Saturday 3 December 2011

UCI appeals Kolobnev dope punishment

Kolobnev in 2006, when he rode for
Rabobank. He was signed to Katusha
when he gave his positive sample
(image credit: Heidas CC BY 2.5)
The international cycling federation apparently feels that the imposition of a €1120 fine was an insufficiently harsh penalty for the Russian rider after he tested positive for the diuretic hydrochlorothiazide at the 2011 Tour de France.

Alexandr Kolobnev, aged 30, was 69th place overall when he tested positive during the first week of the race and was prevented from continuing by Team Katusha in accordance with UCI rules. The Russian Cycling Federation claimed after investigation that it had taken into account "mitigating circumstances," the nature of which have not been revealed. The rider voluntarily suspended himself pending investigation, and while B-sample was also subsequently tested and found to contain traces of the substance he escaped formal suspension.

Hydrochlorothiazide is not itself a performance-enhancing substance, but has been used in an attempt to mask the presence of other drugs to allow athletes to pass anti-doping tests.

Daily Cycling Facts 03.12.11

Joop Zoetemelk
Joop Zoetemelk
Happy birthday to Joop Zoetemelk, born in Rijpwetering on this day in 1946 and the winner of one Tour de France (1980), one Vuelta a Espana (1979), one World Road Championship (1985) and two National Road Championships (1971 and 1973).

In addition, Joop won many other races - but perhaps his greatest achievement was that he completed a record 16 Tours, coming second in six of them. After his retirementfrom racing, he worked as directeur sportif for Superconfex, the team that became Rabobank. He remained with Rabobank for ten years until 2006 when he announced his departure from the world of cycling at the Vuelta a Espana. His son Karl (with Françoise Duchaussoy, daughter of Jacques) is a champion mountain bike rider.

Happy birthday to Joey McLoughlin, "the English Jens Voigt," who was born on this day in 1964 in Liverpool. Joey first found fame as a junior when his aggressive riding style and fierce attacks brought him to the attention of the cycling magazines and he was soon lauded as British cycling's greatest hope. He went on to win two Tours of Britain (in 1986, when it was known as the Milk Race and in 1987 when it had become the Kellogg's Tour of Britain), but his career never quite reached the heights expected due to numerous injuries, tendinitis preventing him from riding in the 1987 Tour de France. He retired in 1991, having never ridden in a Tour.

Laurent Roux
Laurent Roux
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0)
Laurent Roux is a retired cyclist born in Cahors, France on this day in 1972. An immediately likable character, Roux was banned from racing for six months in 1999 after he tested "non-negative" for amphetamines during the Fleche Wallonne and was selected by his team to ride that year's Tour de France ("non-negative" is a term used when the A-sample provided is positive but the B-sample cannot confirm the result). He failed another test in 2004 and this time was handed a four-year suspension which, at his age, effectively spelled the end of his professional career.

 In 2006 he decided to make a full confession and come clean - or, as one newspaper put it, "he emptied his bag" - at a trial in Bordeaux into a ring on some 23 riders accused of supplying and/or using Belgian Mix or Pot Belge (sometimes also known as crazy person mix), a combination of cocaine, heroin, amphetamine, various analgesics and caffeine, which brought the infamous mixture and its use to widespread attention.

Laurent and his brother Fabien stood accused of possessing 2,200 doses of the substance of which roughly half were intended for their own use and the rest to be supplied to other riders, with the total value of the stash  estimated to be €188,100 at the time. Laurent, who was commended by newspapers for his decision not to withhold any details, claimed that he had never used doping at the beginning of his career in 1994 but had felt pressured into doing so simply in order to be competitive at the top level of the sport and said that he had begun using antidepressants and amphetamine to cope with his distress when he started thinking he wasn't going to be able to survive at their level. However, he said, his results did not improve; and so he turned to Pot Belge. "It was a true drug," he told the court.

A representative of the French Cycling Federation asked if he had used drugs during his stage wins at the Tour de l'Avenir, Paris-Nice, Classique des Alpes and Giro d'Italia. He confessed that in addition to Belgian Mix, he had used testosterone, growth hormones, cortisone and EPO.

Katie Compton
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0) 
Katie Compton
Katie Compton, born in Wilmington, USA on this day in 1978, is the most successful American cyclo cross rider of all time, holding the National Championship title from 2004 to 2010, seven consecutive years (thus beating Alison Dunlap's record of five consecutive years from a total of six wins). In 2007, she became the first US female rider to achieve a podium finish at the World Cyclo Cross Championships, finishing behind Maryline Salvetat. In 2011, she won the Plzeň round of the season-long UCI Cyclo Cross World Cup

Like many cyclo crossers, Compton is also a talented mountain biker and has won a series of short track National races. In addition, she acts as Tandem partner to blind athlete Karissa Whitsell and with her has shared many wins, including four medal-winning rides at the 2004 Paralympic Games.


On this day in 2010, Anna Meares set a new Australian Women's Record of 10.985" in the Flying 200m Time Trial


Twins Chow Kwong Choi and Chow Kwong Man were born in Hong Kong on this day in 1943. They rode together in the Individual Road Race and 100km Time Trial at the 1964 Olympics; Choi also rode in the 4000m Individual Pursuit.

Steve Hegg, born in Dana Point, California on this day in 1963, became the rider to win the US National Time Trial Championship three times in 1996 after winning in 1990 and 1995. He was National Road Race Champion in 1994 and won gold and silver medals at the 1984 Olympics.

Other births: Jan Plantaz (Netherlands, 1930, died 1974); Isabelle Gautheron (France, 1963); No Do-Cheon (South Korea, 1936); Emile Waldteufel (USA, 1944); Bert Gayler (Great Britain, 1881, died 1917); David Spencer (Great Britain, 1964); Juan Arias (Colombia, 1964); Francisco Elorriaga (Spain, 1947); Pavel Camrda (Czech Republic, 1968); Thorstein Stryken (Norway, 1900, died 1965); Jean-Pierre Boulard (France, 1942); Arne Berg (Sweden, 1909, died 1997); Paul Backman (Finland, 1920, died 1995); Steve Poulter (Great Britain, 1954); Kwong Chi Yan (Hong Kong, 1956).

