Tiffany Cromwell, Tasman Nankervis win Australia’s Nannup Gravel World Series race

An aerial view of the Seven Gravel Race in previous years
An aerial view of the Seven Gravel Race in previous years (Image credit: Daniela Tommasi Photography)

Tiffany Cromwell (Canyon-SRAM) and Tasman Nankervis (BMC Shimano) become the two latest names added to the list of UCI Gravel World Series victors on Saturday, both sweeping over the line well ahead of their nearest rivals to celebrate on the finish line of SEVEN in Nannup, Western Australia.

The Women's WorldTour racer, who opened her gravel season at the race, finished the 125km race with more than 3,200m of ascent in just under five hours and around 12 minutes later Western Australian rider Cassia Boglio (DRG Knights Liv) crossed the line to take second. Her teammate and D2022 Dirty Warrny winner, Courtney Sherwell, came third.

In the men's category, Nankervis shook off his rivals by first using his mountain bike skills to stretch the elastic on the tricky descents and then took off solo from a select lead group on a climb in the second half of the race. He came over the line with a speedy finishing time of 4:16:44.

Nicolas Roche (NR GRVL), had initially been in hot pursuit and looked well on track to come second in the men's category, however, University of Western Australia student Mark Chong overtook the former road professional. Roche held on for third and, like the two riders ahead of him, took to his first Gravel World Series podium.

The lead group was down to about 30 riders early, with a second group just behind including many of the key players in the women’s category. As sprinkles of rain dispersed to reveal blue skies and Autumn sunshine the lead group then reduced to about 15, as riders like Roche put the pressure on with their digs at the front while others, like Connor Sens (St George), drove an unrelenting pace on the climbs.

On the downhills Nankervis could be seen pulling out a gap on the lead group – which included last year's winner Adam Blazevic and 2022's third-placed Matthew Bird – but it was when the 2023 Life Time Grand Prix series rider put in a big attack on a climb in the second half of the race that he really set the scene for victory. Roche and Chong were on the chase but no one, including defending champion Blazevic, could keep pace with the surge from the rider from Bendigo and Nankervis stretched the gap to the line.

In the women's category Boglio had been leading the way at the early checkpoint while Cromwell came through about a minute later with Sherwell and Darcie Richards, who came second in the event last year. However, Cromwell turned up the pace and shed all her rivals at about halfway through the race, before settling in to pull out a solid gap on the chasing Boglio, a former triathlete who this time last year was racing on the road in Europe with NXTG by Experza.

The Nannup event is the fifth of 16 Gravel World Series rounds in the 2023 series, with the races acting as qualifiers for the UCI Gravel World Championships in Italy in early October. The sixth round, the 3RIDES Gravel Race, will run later Saturday in Germany with Gravel World Champion Gianni Vermeersch, Lorena Wiebes, Ivar Slik, André Greipel, Michael Vanthourenhout, Jan Bakelants and Tessa Neefjes among those on the start line.

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SEVEN Results - Women's top 10
PositionRiderTime
1Tiffany Cromwell4:58:25
2Cassia Boglio5:12:24
3Courtney Sherwell5:19:40
4Serene Lee5:29:42
5Fiona Morris5:34:42
6Nicole Mitsigeorgis5:36:01
7Darcie Richards5:36:51
8Emilie Delaforge5:44:13
9Mikayla Smith5:49:26
10Jo Bennett5:51:10
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SEVEN Results - Men's Top 10
PositionRiderTime
1Tasman Nankervis (BMC Shimano)4:16:44
2Mark Chong 4:25:31
3Nicolas Roche (NR GRVL)4:28:18
4Matthew Bird4:29:23
5Jacob Langham4:29:23
6Connor Sens4:32:46
7Tristan Nash4:33:13
8Oli Stenning4:35:55
9Luke Cridland4:38:12
10Adam Blazevic4:41:02
Simone Giuliani
Australia Editor

Simone is a degree-qualified journalist that has accumulated decades of wide-ranging experience while working across a variety of leading media organisations. She joined Cyclingnews as a Production Editor at the start of the 2021 season and has now moved into the role of Australia Editor. Previously she worked as a freelance writer, Australian Editor at Ella CyclingTips and as a correspondent for Reuters and Bloomberg. Cycling was initially purely a leisure pursuit for Simone, who started out as a business journalist, but in 2015 her career focus also shifted to the sport.

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