The red dust of Western Australia doesn’t offer much mercy, but it provides plenty of perspective. Nestled in the hills of Nannup, the Seven Gravel race serves as a brutal preview for the 2026 UCI Gravel World Championships. This isn't your local weekend cruise; it is 125 kilometers of punishing terrain featuring over 3,000 meters of vertical gain. The statistics alone are staggering, averaging roughly 25 meters of climbing for every kilometer ridden. In a small town of fewer than 600 people, the air hums with the pre-race tension of athletes ready to test their limits against the "Golden Triangle" of Australian cycling. Surviving the ball bearings of pea gravel Success in the Australian bush depends heavily on technical respect for the surface. The course is a treacherous mosaic of quartz grit, hard-packed clay, and mica, but the true nightmare is the pea gravel. These small, rounded stones act like literal ball bearings under a tire, offering zero traction during high-speed descents. Dan Lloyd and Si Richardson both opted for Orbea Terra frames, prioritizing speed on the hard-pack sections while banking on Pirelli Cinturato Gravel H tires to find purchase in the loose corners. Running pressures as low as 23 PSI, the goal was to float over the debris rather than fight it, though the terrain remained inherently unpredictable. Nutrition disaster 15 kilometers in Disaster struck Dan early. Just 15 kilometers into the 125-kilometer suffer-fest, a rough descent ejected his primary nutrition bottle. This wasn't just water; it was a concentrated gel containing 480 grams of carbohydrates designed to fuel his entire effort. In an endurance race where the engine runs on sugar, losing your fuel supply this early is usually a death sentence for any podium ambitions. Forced into survival mode, Dan resorted to scavenging. He eventually received mystery bottles “found on the floor” by support staff and raided feed stations for cookies and Haribo. It was a chaotic, unrefined fueling strategy that forced him to rely on pure grit and the efficiency of his steady power output. Tactical precision versus raw aggression While Dan managed his fueling crisis, Si took a different approach at the front of the pack. The race began at a blistering pace, with riders pushing over 450 watts on the initial asphalt sections. While some competitors "chipped off" early with naive aggression, Si settled into a calculated rhythm. He utilized his SRAM Red AXS drivetrain to manage the constant fluctuations in gradient, while Dan stuck to his mechanical Shimano GRX setup. The race became a psychological battle of staying away; Si spent much of the mid-section riding solo, haunted by the fear of being caught, while Dan moved into "damage mode," desperately trying to hold 320 watts as his legs began to fail on the final climbs. Triumph on the Lindsay climb The climax arrived at the Lindsay climb, the final major hurdle before the run-in to Nannup. By this point, the heat and the cumulative elevation had stripped away any remaining comfort. Si reached the summit seeing stars, physically and emotionally spent, yet managed to hold his lead. He crossed the line in 4 hours, 18 minutes, and 15 seconds, securing first place in his age category. Despite his nutrition catastrophe, Dan finished just thirty minutes later, placing 18th in his age group. Both riders successfully secured their qualification for the World Championships, proving that mental toughness often outweighs perfect preparation. The price of the struggle The lesson from the Australian bush is simple: the mountains demand everything, but they pay back in clarity. Racing 125 kilometers with 3,000 meters of climbing isn't about the bike or the gear; it’s about how you respond when the plan falls apart. Whether it’s losing your calories on a descent or fighting the "ball bearings" of the outback, the struggle is the point. Both athletes left Western Australia with more than just a qualification; they left with the knowledge that they could survive the worst the landscape had to throw at them and still come out on top.
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- Apr 23, 2026