Friday 2 December 2011

Pooley to ride with AA Drink?

Emma Pooley
(image credit: Fanny Schertzer CC BY-SA 3.0)
The Dutch cycling website Wielerland.nl certainly thinks so, reporting this morning that the British star may be considering signing up with the AA Drink-Leontien team as the legendary Garmin-Cervélo women's team falls apart in the wake of sponsor BigMat's withdrawal of funding.

The situation is complicated somewhat by the fact that Pooley already has a full contract with Garmin-Cervélo, meaning that AA Drink could be asked to pay her old team in order to be able to take her.

Other reports this morning reveal that Dutch time trial specialist Iris Slappendel was spotted out on a training ride with Marianne Vos, Annemiek van Vleuten and others from the new Rabobank women's team. Slappendel admitted that she had been there but said she could not confirm or deny rumours until the Cervélo team receives further information from manager Jonathon Vaughters.

Pooley is one of the most successful British riders of all time and has twice been National Time Trial Champion. Unusually for a rider who excels in time trials, she is also a very strong climber with few rivals in the hills; winning the Mountains Classification at this year's Thüringen Rundfahrt der Frauen.

Daily Cycling Facts 02.12.11

Jan Ullrich (image credit: Heidas CC BY-SA 3.0)
Jan Ullrich
Jan Ullrich, born in Rostock on this day in 1973, was the first - and to date, only - German rider to win the Tour de France, his 1997 victory being credited as the inspiration for a massive upturn in interest in the sport in his home nation.

Ullrich - like Viatcheslav Ekimov, Alexandr Vinokourov, Jens Voigt and many other talented riders from the former USSR and Eastern Bloc - is the product of a Soviet sports academy, facilities to which young teenagers displaying athletic promise would be sent in order to be developed into the finest sportsmen and women they possibly could be, ready to go out into the world and demonstrate the glorious might of what passed for Communism in the Bloc. The school somehow carried on for two years after the Wall fell, with Ullrich, several other students and their trainer Peter Sager joining a Hamburg amateur cycling club after it finally closed. In 1994, less than one year later, he was approached by Telekom manager Walter Godefroot with a professional contract and made hi mark almost immediately with a time trial bronze at the World Championships.

Things went quiet for a year and a half after that with the rider only appearing in the cycling press when he stood on the podium at the Tour du Limousin and Tour de Suisse. He wasn't hibernating through the rest of the year, however - he was winning stages and races in Germany and Russia, where the competitive scene was largely ignored by the rest of the world at the time. He also won his Time Trial National Championship in 1995. The rest of the time? Well, he was doing what East European sports academy students do - training, training and training.

Ullrich with Vinokourov (in sunglasses)
(image credit: Der Sascha CC BY-SA 3.0)
Then he entered his first Tour de France in 1996; earning the respect of cycling fans everywhere when he turned down a place at the Olympics because, in cycling, the Tour is the ultimate, the most prestigious event bar none. He finished 2nd overall and won the Youth Category, later rubbishing comments that he'd have won had he not have had to assist Bjarne Riis whom, he said, had inspired the while team. Indurain, winner of five Tours, told the world that Ullrich was also going to win before long. He had, noticeably, suffered in the mountains that year and lost significant amounts of time; so he responded the only way he knew how - he trained in the mountains. On the mountainous Stage 10 from Luchon to Andorra Arcalis in 1997, Riis showed signs of cracking. Realising that his leader was not going to win the stage, Ullrich fell back from the peloton to his team car and ask permission to attack. Permission was granted - and then he dropped Marco Pantani and Richard Virenque, the greatest climbers of the 1990s. He won the stage by more than a minute and wore the yellow jersey for the first time in Stage 11. Stage 12 was an individual time trial, which he won by three minutes. That, along with several other respectable stage results, won him the overall General Classification, the Youth category and 2nd place in the Mountains Classification.

1998 brought the infamous Tour that became known as the Tour de Dopage, in which Ullrich won Stages 7, 17, 20 and a third Youth Category, this time coming 2nd overall behind Pantani. In 1999, he won the Vuelta a Espana and became the World Time Trial Champion, in doing so convincing the world that he had another Tour win in his legs - however, it would not come to pass because in 2000 Lance Armstrong won his first and became, to all intents and purposes, unbeatable for the next six years. Ullrich was condemned to become the Eternal Second which, he says, was a prime factor in the depression he entered and which, as is the way with depression, brought with it a series of physical illnesses. He would also face trouble with the police when he was caught drunk-driving and had his licence suspended. A month later, he was caught out in an anti-doping test that revealed traces of amphetamines and was given a six-month ban - the minimum since the court agreed that he had taken the drug, along with ecstasy, for recreational purposes rather than to improve athletic performance while out with a broken leg and there was no evidence to suggest that he had taken it again since returning to competition.

2003 looked better. For the first time in many years, he was not a favourite to win the Tour and the reduced pressure seemed to suit him well. Things took a downturn in the first week of the Tour when he fell sick, but he recovered well and got to within a minute of Armstrong. At one point, Armstrong crashed hard when his handlebars caught on a bag being waved by a spectator and Ullrich waited for him to catch up. Had he have attacked, he might have won another victory; but he can apparently recognise the difference between an honourable victory and a hollow one. In 2004, he finished 4th overall - a result with which most riders would be pleased but for him, a small disaster as it was the first time he had finished lower than 2nd. In 2005 - after crashing through the back window of his team car when it stopped without warning in front of him and a nasty crash later on a mountain stage that left him with serious and painful bruising - he finished 3rd.

