Centenary 1000

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Date20–27 October 1934
CountryAustralia
RegionVictoria
TypeSeven-day stage race
Centenary 1000
Map of the route
Race details
Date20–27 October 1934
CountryAustralia
RegionVictoria
TypeSeven-day stage race
Distance1,102 miles (1,773 km)
Winners
HandicapTed Stubenrauch, Vic
ChampionshipHarry Cruise, Vic

The Centenary 1000 cycling race was a one-week road bicycle race over seven stages covering 1,102 miles (1,773 km). The race was run in 1934 as part of the celebrations of the Centenary of Victoria.[1] The race was originally conceived along the lines of the Dunlop Grand Prix, won by Hubert Opperman then aged 23, by 1h 20' [2] and the concept for the race was covering 1,000 miles (1,600 km) with prizes exceeding £1,000, including a climb over Mount Hotham.[1]

The race attracted the top riders from Australia and New Zealand as well as Frenchmen Paul Chocque and Fernand Mithouard and Italian Nino Borsari.[n 1] The Australian riders included Opperman, Richard "Fatty" Lamb, Ossie Nicholson, Hefty Stuart, Ern Milliken, Horrie Marshall and Ken Ross. Also competing were riders who would come to prominence in the following years, including Alan Angus, Dean Toseland, Clinton Beasley and Bill Moritz.[3] The only notable Australian absentee was Frankie Thomas who had been suspended for 18 months.[4] Nicholson had been suspended for 12 months for interfering with a rider making a record attempt but was able to have the suspension lifted in time to ride.[5]. Efforts were made to also have Thomas’ suspension lifted, but to no avail.[6] The New Zealand riders were Harry Watson, who had finished 2nd in the 1927 Dunlop Grand Prix, Len Hill and Alby Ralston.[n 2]

The championship title was won by Harry Cruise then aged 28, in 53 hours 50 minutes 32 seconds. As Mithouard did not finish stage 6, Cruise had a 3 minute margin going into the final stage and was able to maintain that margin, becoming the Australasian Road Champion. The handicap was won by D grade rider Ted Stubenrauch despite splintering a bone in his shoulder on stage 4.

The major races in Australia at the time were conducted as handicap races, including the Warrnambool to Melbourne and Goulburn to Sydney. There was a push for the race to be run on “continental lines", that is as a scratch race. The organisers however expressed concern that only a small number of riders could win in a scratch race and that the Sydney to Melbourne championship race had been ridden at a low speed of 15.7 mph (25.3 km/h), "was a contest of tactics, not of speed and endurance" and that there was "loafing by the whole field of riders over many miles" of the final stage.[8] The compromise was a graded handicap, with 30 riders graded on scratch and similar numbers in each of the other grades.[3] By way of comparison the handicaps for the 1933 Warrnambool to Melbourne had 21 handicaps of between 10 and 70 minutes.[9] The championship title was decided on aggregate time with bonus time deductions on each stage of 1' 30" for the fastest, 1' 00" for the second fastest and 0' 30" for the third fastest. The handicap title was to be determined by a complex point system, with 130 points for first through to 30 for 100th for most stages and the fifth stage to Omeo had an extra 20 points.[10] The grade handicaps varied slightly from stage to stage as follows:

Grade Handicaps
StageRouteDistanceABCD
1Melbourne Warrnambool165 miles (266 km)Scr20 min30 min40 min
2Warrnambool Stawell152 miles (245 km)Scr19 min29 min39 min
3Stawell Bendigo163 miles (262 km)Scr22 min32 min43 min
4Bendigo - Wangaratta156 miles (251 km)Scr20 min27 min37 min
5Wangaratta - Omeo154 miles (248 km)Scr26 min36 min48 min
6Omeo - Sale152 miles (245 km)Scr18 min27 min38 min
6 alt.Mount Buffalo - Sale216 miles (348 km)Scr43 min?? min72 min
7Sale - Melbourne158 miles (254 km)Scr22 min26 min43 min

Prizes

When the event was announced in April 1934, it was promoted as having prizes over £1,000.[1] The prizes grew steadily as the date approached. Ultimately there was £820 for the Handicap, £635 for the Championship [11] The winner of the handicap and the championship each won £500 but the major difference between the two was that the handicap had prizes of £150 for 2nd down to £25 for 5th, while the championship only had a prize of £30 for 2nd and none for the lower places.[n 3] There were small prizes for each stage together with prizes for town sprints. The scratch riders were even less likely to beat the handicap to win the town sprints. The richest stage was the mountainous fifth, with a pool of £140 on offer for the ride from Wangaratta to Omeo which included the climbs of Mount Buffalo, Mount St Bernard and Hotham Heights.[13]

One condition of the race was that cycle traders were prohibited from offering a bonus or other inducement to competitors in the event of winning the race on his machine.[10] It is not clear what this condition was meant to achieve and it did not stop cycle traders advertising the success of riders on their bicycles.[14]

The size of the championship prize was at the instigation of Sidney Myer who gave a gold cup valued at 100 guineas to go with the £500 provided by the Centenary Council. Myer also donated £500 for the handicap winner.[15]

Stages

Notes

References

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