Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Contador: guilty or not, justice has not been done

Following the detection of banned drug Clenbuterol in a sample he provided on the 21st of July in 2010, a rest day during the Tour de France, Alberto Contador was handed a (backdated) two-year suspension and all his results during that period - including a Tour de France and a Giro d'Italia, cycling's most prestigious races - will be disqualified.

The world of cycling has been split for nearly two years into those who believe the Spanish rider is innocent of deliberate doping and those who believe he is guilty - yet even the second group are shocked at the apparent severity of this punishment. Many cyclists, some retired and some still active, have leaped to his defence; saying that the penalty is too great and claiming that others, some of them riders whose guilt is in no doubt, have been let off more lightly. So has he been treated unfairly? Should he appeal and, if he does, should his sentence be reduced?

To decide, we first need to know exactly what it is he has been found guilty of doing: what was found in the positive sample, how it was found and how it may have got there. Then it becomes possible to compare his case to those of riders who have been in similar situations and thus decide if his punishment is fair or if he has been singled out for special treatment.

Clenbuterol
Clenbuterol is the generic clinical name for (RS)-1-(4-amino-3,5-dichlorophenyl)-2-(tert-butylamino)ethanol, a sympathomimetic drug - i.e., one that mimics the actions of transmitter chemicals (in this case, epinephrine) within the nervous system. It's used in medicine as a decongestant and bronchodilator, sharing many similarities to Salbutamol but is more potent and its effects last longer; hence its use in some nations to treat chronic asthma.

As is the case with almost all drugs, Clenbuterol can produce a number of undesirable and even dangerous side-effects. These may include, but are not limited to, the following: thyrotoxicosis (over-production of thyroxine and triiodothyronine in the thyroid gland, stenosis (narrowing of the blood vessels), heart attacks, tachycardia (abnormally high heart rate), hypertension (high blood pressure) and hypersensitivity. It also increases aerobic capacity, raising the blood's ability to carry oxygen to the muscles; this being the effect that athletes who illegally use it to improve their performance seek.

Clenbuterol is sometimes used - against medical advice - as a dietary aid as it increases the body's muscle to fat ratio. Currently, vets use a trademarked version named Ventipulmin to relieve respiratory difficulties in horses, but for the same reasons it appeals to dieters it is used by farmers wishing to produce higher-value, leaner meat. In the USA and European Union, where it can be used legally by vets to relax the uterus of birthing cattle (in the USA, provided meat from the animal will not enter the human food chain), it's believed with evidence that illegal use by farmers is extremely rare - a test conducted by the EU in 2008 and 2009 could find only one example of meat contaminated by Clenbuterol among 83,203 samples; but in some nations such as China and Mexico, it's thought to be comparatively common.

How was Contador tested?
All professional cyclists can expect to receive random visits from WADA-approved anti-doping officials throughout the year. They can appear at any time and refusal to provide a sample is considered indication of guilt, as is failure to keep their national federation up to date with their whereabouts. In addition to this, teams now operate their own internal anti-doping test programs which have been opened up to independent inspection in recent years to allay accusations that they are merely paying lip service to the problem - riders who have tried to escape team tests have been sacked in the past. All riders taking part in the Tour de France will be subjected to a test before Stage 1, as will the winner, second place and two riders at random following each stage. Since the Tour lasts for 21 days, this means that all riders are likely to be tested at least twice during the race. Contador won no stages in 2010, but was second on Stages 12 and 17 - and would hence have been tested at least four times: before Stage 1, after Stages 12 and 17 and on the rest day when he provided the sample that tested positive. As race leader in the final six stages, he may have been tested more.

The drug can be detected in a sample of urine via a process termed GC-MS, gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, and is considered sufficiently reliable to have become the standard laboratory test when an unknown substance needs to be accurately identified. In gas chromatography, the sample is carried within an non-reactive or inert gas, commonly nitrogen or helium, which allows it to be fed through a tube coated with compounds termed stationary phases. The varying retention times of each stationary phase (the time taken for the compound to "take hold" of molecules from the sample) permits the sample to be "picked apart" into separate molecules, each representative of one of the chemicals within the sample.

The GC-MS process has been made far easier by improvements in the machines
used to carry out the procedure
(image credit: Polimerek CC BY-SA 3.0)

Those chemicals can then be identified using the mass spectrometry process. The molecules from the sample are converted into ions using an ion source (usually by hitting them with an electron beam) and then sorted according to their mass-to-charge ratio using an electromagnet. This allows the tester to build up an accurate model of the tested molecule, thus allowing the sample to be identified. The GC-MS process was perfected some time ago, but in recent years the equipment used in order to carry it out has been greatly improved and it is now judged to be almost 100% reliable. As the drug is metabolised very slowly within the body, a positive sample cannot be used to ascertain when the substance was ingested.

It has been claimed that at the time Clenbuterol was detected in Contador's sample, there were only four laboratories in the world with the ability to detect in in such minute quantities - this has been declared false by independent scientists.

How much was found?
When news that Contador had tested positive was first made public, it was reported that the amount of Clenbuterol discovered in the sample was 50pg/ml of sample - 0.00000000005grams per millimetre; some 400 times lower than a laboratory is expected to be able to detect in order to receive WADA approval.

This, the probable cause of the "only four laboratories" rumour described above, was subsequently found to be incorrect; the actual amount being 40 times lower than a WADA laboratory must be able to detect - however, according to Dr. Douwe de Boer (recruited by Contador and his lawyers to act as scientific advisor during the case), this would need to be increased 180 times before any effect of athletic performance became noticeable. Secondly, no trace of the drug had been found in samples provided on the 19th or 20th of July, nor at any other point during his career: thus, it seems very unlikely that he was micro dosing - a technique that, in view of Clenbuterol's slow metabolisation rate, would be useless anyway.

How could it have got there?
Contador continues to insist that he has never deliberately doped. Therefore, if we assume he isn't lying, we need to decide other ways in which Clenbuterol may have got into his body. The first and most obvious candidate is the consumption of contaminated meat, the explanation given by the rider himself. This is far from unknown: in September of 2006, 330 people in Shanghai suffered health problems after eating pork from pigs that had been treated with the drug. 60 people in the Chinese province Guangdong ingested it in the same way  in February 2009. In 2011, several players in the Mexican national soccer team and 109 players in the Under-17 FIFA World Cup - held that year in Mexico - provided samples that tested positive for Clenbuterol. All the players claimed that contaminated meat was to blame and, as it is known that the drug is used by Mexican farmers, WADA accepted their claims and they escaped sanctions.

As we have already seen, the EU could find only one positive sample among 83,203 samples of European-produced meat and, over the same time period, 19,431 samples of Spanish meat turned up not a single positive result.

However, the Spanish public have developed a taste for beef over the last few years and the amount consumed within the country has soared. Meanwhile, Spanish production of beef has fallen - from 670,408 tonnes in 2006 to 575,000 tonnes four years later. Where's it coming from?

