Oceanian Cycling Confederation

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The national federations of the UCI form confederations by continent.

In Oceania, this body is the Oceanian Cycling Confederation, also shortened to OCC.

Michael Turtur from South Australia was President of the Union Cycliste Internationale's Oceanian Cycling Confederation from 2008 to 2012, taking over from Ray Godkin from Sydney, Australia, who retired from the position in late 2008 following 22 years as the President. As a result Michael Turtur has a seat on the U.C.I. board (representing Oceania) on the Management Committee of the International Cycling Union.

On 2 December 2012, former Olympic athlete Tracey Gaudry was elected to succeed Turtur, Promoter of the Tour Down Under, who, as a promoter, had brought out Lance Armstrong for the Tour.

The vote was first split 2-2, but pressure was put on Guam to switch their vote by their own Olympic committee,[1] and she won unanimously after Fiji followed. The two other voting members, Australia and New Zealand, supported Ms. Gaudry's candidacy from the start.[2]

Member Federations

Country Federation
 Australia Cycling Australia
 Timor-Leste East Timor Cycling Federation
 Fiji Fiji Cycling Association
 Guam Guam Cycling Federation
 Indonesia Indonesian Cycling Federation (Ikatan Sepeda Sport Indonesia)
 New Zealand BikeNZ

References

  1. Roger Vaughan (29 November 2012). "Turtur to lose key cycling post". NineMSN (1997-2012 ninemsn Pty Ltd). Retrieved 2 December 2012. 
  2. "Gaudry unanimously elected President of the Oceania Cycling Confederation". Velo Nation (Velo Nation LLC). 2 December 2012. Retrieved 2 December 2012. 

External links


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