Sunday, April 28, 2024

Berlin Six Day 2012 – Day Six

-

HomeDiariesBerlin Six Day 2012 - Day Six

The line of taxi lights stretches back into the darkness like a string of pearls, it’s beautiful in an a big city kind of a way – it could be a scene from a Woody Allen film; but it’s not Manhattan, it’s Berlin at 01:40am. We’re here for the Berlin Six Day 2012.

The beige Merc cabs get to drive down to the underground Velodrom entrance to pick up ViPs, meanwhile the support staff – that’s us – have to hi-jack a supermarket trolley and use the lift to take our stuff up to the camper.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Luxury packing in our game.

But it’s not as if it’s cold at minus 9.8 degrees and that wind’s last stop was the Steppes.

Brad Huff flies home to his Jelly Belly training camp in the morning; Silvan Dillier heads for Tenerife and warm weather training; Franco Marvulli heads for the post race party (there’s a surprise) before flying to Copenhagen tomorrow and Jackie Simes is driving to Copenhagen with the Czechs.

He was meant to drive with us, but the old camper is wheezing a bit and whilst it’s OK for two old fools like us to get stranded in the frozen wilds of Northern Germany, Jackie has a Six Day to ride.

He was meant to ride Copenhagen with Bobby Lea but Bobby has scratched with tendonitis of the knee so Jackie rides with ex-Milram Grand Tour rider, Bjorn Schröder.

Berlin Six Day 2012
“The Huff”.

But what about the race ?‘ I hear you ask.

What about it, indeed. Maybe I’m turning into Viktor, maybe I’ve seen to many chases or can’t forget those swirling Skol Six maelstroms back in the 70’s ?

But whatever it is, I didn’t think the chases were good.

If you had measured the crowd decibels then the chase finales would come a distant third to the sprinters and the stayers.

The Aussie world champions won, a hard thing to do, coming straight into a Six with ‘road legs’ and winning.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Congratulations to Cam and Leigh. Photo©Ed Hood

Franco & Silvan were second and Iljo & Kenny De Ketele third.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Ed and Kris’ boys were second – pretty good. Photo©Ed Hood
Berlin Six Day 2012
Iljo and Kenny rode into third place. Photo©Ed Hood

Kluge & Lampater and Bengsch & Kalz were the other top teams – but no one seemed capable of imposing themselves on the race.

But let’s go back to this morning…

It’s a beautiful morning in Berlin but the air nips at your ears and the inside of your nose – minus 8.5 degrees.

A magpie chats to us as we load the camper with the non- essentials.

The other soigneurs and mechanics are doing the same thing, there’s a little banter – but not much, it’s too cold and everyone is too tired.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Over to our left the stainless steel of the TV mast towers over us, the Berliners have an affectionate but rather rude name for it. Photo©Ed Hood

There always mixed feelings on the last day; maybe you’ve had enough of the stadium and that particular round of politics – and it’s no hardship to bid farewell to our concrete block cell and prison bed.

But at the same time, you build up a relationship with your little bubble and become comfortable within it.

But the road to the Baltic and the islands of Denmark call.

Just to make life interesting, the camper is playing up a little, we think that dud fuel is the cause – let’s hope so.

The days pass quickly – you lose the best of it by sleeping late, but with a 03:00 am bed time there’s little choice – by the time the chores and shopping are done and the journo bit taken care of, it’s time to eat and almost show time.

There’s only one chase tonight – the grand finale, 60 minutes. I hope it sparkles.

Berlin Six Day 2012
One of our mascots. Photo©Ed Hood

And only one Derny, for teams placed first to ninth, so only Marvulli/Dillier ride.

Brad and Jackie sit that one out.

The organisation want to say ‘goodbye’ to Danny Stam but he whips through the finish line with a quick wave and on the next lap they’ve practically to jump out and grab him to get him to stop.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Ciao Danny. Photo©Ed Hood

You can tell he’s tired of it all, he just wants to honour his last two contracts – Berlin and Copenhagen then move on to his new life as a DS.

The house band plays, ‘Amarillo‘ – ironic given that a year or two ago old Tony Christie was the live act here and was boo-ed off the stage.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Silvio Martinello, one of the classiest men ever to sit on a track bike gets to start the first race – he still looks good. Photo©Ed Hood

Track record holder Forstemann goes for his flying lap, the flash guns go supernova as the man with the huge – but very short – legs brutalises his way around the track.

He doesn’t break his 24 hour-old record but he’s close – another 12.7 and the crowd go mad.

The stayers, it’s the grand final tonight, 100 laps.

There’s that the strange hush as the BMWs are throttled back to let the men with the big chainrings tuck in behind before they roar again – reaching a crescendo in the last few laps as the streak past at demented speeds.

The crowd go wild, the speaker’s voice starts to give and, bang!

Berlin Six Day 2012
Fernow wins the Steher Championat. Photo©Ed Hood

A rider’s arm goes high – Florian Fernow wins the race and the overall Stayers Series; respect is due to the man.

The boys have been hanging around for ages, they get a points race.

