For some, it may be hard to line up the version of Brodie Chapman that rode the Tour of Bright in 2016 with today’s consummate professional who loves racing so much she was pining on a number at the event in her off-season and helping add some WorldTour lustre to the club-run race in the high country of Victoria.

‘I don’t know if I like road racing’ had been the words echoing through Chapman’s head as she rode the Tour of Bright for the first time, nearly a decade ago.

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And if jumping on the bike sounded like fun, Chapman would do it, even if it meant an enduro mountain bike event or a mid-summer singlespeed cyclocross race with a surfboard trophy. She’d routinely prove every step of the way how much raw talent was there – of course she won that full-size pink surfboard trophy and she may have also lapped some of the slower competitors out on course (i.e. me) twice in the process.

While the enjoyment and prowess was clear, the disciplined focus may not have been evident to some. Her domestic road team from those early cycling days may even have at one stage questioned whether she was taking it seriously enough – “they weren’t wrong” quipped Chapman in her typical tell-it-as-it-is style when the story was told in the relaxed brewery based presentation at the Tour of Bright earlier this month.

Brodie Chapman (UAE Team ADQ) on her way to victory at the stage 2 time trial

Brodie Chapman (UAE Team ADQ) on her way to victory at the stage 2 time trial at the Tour of Bright 2025 (Image credit: Jean-Pierre Ronco / Tour of Bright)

Chapman pulled on the skin suit of an Australian champion and rolled out on her time trial bike in Victoria’s high country to deliver a smooth and speedy 18km effort with an average that fell just shy of 47kph in wet conditions, to deliver a time of 22:59, well over a minute ahead of her nearest rival.

She may have been just coming off her off-season and only just be stepping back on the time trial bike (which arrived last-minute on the eve of the race) but she was the picture of a rider at the top of her game – perfectly positioned and focussed as she took on the discipline where she rose to fourth in the world in Kigali just months before and also claimed a rainbow jersey as part of Australia’s mixed team time trial squad.

That also came in her first season with UAE Team ADQ, where while racing with her trade team she got to celebrate a stage victory at Tour Féminin International des Pyrénées, supported teammate Elisa Longo Borghini to victory at the Giro d’Italia for a second year and lined up for her first Tour de France Femmes.

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“I think I’m the most content I might have ever been on a team,” Chapman told Cyclingnews as she looked back on the season while recovering from her effort in the Tour of Bright pre-race criterium in the centre of town.

“Coupled with the fact that the Women’s WorldTour is so professional now, so every team has a really high standard of operating, but on UAE we’re really well resourced.

“They’ve really built a team based off good personalities and different strengths and I feel like I miss my teammates when I’m not with them, you know, I just love going to races and hanging out with them and going on team camps. Everybody who’s working at UAE has such an ambition to build the team and one thing they really do is respect the individual and their goals, their strengths, even their quirks and personalities, which I really appreciate. I feel very like I can be myself there.”

That helps explains why even though her one-time early career target of keeping riding to the Kigali World Championships has been and gone, Chapman’s passion for the sport and determination to make the most of the career she started carving out with her first professional contract at 26 in 2018 well and truly remains.

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Felicity Wilson-Haffenden, who is still firmly in the under-23 category but of course younger riders can choose to step up early.

“I was training with her before Worlds and, especially on a course like Perth, I’m afraid, I’m scared of her,” said Chapman of her teammate in the world title winning Australian Mixed Relay team time trial squad. “But at a time trial, you just do your race.”

After that time trial on January 8, Chapman will then take on the road race on January 11 and while the 2023 national champion doesn’t have any teammates alongside her it doesn’t mean she’ll be giving up as “every race you do you’ve got you’ve got to race for something.”

Once she has “tried to set the legs up for the season” and “tested some different tactics” at the road race in Perth Chapman will this year be heading to the Santos Tour Down Under after missing out on the event in 2025 as she turned her attention to other later goals.

This year should be an extremely competitive edition of the South Australian race from January 17 to 19, as this year for the first time it will host a full contingent of Women’s WorldTour squads.

“We have a really, really strong team, so I think it’ll be a matter of playing to basically whoever’s legs show up,” said Chapman. “And as we know, the Europeans are always prepared for the Tour Down Under now, it’s no longer just an Aussie game, but together as a team our goal is certainly to win the GC.”

Beyond the Australian season, there are plenty more targets but one clearly stands out for the rider who only just missed the individual time trial podium at the World Championships this year.

“Next year’s Worlds are a really big goal with the Australian cycling team. It’s a really long time trial, which will suit me. The less variation in my watts, the better,” Chapman said with a laugh.

Then of course wherever other longer time trials crop up on the calendar, Chapman will be hoping to capitalise, as well as leaning into her regular season role of helping Longo Borghini defend her Giro title.

And of course there is also one more simple goal. “I’d like to win a race again,” said Chapman, because while racing is still clearly enjoyable, crossing the line with the hands in the air is something else again.

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