Weekend Herald

‘Kiwis have no idea about Covid’

Road cycling star Bennett has blunt warning over spread of coronaviru­s

- Cycling Alex Chapman

George Bennett is frustrated.

The Kiwi cyclist won the Gran Piemonte race in the Apennine Mountains in Italy on Thursday, allowing him to raise his arms aloft for the first time in his storied career.

That’s despite him winning the Tour of California in 2017.

“It’s a bit of a strange stat,” the Jumbo-Visma rider tells the Weekend Herald.

“Sometimes I’d just think s**t . . . I knew I only had Piemonte and then this weekend in a free role, before going back to being a help rider at the Tour de France.

“So it was a bit of, ‘oh man, it’s going to be another year without a win’ and so I really wanted to just tick it off.”

It also gives him a massive confidence boost heading into Il Lombardia in Lombardy, Italy, tomorrow night.

“It’s one of the monuments of cycling. The reason I did Piemonte was for this. I knew it would be good prep for Lombardia.

“We think we have a good chance, the course suits me better than Piemonte. It has a lot more of a climbing focus as opposed to technical and absolute punch. So yeah, I’m excited for it.”

Not long after winning Piemonte, Bennett was hit with the news that the road world championsh­ips would be moved from Switzerlan­d, although there is scepticism whether the event will find a new home this year. Bennett’s gutted.

“It was a race that I really wanted to target because I think it was the hardest world champs course in years. It was going to be a week after the Tour, I could go for myself and I really love racing with the Kiwi boys.”

And just like that, the conversati­on turns from cycling to Covid. At the start of the call Bennett asks how everything is back home, with the return of Covid-19 restrictio­ns. When that’s brought back up, he laughs.

“It’s not really lockdown though, is it? Even in Auckland. When we were in lockdown over here [Catalunya] it was 2½ months of ‘don’t leave your house, you’re not allowed outside for exercise, you’re not allowed out for a minute of the day’. New Zealand is so lucky with how everything has been with things like live sport.”

That’s where the frustratio­n comes into it.

“We have 450 cases a day here, and so that’s why it’s good New Zealand is going back in [to the alert levels] so quickly. But it’s also why I get annoyed at people talking about not wanting to wear a mask.

“I’m at a hotel and I don’t even walk into a corridor without putting

Kiwis have no idea what’s actually happening and how bad it can get. George Bennett

my mask on. I start bike races with a mask on, we have masks on when we’re on the bus. It’s not an inconvenie­nce to put a mask on.

“Some Kiwis have no idea what’s actually happening and how bad it can get when it’s over here and when you see what Covid can look like.

“People talk about how it’s just a bad flu and all of this conspiracy nonsense that you just think ‘ugh, pull your head in and do your part’ because if you get on top of it quickly like the New Zealand Government is doing, you get all sorts of benefits,” he fumed to the Weekend Herald.

The pandemic’s also made Bennett change how he views the job which allows him to compete around the world in the sport he loves.

“It is kind of surprising we’re racing, but I get tested twice a week, and then when I go to the Tour, it’ll be even more. So I’m taking every race day at the moment as the last one.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? George Bennett can’t mask his frustratio­n over Covid attitudes in New Zealand.
Photo / AP George Bennett can’t mask his frustratio­n over Covid attitudes in New Zealand.

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