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Subject: Timor gears up for gruelling cycle race challenge
Timor gears up for gruelling cycle race challenge
By Matt Crook (AFP) 8 hours ago
DILI East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta has thrown down the
gauntlet to foreign cyclists ahead of the inaugural Tour de Timor and
warned the race will be one of the toughest in the world.
The tour from August 24 to 28 will be a highlight of festivities
surrounding the 10th anniversary of East Timor's vote for independence
from Indonesia, and the biggest sporting event the tiny country has ever
held.
The president has been enthusiastically promoting the race, which the
government is hoping will boost not only tourism but also the fledgling
nation's image as a peaceful country after years of unrest.
The Tour will be "one of the most challenging bike races anywhere
in the world, probably tougher than the Tour de France", he said.
Sixty international cyclists from Australia, New Zealand and Malaysia
have already signed up, including Australian mountain biker Dylan Cooper,
while East Timor is expected to enter between three to six teams of four
riders.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ramos-Horta said his country's proud amateur
cyclists were ready to take on the world, particularly regional sporting
giants Australia and New Zealand.
"Australians and New Zealanders are known to be very tough
competitors," he told AFP.
"But they cannot compete against the tough East Timorese so I
think the moment they see the geography, the conditions, they will
probably prefer to stay in Byron Bay (Australia) and enjoy the sunshine
there."
Up to 250 participants from around the Asia-Pacific region are expected
to take part in the 350-kilometre (217-mile) race around the rugged,
tropical half-island state.
Like its French predecessor the Tour de Timor will see riders battle it
out over stages for a yellow jersey, with total prize money of 75,000
dollars.
Cyclists will tackle nine districts over five days, starting with a
coastal jaunt east from the capital Dili, up short, steep hills and
through fishing villages to Baucau.
Day two will take them onto rock-strewn back-roads ending with a
20-kilometre downhill run to Viqueque.
The race then heads over river beds and probably the worst roads ever
seen in a cycling tour, before a backbreaking 2,000-metre (6,560-foot)
climb along 70 kilometres of country roads, through highland villages and
dense forest.
The final descent on August 28 will see competitors wind their way
through rice paddies and Timor's famous coffee plantations back to Dili,
with a flat sprint at the end of the 95-kilometre stretch.
Despite a severe lack of resources, including decent bikes, 28-year-old
Jorge de Silva who represented East Timor at the recent Arafura Games in
Darwin, northern Australia, says local teams are up for the challenge.
"It's the first time we've had an opportunity to have
international teams in our country since independence," he said.
"It's in our backyard, so just come over and we'll try you
out."
Each of the national teams will be sponsored and receive new equipment,
so De Silva is hoping to replace the seven-year-old bike he has been
training on.
But he admitted his countrymen had a lot to learn about competitive
sport.
"When I was in Darwin I noticed that all the athletes had specific
food. The cyclists, when they came back in, they had food with nutrition
that replenished what they lost and to us it's something new, we don't
have that," he said.
Tour public relations manager Sean Borrell said the event would require
"another level of development" from local organisers whose only
previous experience with putting together such a race was the 2004 Timor
Challenge.
"It will be recorded professionally, timed professionally and
there is prize money, so this is the first step of what is hopefully to be
an annual event," he said.
"The president's vision is to create a cycling event that is in
the same league as international events."
The Malaysian National Cycling Federation will send eight riders; the
Asean Cycling Association is on board to lend technical expertise and the
racing federation of Singapore has expressed interest in participating.
Borrell said he was also hoping to organise teams representing the
international peacekeepers who were redeployed to Timor after civil unrest
in 2006, as well as the United Nations police based in the country.
Corporate sponsorship has come from Australian airline Airnorth, which
has pledged 220 Darwin-Dili return flights for riders, media and support.
East Timor voted almost 80 percent in favour of independence from
Indonesia in a referendum on August 30, 1999.
More than 200,000 people were killed in fighting between pro- and
anti-independence groups, and the departing Indonesian army and its
proxies destroyed much of the country's infrastructure on its way out.
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