Monday, March 18, 2013

The art of prepping for the future

The key to writing a good column is to make sure I capture you, the reader’s, attention in the first paragraph. I’m taking my life in my hands by this week focusing on the key task facing Cycling Southland over coming weeks – strategic planning.
The mere mention of those two words tends to generate a glassy-eyed look and a quick change in conversation, yet they are the foundation that any sport, business or organisation is built on.

I’ve always thought of a strategic plan like a road map. If you gave me an address and asked me to get there without a map, I would probably eventually arrive – but without the direction a map (or strategic plan) provides, I would likely waste a lot of time, energy and money in getting there.

Cycling in Southland is at an interesting juncture. The sport continues to grow at a rapid rate at competitive and recreational levels. Each year we host local, national and international events and after the success of last year’s Junior World Track Championships, the public has a greater appetite for international competition. When you add in the development of a second velodrome in Cambridge in 2014 and what that will mean for Invercargill’s facility, this is the perfect time to create an exciting roadmap for the sport in the south.

It’s a really exciting process to go through. There are plenty questions. Finding answers is the fun bit. The question we get asked most often relates to the Cambridge velodrome. As a consequence, I’ve got pretty good at answering it.

We already have assurances from BikeNZ that events will continue to be hosted in Invercargill and that arrangement is to be formalized over coming months. It’s hard to give you an idea of just how much work is involved in hosting events like the recent Elite and Age Group Championships. Our staff of just five and our incredible volunteers (another 40 or so) collectively put in weeks of work to deliver nine long days of racing over the champs and that comes at a real cost. Two facilities sharing championship events will not only make that workload more sustainable, avoiding burn-out locally, but it will also allow Cycling Southland to concentrate on our bread-and-butter – putting more Southlanders on bikes.

Stadium Southland Velodrome is a community facility first and foremost. It will continue to host major events (the Oceania Championships and a new UCI Level 1 track event are both ear-marked for Invercargill later this year) and with the development of an integrated national calendar and the opening of a rebuilt Stadium Southland, we’ll get the best of both worlds – high profile marquee events with more time and space to continue to develop the sport at a grass-roots local level.

Opportunity abounds. Over these next few weeks, we’ll be refining our road-map so that we’ll be able to turn that opportunity in to more success. It should be a fun ride.

Nick Jeffrey is the Chief Executive of Cycling Southland.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Season highlights on and off track

The curtain came down on the track cycling season on Saturday night as Cycling Southland's hosting of the 2013 Age Group Track Nationals proved another outstanding success.

At the end of five great days of competition there is plenty to reflect on. It may surprise that my favourite moment occurred away from the track. Believe it or not the thing I remember fondly is the Southland team photo shoot. Our Cycling Southland squad of 68 riders, spanning seven decades, standing together in team colours, along with our large support crew who put so much into another successful Southland campaign is a pretty impressive sight.

For the sixth successive year, the National Points Shield will spend the year at Stadium Southland Velodrome after Southland finished the two track championships with a 140 point tally, 40 clear of Auckland.

Of all the myriad of events we deliver throughout the course of the year, the age group champs are one of my favourites. It's the mix of riders that I enjoy seeing on display. You have the wily veterans in the masters, the boundless enthusiasm and "give-everything-a-go" attitude of the juniors and, in between, the under-17s who are now starting to select the type of races that suit their talents.
This year also included the addition of the under-19 and elite women's omniums and Laura Heywood's gold and Josh Haggerty's silver medal in the under-19 were brilliant performances.
Glasgow may be calling later in the year, for the Junior World Track Cycling Championships, with the pair's form over recent weeks pushing their cases for selection, and both are chances to join Liam Aitcheson and Jeremy Presbury in the squad.

Yet again, the brilliant efforts by Southland's masters men and women masters proved one of the key differences in the Points Shield battle and a number of this contingent have their eyes on Manchester for the World Masters Championships. Given that, Eddie Dawkins' brilliant silver medal winning ride at the World Championships and Dawkins and Matt Archibald's Mexico World Cup medals in January, 2013 is shaping as perhaps the most successful year yet in international competition.

Trying to pick out individual performances from an event like the age groups is fraught with danger.

