Rory Sutherland of Pro Continental team United HealthCare beat out all the big-named riders from all the big ProTour teams to win Stage Six of the USA Pro Challenge.
Sutherland, an Australian who has lived in Boulder Colorado and ridden of United HealthCare for years, rode with a 14-rider breakaway in the first few miles of the 102-mile stage and stayed through repeated attacks and over the big Boulder Canyon climb and the shorter, sharper Lee Hill Road ascent.
Sutherland waited for the day’s final climb, the five-mile, fourteen-percent haul up Flagstaff Mountain; then when RadioShack’s Jens Voigt (this man is amazing—he has been in a break in every stage, road almost the entirety of Stage Five solo, and started the break in Stage Six) attacked near the bottom of the climb, hoping to launch teammate George Bennett, Sutherland pounced.
The UHC rider passed Voigt, gapped the breakaway riders, and stayed ahead of the fast-approaching peloton to take the biggest win of his career.
Sutherland’s winning strategy? “First I just wanted to make it to Boulder to see my friends of family; then I wanted to help Timmy [Duggan] get up to Nederlands to see his friends and family,” Sutherland told NBS Sports’ Bob Roll.
“I know this climb well enough that I knew I had to go from the bottom to the top. I know where to go easy; I know where to go hard. I’ve done it I don’t know how many times; that was the most beautiful one I’ve ever done.”
The victory, over some of the sport’s biggest teams and best riders, “proves that we’ve been working hard all year, we’ve been working hard for years. I’ve been with the organization for six years,” Sutherland continued.
“This has been a rough week for us, the race was maybe harder than we expected, and we had some bad luck here and there, I didn’t have the legs most of the week. Last night I dreamt all night of the finish line here. I had a terrible night’s sleep, I woke up at five wide awake thinking about it, so I figured, might as well get up and start planning the day.”
Sutherland told Roll this was easily the biggest win of his career. “This is a 2HC race, it’s nationally televised, and for me to win in the town where live on the climb that I know so well and I train on, with my friends and family here—I don’t think we could have asked for anything better than this,” he concluded.