At the Giro d'Italia
(image credit: Rocco Pier Luigi CC BY-SA 2.5)
Armstrong retired in 2005, telling the world that his decision was permanent, and Ullrich decided he'd continue racing for another season or two. Though now 31, the age at which many riders begin to think of retirement (well, except for sports academy cyclists, that is. Ekimov kept going into his late 30s, Vinokourov retired after a crash in the 2011 Tour de France but then returned later in the year when he was 39 and Jens Voigt, at 40, is still mounting the most fearsome repeated attacks in the Grand Tours), he looked to be on better form than ever at the start of the 2006 season - noticeably leaner and with a new springiness in his calves as he turned the cranks. A back problem had forced him to abandon the Giro d'Italia in great pain, but he seemed well-recovered in the week before the Tour. Then, his name having been one of those that came up in Operacion Puerto, he was banned from competition one day before the race was due to start.

Ullrich successfully obtained a gagging order from a German court against a journalist who claimed - with little evidence - that the rider had made a payment of €35,000 into a bank account belonging to the notorious Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes; but while he was on his honeymoon later that year his house was raided by anti-doping officials who obtained DNA samples subsequently used to prove "beyond doubt" that nine bags of blood discovered in Fuentes' offices belonged to the rider, who announced his retirement on the 26th of February in 2007. He continued to insist that he had never doped, and was allowed to keep an Olympic medal when an IOC investigation found insufficient evidence to suggest that he had cheated in the 2000 Games. However, at the time of writing (Decemeber 2011), he is undergoing trial at the Court for Arbitration in Sport and it is widely rumoured that he may be about to confess to using drugs throughout his career.


Vladimir Efimkin, was born in Kuybyshev, Russia on this day in 1981. His professional career began with Barloworld in 2005, the year he won both the General Classification and Youth Category at the Volta a Portugal after the more experienced riders in the peloton failed to take the virtually unknown Russian seriously. In 2006, he came 2nd in Stage 10 at the Giro d'Italia and then won Stage 4 at the Vuelta a Espana one year later. finishing in 6th place overall. He finished Stage 9 of the Tour de France in 2nd place in 2008, coming second to Riccardo Riccò who was subsequently disqualified during one of the most notorious doping scandals since Operacion Puerto. In 2011, now racing with US-based Pro Continental Team Type 1, he came 5th overall at the Tour of Hainan and 9th in the Tour of China.

Eric Boyer was born on this day in Choisy-le-Roi, France in 1963. During his professional racing career, he finished the 1988 Tour de France in 5th place overall, won Stages 2 and 15 at the 1990 Giro d'Italia and Stage 4 in 1991. In 1992, he won the Tour du Limousin and Stage 8 at the Tour de Suisse, then the Route du Sud in 1993. After retiring at the end of the 1995 Season, Boyer worked as a journalist and later became manager of the Cofidis team.

Gilbert Glaus
Gilbery Glaus
(image credit: de Wielersite)
Gilbert Glaus, born in Thun, Switzerland on this day in 1955 (some sources claim he was born a day later) won an impressive string of victories early in his career including twelve prestigious races in his home nation and became an Amateur World Champion in 1978. He became National Champion four years later, after turning professional and won Stage 10 at the Tour de l'Avenir, a race that serves as a means to find riders likely to perform well in Grand Tours of the future. Winning Stage 7a at the Critérium du Dauphiné in 1982 seemed to confirm that he'd impress in his first Tour de France later that season, as indeed proved to be the case - three top 20 finishes wasn't a bad result at all for a debutante. In 1983, he won the final stage into Paris, came 2nd in Stage 4, 3rd in Stage 7 and 4th in Stage 20.

It was obvious that 1984 would bring good things - especially when he won the GP Kanton Genève and GP Kanton Zurich and six other podium finishes early int he season. He rode the Giro d'Italia and finished Stage 6 in 2nd place, but otherwise resisted temptation to ride hard and thus preserved his legs for the Tour. Unfortunately, things didn't quite work out - although he finished 3rd in Stage 6 and 6th in Stages 21 and 23, sixteen stages in which he finished outside the first 100 riders left him with an abysmal total elapsed time more than four hours behind winner Laurent Fignon; and so he became Lanterne Rouge.

His career wasn't finished yet, however - being Lanterne Rouge has its advantages, for a start, and any rider "lucky" enough to receive the "honour" can make a good living from the pay he receives to appear at local criterium races. Also, failure in the Tour de France does not mean failure as a cyclist - the Grand Tours are so far beyond anything else that merely finishing one, with any time, is indication of a rider's strength and talent; so Glaus continued to race. In 1985, he won the Swiss Aarwangen and Meyrin races and 1986 brought perhaps his greatest victory, Bordeaux-Paris. He entered the Tour twice more, in 1986 and 1987, but never again got near the podium, then finished off his career as he'd started with a string of victories in Swiss events and retired in 1982.


Dennis van Winden, a rider with Rabobank, was born in Delft on this day in 1997. At the current time, he is very much an up-and-coming rider; having turned professional in 2006 with B&E before signing up to the Rabobank Continental team for three seasons, then taking his place on the ProTour team for 2010. In 2009, he became National Under-23 Champion and won Stage 9 at the Tour de l'Avenir and in 2011 finished the prologue of the Tour de Romandie in 6th place.

On this day in 1950, an unknown 16-year-old French hopeful named Jacques Anquetil became the proud owner of his very first racing licence.

On this day in 2011, Mexico City awoke to discover that cycling activists had painted a 5km long "guerilla cycle lane" leading into the centre of the city. The lane took eight hours to paint and road signs alerting motorists and cyclists to its presence had also been erected. As the lane was designed to draw attention to the fact that the Mexican government has reneged on its promise to create official cycle lanes, it ended at Congress Hall.

Other births: Nicolas Edet (France, 1987); Paul Rowney (Australia,1970); Maximo Junta (Philippines, 1950); Tinus van Gelder (Netherlands, 1911, died 1999); Neil Lyster (New Zealand, 1947); Gianni Sartori (Italy, 1946); Paavo Kuusinen (Finland, 1914, died 1979); Damian Zieliński (Poland, 1981).

Thursday 1 December 2011

The Strange Tale of Andrea Moletta's 2008 Giro d'Italia...