There is no shortage of worthy results, the danger is in leaving out a notable effort. I think I am safe to mention a young fellow from Palmerston North, though. Campbell Stewart won all four under-15 gold medals at last year's championships and this year he added six golds and a silver medal.
Yes, you did read that right. He won the under-17 boys' sprint, individual pursuit, points race, scratch race, team pursuit and team sprint golds. Perhaps Waikato's Lewis Eccles should be named rider of the championship for being the only rider to beat Stewart into second place in the under- 17 boys' time trial.

A massive thanks to all those who helped last week. Now, let's go road racing.

Nick Jeffery is Cycling Southland's chief executive.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Now it's about winning

Eddie, Ethan & Sam with World Champ silvers

In past years, New Zealand's fledging team sprint combination used to turn up to competitions to gain international experience. Now they turn up to win.

Cycling Southland's Eddie Dawkins teamed with Auckland's Ethan Mitchell and Sam Webster on Friday to claim this country's best ever result in the Men's Team Sprint at the UCI World track Cycling Championships in Minsk, Belarus.

The trio missed the world title by a miniscule margin (0.049 seconds) to claim silver behind Germany.
12 months ago I watched these three men stand on the podium in person in Melbourne when they won bronze at the 2012 World Championships. They did get a little helping hand from two faster teams who were relegated for various infringements, pushing the Kiwis into a ride for bronze, which they were good enough to win.

This year, they needed no assistance from other teams. They were just faster than them. After qualifying fastest they again lowered their personal best sea-level time in the final ride on Friday, but were beaten on the line by the fast-finishing Germans.

These boys finished fifth and sixth in 210 and 2011, prior to their medal-winning deeds over the last two years. With three world championships before the Rio Olympics and fellow Southlanders Matt Archibald and Tom Beadle adding depth to the squad, the question may well be not if they can win more medals, but how many and what colours will they be.

Yes, that brings expectation and its own pressure. But you only have to bear expectation when you are world class. And these boys are. It has been another hugely proud weekend, watching from afar.
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Early mornings watching internet video from Minsk will this week become long and late nights at the 2013 Age Group Track Championships at Stadium Southland Velodrome.

I wrote last week about the prospects for the five days of competition which begin on Tuesday night from 6:30pm. These championships may not have the big names of the Elites but, more often than not, they deliver more spectacular racing than their championship counterpart.

Large, even fields in the Under 15 and Under 17 ranks augers well for the sport's competitive future. The thing I love about the Age Groups is that you are either watching the champions of tomorrow, or the champions of yesterday. Juniors and Masters racing together is a great mix and with the addition of the Elite and Under 19 omniums, we have riders from eight different decades competing through to Saturday. Should be fun.
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I spent the weekend in central Otago for a mate's wedding (congrats Justin & Nicky) and reaquainted myself with the course that will host the Club Road Nationals in Queenstown in April. This is the biggest national championship event with north of 800 competitors predicted and Speargrass Flat/Malaghans Road will provide a stern test for all of them.

But first, we've got a little overtime to put in at the Velodrome this week. Hope to see you there.

Nick jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive

Monday, February 18, 2013

Giving thanks for those behind the scenes

Club racing at Waianiwa
It's been a hectic start to 2013. So when a rare weekend off presented itself, I travelled to the old home patch of Gore to give Sport Southland a hand at their outstanding MTL Moonshine Trail on Saturday (yes, I too was questioning my sanity when the alarm went off at 6am!)

It was a great event, expertly organised, wonderfully supported by volunteers and entrants and the weather gods even played ball.

It also brought home to me the outstanding job local sporting clubs and organisations do in providing great local events. In a lot of cases we don't consider the huge amount of work put in to deliver what must rank as one of the highest number of events per capita in the country.

This weekend was a great example. While over 400 were taking on the ups and downs of the Moonshine Trail from Dolamore Park, our club road racers were battling strong head and cross winds and on Sunday the first in our SouthPort Criterium Series was raced around Bill Richardson Drive.

