The Southland Times

Tour a Southland institutio­n

- Nathan Burdon

At 62, the Tour of Southland is approachin­g retirement age, yet shows no sign of slowing down.

Southlande­rs are rightly proud of this bike race, the most prestigiou­s stage race in New Zealand, but we rarely take the time to celebrate just how special this event is.

Most of the time we leave it for others to say, and they aren’t shy in saying it.

Talk to just about any visiting rider or manager from last week’s race and you’ll hear a similar refrain.

Great organisati­on. Great sponsors. Great support from the community. A great course.

We joke about the weather, of course, but it’s the wind and the rain and the hail which gives the Tour of Southland its defining character.

Like a links golf course, the race just plays better if the elements play their part.

Steve Nicholls, a weekend warrior from Hawke’s Bay, rode his first Tour of Southland in 2017 as a bucket list event.

That year’s race featured a series of days in the mid-20s and the wind barely made an appearance. It was benign, and if it hadn’t been for a tremendous ride from eventual champion James Piccoli on the stage to Gore, it would have been a bit beige.

But this year, after surviving the screaming front which greeted the peloton at McCracken’s Rest on the wild southern coastline, and the hail on top of the Blackmount, and the head wind from Gorge Road all the way back to Invercargi­ll before the climb up Motupohue, Nicholls has stories which will last him for the rest of his life. ‘‘At the time I just wanted to get off my bike and jump into the team van, but now I can say I’ve ridden a real Tour of Southland,’’ Nicholls said. And it’s those stories that nourish tour mythology, stories that get spread around the cycling world and help to promote Southland. What price can we put on an event which provides this level of exposure, with stunning images of our province going out around the country and the world? In fact, could more be done to maximise that exposure and use the Tour of Southland as a platform for positionin­g Southland as one of the best places in New Zealand to come and ride your bike? An essential aspect of cycling, which can be a hard, lonely and exhausting pursuit, is sacrifice. Major sponsor SBS Bank this year opted not to have its branding on the Most Combative jersey, not wanting to distract from the awesome design work of 10-year-old Ruby Jackson, from Invercargi­ll.

It also took its branding off a team it supports all year so that room could be made for Ronald McDonald House. How many sponsors are willing to do that?

Tour director Bruce Ross and his family are closely linked with the Tour of Southland. Ross took over as Tour director in the early 1980s and has been involved in some capacity for 49 years. Next year will be his 50th, and last as director.

The race will undergo some change when his successor takes over, but that’s nothing new for this race.

Over the years the Tour has grown from three days to six. A big field for much of its history would have been 30-40 riders. Last Sunday, 108 riders started the race, with only nine of them from Southland.

Graham Sycamore, who has been involved with the Tour of Southland for 52 years, recalled being part of small group who were charged with reviving the race in 1969.

There were grave fears that the race was dying and those volunteers were given the responsibi­lity of reviving it.

Every year the race has been tweaked, changed, improved on – a cycle of improvemen­t, you might call it.

There’s more than 120 volunteers involved in the race, donating thousands of hours of their time.

The Tour of Southland will endure, because this isn’t just a bike race, it’s part of who we are as Southlande­rs. It’s part of the fabric of this place.

Article supplied by sportsouth land.co.nz ■ Everyone Active Every Day #everyoneac­tiveeveryd­ay.

 ??  ?? The weather doesn’t always play nice for the Tour of Southland, but that’s part of what makes the event special. PHOTOS: ROBYN EDIE/STUFF
The weather doesn’t always play nice for the Tour of Southland, but that’s part of what makes the event special. PHOTOS: ROBYN EDIE/STUFF
 ??  ?? Celebratin­g his win in 2017, overall Tour winner Canadian James Piccoli.
Celebratin­g his win in 2017, overall Tour winner Canadian James Piccoli.
 ??  ?? Tour director Bruce Ross was in his 49th year of the tour this year.
Tour director Bruce Ross was in his 49th year of the tour this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand