KUALA LUMPUR: The MNCF President’s Cup series which concluded in Nilai on Sunday (Jan 11) gave Malaysian riders an important opportunity to shake off the cobwebs ahead of what is set to be an important season.
Azizulhasni Awang, who celebrated his 38th birthday on Jan 5, proved he remains a force after sweeping both men’s individual sprint and keirin gold medals in the first leg of the series (Jan 7-8) at the National Velodrome.
Azizulhasni, who is now competing as an independent rider, sat out the second leg.
Ridwan Sahrom, who won the keirin and team sprint (with Fadhil Zonis and Akmal Jusena) at the Thailand SEA Games last month, was slightly off his usual pace after taking a two-week break following the games to perform the Umrah.
He was still able to win one gold, one silver (both individual sprint) and one bronze (keirin second leg) over both legs of the series.
His elder brother Shah, who underwent knee surgery in late September, made a surprise appearance in the keirin and was able to reach the semi-finals. Shah, who has lost a substantial amount of muscle in his right leg since the operation, is not expected to be in fighting form until late March.
On the women’s side, Izzah Izzati Asri swept both individual sprint gold medals but was upstaged by her junior Nur Alyssa Farid in the keirin.
Izzah settled for silver in the first leg and was off the podium in fourth in the second leg as Alyssa, 20, showed remarkable improvement to win both keirin gold.
Both Izzah, Alyssa and Azizulhasni had competed in a number of races in Melbourne late last month.
National cycling programme technical director, John Beasley, was pleased with the progress shown by Alyssa, who is expected to be promoted to the Podium Programme this year.
Alyssa has stated that she is hoping to qualify for her first world championships this year.
“She (Alyssa) is progressing nicely. She had a good campaign in Melbourne and now (President’s Cup series) she has stepped up again,” said Beasley yesterday.
“The more races we expose her to, the better she is going to become.
“Her form is pretty good, so I think she can qualify for the world championships and she is also in the running to compete in a number of major games.”
Beasley, however, stressed that Shah still has a long path ahead of him in the road to recover.
“It was a last-minute decision to race him here. Shah wanted to race and we got the go-ahead from the doctor,” said Beasley.
“He was able to race pain-free which is a good sign and hopefully we can continue to progress.
“He is still a long way from being in good form, but it is a start. There is still a lot of hard work to be done.”
The national squad will now shift their focus to preparing for the Asian Championships which will be held at the brand new Tagaytay Velodrome in the Philippines (March 25-31).
Selected riders will also compete in the UCI Track World Cup series which begins with the Perth leg (March 6-8) followed by Hong Kong (April 17-19) and season-ending Malaysian leg (April 24-26).
The Shanghai World Championships will be held on Oct 14-18 which also marks the start of the Olympic qualifying window for the 2028 Los Angeles games.
The Glasgow Commonwealth Games (Jul 23-Aug 2) and the Aichi-Nagoya Asian Games (Sept 19-Oct 4) will also be held this year.