It's been a quiet day, so we thought we'd have a look at the strange tale of Andrea Moletta's 2008 Giro d'Italia...


Born in 1973 in Citadella, Italy, Andrea Moletta became involved in a mysterious doping incident during the 2008 Giro d'Italia when he was riding with the Gerolsteiner team. Moletta's father was one of three passengers in a car stopped by police at the race as part of an ongoing investigation into doping at Padua gyms and was discovered to be in possession of 82 packets of Viagra, a syringe hidden inside a toothpaste tube and a portable fridge containing unidentified fluids.

Andrea "Actually, That's The Baguette I'm Having
For Lunch" Moletta
(image credit: PCM Daily)
Viagra - not officially recognised as having any physical effects likely to be of much during a bike race (though some reports had claimed it improved athletic performance at altitudes greater than any reached on any Grand Tour, unless you're Charly Gaul*) and, due to the effects it does have, being a tricky one to hide if your job requires you to wear very tight lycra shorts - was not banned under UCI or WADA rules, but a rumour doing the rounds claimed that riders had been taking it to increase their aggression which served to increase suspicion, as did those mysterious fluids. The hidden syringe, of course, was the most damning of all.

Gerolsteiner suspended the rider pending further investogation. The fluids turned out to be an intravenously-injected substance known as Lutelef, a drug that could be used in a virtually undetectable blood doping technique but also came with a host of common side effects including a "painful, prolonged erection," leading to its use in very tiny quantities in so-called "non-prescription blue pills" used as an alternative to Viagra (generally by men who confuse ability to achieve an erection with status and thus feel ashamed to admit impotence to their doctor).

The investigation could find no suggestion that Moletta had been using Viagra, Lutelef or any other drug, so he was cleared of all suspicion. His father continues to deny that the drugs were to be used for nefarious means and no link to any doping programme was ever found. Nor was anybody, perhaps unwilling to risk damaging the Italian Stallion stereotype, willing to come forward and admit that they had a legitimate use for 82 packets of Viagra and an extremely questionable hormone should the Viagra not work its magic. To this day, nobody knows who the drugs were owned by, nor whom they were going to.

*'Cos he was off his tits on drugs all the time.

Dope doctor confesses, says L'Equipe

L'Equipe is reporting this afternoon that the BigMat-Auber93 cycling team has announced that their former doctor Philippe Bedoucha, who was arrested and questioned by police on Tuesday, has made a confession in which he claims to have provided the means to dope to several riders during his last three years with the team. Further details of his confession have not been released, but he was indicted for "cession et acquisition de produits dopants" - "selling and purchasing doping products" - and "exercice illégal de la pharmacie" - "acting illegally as a pharmacist."

The newspaper says that the confession came after investigators found orders for doping products and incriminating e-mails at his office in Creteil, Paris, and speculates that he will face charges related to "détention de substances ou procédés interdits aux fins d'usage par un sportif sans justification médicale," possession of prohibited substances or processes for use by an athlete without medical justification,

The team's riders, especially those who were part of the outfit prior to Dr. Bedoucha's departure in 2010, can now expect to face further investigation; as can riders with other teams who may have had any dealings with the doctor, whose business address is registered as a premises on the Rue Cheret occupied by a pharmacy and a phytotherapie (herbalist/alternative medicine surgery).

The charges carry a maximum sentence of seven years in prison in French law. It is reported that cyclo cross rider Geoffrey Clochez (left) and mountain biker Jean-Phillipe Tellier also face indictment.

Daily Cycling Facts 01.12.11

Alex Rhodes, born today in 1984
(image: GSL CC BY-SA 2.5
Alex Rhodes was born on this day in 1984 in Alice Springs. After a very promising early track career, Alex was seriously injured in a road accident in 2005 that led to the death of team-mate Amy Gillett, but she returned the following year to win one stage of the Bay Classic and two bronze medals at the Australian National Track Championships. Since then, she has won three more stages at the Bay Classic and a bronze at the National Time Trial Championships. In 2011, she came 5th overall in the Ladies' Tour of Qatar and became Australian Elite Road Race Champion.

Other births: Eduard Vorganov (Russia, 1982); Matthew J. Feiner (USA, 1963); Radim Kořínek (Czechoslovakia, 1973); John Bugeja (Malta, 1932); Uwe Nepp (Germany, 1966); David Dibben (Cayman Islands, 1959); Fons van Katwijk (Netherlands, 1951); Pietro Bestetti (Italy, 1898, died 1936); Eddie Testa (USA, 1910, died 1998).

Wednesday 30 November 2011

The Importance of Buying Bikes From People Who Have A Vague Idea Of What They're Doing

In Britain, the Argos retail chain can expect to make more money than most of us even realised exists over the Christmas period as millions of people queue for hours for goods chosen from the in-store catalogues and the over-worked staff (strange how they only seem to have six people working at the busiest periods) try their best to deal with the maelstrom.

A fair bit of their revenue will be coming from the bikes they sell - there are several in the catalogue, ranging from the ultra-cheap to a few hundred pounds. But customers should be wary: Argos is categorically not a bike shop, and it doesn't employ bike mechanics able to assist purchasers when it comes to setting up the flat-pack bikes. It does, meanwhile, provide handy little sections full of information in the catalogue. They'll tell you everything you need to know, surely?

Er - perhaps not. Argos are currently running an advert featuring a Raleigh "mountain bike" (it's not really a mountain bike, though Raleigh do produce such things - it's a bike-shaped-object). The trouble is, they've put the forks on the wrong way round which is going to make the handling, well, interesting. So the moral of the story is: if you really must buy a bike from Argos, don't believe a single word in the catalogue when you put it together - and if you don't know enough about bikes to be certain you've put it together properly, wheel it down to your local bike shop and ask for their advice.