Most of Spain's beef imports originate in the Netherlands, a nation which is far more strict when it comes to which drugs can be administered to animals that it is on which drugs people can administer to themselves. Ireland provides the next largest EU share, but since the same laws apply there the Emerald Isle isn't likely to be the source of dodgy steaks either. Most of the remainder comes from Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina, and in the last couple of years the former Eastern Bloc nations of Poland and Romania have begun supplying live cattle for slaughter in Spain. Contador claims to believe that he ingested the drug by eating contaminated beef bought at a shop attached to a slaughterhouse in Irun, a town in the Basque Country, subsequently visited by a WADA team who could find no evidence of contaminated meat at the facility. However, Jacinto Vidarte, acting as spokesman for the rider's legal team, says that it is impossible to prove for certain that the meat was not contaminated. After all, the Irun meat is only the meat that Contador says he believes is to blame; if he genuinely did not deliberately use Clenbuterol, which as we have seen is metabolised very slowly, it may also have come from meat bought elsewhere. The Court declared that "...on the basis of all the evidence adduced, the Panel considers it highly likely that the meat came from a calf reared in Spain and very likely that the relevant piece of meat came from the farming company Hermanos Carabia Munoz SL" (paragraph 328).  Very likely is not the same as definitely. In these days when much of what we eat has been transported halfway around the world before finding its way into our kitchens, can we truly be certain that he did not unwittingly ingest the drug in this way?

How else might it have got into his body? The CAS, via a press release after their verdict, said: "The panel found that there were no established facts that would elevate the possibility of meat contamination to an event that could have occurred on a balance of probabilities." Note that they also cannot prove it definitely didn't. They go on: "In the panel's opinion, on the basis of the evidence adduced, the presence of clenbuterol was more likely caused by the ingestion of a contaminated food supplement." Once again, there is no proof that Contador willingly ingested the drug and a rather large chance that he may have done so accidentally and without his knowledge - this would not be the first time an athlete has failed an anti-doping test without consciously doping: it happened to Scott Moninger, who was suspended for one year after testing positive for 19-norandrosterone, indication of anabolic steroid use but later shown to have come from a contaminated food supplement he'd bought in a shop in Colorado. Christopher Brandt tested positive for methadone, which was later found to have originated from a presumably rather incompetent chemist who had been preparing a methadone prescription before he prepared Brandt's prescription for an entirely different drug that he was permitted to use. Formula 1 driver Fernando Alonso was so concerned about the likelihood of consuming contaminated food whilst in China in 2011 that when away from the Ferrari team's mobile kitchen - serving food brought with them - he would eat only plain rice after personally supervising the cooking to ensure it had been boiled in bottled mineral water, otherwise surviving on energy bars.

The third likely scenario is that he received a transfusion of blood that was contaminated with the drug. Since blood transfusions can be used by athletes to boost their body's ability to supply the muscles with blood, transfusions are strictly forbidden unless carried out for genuine medical reasons. More on this explanation in the next section.



Contador's doping record
Like all professional cyclists, Contador has been subject to regular anti-doping tests throughout his career - and as perhaps the most talented stage cyclist of his generation and a three-time Tour de France winner, he comes under especial scrutiny. It's no surprise then that, in a sport which has done more than any other in an attempt to prevent the issue that twice nearly killed it and has accounted for several of its most shining stars, he has been linked to doping in the past.

In 2006 he and five other members of Astana-Würth were prevented from taking part in the Tour de France after they were connected to Operación Puerto. He and four of the other men were subsequently cleared of wrong-doing and the rider swore under oath that he neither knew nor had links to Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes, about whom the investigation was centred - yet Le Monde reported that he had refused to undergo a DNA test which would have proved whether or not any of the preserved blood found at the doctor's laboratory was his. Three years later, in a column in the same newspaper, Greg Lemond claimed that to climb Verbier as quickly as Contador had done in that year's Tour would be impossible "without falling back to the use of performance enhancing products." Several experts later refuted claims made by Lemond and his advisor, Professor Antoine Vayer, saying that while Contador would undoubtedly require an unusually high VO2 level it would not be "so high that you can definitively state that it can only be achieved via doping."

The day before he provided the sample that tested positive for Clenbuterol, Contador underwent another test - which turned up plastic residue in his urine. In the past, the presence of plastic residue has been shown to be indication of blood doping, the plastic having come from the plasticisers added to blood harvested from an individual before its stored ready for future re-transfusion into the body. The test that discovered the residue was not approved by WADA, meaning that the results were not admissible as legal evidence - and as such, Contador has never had to explain them, nor done so. The CAS decided that this scenario was unlikely (paragraph 454).

That leaves the contaminated food supplement theory, as proposed by WADA: an explanation that will be all too familiar to Amber Neben, another professional cyclist who, in 2003, tested positive for 19-Norandrosterone (a metabolite of the anabolic steroid Nandralone, which promotes the production of red blood cells and in turn boosts the body's ability to transfer oxygen to the muscles, as does Clenbuterol) at the Road World Cup. She was banned pending investigation immediately after the test, but the CAS subsequently ruled that whereas doping had occurred, there was no evidence that it had been done deliberately and accepted the rider's explanation that a contaminated food supplement was to blame; then handed her a six-month ban backdated to the time of the test and agreed that she would subject to increased tests for the following eighteen months. Contador, meanwhile, rejects this theory; saying that he only used food supplements supplied to him by the Astana team, for whom they were selected by the team's assistant coach and chief masseur (paragraph 461). CAS maintains that it is the most likely explanation, but notes that it cannot be proved that the rider's assertion to have only used Astana's supplements (paragraph 462).

The UCI and WADA's case
(image credit: kei-ai CC BY 2.0)
The legal concept of onus probandi, burden of proof, states that an individual or party that has provided satisfactory evidence that another individual or party then becomes subject to the benefit of assumption. Since all defendants are automatically assumed innocent unless proven otherwise, the the prosecution must show beyond doubt that their accusation is founded and, if they can do so, the defence then bears the burden of proof and must demonstrate reliable evidence to support their claim that the accusation is false.

In this case, Contador automatically carried the burden of proof since there is no reasonable doubt - in view of accuracy of the GC-MS testing process - that Clenbuterol was present in his body. Nor is there any evidence to suggest that the laboratory which carried out the test mixed up his sample with one from another athlete - his defence team have not introduced such a scenario as a possibility though they will undoubtedly have looked into it; leading us to the conclusion that they consider it extremely unlikely. Many people are in no doubt whatsoever that the rider is guilty of deliberately taking Clenbuterol (the hundreds of thousands of Tweets over the last 24 hours referring to him as Dirty Bertie are proof of that), but as the case stands the UCI and WADA have not been able to prove this. If we assume that he did not and was not willing to falsely confess, his only remaining option was to attempt to describe other possible ways in which the drug might have got into his body in order to raise sufficient doubt for a favourable verdict. Unfortunately, the ideal - submitting a sample of the beef he says he ate for analysis - was not available, because by the time he'd tested positive he'd already eaten it and it was already back in the food chain: it is referred to as "the missing link" in paragraph 329 of the court transcript. All he could do was describe events as best as he could and throw himself upon the mercy of the court.

