
Scottish
Road Race Championships
Sunday 3rd June, 2007
by Ed Hood
The result may have been predictable, but Evan
Oliphant (DFL) only took home the gold medal in a sodden Scottish
road race championship after an incident-packed four hours.

Evan Oliphant - Scottish Road Champion 2007.
Taking a well-deserved silver medal and 'moral
victor' of the championship was pre-race favourite Raymond Wilson
(Dunfermline CC).
The Irishman displayed great strength of character
against Oliphant and the Velo Ecosse duo of Phil Brown and Stuart
MacGregor; these four riders dominated the finale with Brown taking
his first ever road race medal, leaving MacGregor with just the €30
fourth prize as consolation.
The race took in two laps of a large circuit which
included the brutal Nick o' Balloch climb; then two laps of a small
finishing circuit near Straiton.
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Velo Ecosse bring up the tail of the bunch
- first time up the Nick.
By the end of the first lap of the main circuit
around half of the field had succumbed to the dismal conditions, hills
and gravel-strewn surfaces.
Gary Hand (KFS) meanwhile, had flown the nest and
was on a gallant - or over-optimistic, depending on your point of
view - solo off the front.
As Hand, and then the survivors of the bunch, left
Straiton to start their second lap they were mis-directed and it took
the organisers a little time to sort things out.

Paul Rennie headed for the showers early
after the direction error.
Paul Rennie (Edge RT) didn't hang around to see
what the outcome would be, he popped a u-turn and headed for the strip.

Trying to figure out what's going on.
It was a wet, cold and de-motivated group of riders
who eventually re-started 39 seconds behind Hand - albeit he did get
away right behind a well-timed truck; as pre-race favourite but eventual
non-finisher, Gordon Murdoch (East Kilbride RC) succintly put it;
'he's jumped a f**king juggernaut!'

The only happy riders were those souls who had
been dropped but caught-up again at the enforced halt.
Indeed, Oliphant had to be persuaded to continue
by mentor, Gregor Russell.
On the Nick for the second time MacGregor, Brown
and Hand lead by a handful of seconds from Wilson, Arthur Doyle (Ivy
CC), Oliphant and a surprising Michael Mallen (GS Metro).

L to R: Brown, Hand and MacGregor lead 2nd
time up the Nick.
The two groups merged before the top and the race
was over for all but these seven riders; Brown took the prime as the
weather conditions went from bad to grim.

Mallen leads the others towards the finishing
circuit.
On the long, winding ascent of Tairlaw, which follows
the descent from the Davie Bell memorial cairn Brown danced clear
as Hand succumbed to the cold, wet and gravity.
The descent to Straiton saw Brown consolidate his
lead but the rolling, twisting finishing circuit saw pursuit and short-distance
specialist, Doyle run out of gas and Mallen succumb to cramp.

Mallen has no option but to let the break
go as he suffers cramp.
This left just four riders in the finale; Oliphant,
Wilson and MacGregor behind Brown, alone in the lead and looking like
a winner until Wilson decided that the only thing he could do was
chase.
MacGregor was not going to chase-down a team mate
and it was unlikely that Oliphant - a long-term Velo Ecosse member
before he turned pro would do much to aid the chase.

There's no shortage of water on the Nick
today!
It was a dour pursuit beneath skies heavy with
clouds which poured out driving rain, but eventually Wilson hauled
Brown back with one lap of the finishing circuit to go.
MacGregor and Brown took it in turns to attack
the man who won last weeks Grand Prix if Fife, but he was too strong;
responding to everything that the Velo Ecosse men could through at
him.
An impassive Oliphant meanwhile 'rode shotgun'
facing the dilemma of the big fish in the little pond - win and get
criticised or loose and get crucified.
MacGregor fell on one of the tight bends which
abound on the finishing circuit but the others sportingly waited for
him.

Brown attacks again to try distancing the
others in the break.
Under the canopy of lush, green trees which arch-across
the road approaching the uphill finish, it was Brown on the attack
again.
Wilson showed bull-like strength in bringing him
back and then it was down to track-stand speeds as the chequered flag
could be seen fluttering at the top of the drag.
MacGregor launched the sprint and Wilson responded
immediately but Oliphant doesn't have a contract with a pro continental
squad because he's not quick, and those ripped legs were too quick
for strong-man Wilson.

The winner's bike.
Brown took bronze with a tired MacGregor in fourth
after having given his all. Mallen took fifth, Hand sixth and Doyle
seventh.
Quotes of the day

Gary Hand (above): "I
got up to the early break but no one was riding so I put in an effort
and went clear but no one came across. I had 30 seconds over the Nick
the first time and I felt good. It was brutal when we were stopped
though, I know it's the same for everyone but the cold and wet eats
into you - I just seized-up I had a bad patch just as I was caught
and rode the last 35 miles on my own or in the company of one other
rider - I was suffering like a dog!"

Stuart MacGregor (above): "I'm
too old I I don't have a jump any more!"

Phil Brown (above): "It
was maybe a bit early for me to go but there was stalemate in the
group and I decided to take advantage of it. I believe that Raymond
brought me back single-handed; he was very strong today. If I had
to ride the race over I would adopt the same tactic - there was a
chance and I took it. It's my first medal in the road race so I'm
quite pleased."

Ramond Wilson (above): "Ask
me if I felt I was the strongest rider today and I would say, 'yes'.
Ask me if I'm taking the gold medal home and I have to say, 'no'.
No matter how it panned-out today I was up-against it in the last
35 miles. I work full-time and have to make a lot of sacrifices to
race at the level I do - it's difficult to compete against guys who
are full-time. For a while, I thought 'just let Phil win' but then
the best I could have done was bronze. I came here to win and decided
to chase and keep myself in with a chance. Guys have had bad luck
today with punctures and crashes so I can't complain. The 'stop' was
comical more than anything, we're in the biggest race in Scotland
and nobody knows what's happening - all standing there in the rain!
All-in-all, it was good day out though!"

Evan Oliphant (above): "Tell
you about the race? Wet, cold, we got lost and I nearly went home!
Ray was very strong today but I was just making up for last week when
he beat me after I punctured and I had to ride on the rim for five
miles. I wasn't putting everything into it today because I fly out
tomorrow at 06.30 for the Tour of Luxembourg."