Then come the next few weeks. From next Tuesday, Stadium Southland Velodrome plays host to over 200 track cyclists with the annual Age Group Nationals over five days, the Gore to Waikiwi classic and South Island Teams' Time Trial will be held the following weekend and then a large Southland contingent will pursue more national titles at the Club Road Nationals in Queenstown in April. And that's just our sport!
The people who deliver events don't do it for thanks, they do it because they love their sport. But don't under-estimate the difference a quick word of appreciation at the end of the day provides. It's the least we can do to recognise the countless hours and unrivalled passion these people have for all our sports.

While I'm on the topic of the weekend, a deserving congratulations to Matt Zenovich, Neil Familton and Kirstie James for their wins in trying conditions at Waianiwa on Saturday. Zenovich backed up to complete a double in winning A Grade at the SouthPort Crit on Sunday, with series leader jerseys also going to Stu MacDonald (B Grade), Daryl Haggerty (C Grade) and Glen Ferguson (D Grade) along with juniors Tom Sexton, Corbin Strong and Madeleine Gough. A good weekend's work by you all.

Offshore, Eddie Dawkins has safely arrived in Belarus for the World track Cycling Championships which kick off late Wednesday night, New Zealand time. The Men's kilo time trial is on the opening evening of competition (Thursday morning) and although yet to be confirmed, it would surprise if he and Simon van Velthooven don't line up to fill New Zealand's two qualification spots. The Team Sprint then follows on Friday morning. Last year I was lucky enough to watch Eddie stand on a world championship podium in person in Melbourne. We would love nothing better than a repeat performance  to cap what has been a stellar 12 months for the big guy. Rip 'em to shreds Ed!

Monday, February 11, 2013

National champs live up to hype

Steph McKenzie - Photo credit: Dianne Manson
Last week's Elite and U19 Track nationals held at Invercargill's Stadium Southland Velodrome was another outstanding success.

Great racing, great crowds and the great atmosphere which has become a hallmark of the velodrome over recent years, all added up to four great days of racing. Another seven national records fell by the wayside as New Zealand's elite track cyclists continue to raise the bar, year-by-year.

During my days in radio and in my brief sports administration career since, I have been lucky enough to attend plenty of spectacular sporting events but, all biases aside, what I saw last Saturday night will live in my memory for a long time.

Watching Simon van Velthooven, Eddie Dawkins, Matt Archibald and Sam Webster take the final bend four-wide at 70 kilometres an hour in the Men's Keirin  was nothing short of breath-taking. There are plenty of folk who have seen a lot more bike racing than I who rated that final as one of the best they'd seen - a truly world class field, putting on a great show as they hunted down a national title and, perhaps just as importantly, bragging rights over their mates for 12 months.

Southlanders again performed with distinction but now know they have the tough task to retain the National Points Shield with Auckland holding a narrow lead on the Points Table after the first Championships. The shield is awarded at the conclusion of the Age Group Championships which start later this month and it will come down to our squad of junior and masters riders to determine whether the Shield stays in Invercargill for a sixth-successive year.

The good news for Southland is that we have seen the last of Aaron Gate and Simon van Velthooven these championships - their dominance last week a major factor in Auckland's five point lead.

Steph McKenzie continued her rapid recent development, earning her first elite national title in the women's sprint while Natasha Hansen finished strongly to claim a dominant keirin win and lowered both her national 200m record before smashing the Team Sprint mark with McKenzie. Matt Archibald also continued to stake a claim for consistent higher honours and was undoubtedly the unlucky party in the selection for the World Championships, missing out on joining mate Eddie Dawkins in the five-man squad by virtue of Aaron Gate's four gold medals which gave the selectors no option but to take him to ride the endurance events in Minsk.

One of the success of the championship was the inclusion of the Under 19 events alongside the Elite programme. Jeremy Presbury, Liam Aitcheson, Josh Haggerty and Laura Heywood are all good chances at gaining Junior Worlds' selection after the Age Group Champs.

The Age Groups feature, Under-15 and Under 17 grades as well as the Masters age categories and the Elite and Under-19 Omniums. It starts on the night of Tuesday 26 February and then features two sessions per day until Saturday 2 March. Should be a great climax to another huge track season.

Nick Jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive

Monday, December 31, 2012

2012 Year in Review - Part 2

After reviewing the first part of the year last week, what better way to send out 2012 than with part two of our Cycling Year in Review.