Conclusion
In the court transcript, paragraph 336 states: "..it is alleged that Mr Contador undertook a transfusion of red blood cells on 20 July 2010 and then – in order to preserve a natural blood profile and mask the use of such transfusion, which can be detected through the Athlete’s Biological Passport (hereinafter; the "ABP") - the next day (21 July 2010) injected plasma (to hide the variation of haemoglobin values) and erythropoiesis stimulation (to hide the variation of reticulocytes) into his system. According to the Appellants, it is the transfusion of plasma of 21 July 2010 which could have contaminated the Sample with clenbuterol, resulting in the adverse analytical finding." The Court then decided this was unlikely to be the reason for the failed test (paragraph 454). That Clenbuterol, a drug banned under international athletic rules, was found in a sample provided by Alberto Contador at the 2010 Tour de France is in no doubt whatsoever. Contador has not tried to claim that he did not provide the sample, nor that persons unknown tampered with it - but, due to the complexities of the case,  he cannot prove for certain that he did not deliberately ingest the drug. Neither can the UCI or WADA prove that he did.

 Last year, I was accused of stealing "a significant sum of cash" from my then employer. I didn't, but my case had broad similarities to that of Contador: CCTV evidence proved that the money was in my possession at the time when it was stolen, something I had never denied - one of my duties, as a manager, was to bank the daily takings and I had placed the money in a bag belonging to myself ready to be taken to the bank. There was a period of approximately one hour after I did so during which it seems the money was stolen by persons unknown. Two days later, I was suspended from the job, then dismissed after another few days. After a six month investigation, I appeared in a Crown Court with a very high likelihood that I would be going to prison for twelve months. However, during the hearing, my excellent barrister was able to extract admissions from my employer that it had viewed only CCTV footage of me placing the money into my bag and had not bothered to check footage from the time between then and the time I took the bag to the bank. The police had also not thought to ask for that footage which, after one month, was destroyed when the video tape was reused. Whilst that might seem to be in my favour, it was not - because I needed it to prove that someone else had committed the theft and thus the burden of proof fell upon me. Like Contador, I needed to convince the Court that while a crime had been committed (theft in my case, the illegal contamination of meat in his), I was not the person who committed it. Thankfully, I have never committed a crime and have no criminal record; it was this "good character" which saved me - while I couldn't prove I hadn't stolen the money, it also couldn't be proved that I had and so the Jury found in my favour and I was unanimously cleared of the charge. Contador doesn't have that on his side. His name has been linked to doping in the past, the most damning link being the plastic residue - something he should have dealt with at the time by seeking an explanation, assuming he was not blood doping, even though the evidence found by that test could not be used alone to prosecute him. He was unable to relieve himself of the burden of proof and the Court, swung by his previous record, was not inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt.
We cannot be certain that Contador either deliberately took a performance-enhancing drug or that he injected it into his body by way of an (illegal) blood transfusion. We also can't be certain that, as Contador claims, he did not. Hence, the case was decided not on proof, but on a legal technicality used to decide an outcome when proof is not available. Finally, there seems to be a very really likelihood that he unknowing ingested it in a contaminated food supplement; as we've seen, this happens - and the Court recognises that fact (paragraphs 457-460). If this scenario - favoured by the Court, remember - is the real reason for the drug found in his sample, he's no more to blame than he would be if he ate contaminated meat because food supplements are no more illegal (though adding Clenbuterol to them is, in many nations) than eating beef is. So why was Amber Neben suspended for six months and Alberto Contador for two years? Does the UCI have an axe to grind after he escaped charge when the plastic residue was discovered? Could it be that they and WADA want to use his enormous celebrity as winner of six Grand Tours (three editions of the Tour de France, two of the Giro d'Italia and one Vuelta a Espana) to make an example of him, leaving nobody in any doubt that both organisations are serious about ending doping? It is possible that he's a liar, a doper who thought he was clever enough to get away with cheating in a sport he professes to love - but there also appears to be a reasonable possibility that an innocent man who truly does love his sport is being unfairly punished as a result of circumstance. Four things are certain:

  1. Contador's punishment, as the case now stands, is unfair.
  2. We don't know what happened.
  3. We cannot be certain that justice has been done.
  4. If, as he well might, Contador decides to appeal, this chapter in the history of cycling is far from over.

Daily Cycling Facts 07.02.12

Learco Guerra
Learco Guerra, who died on this day in 1963, started out as a footballer. However, he turned out not to be very good at it and so he decided to have a go at cycling instead. He turned out to be very good at that, earning himself the nickname "Locomotive" for his ability to keep on for kilometre after kilometre at high speed.

Born in Bagnolo san Vito on the 14th of October 1902, Guerra's football ambitions meant that he came to cycling unusually late when he was 26. It took him just a year to become National Champion in 1930, the same year he entered the Giro d'Italia for the first time and won two stages (8 and 11), coming 9th overall. Even more remarkably, he also entered the Tour de France for the first time, where he won three stages (2, 13 and 15), wore the maillot jaune for seven days and finished in 2nd place overall and retained his National title. He kept it again in 1931 and added the World Road Race Championship for good measure, having won another four stages in the Giro too. He wasn't World Champion in 1932 but remained National Champion, this time winning six Giro stages (1, 4, 6, 8, 9 and 13). In 1933, he took Stages 1, 3 and 5 at the Giro, then went back to the Tour where he won Stages 2, 6, 7 and 18, once again finishing 2nd overall, won Milan-San Remo and became National Champion for the fourth consecutive year.

Guerra's best year was 1934, when he won 13 major races including the Giro di Lombardia and ten stages at the Giro d'Italia (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 14) - more than enough for an overall win - and won the National Championship for the final time. He settled for 4th overall at the 1935 Giro, this time having to make do with Stages 3, 4, 7, 8 and 10, then had a quieter year in 1936 during which his only notable win was the  Giro della Provincia Milano in which he teamed up with Gino Bartali. His last Giro came a year later and he won Stage 9, polishing off his career in 1940 when he became National Track Stayer Champion.

Sadly, Guerra's enormous success was hijacked by the Italian Fascist government who used him as a heroic figurehead in propaganda. His own politics are not known, but most historians feel he was probably not a fascist himself - his popularity in the peloton, among cyclists of various nations and at a time when many were beginning to develop real suspicions and fear of what was taking place in Italy and Germany, may confirm this; as would his work after retiring as a cyclist when he became a team manager for, among several others, Charly Gaul, a rider who would have made one of the most unlikely fascists ever.

He died aged 60, having been diagnosed Parkinson's Disease some time previously.

