Business Day

Cycling ace changes lanes

• Reinardt Janse van Rensburg recalls 10 years on the global circuit and a wild ride on the UCI World Tour

- Mark Etheridge

After just shy of 10 years as a profession­al in the World Tour cycling saddle, SA powerhouse Reinardt Janse van Rensburg has shifted gear. Last month, he won the Momentum 94.7 Challenge event in Johannesbu­rg, 10 years after he had first triumphed in that event.

But for now he is back in Pretoria and taking time to look back on a wild ride on the UCI World Tour that brought crests and troughs aplenty.

He is not exactly putting the brakes on his cycling tour, saying the US will be his playground next year and an announceme­nt to this effect will be made soon.

Now a few months shy of his 34th birthday, the Virginia-born ace can still remember his first road race. “I was 11 years old, at Laerskool Transvalia, and was riding a Pick n Pay steel bike. Two years later, I got a proper road bike as a Christmas present and won my first race, in Bronkhorst­spruit.”

That was pretty much the first entry on his impressive palmarès of cycling achievemen­ts down the years.

GREAT START

“My first race with the pros on the World Tour was the 2011 Vuelta Andalucia in Spain where I raced alongside [legendary Spanish rider] Alejandro Valverde who was in his prime,” recalls Janse van Rensburg. “Just after that, I took second in a oneday classic in Almeria, so I had a great start to my career.”

Two years later, he turned pro with the then MTN-Qhubeka outfit and did the Sun Tour in Australia on the Continenta­l Tour stage, where he ended up winning the second stage and taking fourth in the GC (general classifica­tion).

During his career, he has remained mainly loyal to the MTN team through its different iterations of Dimension Data, Qhubeka and NTT, alongside spells with Giant-Shimano and most recently Lotto-Soudal.

It is his latest team that gave him a huge sense of pride.

“Apart from my stage victories etc, this year has made me really proud.

“I didn’t have a team contract until mid-April, when Lotto Soudal came in for me and just two months later, I was named in their Tour de France team. Believing in my own resilience, grit and fight no matter the odds was a great feeling,” he says.

Spending more than 10 years on the global circuit served up many more memories for the man known as “The Beast”, after a particular­ly gritty chase during the Clover Tour in Mpumalanga many years ago.

“Looking back, I’d probably say 2015 was my favourite team year, with MTN.

“We created so much history for the African continent, being the first profession­al African team racing at the Tour de France. We went in with no expectatio­ns, but we punched way above our weight. We were second in the team classifica­tion until two or three days before the end, when Louis Meintjes, one of our star riders, got sick and we slipped back.

“But still, we surprised so many people and earned a lot of respect in world cycling.”

On a personal front, he counts his Malaysian triumph in the 2016 version of the Tour de Langkawi and in Europe, the Binche-Chimay-Binche oneday classic in Belgium. “That was a special one, especially beating someone like the host nation’s Greg Van Avermaet,” he recalls.

“Local is lekker” holds true for the rainbow nations’ home boy. “Winning SA nationals on two occasions is still a highlight for me. You cherish any win, but your own national title is always special.”

Which brings one to low points and he says “cycling is a sport that always brings low points because there are so many factors at play on any given day that if you miss your moment, they don’t come around that quickly”.

Like the national championsh­ips. He won his first national road title in 2017 before injury.

“I gave myself a sport hernia that needed operating on and I was out for about six months. That was a definite low point.”

INJURIES

Injuries are part and parcel of sport which saw him grinding out the training routines over the years. “December/January are usually our toughest months and you’ll spend between 22-30 hours a week on the bike, 2-3 hours in the gym and then probably an hour of running.”

Crashes are also part of the sport, but thankfully, he’s got off relatively lightly.

“I broke my finger when I was 16, but probably the most major crash was in France after which I needed an op years later to fix broken cartilage in my shoulder, and of course I’ve had a few concussion­s.”

Cycling aficionado­s may remember his big coming together with Mother Earth at this year s Tour de France.

“That ’was definitely the most spectacula­r when I came off at around 74km/h and spun through the air like a rag doll.

“It made for a great TV crash, but miraculous­ly, I didn’t have a scratch. Lining up for the next day no-one could believe I’d come through unscathed.”

His personal life hasn’t been unscathed though, with a nasty scare for girlfriend [now wife] Leilani while the pair were at their Spanish base of Girona.

“That was in 2014. She just started getting swollen feet. A month later, she came home and was admitted straight into ER with renal failure and doctors said it was just days before she would have gone into a coma.”

WE CREATED SO MUCH HISTORY FOR THE CONTINENT, BEING THE FIRST PRO AFRICAN TEAM RACING AT THE TOUR DE FRANCE

Reinardt Janse van Rensburg Profession­al cyclist

Leilani was on kidney dialysis for six months before her father gave her the gift of life in the shape of a kidney transplant.

“She’s been healthy ever since and till this day, we’re living a miraculous journey.”

If he had to give back a gift of knowledge to the new generation of cyclists, it would be to live life on all fronts. “The youngsters turning pro now are already at the highest level due to the progress of scientific training. All they need to learn is how to race, and that you can only learn through racing.

“My concern is that modernday pressure in cycling is so intense now that they run the risk of never having a social life and that’s an important part of growing up, because it ’ s hard to get those years back.”

For now though, as he faces the new chapter in the land of stars and stripes, there’s no doubting that the beast will roar once more.

 ?? /Reuters ?? ‘The Beast’: Reinardt Janse van Rensburg in action in the individual time trial at the 2018 Tour de France.
/Reuters ‘The Beast’: Reinardt Janse van Rensburg in action in the individual time trial at the 2018 Tour de France.

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