A young cyclist from New Zealand has beaten off more than 9,000 other riders to win a place on Dimension Data’s under-23 team through a competition hosted by online training platform Zwift.
Ollie Jones was one of 9,200 aspiring pro cyclists who signed up for this year’s Zwift Academy talent identification programme, with the first phase lasting six weeks and seeing participants undertake online workouts, group rides and races.
10 of the hopefuls progressed to the semi-finals which lasted a fortnight and comprised both online and outdoor workouts as they vied to make the final at Dimension Data’s training camp in Cape Town, South Africa earlier this month.
Jones, a former speed skater who switched to cycling due to injury in May last year, was one of three cyclists to make it through alongside fellow Kiwi Sam Mobberley and Nick White from Australia. The trio spent a week riding with the team and undertaking more challenges.
“To say this is a dream come true is the understatement of the year,” said Jones after learning he had secured a year’s contract with the development squad, which races at UCI Continental level.
“It’s a life changing experience and I still can’t believe it’s happening. Nick and Sam were incredible competitors in the Academy Final and, after this camp, good friends.
“Now I’m onto the next challenge of making the move to a now home in Lucca, Italy and doing everything I can to support my team mates in the season ahead”
Doug Ryder, team principal for Dimension Data, said: “Finding the next young talent is never easy, but Zwift’s reach and data collection opens our team up to the whole world.
“Of course, there’s no substitute for the tactics, bike handling, and skills a rider needs in real-world racing, but these finalists presented us with the raw materials we need to find the next generation of world class talent.
“This isn’t a marketing gimmick; many of our riders are passionate about riding Zwift and they’ve seen first-hand what a capable rider Ollie is. We’re super proud to have him on the team”
Eric Min, Zwift’s founder and CEO, commented: “Last year’s Zwift Academy proved that the talent is out there and they’re using Zwift.
“While we had no doubt in the strength of our community of Zwifters, we’re lucky to have a partner like Team Dimension Data share that confidence.
“Heartfelt congratulations not only to Ollie, Nick, and Sam but also to the thousands who got more fitter and stronger by graduating from the Zwift Academy programme,” he added.
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5 comments
Can the public not participate in a public vote?
A panel of (smug) judges making snide comments would also help with TV ratings.
Just a thought...
And Dutchman wins a place with the McLaren team by being fastest on their simulator... https://www.reuters.com/article/us-motor-f1-gamer/dutch-sales-manager-wins-mclaren-f1-simulator-job-idUSKBN1DL2IC
What a world we live in.
"A young cyclist from New Zealand has beaten off more than 9000 other riders"
Well done to him. It'll be interesting to see how this develops.
The modern world is f*cking amazing!
They previously did it with Video Gamers and Track Car racing - Nissan?
I believe the greatest trouble was getting them up to physical condition ready to race in cars pulling multiple G's, I'd figure that anyone capable of getting the wattages needed to win this challenge would have ridden in enough Cat 2/1 races to be comfortable enough in a small continental peloton.
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https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2012/apr/29/jann-ardenborough-racing-c...