More sprinters – for a sport that’s about going fast, ironically the crowds love when the guys standstill.

Berlin Six Day 2012
Six minutes of this does break the legs a tad. Photo©Ed Hood

In the grand final it’s Forstemann v. Levy and they pop a six minute job – way outside UCI regs.

But when did the UCI ever care about the Six Days?

And then it was chase time, but I’ve moaned about that already.

It’s 02:50 now and only 150 K to Rostock – it’s a glamorous life being a runner.

Talk to you from Copenhagen, soon – I hope.

Berlin Six Day 2012
The final podium. Photo©Ed Hood

Berlin Six Day - Results from Day Six


Wertungssprints


1. Nr. 1 HOWARD / MEYER 8 Pkt.
1. Nr. 6 SCHRöDER / THöMEL 8 Pkt.
3. Nr. 4 KEISSE / DE KETELE 7 Pkt.
3. Nr. 14 MATZKA / REINHARDT 7 Pkt.
5. Nr. 3 MARVULLI / DILLIER 5 Pkt.
5. Nr. 5 BOMMEL / MERTENS 5 Pkt.
7. Nr. 13 HUFF / SIMES 4 Pkt.
8. Nr. 2 LAMPATER / KLUGE 3 Pkt.
9. Nr. 10 GRAF / MüLLER 2 Pkt.
9. Nr. 12 MASOTTI / CICCONE 2 Pkt.
9. Nr. 16 KAIKOW / KRASNOW 2 Pkt.
12. Nr. 9 BENGSCH / KALZ 1 Pkt.
12. Nr. 15 RATAJCZYK / AESCHBACH 1 Pkt.
14. Nr. 7 STAM / BLAHA
14. Nr. 8 BARTH / MOHS

Mannschaftausscheidungfahren


1. Nr. 9 BENGSCH / KALZ 20 Pkt.
2. Nr. 3 MARVULLI / DILLIER 12 Pkt.
3. Nr. 1 HOWARD / MEYER 10 Pkt.
4. Nr. 4 KEISSE / DE KETELE 8 Pkt.
5. Nr. 14 MATZKA / REINHARDT 6 Pkt.
6. Nr. 15 RATAJCZYK / AESCHBACH 4 Pkt.
7. Nr. 12 MASOTTI / CICCONE
8. Nr. 5 BOMMEL / MERTENS
9. Nr. 7 STAM / BLAHA
10. Nr. 13 HUFF / SIMES
11. Nr. 16 KAIKOW / KRASNOW
12. Nr. 6 SCHRöDER / THöMEL
13. Nr. 2 LAMPATER / KLUGE
14. Nr. 10 GRAF / MüLLER
15. Nr. 8 BARTH / MOHS

Derny Final


1. Nr. 2 LAMPATER / KLUGE 10 Pkt.
2. Nr. 4 KEISSE / DE KETELE 8 Pkt.
3. Nr. 9 BENGSCH / KALZ 6 Pkt.
4. Nr. 1 HOWARD / MEYER 4 Pkt.
5. Nr. 3 MARVULLI / DILLIER 2 Pkt.
6. Nr. 8 BARTH / MOHS
7. Nr. 10 GRAF / MüLLER
8. Nr. 5 BOMMEL / MERTENS

Punktefahren


1. Nr. 15 RATAJCZYK / AESCHBACH 34 Pkt. 20
2. Nr. 3 MARVULLI / DILLIER 28 Pkt. 12
3. Nr. 1 HOWARD / MEYER 23 Pkt. 10
4. Nr. 5 BOMMEL / MERTENS 9 Pkt. 8
5. Nr. 13 HUFF / SIMES 5 Pkt. 6
6. Nr. 2 LAMPATER / KLUGE 3 Pkt. 4
7. Nr. 16 KAIKOW / KRASNOW 3 Pkt.
8. Nr. 6 SCHRöDER / THöMEL 2 Pkt.
8. Nr. 9 BENGSCH / KALZ 2 Pkt.
10. Nr. 4 KEISSE / DE KETELE 1 Pkt.
11. Nr. 7 STAM / BLAHA
11. Nr. 8 BARTH / MOHS
11. Nr. 10 GRAF / MüLLER
11. Nr. 12 MASOTTI / CICCONE
11. Nr. 14 MATZKA / REINHARDT

60 Min. Zweier-Mannschaftsfahren


1. Nr. 1 HOWARD / MEYER 40 Pkt.
2. Nr. 3 MARVULLI / DILLIER 28 Pkt.
3. Nr. 2 LAMPATER / KLUGE 18 Pkt.
3. Nr. 4 KEISSE / DE KETELE 18 Pkt.
5. Nr. 9 BENGSCH / KALZ 4 Pkt.
@ 1 Lap
6. Nr. 5 BOMMEL / MERTENS 1 Rd.
6. Nr. 7 STAM / BLAHA 1 Rd.
6. Nr. 8 BARTH / MOHS 1 Rd.
@ 2 Laps
9. Nr. 10 GRAF / MüLLER 2 Pkt. 2 Rd.
10. Nr. 6 SCHRöDER / THöMEL 2 Rd.
10. Nr. 12 MASOTTI / CICCONE 2 Rd.
10. Nr. 14 MATZKA / REINHARDT 2 Rd.
10. Nr. 15 RATAJCZYK / AESCHBACH 2 Rd.
@ 3 Laps
14. Nr. 13 HUFF / SIMES 3 Rd.
@ 4 Laps
15. Nr. 16 KAIKOW / KRASNOW 4 Rd.