Daily Cycling Facts 30.11.2011

Tommy Simpson, 1937-1966
Tom Simpson
Today is a holy day in cycling - it would have been the 74th birthday of legendary, tragic Tommy Simpson - perhaps Britain's best ever hope for a Tour de France overall General Classification winner and the only British World Champion until Mark Cavendish took the title this year. Tommy's death, caused by sheer exhaustion, alcohol, amphetamines and Mont Ventoux has become one of professional cycling's greatest and most-told stories, the memorial on the mountain where he died a place of pilgrimage for cyclists from around the world. Simpson did not die in vain: his death was the wake-up call that alerted the world to the prevalence and dangers of doping and forced organisers to begin to consider ways to control it. Simpson would be the last British-born World Champion in 2011, when Mark Cavendish won the title in Copenhagen. In recognition of his achievement, Cavendish was awarded an MBE by the Queen on Simpson's birthday that year.

Laurent Jalabert
Laurent Jalabert, born in Mazamet on this day in 1968, is a retired French cyclist and one of the few to have become a well-known character among the non-cycling public outside the cycling nations of France, Italy, Spain and the Benelux. As a result, it frequently comes as a surprise to many when they learn that Jaja never won cycling's most famous race, the Tour de France. However, stage wins on Bastille Day in 1995 and 2001 earned him the thanks of French fans, restoring to them some of the pride lost during the long years since Bernard Hinault last took overall Tour victory.

The outcome of The Policeman's Crash
Jalabert - whose nickname Jaja came into being because he continued drinking wine when he became professional (it's slang for a glass of wine) - began racing with the Toshiba team in 1989, having come to their attention due to his rocket-like sprinting capabilities. He moved on to ONCE in 1992 and would remain with them for nine seasons. Having won a wide variety of stages and one-day races, he was involved in a dramatic crash in the sprint finish of Stage 1 at the 1994 Tour de France when a policeman's love for the sport got the better of his common sense and caused him to step into the road, where Belgian rider Wilfried Nelisson and Jalabert piled straight into him - an incident that has gone down into cycling history, known as The Policeman's Crah. The policeman was thrown backwards into the crowd and Nelissen concussed. Jalabert was most injured, requiring reconstructive surgery to repair his smashed teeth and face.

Sylvie, Jalabert's wife to whom he is still married, was understandably concerned that her husband had been so badly hurt in such an unpredictable accident. He promised her that he would find a way to continue racing that didn't require him to be in the high-speed tussle of a final sprint. Thus began his transformation into one of the finest all-rounders of his generation, a change that turned him from a sprinter able to grab glory in individual sprints to a rider who had a real chance at topping general classifications. Just a year later, he proved his new status at the Vuelta a Espana when he won the Points classification, the King of the Mountains and the General Classification - the trifecta, the only man to have done so in the Vuelta and an honour he shares in the Grand Tours with only Tony Rominger and the legendary Eddy Merckx. In that same Vuelta, he cemented his popularity among fans by allowing a little-known German rider named Bert Dietz to win the sought-after summit finish at Sierra Nevada: Dietz had ridden much of the race in a solo break but, after chasing for many kilometres, Jalabert caught him on the mountain. The outcome of the stage was, apparently, settled - but then Jaja was seen to hold back, refusing to overtake. "I never thought we'd catch him, and when I saw he was ready to drop I felt sorry for him," he later told reporters.

Jaja
(image credit: Cycling Art)
His generosity was repaid in good fortune, because in the coming years he won  string of races including prestigious events such as the Giro di Lombardia (1997), Paris–Nice (1995, 1996, 1997), the Classique des Alpes (1996, 1998), Milano-Torino (1997), the Vuelta a Asturias (1998), the Tour de Romandie (1999), the Tour Méditerranéen (2000), the Clásica de San Sebastián (2001, 2002) and many others before retiring after 14 years at the top. He has continued in sport since, becoming a consultant for Look who had used their experience as a ski manufacturer to develop clipless pedals and move into the bike market and acting as a commentator for French television - he can often be seen at the Tour providing race reports from the back of one of the motorbikes that follow the peloton. He also competes in triathlon and has entered numerous Ironman events, at which he unsurprisingly excels in the cycling sections - in the 2007 Swiss Ironman, he was in 966th place after the swimming section, then rose through 857 places in the cycling section to put himself into 91st overall. He also runs and has completed several marathons - something else that has stood him in good stead for triathlon, of course; in that same Swiss Ironman, he rose another 69 places during the running section.

Maurice Garin in 1897
Maurice Garin stripped of Tour win
On this day in 1904, four months after the end of the race, the Union Velocipedique de France announced that it would be stripping Maurice Garin of his Tour de France win and banning him for two years as part of its disciplinary action against 30 riders found to have cheated. Second place Lucien Pothier was also disqualified, allowing Henri Cornet (real name Henri Jardry)  to become the youngest winner in Tour history at 19.

Garin had also won the first Tour in 1903, but spectators claimed to have seen him take a train rather than ride one stage the following year - he denied doing so at the time, but admitted it in old age according to a man who had once run errands for his garage and later ended up working as the gravedigger and attendant at the Cimetiere Est where Garin was buried in 1957. The organisers, despite suspicions that they had permitted Garin to cheat because his personal sponsor was also a race sponsor, appear to have grounds to have banned him immediately and would have been keen to do so had not angry spectators been likely to turn into a lynch mob if they'd done so.

In fact, aggression and cheating by spectators had been rife throughout the race that year - they'd felled trees to block riders they disliked and at one point Garin was savagely beaten by a crowd who had to be dispersed with pistol shots. This, combined with cheating among the entrants, was sufficient for Henri Desgrange to announce that the 1904 Tour would be the last. Thankfully, he was convinced to run the event again the following year with different, stricter rules.

Knud Enemark Jensen
Knud Enemark Jensen, born in Århus, Denmark on this day in 1930, achieved cycling fame in the very worst way possible - he was one of the earliest cyclists whose death was connected to doping when he collapsed in the 42C heat and fractured his skull during the team time trial event on the 26th of August at the 1960 Olympics. He went into a coma and died a few hours later in hospital.