Franco Ballerini
Franco Ballerini, who died on this day in 2010, first found fame as a cyclist before becoming a cycling team manager. Born in Florence, his greatest success came in the Classics - he won Paris-Roubaix, the single-day race so hard it's known as commonly by its nicknames "The Hell Of The North" and "A Sunday In Hell" as often as by its real name, on two occasions, first in 1995 and then again in 1998. He also won Paris-Brussels in 1990, the Giro della Romagna in 1991, the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad in 1995 and the Grand Prix de Wallonie in 1996.

Franco Ballerini, 1964-2010
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0)
He was far less effective as a stage racer, finishing the Tour de France 115th overall in 1992 and 61st the following year, when he also took Stage 14 at the Giro d'Italia. He would win Stage 5 in the 1996 Tour of Austria, but that was as far as his stage race success went. He did far better as manager of the Italian team, training among others Mario Cippolini who holds the Giro record of 42 stage wins. He also managed Paolo Bettini, who would become known as the greatest Classics rider of his generation before retiring in 2008.

Ballerini loved rally racing as much as he loved cycling, and it was while participating in that sport that he met his untimely end when he was 45. He was acting as navigator for a driver named Alessandro Ciardi during a race at Larciano when the car went out of control and crashed, leaving him with the horrific injuries that caused his death a short while later.


Elia Vivani, stage winner at the Vuelta a Cuba, Tour of Turkey, Tour of Beijing and USA ProCycling Challenge and victor at the 2010 Memorial Marco Pantani, was born on this day in 1989 in Italy.

Belgian Wim Arras, born today in 1964, was considered destined for great things after winning Paris-Brussels in 1987, also achieving podium finishes and stage wins in numerous other events. However, his career was cut short by a motorcycle accident in 1996.

Other births: Fridrihs Bošs (Russia, 1887, died 1950); Andrejs Apsītis (Latvia, 1888, died 1945); Jairo Díaz (Colombia, 1945); Michael Marx (Germany, 1960); George Corsar (Scotland, 1886); Franco Testa (Italy, 1938); Pedro Pablo Pérez (Cuba, 1977); Yuriy Krivtsov (Ukraine, 1979); Marcel Grifnée (Belgium, 1947); Józef Stefański (Poland, 1908, died 1997); Jo Geon-Haeng (South Korea, 1965); Jo Seong-Hwan (South Korea, 1943).

Monday, 6 February 2012

What next for Contador?

"This is bad for cycling." Johan Bruyneel 
Alberto Contador, the three-time Tour de France winner who tested positive for a miniscule trace of the banned drug Clenbuterol in 2010, has been found guilty by the Court for Arbitration in Sport and handed a two-year ban and will also be stripped of his 2010 Tour victory.

The ban will be backdated to the 25th of January 2011. As he was provisionally suspended for a period of five months during the initial investigation, he will be able to return to competition in August this year - too late for the Tour but in time for the Vuelta a Espana. Online betting sites have slashed odds of Cadel Evans winning a second Tour de France from 5/1 to 2/1.
"It’s an excessive punishment. It’s bad for everybody, for the reputation of cycling, for sponsors." Eddy Merckx
In view of the failure to disprove the rider's claim to have ingested the drug in contaminated beef, two years seems an unexpectedly harsh punishment - six months to a year was considered the most likely punishment by many. He is reported to have said he does not agree with the decision and will call a press conference in the near future and what he plans to do next should then become known: he may now decide to appeal; but having already spent a huge amount of money on lawyers he might also decide to accept the decision, especially now that the UCI are likely to be given the go ahead to fine him €2,485,000. In 2010, he said that if banned he would retire; but this seems an unlikely course now.


Andy Schleck now becomes the official winner of the 2010 Tour, but has said that he does not accept the title and will continue to consider Contador the rightful victor - and says he can win on his own merit. Contador's 2011 Giro d'Italia victory will also be disqualified, making Michele Scarponi the winner.

Daily Cycling Facts 06.02.12

Jose María Jimenez Sastre
At the start of his professional career, Jose María Jimenez was widely hailed as a likely successor to none other than Miguel Indurain in Spain, where he was born in El Barraco on this day in 1971. Indurain, Spain's most successful cyclist, had become the fourth man to win five Tours de France and the first to do so consecutively, so it was not a comparison that was made lightly.

His Grand Tour performance was impressive; finishing the 1996 Vuelta a Espana in 12th place overall, then finishing the following year's Tour de France in 8th place and winning the Vuelta's Mountains Classification and a stage. The following year he got his first Vuelta podium finish when he came 3rd overall, also winning four stages and the Mountains for a second time. Then, in 2001, he only came 17th overall but won three stages, the Mountains and the Points Classification - a rare feat since the Points are almost invariably won by sprinters, and climbers do not make good sprinters any more than sprinters make good climbers. Those who can climb and sprint are the rarest of the rare and almost guaranteed Grand Tour wins.

Sadly, it was not to be. Jimenez suffered from clinical depression - he received psychiatric treatment but, as is all to frequently the case, his illness took over his life and as a result he retired in 2002, the same year that he got married. In 2003, he died of a heart attack in a Madrid clinic, aged 32. His death - like that of the great Italian climber Marco Pantani, another rider to whom he had been compared - was caused by an overdose of cocaine.

Jiminez wins on Angliru
Jiminez will always be remembered for his incredible victory in Stage 8 at the 1999 Vuelta a Espana, the first time the race had featured the Alto de l'Angliru which remains the steepest climb in any Grand Tour with gradients as high as 23%. Pavel Tonkov had been leading the stage and had a significant advantage when Jiminez launched an attack, thinking nothing of the consequences he might face from attacking on a mountain so steep and in atrocious weather with rain and fog (in 2002, the third time the mountain was used, it also rained. The combination of wet roads and sheer gradient left team cars and support vehicles unable to follow the bikes up). He'd become known for these apparently rash attacks which, as often as not, resulted in failure and exhaustion; but when they did work they tended to result in spectacular wins and glory, so he kept doing it.

This time, it worked. He caught Tonkov with a kilometre to go and the two men began to sprint through the final, flatter section. Many times when he'd done this, he'd hit the wall before the end and lost as much as ten minutes by the end. This time, despite the superhuman effort required to ride such a climb aggressively, he'd timed himself to perfection and crossed the line first. It's common to hear fans claiming that although cycling is still a fine sport, it no longer offers the spectacle that it once did. If reminded of that day in Spain, they usually change their minds.


Charles Henry Bartlett was born on this day in 1885 in Bermondsey, London. In 1908, he rode 100km in 2h41'48.6" on the track at the Olympics in London and won a gold medal for his achievement. He died on the 30th of November, 1968.

Ukrainian Volodymyr Bileka was born on this day in 1979 in Drohobych, was a rider with Discovery and later Silence-Lotto who showed promise in time trials and as a sprinter. His resignation, announced as being due to "personal reasons" on the 6th of May in 2008, therefore came a s a surprise - until it was revealed that he'd been handed a two-year ban after testing positive for EPO.

