Kevin Evans and Pieter Seyffert drew first blood on the opening stage of the three-day PwC Great Zuurberg Trek near Addo, just outside Port Elizabeth, on Friday.

Evans and Seyffert powered away from defending champion Andrew Hill and teammate Chris Wolhuter on the historic Zuurberg Pass to open up more than a minute’s lead in the 200km mountain bike race.

The Biogen Volcan-Altech Autopage duo sailed into the finish at Zuurberg Mountain Village to claim the 66km stage in a time of 2:40:27, followed by TIB Insurance’s Hill and Wolhuter in 2:41:46.

Former Western Province U23 cross-country champion Jurgens Uys and his Isostar partner Jason Meaton completed the day’s podium in 2:48:59.

According to Evans, things had not gone according to plan as they had originally decided to make an easy start to the racing.

“We both felt good early on, so then we pushed it and had a nice gap by the middle of the stage.”

After the opening gravel stretch, the top two teams got away together on the Seven Dwarves descent into the horse trails section of the Addo Elephant National Park.

Then Evans and Seyffert put in a major effort on the first big ascent of the day, Monty’s Climb, up to waterpoint one at 18km.

They extended the gap into the undulating Sundays River Valley section and were one minute and 20 seconds clear of Hill and Wolhuter by the second waterpoint after 35km.

The chasing team made up time rolling through the thick African bushveld inside Intsomi Game Reserve and were thirty seconds off by the time they exited the reserve.

“We got to see quite a lot of wildlife out there. There was one big majestic giraffe in front of us that also slowed us down a little,” laughed Evans.

By the third waterpoint at Hayterdale Trails at the bottom of the pass, Hill and Wolhuter were just 15 seconds behind and closing in.

But Evans and Seyffert tapped their reserves to put more than a minute into the second-placed team on the climb to take a comfortable stage win.

“We need to save some legs for the last two stages because judging by today’s so-called easy day it’s going to be quite hard,” added Evans.

Seven-time national road champion Anriette Schoeman and Africa Silks teammate John Wakefield made short work of the opening gravel road stretch before riding away from their mixed category rivals on the first climb to dominate the stage in 3:14:27.

Last year’s winners Lester Tait and Siska van der Bijl of Red Cherry were a distant second in 3:39:51, with husband-and-wife Gerhard and Junita Kruger third for PwC in 3:45:17.

“John had other ideas today and I just had to go with the move,” said Schoeman.

“The trails were magnificent but my legs suffered. I hope I have enough in the tank for tomorrow.”

The Merrell Ladies pairing of SanMari Woithe and Andrea Shirley are clearly on the hunt for a second consecutive victory in the women’s race after taking the stage win in 3:34:46.

Visit www.greatzuurbergtrek.co.za. Follow @zuurbergtrekker or find the race on Facebook.

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Issued by:

Coetzee Gouws
082 575 7991
041 368 4992
coetzee@fullstopcom.com
www.fullstop.co.za

On behalf of:

PwC Great Zuurberg Trek

Pieter Seyffert (left) and Kevin Evans of Biogen Volcan-Altech Autopage drew first blood on the opening stage of the PwC Great Zuurberg Trek near Addo outside Port Elizabeth on Friday. Photo: Full Stop Communications

Pieter Seyffert (left) and Kevin Evans of Biogen Volcan-Altech Autopage drew first blood on the opening stage of the PwC Great Zuurberg Trek near Addo outside Port Elizabeth on Friday. Photo: Full Stop Communications