Witnesses claimed that Jensen had swallowed eight pills believed to be phenylisopropylamine, an amphetamine-like drug, and another fifteen containing amphetamine and caffeine in the run-up to the race. His trainer initially said that he had administered Roniacol (nicotynol alcohol), a vasodilator, to the team but formally retracted his statement soon after. An autopsy confirmed the presence of both Roniacol and amphetamines in his body, but doctors concluded that his collapse had been caused by the heat rather than the drugs and his family were awarded one million lire compensation.

There are obvious comparisons between the deaths of Jensen and the British rider Tom Simpson, with whom he shared his birthday. Jensen's death encouraged the International Olympic Committee to accept that there was a problem with doping in sport and to establish a medical council in 1967, the year that Simpson died. Anti-doping controls would be put into place the following year, paving the way for similar controls to be introduced at the Tour de France and other races.


Pierrick Fedrigo
(image credit: sports.fr)
Pierrick Fédrigo, a French rider born in Marmande on this day in 1978, has been National Champion (2005) and has won the Tour du Limousin twice (2004, 2006), the Four Days of Dunkirk (2005), the Critérium International (2010) and stages at the Critérium du Dauphiné (Stage 6, 200) and Tour de France (Stage 14, 2006, Stage 9, 2009, Stage 16, 2010). As a result, he probably feels a little disappointed that he is chiefly famous - and most likely to be remembered - for his nose, a prominence that gave rise to his nickname "le Nez de Marmande" and which is best described as "splendid."

Born in Rabat, Morroco on this day in 1922, Custodio Dos Reis had Portuguese nationality but became a French citizen at the age of nine - and turned out to be a  worthwhile catch by France, because he won Stage 14 of the Tour de France in 1950.

Charles Henry Bartlett died on this day in 1968 in Enfield, 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 was born on the 6th of February 1885 in Bermondsey, also in London, making him 85 when he died.

Other births: Domenico Pozzovivo (Italy, 1982); Arthur Griffiths (Great Britain, 1881); Martin Hvastija (Slovenia, 1969); István Liszkay (Hungary, 1912); Armand Putzeyse (Belgium, 1916, died 2003); Franck Perque (France, 1974); Kyriaki Konstantinidou (Greece, 1984); Andrés Torres (Guatemala, 1966); Álvaro Pachón (Colombia, 1945).

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Doctor arrested, BigMat cyclists questioned, possible EPO link

Arnold Jeannesson has expressed dismay
at becoming associated with the case
(image credit: Jejecam CC BY-SA 3.0)
L'Equipe, the French sports newspaper, is reporting that former BigMat-Auber93 team doctor Philippe Bedoucha has been arrested and is being questioned with regard to suspicions he may have supplied EPO and/or an un-named growth hormone to riders.

Original reports stated that the doctor is currently employed by the team, an error reproduced here. It is now understood that Dr. Bedoucha is not connected to BigMat-Auber93 and has not been employed by the outfit since 2010. It is believed that he is suspected of supplying banned products to amateur cyclists.

A mountain biker is also reported to be under arrest in connection with the investigation, but it's not clear if this is in connection with use or supply. Some sources claim it to be Philippe Tellier, who has previously tested positive for EPO.

It is believed that as many as twelve other riders have also be questioned under caution, including the French star Arnold Jeannesson; though as the article points out they mat be providing witness statements and this should not be seen as indication that the riders will face either suspicions or charges. Jeannesson has since stated that he has not been able to provide police with any information and expressed dismay at being associated with the case.

Dr. Bedoucha is listed as operating from an address in Rue Cheret at a premises occupied by a pharmacy and a phytotherapie (a "pharmacy" supplying products based on natural ingredients and herbs) in Creteil - the riders were also questioned in the Paris suburb.

One possible - and serious - outcome of the investigation is that BigMat, who recently withdrew funding from Garmin-Cervélo, leaving the women's team in a precarious position, are now likely to face bad press; despite no longer maintaining connections with the doctor. This may prove to have a detrimental effect when other companies are considering sponsoring a cycle team and could persuade them not to become involved even if the team in question have an impeccable record.

Fugly!

NSFW WARNING!

Ladies and gentlemen, we present to you...

THE CBR GATECRASHER!

We think that this is the ugliest bike ever built (possibly the ugliest object of any description ever built, including the Nissan Duke and Barrett Homes) - or can YOU do better? E-mail us your ugliest bike pics and - who knows? - if any of 'em really amuse us we might sort you out some sort of prize.

Daily Cycling Facts 29.11.11

Andre Noyelle, 1952-2003
It's been 80 years since the birth of Belgian cyclist André Noyelle, winner of a gold medal in the Individual Road Race at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki. Noyelle died on the 4th of February, 2003.

Sharing Noyelle's birthday is the Welsh professional track cyclist Rebecca "Becky" Angharad James, born in Abergavenny in 1991,  a rider for the Motorpoint team. In 2009, Becky won two gold and a silver medal at the European Track Championships, repeating the achievement at the UCI Junior World Championships a month later - when she also set a new flying 200m world record. She will represent Great Britain at the 2012 Olympics in London, no doubt spurring on her two younger sisters who are also keen cyclists and hope to follow in her footsteps.

Cyril Dessel was born on this day in Rive-de-Gier, France, in 1974. He won a silver medal in his National Championships in 2004, then won the Tour Méditerranéen and Tour de l'Ain in 2006 as well as wearing the yellow jersey for one day and finishing 6th overall at that year's Tour de France. He also won Stage 16 at the Tour in 2008.

Urs Zimmerman, born in Mühledorf, Switzerland on this day in 1959, was third place runner-up in the 1986 Tour de France and 1988 Giro d'Italia. In the 1991 Tour de France, riders mounted a 40 minute "no racing" protest to express support for him after he was penalised for driving from one stage town to another rather than flying.

Saturnino Rustrián, born in San José Pinula, won the Vuelta a Guatemala in 1966 and was the first Guatemalan to win against Columbian riders who had dominated the local talent whenever they entered in the past. He is also one of only three cyclists to have won the Vuelta a Costa Rica, established in 1965, on two occasions. At the time of writing, as he approached 70 years old, he was still racing competitively in local and overseas veteran events.