Reza Hormes-Ravenstijn is a Dutch cyclo crosser, born in Beek on this day in 1967. She was National Champion in 1995, then came second in 1997 and 1998 and was third in 1996 and 2006.

Other births: Bernd Dittert (East Germany, 1961); Vladimír Hrůza (Czechoslovakia, 1960); Vladislav Chalupa (France, 1871); Johann Traxler (Austria, 1959, died 2011); Jan Erik Gustavsen (Norway, 1946); Yevgeny Golovanov (Belarus, 1972); Juan Palacios (Ecuador, 1962); Kenrick Tucker (Australia, 1959); Howard Fenton (Jamaica, 1952); Vladimír Vačkář (Czechoslovakia, 1949); Reinhard Alber (Germany, 1964); Ernests Mālers (Latvia, 1903, died 1982).

Sunday, 5 February 2012

2012 Tour of Qatar Results

Stage 1

Superprestige Hoogstraten Results

Daphny Van Den Brand
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
Elite Women
  1 Daphny Van Den Brand 0:37:05
  2 Nikki Harris 0:14
  3 Pavla Havlikova 0:40
  4 Sanne Cant 0:44
  5 Lucie Chainel-lefevre 2:03
  6 Nancy Bober 2:38
  7 Nikoline Hansen 2:42
  8 Amy Dombroski 3.02
  9 Iris Ockeloen 3:41
  10 Joyce Vanderbeken 4:19
  11 Christine Vardaros   4:40
  12 Suzie Godart 5:00
  13 Katrien Vermeiren 0:01
  14 Sophie De Boer ST
  15 Caitlyn La Haye ST


Elite Men

  1 Tom Meeusen Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team 00:58:59
  2 Kevin Pauwels Sunweb - Revor 00:03
  3 Sven Nys Landbouwkrediet - Euphony ST
  4 Sven Vanthourenhout Landbouwkrediet - Euphony 00:22  
  5 Radomir Simunek BKCP-Powerplus ST
  6 Klaas Vantornout Sunweb - Revor 00:23  
  7 Zdenek Stybar Omega Pharma - Quickstep ST
  8 Julien Taramarcaz 00:31  
  9 Dieter Vanthourenhout BKCP-Powerplus ST
  10 Thijs Al AA Cycling Team 00:32 
  11 Marcel Meisen BKCP-Powerplus 00:54 
  12 Joeri Adams Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team 01:03  
  13 Bart Aernouts Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team 01:14 
  14 Gerben De Knegt Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team 01:22 
  15 Mariusz Gil Baboco - Revor Cycling Team 01:35 
  16 Jonathan Page 01:37 
  17 Niels Albert BKCP-Powerplus 02:07 
  18 Jim Aernouts Sunweb - Revor 02:21 
  19 Thijs Van Amerongen AA Cycling Team 02:33  
  20 Steve Chainel Equipe Cycliste FDJ - BigMat 02:40 
  21 Niels Wubben Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  ST
  22 Ben Berden ST
  23 Rob Peeters Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team 02:50  
  24  Francis Mourey Equipe Cycliste FDJ - BigMat 02:54 
  25 Matthieu Boulo Roubaix - Lille Métropole ST
  26 Kevin Cant 04:20  
  27 Bart Hofman 04:25 
  28 Jelle Wallays Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator 00:01 
  29 Dries Pauwels ST


Under-23

  1 Laurens Sweeck  
  2 Tim Merlier Sunweb - Revor  
  3 Mike Teunissen Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  4 Stan Godrie Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  5 Wietse Bosmans BKCP-Powerplus  
  6 Lars Van Der Haar Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  7 Gianni Vermeersch BKCP-Powerplus  
  8 Corne Van Kessel Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  9 Arnaud Jouffroy Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  10 Tijmen Eising Sunweb - Revor  
  11 Michael Vanthourenhout BKCP-Powerplus  
  12 Emiel Dolfsma Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  13 Gert-Jan Bosman Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  14 Micki Van Empel Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  15 Sven Beelen Sunweb - Revor  
  16 Vinnie Braet Sunweb - Revor  
  17 Toon Aerts  
  18 Diether Sweeck  
  19 Jens Adams BKCP-Powerplus  
  20 Karel Hnik Sunweb - Revor  
  21 Daniel Peeters Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  22 Jens Vandekinderen Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  23 Niels Koyen  
  24 Ingmar Uytdewilligen  
  25 Bart Barkhuis  
  26 Jellen Schiettecatte  
  27 Rutger La Haye  
  28 Nick Van Huffelen  
  29 Ilja Peijffers 
  30 Joachim Janssens



Juniors

  1 Mathieu Van Der Poel Boxx VeldritAcademie 00:42:59 
  2 Wout Van Aert Young Telenet-fidea 00:46 
  3 Quentin Jauregui Boxx VeldritAcademie 00:56 
  4 Koen Weijers 01:30 
  5 Berne Vankeirsbilck 01:36 
  6 Matthias Van De Velde Boxx VeldritAcademie 01:39 
  7 Tim Ariesen ST
  8 Daan Soete Young Telenet-fidea 01:41 
  9 Yorbin Van Tichelt 01:59 
  10 Quinten Hermans Young Telenet-fidea 02:12 
  11 Pjotr Van Beek 02:21 
  12 Nicolas Cleppe Young Telenet-fidea 02:23 
  13 Martijn Budding Boxx VeldritAcademie 03:19 
  14 Braam Merlier 03:46 
  15 Alexander Ameel 03:49 
  16 Ben Boets Young Telenet-fidea 04:08 
  17 Félix Pouilly 04:17 
  18 Seppe Gorrens ST
  19 Bjorn Van Der Heijden 04:24 
  20 Robbie Van Bakel WV Schijndel 04:31 
  21 Stig Callay 04:35 
  22 Jakob Britz 04:40 
  23 Joran Mertens 04:52 
  24 Bryan Van Rooyen 05:08 
  25 Kyle De Proost 00:01 
  26 Jens Couckuyt ST
  27 Mats Lammertink AWV De Zwaluwen ST
  28 Quinten Vandenbossche ST
  29 Tom Bosmans ST
  30 Lander Jespers ST

Tour of Qatar - DON'T watch it free online

Want to watch the desert action but living in a country where it's not shown? Reluctant to pay for the cable sports channels because you only like cycling and they fill up 99% of the airtime with - er - whatever those others sports are called? Or maybe you're at work and your idiot bosses don't allow you to take a portable TV with you?

If so, you might be tempted to have a look online for a free stream. However, watching free online livestream channels such as this one, for which you're really supposed to pay, is illegal. So don't watch it. No - we really mean it: don't. It's very naughty.

Make sure you read this smallprint, too. Cyclopunk provides the above livestream link for educational purposes only and as an example in order to illustrate the article. This blog is not responsible for anything readers choose to do of their own free will and strongly encourages all readers not to do anything that could get them into trouble with their mums.