JUNE
Steph McKenzie is named Southland's Junior Sportsperson of the Year while Eddie Dawkins and Ross Machejefski both earn finalist spots at the ILT Southland Sports Awards.

JULY
Southland District Council's Cherie Champion, Adrian Buddle, Jamie Cunningham and Mark Day take out the 2012 Harrex Group Corporate Pursuit title, Bradley Wiggins wins the Tour de France and we honour Lyn Randall with Life Membership at our AGM.

AUGUST
Eddie Dawkins earns a top five Olympic result in the Men's Team Sprint while Natasha Hansen features prominently in her Olympic debut and the UCI Juniors Track World Championships are staged in Invercargill. New Zealand win seven silver and three bronze medals and an unprecedented five world record rides are recorded. Brilliantly supported by spectators and the wider Southland community, Cycling Southland delivers the best ever Junior World Champs and stamped the city and our velodrome on the world stage.

SEPTEMBER
Phillipa Gray and Laura Fairweather combine for a full set of Paralympic medals at the London Paralympics. The pair smash the world record in winning gold in the Individual Pursuit after taking bronze in the Time Trial and then completed their set with silver in the road Time Trial. Sophie Williamson rides strongly to just miss a medal in her final race as a junior at the World Road Championships in Holland while Andy McIntyre takes out the Murray McLeay Trophy on Cycling Southland's Memorial Weekend.

OCTOBER
A record field of 189 takes to the roads in our annual Yunca Junior Tour of Southland. The weather gods don't play ball on the Saturday in Te Tipua but the sunshine returned for some exciting climaxes on the final day. At the Velodrome the first track event of the new season shows the unquestionable talent coming through the Junior ranks and stamp Australian Jack Edwards as a freakish talent and a name to watch as a future superstar of the sport.

NOVEMBER
The final PowerNet-sponsored Tour of Southland ends in appropriate fashion with the race lead changing on the final stage of the week long race. Node 4-Subaru's Mike Northey claims a hugely popular victory on the ride to Gala Street. A record 17 Southlanders line up at the Oceania Track Championships in Adelaide. They return with 15 medals including an incredible Southland trifecta with Eddie Dawkins, Cam Karwowski and Matt Dodds finishing 1,2,3 in the Men's kilo.

DECEMBER
James Hargest retain the Secondary School track cycling title by a solitary point, two national records fall at the Southland Track Championships and Jeremy Presbury and Liam Aitcheson are named to ride at the Sydney Youth Olympic Festival in January. Sophie Williamson is named BikeNZ's Emerging Talent while she, Eddie Dawkins and Phillipa Gray all feature in the Halberg Award nominees.

Let's do it all again in 2013. Happy New Year.

Nick Jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive

Monday, December 24, 2012

2012 Year in Review - Part 1

As usual, my final columns for the year look back on some of the highlights from the Cycling Southland year.

Each of these deserve more words than this column's word limit can provide, but collectively they add up to one helluva year for the sport in the south. I planned to do a single column, but the sheer volume of performance mean I have had to split this over two. So let's get started

JANUARY
Cycling Southland members Nicky Samuels and James Williamson complete a remarkable double in winning both the elite titles at the Road Nationals in Christchurch. Matt Archibald and Eddie Dawkins earn World Cup bronze in the Team Sprint in Beijing while Cam Karwowski earns the same coloured medal in the Team Pursuit. Canterbury's Dylan Kennett takes out the Gore to Invercargill Road classic.

FEBRUARY
Eddie Dawkins and Natasha Hansen are the star-turns at the Elite Track Nationals in Invercargill winning the trophies for most points by male and female riders while Phillipa Gray and Laura Fairweather give us a taste of things to come by winning bronze at the Para-Cycling World Championships in Los Angeles.

MARCH
Southland again dominates the Age Group Track Championships, earning 144 points to comfortably defend the National Points Shield, 63 points ahead of its closest region. Kylie Young takes out the Gore to Waikiwi classic while Sophie Williamson and Tom Vessey both earn podium finishes at the Oceania Road Championships, hosted in Queenstown. In the space of 48 hours eight Southlanders are named in World championship squads (three for the Elites and five for the Juniors) and just to top off a busy month we hand out 10 Southland road racing titles across various age groups.