It's been 14 years since the death of Ernest Alfred Johnson in Putney, London. Johnson won bronze medals for the team pursuit events at the Olympics in 1932 and 1936. He died in 1997, nine days after his 85th birthday.


Other births: Yauheni Hutarovich (Belarus, 1983); Carlo Legutti (Italy, 1912); Piet van der Touw (Netherlands, 1940); Brahim Ben Bouilla (Morocco, 1959); Enrique Allyón (Peru, 1952); Andy Paulin (USA, 1958); Melesio Soto (Mexico, 1941); J-me Carney (USA, 1968); Robert Baird (Australia, 1942).

Monday 28 November 2011

Early Prediction: Vos will dominate in 2012

Vos, seen here in the pink jersey, slender but lacking the
power to dominate in the mountains
(© Eddy Fever CC2.0)
Now, Cyclopunk makes no excuses nor denials with regard to our fascination for the ever-onward-and-upward career of Marianne Vos, the Dutch cycling polymath who, in our opinion, is destined to become nothing less than the Greatest Cyclist Of All Time (providing all the companies sponsoring women's cycling don't pull out over the next year or so, leaving her without any races in which to prove herself that is) and, in the opinion of many, has already set out along that road.

Hence we were eager to have a look at her form in the cyclo cross races over the weekend just passed in the hope of finding early indications- for those who are unaware, there were two major events; one at Koksijde (where she came second) and one at Gieten (which she won) - and the status report is: OMG.

Vos is looking better than ever. We suspect she's perhaps added a kilo or two from her weight at the beginning of the 2011 road racing season, when she was 58kg (at 1.68m tall), but it's a kilo or two of sculpted, toned muscle - very much what one might expect of a rider who is mindful of the fact that Emma Pooley was better than ever in the mountains throughout the last year and wants to make sure she can catch her in 2012.

Compare, if you will, the following images: Vos in 2010 (c/o CyclePhotos) and Vos on 27/11/11 (again c/o of CyclePhotos). Excellent form in both, but it's obvious even with the long sleeves that in the older image she has far lower muscle mass. In the newer image, her upper arms and calves look like they've been carved from oak - which means greater strength in the places that creates a powerful climber, but not where it creates extra weight that needs to be hauled up without contribution on the way.

If she keeps this form for next season - and Vos is a woman who rides because she loves to do so as much as the drive to win, meaning she'll be likely to get out on bike every chance she gets no matter what the weather does between now and then, so it's pretty much guaranteed that she will - and if the new Rabobank-backed women's team works as well for her as it potentially could do, then it looks a pretty safe bet that she's going to have yet another "best year so far" in 2012. We'll be cheering her all the way.


Vos interviewed (in Dutch) after Koksijde. Look at the cheekbones - honed!

Daily Cycling Facts 28.11.11

Full Tilt by Dervla Murphy -
one of the finest books on
cycle touring ever written.
Happy birthday to the cyclist and writer Dervla Murphy. In 1963, Dervla set off from her home in Ireland astride her Armstrong Cadet and, having faced one of the worst European winters in years, robbers and a would-be rapist (whom she dissuaded using what she calls "unspeakable tactics"), arrived in New Delhi many months later - the first of many adventures. She was born in 1930.

Guy Lapébie, born on this day in 1916 in Saint-Geours-de-Maremne, won two golds and a silver at the 1936 Olympics. He also enjoyed some Tour de France fortune, winning Stage 3 and coming 3rd in the overall General Classification in 1948 and the winning Stage 8 in 1949. He made his biggest impact on the track, however, winning several prestigious six-day races. He was the younger brother of Roger Lapébie who, through a combination of derailleur gears and questionable tactics, won the Tour in 1937. His son Serge was also a professional cyclist. Guy died on the 8th of March, 2010.

Scott Sunderland, who retired in 2004 after the longest professional career in Australian cycling history, was born in this day in 1966 in Inverell. Scott's first success came as a junior when we won the New South Wales State Championship and, whilst he never quite made it onto the A-list at least partially due to a number of injuries, he has a palmares many riders can only dream about. He later became directeur sportif of CSC, a position he held until 2008 and in which he was instrumental in driving the team towards two consecutive wins in Paris-Roubaix and coached Carlos Sastre to his 2008 Tour de France victory. After leaving CSC, he spent time working for British Cycling until becoming senior directeur sportif with Team Sky in 2010, a role from which he retired in May of the same year after coaching Juan Antonio Flecha to a win at the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.

Stephen Roche
Triple Crown winner Stephen Roche, 52 today
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0
The biggest happy birthday for today must surely go to Stephen Roche, the Irish winner of the 1987 Tour de France and the only cyclist other than demigod Eddy Merckx to have won the sport's greatest achievement, The Triple Crown (the Tour, the Giro d'Italia and the Elite Road World Championship in a single year) - the same year that he sustained a knee injury that would have ended the career of a lesser man. Roche, born in 1959 in Dundrum, Ireland, was never again a contender for overall victory in the Grand Tours afterwards, he went on to place 9th in the Giro in 1989 and 1993 and in the 1992 Tour de France (where he also won Stage 16).

His brother Lawrence was also a professional cyclist and competed in the 1991 Tour, while his nephew Daniel Martin was the 2008 Irish National Road Race champion. His son, Nicolas, rides with AG2R - his best Grand Tour result to date was 7th overall in the 2010 Vuelta a Espana, his best Tour result was 15th overall in the same year. Stephen is now 52 and runs a hotel he owns in the Antibes.

Other births: Tim Kennaugh (Isle of Man, 1991); Denis Flahaut (France, 1978); Roberto Vacchi (Sweden, 1965); Albert Byrd (USA, 1915, died 1990); Jack McCullough (Canada, 1949); Preben Lundgren Kristensen (Denmark, 1923, died 1986); Willy Gervin (Denmark, 1903, died 1951); Henrik Salée (Denmark, 1955); Lauri Resik (Estonia, 1969); Juan Carlos Rosero (Ecuador, 1963); Nuno Marta (Portugal, 1976); Tomohiro Nagatsuka (Japan, 1978); Suprovat Chakravarty (India, 1931).