Daily Cycling Facts 05.02.12

Barry Hoban
Barry Hoban
Before Mark Cavendish first broke and then smashed his record, Barry Hoban was Britain's most successful Tour de France stage winner eight victories. Born in 1940 on this day in Wakefield, Hoban began cycling in 1955 and immediately showed promise, competing against and taking inspiration from Tommy Simpson. He moved to France in 1962, once again following Simpson's lead.

After two years in France he turned professional with Mercier-Hutchinson-BP and entered his first Tour, riding support for perpetually 2nd place Raymond Poulidor. Several riders must have wondered just what sort of man they'd been riding with when, with the race over, Hoban went around gathering up as many pairs of sweaty cycling shorts and jerseys as he could lay his hands on. In fact, he'd spotted an easy way to make himself a bit of extra cash: British-made kit of the time were of very poor quality and likely to fall apart after a few rides. Good quality European kit, meanwhile, cost a fortune to buy even without the expense of having them sent across, so once it'd all been laundered he had no trouble at all finding customers for it. To this day, there are veteran cyclists in Wakefield who can remember the year when club rides stepped out in the finest kit then available.

While European shorts were of higher quality than British ones, British-built frames were far better than those made anywhere else in the opinion of many. Thus, as the beginning of each new season approached, Hoban would make an annual pilgrimage to the Leeds workshop of Maurice Woodrup, a craftsman frame builder who would have a frame ready, waiting and painted in Mercier's trademark pink. Hoban would then take the frame back to France with him and Mercier would supply him with the correct decals so nobody would be any the wiser.

Simpson, as all cyclists and fans know, died on Mont Ventoux the 13th of July in 1967, during a two-year period in which the Tour experimented with a return to national teams. The following day, the Tour paid its respects by allowing Hoban, as a team mate and the next placed British rider, to win the stage. Sadly, the honour was marred afterwards by a disagreement over whether Hoban or Vin Denson, another member of the team, should have been allowed to win. In 1969, Hoban married Simpson's widow Alice. They now live in Wales.


Samuel Sánchez González
Samuel Sánchez González, who began his professional career with the Euskaltel-Euskadi team in 2000 and has remained with them ever since, was born on this in 1978 in Oviedo, Asturias. Due to his loyalty to the team and long list of impressive results, he has attained the status of Basque national hero despite not being a Basque himself.

Samuel Sánchez
(image credit: Euskalbizikleta CC BY-SA 2.0)
Like any rider who trains in the Basque nation, Sánchez has become a powerful climber and won the King of the Mountains classification at the 2011 Tour de France. However, he appears to have gained this skill through hard work, not displaying the skeletal form of most climbers and - perhaps even more tellingly - excelling in other areas where grimpeurs are usually fairly hopeless, including descending (he's known as one of the fastest descenders of his time and won Stage 13 at the 2006 Vuelta a Espana by mounting a lightning-fast downhill attack) and sprinting, the latter allowing him to have won the Points Classification at Paris-Nice, the Tour of the Basque Country and the Vuelta a Burgos. He can even time-trial, as he proved in the 2007 Vuelta al País Vasco The general impression is of a rider who would have been a handy all-rounder, then made himself a Grand Tour General Classification contender through sheer determination.

Few fans will ever forget Sánchez's Stage 15 win at the 2007 Vuelta a Espana when he followed Manuel Beltrán down from the Alto de Monachil into Granada like a hawk hunting a pigeon. Beltrán, it turned out, had asked to be allowed to win the stage, but Sánchez had received news that his wife was expecting a child and wanted to dedicate it to his future son who would be born in March the following year. He caught Beltrán and crossed the line in front of him, sitting upright as he did so and rocking his arms as though cradling a baby. His performance on the stage propelled him into 3rd place overall at the end of the race, thus making him the first Euskaltel rider to stand on the podium after a Grand Tour.

Sanchez in polka dots
(image credit: Petit Brun CC BY-SA 2.0)
In 2008, he won a gold medal at the Beijing Olympics. The peloton had been forced to work hard to reel in an early breakaway which was beginning to look as though it might last to the end of the race. Then, having his fair share of work, Sánchez escaped with two other riders and could only be caught by another group of three driven by the infamously fast Fabian Cancellara. The two groups combined, riding together towards a sprint finish. He finished just ahead the Italian Davide Rebellin with Cancellara coming in right behind them. In 2011, he revealed his great ethical support for the Tour of Beijing, hinting at a good understanding of the effects international events such as cycle races can have improving the lives of people living under repressive regimes.

Sánchez was a favourite at the start of the 2011 Tour de France, but the large number of crashes early on in the race left him far down the leadership board. However, he proved without equal in Stage 12, powering ahead of the climbing specialist Frank Schleck to the summit finish at Luz Ardiden after having already climbed Tourmalet in the same stage. In Stage 14, he finished in 2nd place at the Plateau de Beille summit finish, this time beating Andy Schleck. He would lose time on the Galibier in Stage 18, but then finished in 2nd place again on the Alpe d'Huez (beating Contador, no less) - at which point, with no further mountain stages, the King of the Mountains prize was in the bag. He also came 7th overall in the General Classification.

John Boyd Dunlop
On this day in 1840, John Boyd Dunlop was born in Dreghorn, Scotland. An intelligent boy, he studied veterinary science and qualified from the University of Edinburgh. He then set up a surgery and practiced for ten years before relocating to Northern Ireland and setting up another surgery. Dunlop had a sick son who suffered great pain as a result of the vibrations transmitted through the metal tyres of his tricycle, so his father set out to find a way to reduce this - resulting in the pneumatic tyre. He quickly realised that his invention had a future and patented it on the 7th of December, 1888. With help from the cyclist Willie Hume, who used the tyres to win a string of races, he soon found a market.

Then in 1891, it was discovered that a pneumatic tyre of very similar design had been patented in France by another Scottish inventor named Robert William Thompson more than forty years previously. A business deal also didn't work out which, combined with the subsequent declaration of invalidity on his patent, meant that Dunlop made very little money from "his" invention.


Paolo Rosola, born on this day in Gussago, Italy in 1957, won twelve stages at the Giro d'Italia (Stage 2 in 1981, Stages 3, 15 and 18 in 1983, Stage 12 in 1984, Stages 9 and 18 in 1985, Stages 8, 10 and 20 in 1987 and Stages 10 and 20 in 1988). 1987 was his best year with 10 wins in total.

Giovanni Mantovani, born two years earlier in Gudo Visconti, won a few stages at various races in the same period, including two (9 and 10) in the 1980 Giro, but for most of his career was one of those cyclists condemned to eternal occupation of the podium's lower steps. His best year, strangely, was one of his last - he achieved five victories in 1986, including the Perth Criterium and two stages (3 and 13, as well as 2nd for Stage 5) in the Griffin 1000, also in Australia, where it appears the climate suited him. Had he have discovered that earlier on, he might have enjoyed a far more successful career.

