The home team got off to a blazing start in worlds week on Monday in Richmond, Virginia as junior American women went one-two in the individual time trial. Chloe Dygert won the 15-kilometer race, 1:06 ahead of her compatriot Emma White. Australian Anna-leeza Hull rounded out the podium, 1:26 behind the winner.
“I enjoyed it so much,” Dygert, of Brownsburg, Indiana, said. “I’m a power climber, and [the course] was made for me. It’s really exciting, this is my first worlds.”
Top-10 results
- 1. Chloe Dygert, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, in 20:18.47
- 2. Emma White, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, at 1:05.53
- 3. Anna-leeza Hull, AUSTRALIA, at 1:26.08
- 4. Pernille Mathiesen, DENMARK, at 1:30.41
- 5. Juliette Labous, FRANCE, at 1:35.96
- 6. Aafke Soet, NETHERLANDS, at 1:40.67
- 7. Daria Pikulik, POLAND, at 1:41.06
- 8. Gillian Ellsay, CANADA, at 1:45.17
- 9. Agnieszka Skalniak, POLAND, at 1:47.51
- 10. Emeliah Harvie, CANADA, at 1:49.51
Winds kicked up throughout the morning, buffeting riders as they rode across exposed overpasses through Richmond’s downtown.
“On the bridge it was a full-on headwind, just powering through it. It was difficult,” White said. “You really had to keep that mental strength up to continue the rest of the ride.”
“I tried not to think about it,” Dygert said of the windy conditions. “I had a headphone in for Ina [Teutenberg] and an earplug so I wouldn’t hear it. That helped me block it out. I knew it was there but I was able to ignore it.”
White, the reigning U.S. junior cyclocross champion, will step back into a ‘cross schedule as soon as next weekend, and is eyeing a good performance at the world championships in Luxembourg. “I absolutely plan on racing the season, transitioning pretty quick, heading to the Providence UCI race,” she said.
Dygert is the U.S. junior national champion in both the time trial and the road race. White finished second in this year’s national championship TT.
Full results
- 1. Chloe Dygert, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, in 20:18.47
- 2. Emma White, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, at 1:05.53
- 3. Anna-leeza Hull, AUSTRALIA, at 1:26.08
- 4. Pernille Mathiesen, DENMARK, at 1:30.41
- 5. Juliette Labous, FRANCE, at 1:35.96
- 6. Aafke Soet, NETHERLANDS, at 1:40.67
- 7. Daria Pikulik, POLAND, at 1:41.06
- 8. Gillian Ellsay, CANADA, at 1:45.17
- 9. Agnieszka Skalniak, POLAND, at 1:47.51
- 10. Emeliah Harvie, CANADA, at 1:49.51
- 11. Yumi Kajihara, JAPAN, at 1:54.52
- 12. Camila Valbuena, COLOMBIA, at 1:56.84
- 13. Natalia Studenikina, RUSSIAN FEDERATION, at 2:02.48
- 14. Yara Kastelijn, NETHERLANDS, at 2:02.97
- 15. Nikola Noskova, CZECH REPUBLIC, at 2:03.33
- 16. Aline Seitz, SWITZERLAND, at 2:05.12
- 17. Lisa Morzenti, ITALY, at 2:07.63
- 18. Marion Borras, FRANCE, at 2:13.67
- 19. Susanne Andersen, NORWAY, at 2:13.77
- 20. Ida Jansson, SWEDEN, at 2:14.35
- 21. Ksenia Tcjmbaliuk, RUSSIAN FEDERATION, at 2:14.85
- 22. Sofia Bertizzolo, ITALY, at 2:22.45
- 23. Abby-mae Parkinson, GREAT BRITAIN, at 2:22.53
- 24. Georgia Catterick, NEW ZEALAND, at 2:27.40
- 25. Frida Knutsson, SWEDEN, at 2:30.32
- 26. Ema Manikaite, LITHUANIA, at 2:34.69
- 27. Maria PalmEva, BELGIUM, at 2:39.95
- 28. Ciara Doogan, IRELAND, at 2:46.02
- 29. Maria CalderonFernandez, SPAIN, at 3:02.70
- 30. Nathalie Bex, BELGIUM, at 3:03.23
- 31. Elizabeth Holden, GREAT BRITAIN, at 3:06.81
- 32. Ingvild Gaskjenn, NORWAY, at 3:07.02
- 33. Ana Suarez, ECUADOR, at 3:42.21
- 34. Teresa RipollSabate, SPAIN, at 4:14.03
- 35. Diana Ramos, PUERTO RICO, at 4:35.34
- 36. Helen Mitchell, ZIMBABWE, at 5:00.04
- 37. Christa Riffel, GERMANY, at 5:22.52
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