APRIL
In what ranks at the top of my personal highlight list, Eddie Dawkins becomes the first man to break the 10 second mark in the Men's Sprint on one of the biggest stages imaginable - the UCI World Championships in Melbourne. Eddie and Matt Archibald finish qualifying in the top 12 in the world. Eddie also earns New Zealand's first World Championship sprint medal, winning bronze in the Team Sprint. I feel very privileged to have watched it from the infield at Hisense Arena. Another 14 titles are handed out at the Southland Time Trial Champs and Eddie Dawkins and Natasha Hansen are named in NZ's Olympic team.

MAY
Sophie Williamson goes back-to-back in winning both the road race and time trial at the Club Road Nationals while Laura Heywood, Jennifer Muhl , Phillipa Gray, Laura Fairweather and Kylie Young also all stand on the medal dais. Tom Scully becomes the first New Zealander to finish in the top three of the prestigious Paris-Roubaix U23 race and somehow I cycle from Queenstown to Invercargill (or most of the way anyway) as part of Westpac's Chopper Appeal.
Until our June to December review next week, from all of us at Cycling Southland, a merry Christmas to you and yours.

Nick Jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive

Monday, December 17, 2012

Busy start to 2013 beckons

There's little doubt that 2012 has been a massive year for Cycling Southland, headlined by our hosting of the UCI Juniors Track World Championships in August and by a large number of stand-out performances at national and international by the south's elite and junior riders.
 
Next week, in my final column for the year I will relive the craziness of the last twelve months, but today it is a quick look forward to what the New Year holds.

The first month of the year is chock full of championship racing the Elite Road and Track Championships scheduled. First up, the Elite Road Championships in Christchurch from January 11 to 13. Last year Cycling Southland's James Williamson and Nicky Samuels doubled-up for an unprecedented double in winning both elite men's and women's road racing titles, Southland's first national road title since 1968.

Closer to home, we hit the ground running with our annual ILT New Year Cycling Series. This begins on January 18 and 19 with the traditional New Year Track Carnival starting at 7pm both nights. This event is always a great way to get the year underway and with the Track Nationals to follow just over ten days later it is a crucial build-up event.

The Elite and Under 19 Track Nationals will be held from January 31 to February 3. In recent years, some members of the High Performance squad have had limited campaigns. No so in 2013. The national selectors have been very clear that performances at these nationals will dictate selections for the international campaigns for the remainder of the year. It is the key selection event and we'll get the benefit.

With a pared back international programme in 2013 as the first year in a new Olympic cycle, riders will have precious few competition opportunities to show why they should have a spot in the squad building to Rio in 2016. Next month's Track nationals and the Oceania Championships in Invercargill in November will benefit as the best in the business will have to fire to earn spots in the black skin suit throughout the year.

Last weekend's Southland Track Champs really fired us up for the upcoming championship season. To have over 120 riders racing at our local championships is easily a record and underlines the continued growth in the sport.

A number of new names have earned selection in the Nationals training squads directly on the back of their performances last weekend and the quality of riding, along with depth of talent which is developing across all our age groups from under-15 to Masters is heartening.

The World Championships are to be held in Minsk, Belarus in mid-February and then our Age Group athletes take centre stage from February 26 to March 2.

And just because we would hate for you to think we weren't busy enough, the Club Road nationals - the biggest national cycling championship in number-terms, is this year being held in Queenstown in April.

Better rest up over Christmas then!

Monday, November 26, 2012

Oceania champs kick-start track season

Pieter Bulling in action for New Zealand
The track cycling season begins in earnest this week with a record 17-strong Southland contingent lining up at the Oceania Track Cycling Championships in Adelaide starting Wednesday.

Ten riders will start in New Zealand’s Elite and Under-19 squads while a further seven will ride in Cycling Southland colours over the four day championships which alternate between Australia and Invercargill annually.

As usual, we have had a pretty good view of preparations, outside our office window on Stadium Southland Velodrome and with scaled-back international campaigns scheduled for New Zealand’s track programme this season, the Oceania championships represent one of a limited number of opportunities for riders to impress.

As discussed in this column last week, with a new Olympic cycle beginning post-London, much interest will focus on the next wave of talent stepping into the Elite ranks and at how some of the experienced campaigners will back-up after the Olympics. Southland has riders in both categories.