Fredereik Nolf, 1987-2009
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
Frederiek Nolf, born in Kortrijk in Belgium, died on this day in 2009 of a heart attack as he slept between Stages 4 and 5 at the Tour of Qatar, five days before his 22nd birthday. Due to his age, suspicions immediately arose that he'd been doping - EPO is frequently linked to heart attacks as it thickens the blood, putting more strain on the heart as it pumps harder in an effort to keep blood flowing around the body. However, no evidence of EPO or any other doping product was ever found and his death is generally assumed to have been caused by an undiagnosed heart defect, a tragically common cause among young athletes who might not have previously exhibited any symptoms due to their high level of fitness. Nolf was a close friend of Wouter Weylandt, who would be killed in a crash at the Giro d'Italia two years later.


On this day in 2011 Melissa Hoskins, Josie Tomic and Isabella King set a new Australian Women's Record of 3'21.427" in the 30km Team Pursuit.

Other births: Valery Kobzarenko (USSR, 1977); Burton Downing (USA, 1885, died 1929); Frédéric Magné (France, 1969); Lee Seung-Hun (South Korea, 1938); Pavel Tonkov (USSR, 1969); Fyodor Borisov (Russia, 1892); Frederick Habberfield (Great Britain, 1895, died 1943); Ana Barros (Portugal, 1973); René Gagnet (France, 1891, died 1951); Horst Tüller (Germany, 1931, died 2001); Héctor Urrego (Colombia, 1945); Michel Rousseau (France, 1936); Ma Yanping (China, 1977); Roger Kluge (Germany, 1986); Cesare Facciani (Italy, 1906, died 1938).

Saturday, 4 February 2012

Giro di Sardegna cancelled

Just days after it was announced that preparations for the 2012 Holland Ladies' Tour have been suspended while the organisation that runs it seeks new sponsorship, their counterparts at the Giro di Sardegna have revealed that they too are experiencing difficulties and have been forced to cancel this year's edition which was due to start on February the 21st.

The race began in 1958 and was held annually, except for 1979 and 1981, until 1983. It was then not held from 1984 to 1996 when it returned for two editions before vanishing again until 2009. Among others, it has been won by Rik Van Looy, Eddy Merckx, Jacques Anquetil and Roger De Vlaeminck.

Rather than lacking commercial sponsorship, organisers blame local government - stating that they have yet to be paid by towns wishing to host starts and finishes in the race and are still owed money from previous editions, leading to a 150,000 euro hole in the budget.

GVA-Trofee Lille 04.02.12

Click to enlarge
Results below

The World Cup is done and dusted, the bikes cleaned up and kits laundered after last weekend's  Koksijde World Championships; but the GVA Trofee still has two rounds to go and the penultimate race, the famous Krawatencross, takes place on Saturday the 4th of February near the Belgian city of Lille and not far from Turnhout and Antwerp - with excellent road links to the several towns and cities in the area, a good attendance is guaranteed.

Krawatencross is one of the most popular among spectators as the majority of the 2.8km route can be seen clearly, with several points along the length offering a good view of two or more sections. The unusual parcours consists of a little bit of everything, with sections on sand, grass, tarmac, woodland and loose pebbles along a roughly G-shaped track around a lake just to the north-west of the E34 motorway (51°17'3.17"N 4°50'39.50"E). Riders need to be able to perform well on the several very different types of terrain to be in with any real chance of a podium place; and just for good measure it looks as though they're going to have to contend with snow as well this year. In other words, it's a race that favours the very best of the all-rounders.


Elite Men at Krawatencross 2011
(image credit: Ronnes CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

The race begins with a 230m sprint down a forest road that intially dips, then rises a couple of metres before a slight dip and rise towards the end (51°17'3.44"N 4°50'27.18"E), then turns right onto grass and heads back the way it came. A few metres beyond the start line, the riders turn left and onto sand; immediately entering a tight S-bend which, on sand, will require first-rate bike handling skills. Once through it, they remain on sand as they follow the banks of the lake for 200m on their way into the first woodland section.

A wide loop curves to the left through the trees, then emerges for 50m stretch across more sand before heading once more into the woods and following a curved track leading to a bridge. Having crossed it, the race arrives at a road and passes straight over. A sharp left into a second tight loop on sand - another tough test of handling skills. Afterwards, a 220m sand section leads past the pits and via a right/left combination and into a grass section of similar length. This is followed by 280m in woodland and up the steepest climb of the race - immediately after turning right, the riders begin an 8m ascent in around 55m; with a maximum gradient of 9.4%. The rest of the section takes the riders to the pebbles (51°17'0.06"N 4°50'45.98"E) - a difficult surface which, at 270m, will be one of the most challenging parts of the parcours.

A right turn leads back onto the sand and through a tight Z-bend around the pits, then back over the same road as earlier and across a second bridge. A long woodland section, technical in part with some tight loops, then leads for 549m back to the start line and back along the first track. The finish line will be located just before the first right turn onto grass.

Altimetry (click for enlargement)

Results (more to come)


Elite Women

  1 Marianne Vos Rabobank Ladies Team
  2 Daphny Van Den Brand WV Schijndel
  3 Sanne Cant Boxx VeldritAcademie
  4 Sanne Van Paassen Brainwash 
  5 Nikki Harris 
  6 Arenda Grimberg 
  7 Helen Wyman 
  8 Pavla Havlikova 
  9 Sabrina Stultiens Brainwash 
  10 Sophie De Boer WV Schijndel 
  11 Joyce Vanderbeken 
  12 Reza Hormes Ravenstijn 
  13 Nicolle De Bie Leyten 
  14 Nancy Bober 
  15 Nikoline Hansen 
  16 Gabriella Day 
  17 Lana Verberne 
  18 Karen Verhestraeten Sengers Ladies Cycling Team 
  19 Amy Dombroski Crank Brothers 
  20 Iris Ockeloen 
  21 Christine Vardaros Baboco - Revor Cycling Team 
  22 Anja Geldhof 
  23 Katrien Thijs 
  24 Kim Van De Steene 
  25 Nathalie Nijns Lotto Belisol Ladies 
  26 Caren Commissaris 
  27 Shana Maes 
  28 Janice Geyskens 
  29 Caitlyn La Haye 


