
Yates Brothers Dominate in Brighton![]() Miracles do happen. Travelling west towards Last week’s dominator Felix English was absent, as
was fastman John Scripps. So the action focused on superfast youths Adam Gent, Lewis
Earthrowl-Gould and Jake Butler, ever-present strongman Lee Povey, world junior
sprint champ Pete Mitchell and the Yates brothers - the legendary Sean and the
in-form Christian, winner of the recent East Sussex open 10-mile TT. SENIORS Sean Yates wasted no time igniting proceedings
in the 8-lap opener, bursting away from the rest just after the off. He was
initially pursued by Phil Smith, with the peloton being headed by Bruce English,
winner of a stage of the Junior Tour of Ireland some years back. One lap later
Smith had dropped back, while Lewis Earthrowl-Gould and Adam Gent had taken up
the chase with a full-on effort. At mid-race, young Lewis was still in hot
pursuit of the ex-Tour de ![]() However, at this point there was danger for any
rider not called “Yates”, as Sean’s brother Christian was speeding up from
behind and had joined the leading duo with two to go, the bunch at this stage
being headed by Lee Povey, Adam Gent and Andy Parle. This was turning into a
brilliant battle, and although some riders had been jettisoned, there were still
about a dozen in with a shout. At the bell, Sean was slightly ahead of
Christian and Lewis, but by the finish Christian led home ahead of Sean and
Lewis, with Pete Mitchell, Nigel Foskett and Martyn Potter gaining the minor
placings. Track boss Vern McClelland had devised a cunning
programme which enabled as many races to take place as usual, despite the
shorter evening. This included 1-lap “dash” heats and finals for Bs and As.
Neil McClelland used his sprinting ability to beat Rob Dean, Phil Smith and
Andy Parle in the B final, then it was the turn of former British masters
sprint champ Lee Povey from Team Terminator to outsprint clubmate and world
junior team sprint champ Pete Mitchell, Adam Gent and Mark Burgess in the A
final. The points race saw a master-class from the
Yates brothers. Christian powered away alone from the off, gaining the first
maximum while Adam Gent, Lee Povey and Jake Butler each opened their account.
Young Jake, who has recently raced in ![]() In the B seniors 3-lap dash event, Charlie
Heffernan won the £5 prime after the first lap. At the end of a closely-fought
sprint, he came home first in front of Andy Parle, Rob Dean, Nigel Foskett,
Phil Smith and Lee Smith. Pete Mitchell took the fiver on offer after one
lap of the parallel A-riders race, then went on to win the final sprint ahead
of team-mate Lee Povey and Mark Burgess, with Adam Gent, Jake Butler and Lewis
Earthrowl-Gould next across the line. To conclude proceedings, organiser McClelland
offered an unknown distance race to all seniors who were up for the challenge.
Sean Yates went away just after the start and gave a great demonstration of
speed. Notable early efforts were made by Charlie Heffernan, Ben Miller, Jake
Butler and Rob Dean to limit Sean’s lead, but these were all in vain as the
In-Gear Quickvit rider chugged away like a cycling version of a TGV. As Sean’s
advantage approached 100 metres, Charlie and Jake were yoyo-ing ahead of the
bunch, in which Christian Yates and Adam Gent looked the likeliest to pounce.
