Jack Bobridge Hour World Record Attempt 2015 Highlights Track Cycling DISC



Australian Track Cycling Championships 2015 Jack Bobridge fell two laps short of his second cycling world record after an hour of hell. The Australian star rode 51.3km on Saturday night at Melbourne's DISC Velodrome in his unsuccessful hour attempt. It is the second-best distance under the new rules for one of cycling's most-prestigious records. Bobridge also set an Australian record, but he could not beat the 51.852km that Austrian Matthias Brandle rode last October. He started well, but went out slightly too hard on the 250m track and eventually paid a brutal price. His father Kahl and wife, Olympic cyclist Josie Tomic, were in the capacity crowd to watch the ride on the last night of the track nationals. Bobridge was throwing up several minutes after he had to be helped off his bike at the end of the ride. He said it was the hardest thing he had done. "This is the closest to death I will ever be, I think, before actually, without dying," he said. "It's just torn me apart. "I take my hat off to Brandle - it's amazing what he's done. "That's just one hell of a record." Fellow Australian Rohan Dennis will attempt the world hour record on February 8 in Switzerland. Asked what message he would have for his fellow SA rider, Bobridge laughed and said: "don't do it to yourself". Told that coach Tim Decker thought the new Australian record holder would make another attempt, Bobridge replied: "he's going to have to do some serious convincing to make me line up to do it again". After cycling's world governing body, the UCI, standardised the world hour record last year, German Jens Voigt set a new mark of 51.115 in September. A month later, Brandle took it from him. Bobridge eclipsed Voigt's ride and also the old Australian record of 50.052km that Brad McGee set in 1997. Four years ago, Bobridge set the 4000m individual pursuit world record. Decker confessed he and Bobridge slightly misjudged the ride. "There's no doubt that we were maybe a little bit overconfident or we underestimated the hour record a touch," Decker said. "I'm feeling gutted for Jack in the fact that he didn't quite get the record. "Obviously, I have another level of respect for him after seeing him (at) the finish. "He gave it all he could and that's all you can ask." Bobridge was one of the stars of last week's Tour Down Under, but he and Decker refused to blame that race for not breaking the record. Jack Bobridge (born 13 July 1989 in Adelaide) is an Australian professional racing cyclist. In May 2009, Bobridge signed with Garmin-Slipstream, with his contract starting on 1 January 2010 and had been contracted to race with the team until 2012. He left the team at the end of 2011, and joined GreenEDGE for the 2012 season. Bobridge left Orica-GreenEDGE at the end of the 2012 season, and joined Blanco Pro Cycling on a two-year contract from the 2013 season onwards. In September 2009 he won the under-23 time trial at the UCI Road World Championships.In January 2011 he became the Australian National Road Race Champion with a daring solo breakaway. On 2 February 2011, he set a new world record for the track 4k individual pursuit. Bobridge was an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship holder. In November 2014 Bobridge was announced as part of the Team Budget Forklifts line-up for 2015 alongside fellow members of the Australian endurance track squad Luke Davison, Glenn O'Shea, Scott Sunderland and Mitchel Mulhearn, riding a domestic programme with a focus on achieving success on the track at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Bobridge won the opening stage of the 2015 Tour Down Under. He lost the overall lead on stage three but finished the race with the King of the Mountains jersey. On 31 January 2015 Bobridge attempted to break the world hour record in Melbourne. He rode 51.3 kilometres falling short of the record of 51.852 kilometers.

Comments

  1. His arrogance in the build up just makes it funnier.
  2. Riding 'almost full gas' on the track for 60 mins is quite different from doing it on the road. No changes in rhythm. No opportunities to change gear and stretch the legs. Its a totally different 'psychological test. All credit to Brandle. 
  3. Real winner of THE PAIN CONTEST! Amazing.
  4. Amazing. .it truly is 1 hr in hell..Jeans Voight. .did it and for his age that really was amazing. Good job to Jack..


Additional Information:

Visibility: 8079

Duration: 5m 49s

Rating: 23