Elite Men

1 Tom Meeusen Telenet Fidea Cycling Team
2 Zdenek Stybar Omega Pharma Quickstep
3 Kevin Pauwels Sunweb Revor Cycling Team
4 Sven Nys Landbouwkrediet
5 Niels Albert BKCP-Powerplus
6 Radomir Simunek BKCP-Powerplus
7 Marcel Meisen BKCP-Powerplus
8 Sven Vanthourenhout Landbouwkrediet
9 Vincent Baestaens Landbouwkrediet
10 Francis Mourey Francaise des Jeux
11 Klaas Vantornout Sunweb Revor Cycling Team
12 Dieter Vanthourenhout BKCP-Powerplus
13 Jim Aernouts Sunweb Revor Cycling Team
14 Thijs Al AA Drink / Pro Leontien.nl
15 January Denuwelaere Style & Concept Cycling Team
16 Twan Van Den Brand Orange Babies Cycling Team
17 Thijs Van Amerongen AA Drink / Pro Leontien.nl
18 Joeri Adams Telenet Fidea Cycling Team
19 Gerben De Knegt Rabo - Giant Offroad Team.
20 Kevin Cant Van Goethem - Prorace - cycling team
21 Bart Aernouts Rabo - Giant Offroad Team.
22 Rob Peeters Telenet Fidea Cycling Team
23 Tom Van Den Bosch AA Drink / Pro Leontien.nl
24 Patrick Gaudy The Barracuda Company
25 Patrick Van Leeuwen Orange Babies Cycling Team
26 Stijn Huys Orange Babies Cycling Team
27 Ryan Trebon
28 Steven De Decker Van Goethem - Prorace - cycling team
29 Bart Verschueren Landbouwkrediet-KDL
30 Bart Hofman Department of East Flanders WBV - VZW
31 Mariusz Gil Baboco - Revor Cycling Team
32 Denolf Gianni Baboco - Revor Cycling Team
33 Jens Gys Bianchi New Hope Regulators ASBL
34 Jonathan Page Planet Bike
35 Kenneth Van Compernolle Style & Concept Cycling Team
36 Ben Berden OPS ALE - Stoemper
37 Kristof Cop Cycling Team Kessel
38 Dave The Cleyn Scott USA Cycling Team
39 Eddy Van IJzendoorn Orange Babies Cycling Team
40 Tim Van Nuffel DCM-GB Cycling Team Vorselaar Vzw
41 Craig Richey
42 Sten Raeymakers Cyclocross Team Freddy Sports Dilbeek
43 Marco Bianco L'Arcobaleno Carraro Team
44 Lewis Rattray
45 Lorenz Couckuyt WC Mill sprinters Meulebeke



Under-23

  1 Wietse Bosmans BKCP-Powerplus  
  2 Lars Van Der Haar Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  3 Micki Van Empel Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  4 Gianni Vermeersch BKCP-Powerplus  
  5 Arnaud Jouffroy Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  6 Michael Vanthourenhout BKCP-Powerplus  
  7 Tijmen Eising Sunweb - Revor  
  8 Sven Beelen Sunweb - Revor  
  9 Laurens Sweeck  
  10 David Van Der Poel BKCP-Powerplus  
  11 Jens Adams BKCP-Powerplus  
  12 Vinnie Braet Sunweb - Revor  
  13 Gert-jan Bosman Rabobank-Giant Offroad Team  
  14 Daniel Peeters Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  15 Karel Hnik Sunweb - Revor  
  16 Ingmar Uytdewilligen  
  17 Kenneth Hansen  
  18 Toon Aerts  
  19 Arnaud Grand Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  20 Floris De Tier Baboco - Revor Cycling Team  
  21 Mathieu Willemyns  
  22 Jens Vandekinderen Telenet-Fidea Cycling Team  
  23 Niels Koyen  
  24 Raf Risbourg  
  25 Maxim Panis  
  26 Joeri Hofman  
  27 Niels Ooms  
  28 Stijn Gielen  
  29 Ritchie Denolf Baboco - Revor Cycling Team  
  30 Luke Gray  
  31 Sibe Smets  
  32 Bart Barkhuis  
  33 Pieter Dewitte  
  34 Jeffrey Mellemans  
  35 Joni Geeraerts  
  36 Mathias Van Der Sanden  
  37 Rutger La Haye  
  38  Jellen Schiettecatte  
  39 Ilja Peijffers  
  40 Germer Cardon  
  41 Joachim Janssens 



Juniors

  1 Yorbin Van Tichelt 
  2 Mathieu Van Der Poel Boxx VeldritAcademie  
  3 Wout Van Aert Young Telenet-fidea 
  4 Daan Soete Young Telenet-fidea 
  5 Quinten Hermans Young Telenet-fidea 
  6 Matthias Van De Velde Boxx VeldritAcademie 
  7 Nicolas Cleppe Young Telenet-fidea  
  8 Daan Hoeyberghs Boxx VeldritAcademie  
  9 Martijn Budding Boxx VeldritAcademie 
  10 Pjotr Van Beek  
  11 Bryan Van Rooyen  
  12 Tim Ariesen  
  13 Seppe Gorrens  
  14 Jelto Veroft  
  15 Stig Callay  
  16 Timothy Vanderaerden  
  17 Koen Van De Ven  
  18 Robbie Van Bakel WV Schijndel  
  19 Jens Couckuyt  
  20 Mats Lammertink AWV De Zwaluwen  
  21 Arne Poelvoorde  
  22 Jens Dierckx  
  23 Joran Mertens  
  24 Jonas Degroote  
  25 Kevin Ysenbaardt  
  26 Dieter Jacobs  
  27 Stef Claeys  
  28 Gianni Quintelier Team Catabikes- Deratec- Willems.Co  
  29 Kenneth Van Dessel  
  30 Bryan Vispoel  
  31 Jeffrey Jansegers  
  32 Bjorn Van Der Heijden  
  33 Brent Van Den Bosch  
  34 Arno Verberckmoes  
  35 Jasper Aernouts  
  36 Sören De Clercq  
  37 Jory Degheldere  
  38 Yelle Leaerts  
  39 Lars Van Giels  
  40 Félix Pouilly  
  41 Gilles De Jaeger  
  42 Bjorn De Pot  



Novices

  1 Gianni Van Donink 
  2 Yannick Peeters 
  3 Thijs Aerts 
  4 Jens Teirlinck 
  5 Stijn Caluwe 
  6 Vincent Peeters 
  7 Thomas Joseph 
  8 Elias Van Hecke 
  9 Maik Van Der Heijden 
  10 Jorn Verbraken 
  11 Dario Kloeck 
  12 Thomas Van De Velde Vl Technics Abutriek
  13 Robbe Commisaris 
  14 Lennert Van Hasselt 
  15 Robbert Brughmans 
  16 Sybren Jacobs 
  17 Tim Janssen 
  18 Wesley Floren 
  19 Cedric Beullens 
  20 Dieter Jans 
  21 Dylan Bouwmans 
  22 Jef Van Belle 
  23 Andries Baert 
  24 Timon Ruegg 
  25 Senne De Meyer 
  26 Briek Hermans 
  27 Timo Verberckmoes 
  28 Nick Van De Kerckhove 
  29 Kevin Van Bennekom 
  30 Thomas Verheyen 
  31 Yara Kastelijn 
  32 Laurens Boden 
  33 Jonas Verstraete 
  34 Dieter Braet 
  35 Olaf Remmerswaal  
  36 Dorian De Maeght  
  37 Wout Alleman 
  38 Niel Custers 
  39 Mathias Vertessen  
  40 Sven Driesen 
  41 Samuel Debeer 
  42 Jasper Knaeps 
  43 Bjarne Bertels 
  44 Yenthe Boons 
  45 Stijn Siemons