By the finish, Sean Yates came home alone for a brilliant win, and behind him
the youngsters dominated, Adam Gent taking second, Jake Butler third and Lewis
Earthrowl-Gould fourth. Christian Yates was fifth while Charlie, paying for his
valiant earlier efforts, had fallen back to sixth. ![]() After two weeks of fascinating racing, junior
ace Adam Gent leads the overall A-cat standings, in front of Lee Povey, Felix
English, Christian Yates, Sean Yates and Pete Mitchell. Andy Parle is out front
in the B ranks, leading Charlie Heffernan, Rob Dean and Nigel Foskett, with
Neil McClelland, Anthony Rogers and Phil Smith all tying for fifth. For full
results and points scores, visit scrl.co.uk. YOUTHS Despite the uncertain weather conditions, no
fewer than 35 youths took part in the racing tonight. Handicap races featured
for the first time this season, and these resulted in some close finishes. For
the second time in a row, the £10 voucher for the most meritorious youth went
to an U16 rider (see below). After tonight’s tussles, Milo Burdeau and Cory
Anderson have strengthened their positions at the top of the U14 and U8 rankings
respectively. However, league U12 leader Gabriel Parle is only marginally ahead
of Jake Marley, while U10 boss Douglas McCauley is fractionally in front of Joe
Hill. The U16 category is even tighter and is developing into the battle of the
season with Louis Brasington and Nick Smith tying at the top with Tom Goldsmith
just two points behind. ![]() U16/U14 Tom Jamieson came through at the head of affairs
after one circuit of the 4-lap opener, with younger riders Sara Gent and Kim
English well to the fore. Both Sara and Kim have elected to “ride up” from
their official age-group in order to ride fixed-wheel and they are performing
very well against their older rivals. At mid-race, it was still Tom in control,
but his U16 opponents Nick Smith, Louis Brasington, Tom Goldsmith and James
McCarron looked dangerous. At the bell it was Louis in front, no doubt
confident after his hat-trick of wins last week. However, at the end it was
Nick who triumphed after a fantastic sprint, pipping Louis to the line, with
Tom Goldsmith, Tom Jamieson, James McCarron and U14 Milo Burdeau filling the
other top-6 places. Ashley Dennis and Nathan Moore were the next two U14s. The U14s stayed more or less together in their
2-lap dash race, with the usual suspects James McCarron broke away on the initial lap in
the equivalent U16 event, opening up a useful gap and keeping it all the way to
the finish to also earn himself the AD Cycles £10 voucher for the night. The
quartet comprising Tom Goldsmith, Louis Brasington, Nick Smith and Tom Jamieson
finished after James in that order, with Ben Gerrey in sixth. ![]() The all-up U16/U14 block handicap was dominated
by the U16s, with five of them in the first six. Tom Goldsmith won, Nick Smith
was runner-up, and they were trailed home by Milo Burdeau, James McCarron, Tom
Jamieson and Ben Gerrey. U12 Harris Redgrove, Spencer Thomas and Katie Thomas
were the first to show in the 2-lap curtain-raiser, but by the finish it was
Gabriel Parle who outsprinted Jake Marley in an enthralling elbow-to-elbow
tussle. Jack Barnett, Amy Barnes, Spencer Thomas and Megan Lewis followed this
duo home. It was “all change” for the top two places in
the 1-lap handicap, with Jake getting his revenge on Gabriel. Megan, Jack, Spencer
and Amy filled the other top spots. By the end of the 3-lap scratch race, Gabriel
and Jake came home in that order ahead of the rest, with the trio of Spencer
Thomas, Jack Barnett and Amy Barnes next, while Harris Redgrove took sixth. U10/U8 In the 2-lap U10/U8 event, which involved a
certain amount of handicapping, Harry Stacey, Ferne Leonard and Joe Hill came
through at the front as the bell rang. By the end, Joe led home Douglas
McCauley, Ben O’Brien, Ted O’Brien and Matthew Duffin – all U10s. The first
U8s, Harry Stacey and Cory Anderson,
were next to finish. ![]() Ben made good use of his allowance to win the
handicap race, though U8s Cory Anderson and Harry Stacey came first
and second respectively in the block handicap, with Joe Hill in third position
as first U10. Douglas, Ben and Ted took fourth to sixth respectively. Report by Gavin Smith, Photos by Sally Page/Daniel Bunbar |
EXCLUSIVE: The Dolan DF3
After the huge success of the original Arc, Terry Dolan decided to create his own mould rather than base his version on Peter Teschner's Teschner Track Pro. Trying to improve a frame that was already far superior to others on the market was a hard task to undertake more........
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EXCLUSIVE: The Dolan DF3
After the huge success of the original Arc, Terry Dolan decided to create his own mould rather than base his version on Peter Teschner's Teschner Track Pro. Trying to improve a frame that was already far superior to others on the market was a hard task to undertake more........
Advertise on Velodrome.org.uk
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