Eddie Dawkins has quickly become one of the most experienced members of the elite squad and I have little doubt that the big fella will relish any extra leadership responsibility. He’ll have his good mate Matt Archibald alongside him who has certainly found strong training form over the last couple of weeks and will be wanting to send a clear message to the selectors that he is worthy of a world championship ride in February. Natasha Hansen will be hoping she can replicate her form from twelve months ago when she claimed three Oceania titles and a silver from her four starts.

The endurance squad features Sequoia Cooper who will have renewed focus with the strong possibility the Women’s team pursuit will move from three to four riders in Rio in 2016 along with Cameron Karwowski and Pieter Bulling who have both come off impressive European summers and strong PowerNet Tour of Southlands.

The Under-19 New Zealand squad is an early indication of those in the running for trips to Glasgow next August for the 2013 World Juniors. Jeremy Presbury will likely be one of the first names written down after his to fourth placings this year in Invercargill. He will take on the Super-Drome in Adelaide along with Josh Haggerty and first year Under-19s Mike Culling and Laura Heywood.

Meanwhile a further seven riders will wear the Southland skin-suit in Adelaide - Aimee Burns, Steph McKenzie, Bradley Tuhi, Matt Dodds, Karl Watson, first year under-19 Nick Kergozou and a returning Lee Evans who rode last year for Wellington where he is attending university. Of these, McKenzie looms as the strong contender for possible podium finish, showing some excellent training form over recent weeks.

The 2013 Oceania Track Championships in Adelaide begin Wednesday and conclude Saturday. On a local front the next key event is the Southland Track Championships to be held from Friday 7 to Sunday 9 December while the annual ILT New Year Track Carnival will be held on January 18th and 19th, leading in to the Elite and U19 National Championships starting January 31.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Big year leads to big plans

Hillside School learns to ride with Cycling Southland
With the end of the year quickly descending upon us, many organizations like Cycling Southland are in review/preview mode - reviewing the good, the bad and the ugly from the year that’s been and planning for 2013. Fortunately for cycling there has been plenty of good and, aside from some bloke Armstrong, not a lot of ugly.

Whilst the flag-ship events including our recent PowerNet Tour of Southland and the SIT-sponsored UCI Juniors Track World Championships are the big, shiny things most people remember, the work I am most proud of is at the club and entry levels of the sport.

To see the numbers coming through our beginner programmes on the track and road is really heartening. It is a real focus for us in the year ahead with an aim of continuing to make it easier for people to get on a bike with us and then to develop their skills to whatever level they desire.

The corner-stone of this is our soon-to-launch Pedaling Pathway. This is our new road rider education and development programme and for those new to the sport, (and those a little more experienced,) it will provide the skills and knowledge to achieve your cycling goals – whether that is to cycle around the block or to win a national title.

We are also aiming to significantly expand our hugely successful Learn to Ride programme in Southland primary schools. This is a wonderful partnership with Sport Southland and KiwiSport and our good mates at the Southland MTB and BMX clubs and it is at this level where our team is really making a difference.

Over the six weeks of the programme there are kids who have hardly been on a bike who are throwing away trainer wheels and have a new found confidence and a whole heap of fun along the way. We can’t wait to get to more primary schools next year.

Short story is there are some pretty exciting plans to capitalize on the high profile our sport has enjoyed over the past year, so be warned - you can expect to hear plenty more from us to join us for a ride.

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Whilst on the topic of things new, the latest UCI World Cup round in Glasgow this past weekend showed that the four-year changing of the guard which accompanies the Olympic Games cycle has already started.

The most notable examples were in New Zealand’s sole representative in Scotland, 17 year old Dylan Kennett, riding his way to fourth in the Men’s Individual Pursuit on Sunday and Great Britain’s Elinor Barker who, like Kennett, shone brightly at the Junior Worlds in Invercargill in August, partnering with World and Olympic champions Laura Trott and Dani King to win the Women’s Team Pursuit gold on Saturday.

We’ll get a first hand look at the new wave of talent at the Elite and Under-19 Track Nationals at Stadium Southland Velodrome from January 31st. That will be a fitting way to start another new year.

Nick Jeffrey is Cycling Southland's Chief Executive.