Hayden Roulston supported Fabian Cancellara to plenty of classics success in 2013. While preparing to defend his national championships title, he is looking forward to again doing the major one-day races and hopes to return to the Tour de France while he also has an eye on a return to the Olympics
Christchurch cycling professional Hayden Roulston, a double Olympic medallist, has not given up hopes of adding a third in Rio in 2016.
The 32 year old is home preparing to defend his national jersey at the elite road championship on home turf in two weeks time.
Roulston, who enjoyed his best year as a professional in 2013, has a new two-year contract with the renamed Trek Factory Team. While his focus is on a big support year for roommate Fabian Cancellara in the early season Classics and a renewed desire for a second crack at the Tour de France, Roulston has a weather-eye on the Rio Olympics, after winning two medals at Beijing.
“I would love to ride the Olympics. I’d love a gold medal but it is very difficult to come back to the track with all of the complex qualifications that the UCI have put in place. I have talked to Dayle Cheatley (New Zealand head coach) about it. If it is meant to be then it is meant to be.”
Roulston has been anointed as the key support for superstar Cancellara, the two-time Olympic medallist, four-time world champion and winner of all the major Classics including the famed Paris-Roubaix three times and Tour of Flanders twice.
The Kiwi believes his strong form in 2013 was his best since first turning professional in 2003.
“I was actually strong throughout the whole season. I didn’t have any injuries or illnesses and I came up a level which is good when you have been in the sport a while. Our leader won the key races, so I must have done something right.”
Suffice to say that Cancellara has picked Roulston as his permanent roomie during the Classics and the unlikely pair has become good friends.
“Often when you have a superstar in the team, the rest of the team pussyfoot around them but I am not one of those people. I tell it how it is to him and I think he respects that. We’ve formed quite a strong bond.”
While he has his job to do in the Classics, Roulston has spoken to team management at the recent training camp in Spain of his desire to ride the tour in 2014.
“I have been in the long list of 15 riders every year for the last three or four years but I have not gone. The last time was in 2009. At the same time I’ve not had the passion for it. But I am very serious about the Tour next year.”
A stumbling point may be the impending arrival of his second child due in June, which takes first priority according to Roulston.
His immediate aim is a fourth national road race title around the testing terrain of the Cashmere Hills in Christchurch on 12 January, which will enable him to again wear the national jersey on the World Pro Tour next year.
Roulston has been back in training for six weeks and happy with his current form, which he sharpened in the Tour de Vineyards in Nelson over New Year.
He says the 186km race in Christchurch is a stern test, and key team support is not such a factor with nine testing climbs up Dyers Pass Rd.
“You have to have the legs to win on that course. It doesn’t matter if you have a team of 10 or an army of
20, if you don’t have the legs, you aren’t going to win. I hope to have good legs on the 12th and be as fit as I
can be.”
The road race will take place on Sunday.
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