Berlin Six Day - Final Standing after Six Days


1 Leigh Howard (Aus) & Cameron Meyer (Aus) Axel Lange 263 pts
2 Franco Marvulli (Swi) & Silvan Dillier (Swi) Wolfram 254
3 Iljo Keisse (Bel) & Kenny De Ketele (Bel) Techem 254
4 Leif Lampater (Ger) & Roger Kluge (Ger) Schultheiss 239
@ 1 Lap
5 Robert Bengsch (Ger) & Marcel Kalz (Ger) LCW 234
@ 11 Laps
6 Marcel Barth (Ger) & Erik Mohs (Ger) Oßwald 77
@ 12 Laps
7 Henning Bommel (Ger) & Tim Mertens (Bel) Veaxo 116
@ 13 Laps
8 Andreas Graf (Aut) & Andreas Müller (Aut) Preuss Münchenhagen 49
@ 14 Laps
9 Ralf Matzka (Ger) & Theo Reinhardt (Ger) Berlin Recycling 111
@ 16 Laps
10 Rafal Ratajczyk (Pol) & Alexander Aeschbach (Swi) Nokia 132
@ 17 Laps
11 Danny Stam (Ned) & Peter Schep (Ned) KIA Motors 57
@ 21 Laps
12 Fabio Masotti (Ita) & Angelo Ciccone (Ita) Rosti 55
@ 22 Laps
13 Björn Schröder (Ger) & Tino Thömel (Ger) Radio Berlin 56
@ 23 Laps
14 Brad Huff (USA) & Jackie Simes (USA) Win Office Network 43
@ 32 Laps
15 Waleri Kaikow (Rus) & Leonid Krasnow (Rus) 19

Berlin Six Day 2012
Time to think before the next one. Only one day though! Photo©Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Giro d’Italia 2015 – Stage 16, Pinzolo – Aprica; the Mortirolo!

You forget how gruesome the climbs are here in Italy; I'd never been over the Mortirolo before but it was an eye opener - 11.9 kilometres (that's more than seven miles) with an AVERAGE gradient of just under 12% and a maximum of 18%. Lance reckoned it was the toughest climb he ever raced and 'Bert' was on 34 x 30; 'nuff said !' On most of the big climbs there are sections where it eases a little; not on this swine, it's unrelenting and unforgiving - ask Fabio Aru ...

The Last Three Nights of the Rotterdam Six Day 2019

Kris heads straight for breakfast from the camper but I’m not man enough for that, I need the shower to bring me to life before I can face Rotterdam Six Day 2019, Day Four...

Charline Joiner – Pushing Past the Pain Barrier

VeloVeritas spoke recently to Commonwealth Games Team Sprint Silver Medallist Charline Joiner after her ride at the Rotterdam Six Day.

Grenoble Six Day 2009 – Day Five, Bar Clemenceau

Bar Clemenceau was open again today, for our afternoon 'snifter.' The bar tender must have had a heavy Sunday session, he was asleep at one of his own tables. I went for a Ricard today; it reminded me of the time John and I were in the Bar Britanique on Alpe d'Huez. We drank so much pastis that we only just made it outside in time to catch Pantani on his way to the stage win - those were the days!

At Random

Grenoble Six Days 2011 – Fifth Night

Grenoble Six Day 2011... Bed was at 02:00 am so I didn't have too much problem getting up at 07:45 to do some 'real world' stuff. The only trouble with that is I know I won't feel nearly as frisky come 02:30 am. I was meant to have an interview with Luke Roberts today, he was meant to get word about what's happening team-wise for 2012.

Cycle Hire in Mallorca – hire a bike on the island

If you're heading to Mallorca on holiday or for a training camp it makes a lot of sense to hire a bike over there rather than take your own machine to the island. I recently spent a couple of weeks in Pollença in the north east of Mallorca, on a family holiday - and for simplicity I decided to do just that. Here's how it went...

Steve Joughin – The Original ‘Pocket Rocket’

The ‘Pocket Rocket’ they called him; British Junior Road Champion, twice winner of the season-long Star Trophy, winner of just about every major amateur race in Britain and twice British Professional Road race Champion – the Isle of Man’s own Mr. Steve Joughin. High time we caught up with him.

“A Peiper’s Tale” by Allan Peiper

This book, Allan Peiper's story, is a little different from the usual sports biography: it's clear that Allan is a sensitive, thoughtful, somewhat spiritual bloke, who spends a lot of time trying to get through life in the best way possible, whilst looking after others (he's currently working as a Team Director for the Lotto - Davitamon Pro cycling team), and usually putting himself further down his priority list than most other folk would.