ace classification and PowerNet won the teams classification.

Southland’s Luke Macpherson won the over 35 classification, which was dedicated to the late Ken Lasenby, a beloved figure in New Zealand cycling.

Stage 7 & 8 YouTube Video