Sunday 27 November 2011

Daily Cycling Facts 27.11.11

Happy birthday Wendy Houvenaghel!
(image credit: johnthescone CC BY 2.0)
Wendy Houvenaghel
Wendy Houvenaghel, the Northern Irish track cyclist, was born on this day in 1974. Houvernaghel  has won a vast collection of trophies during her illustrious six years as a professional including three gold medals in the UCI Track World Championships, four golds in the UCI Track World Cup and a silver at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Now based in Cornwall, Houvernaghel was interested in running, horse riding and hockey in her youth, only discovering her talent for cycling during her time with the Royal Air Force. Whilst in the RAF, she rose to the rank of Squadron Leader and qualified as a dentist - which would prove handy once she completed her commission as it allowed her to support herself before she gained a professional contract.

She took part in her first race in 2002 at a time when she had little cycling experience and one year later became National Time Trial Champion, a meteoric rise that left the cycling world in no doubt that a serious new talent had arrived and thankful that she had done so just in time for her best years when they could so easily have been swallowed up by military service. In 2004, she won every time trial she entered. However, it seems that now she's well into her late 30s, Houvernaghel's best years are far from behind her - in fact, 2011 has been one of her best yet and has brought two gold medals won at the World Track Championships and the Track World Cup (in both cases for the Team Pursuit event), a third gold at the National Circuit Time Trial Championships and a new 25 Mile Time Trial national record.

Julien Moineau
Moineau in the 1935 Tour de France
Julien "The Sparrow" Moineau was born on this day in 1903. That he was a talented rider was evident as far back as 1924 when he won Paris-Le Havre and the Circuit de Bourgogne, victories he followed up by winning Stage 14, coming 3rd on Stage 15 and 2nd on Stage 19 at the Tour de France the next year. He won Stage 8 and came 2nd on Stage 13 the year after that, too, demonstrating that he was undoubtedly a man with impressive Tour ability.

More successes came in the following years: the Circuit du Forez, three Paris-Limoges, Paris-Tours - a palmares with of any professional would very rightfully feel proud. However, Moineau will be forever remembered not for these victories, but for the way in which he won his last Tour stage, Stage 17 from Pau to Bordeaux in 1935.

It wasn't an enormously long stage by the standards of the day, being 224km (four days previously, they'd faced a mountain stage more than 100km longer) and it was both flat and came right after a rest day - in other words, it shouldn't have been difficult. But, when the riders woke that morning, it was already hot and the humidity was high: one of those sultry days that the French term a canicule that sometimes settle over south-western France like a hot, sticky blanket when the cooling winds stop blowing from the High Pyrenees and off the Atlantic.

Moineau - perhaps the most
popular cheat in cycling history
Understandably, nobody was much in the mood for racing and the peloton was ambling along at 20km; riders wanting to simply get through the day with as little effort as possible. Then, the leaders saw what they probably first assumed to be a mirage, either that or an early symptom of heatstroke: just up ahead, an entire village had turned out with trestle tables, erecting them at the side of the road and loading them up with abundant quantities of delicious, ice-cold beer for their intrepid heroes. Astounded by the hospitality of the local fans, the riders were of course more than happy to stop for a break, all of them thankful for the relief the refreshing liquid brought to their parched throats. Even after they'd all had as much as they wanted there was plenty of beer left, so they loaded themselves up with as many bottles as they could fit into their jersey pockets before thanking their benefactors and heading back onto the road.

They probably didn't even realise that one rider hadn't stopped and was now far away in front of them. Moineau, who had rolled up to the start line that morning with a 52-tooth chainring - in those days, when the Tour was a contest of endurance rather than speed, unheard-of off the track and a seemingly insane choice int hat heat - had set the whole thing up at his own expense, and the generous villagers were in fact a group of his friends.

Strangely, Moineau was not penalised for his cheating. Perhaps the organisers thought that the other riders were thankful for a free drink on such a horrible stage and hence didn't  resent his stage win.


Edita Pučinskaitė
(image credit: Yay Cycling)
Edita Pučinskaitė, born on this day in 1975 in Naujoji Akmenė, is the most successful female cyclist to have yet come out of Lithuania. Her best years have been 2005 with stage wins at Giro del Trentino Alto Adige - Südtirol, the Thüringen-Rundfahrt der Frauen, the Tour de l'Ardèche and the Vuelta Ciclista Femenina a el Salvador and overall victory at the Berner Rundfahrt, Tour de l'Ardèche and Vuelta Ciclista Femenina a el Salvador and 2007 when she won the Berner Rundfahrt, the Giro del Trentino Alto Adige - Südtirol and, her best result so far - the Giro Donne.

Thea van Rijnsoever, Dutch National Champion in 1983 and 1985, was born on this day in 1956.

Iván Gutiérrez
(image credit: Adam Baker CC BY 2.0)
José Iván Gutiérrez Palacios, more commonly known as Iván Gutiérrez, was born in the Cantabrian town of Hinojedo on this day in 1978. While he's been highly successful in mass-start road races including a win at the National Championship in 2010, the Gran Premio de Llodio, the Giro dell'Emilia, the Tour Méditerranéen, the Eneco Tour of the Benelux and many others, he is primarily known as a time trial rider. His first big win in the discipline was the Under-23 World Championship in 2002 and he has gone on to be National Champion five times (2001, 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2007) along with winning the time trials at a series of stage races including the Vuelta a Murcia (2004and 2006) and the Vuelta a Burgos (2006). Very unusually for a time trial specialist, Gutiérrez can also climb when required to do so - he won the King of the Mountains at the Critérium du Dauphiné in 2005.

Oksana Grishina, silver medalist in the 2000 Sydney Olympics for the Track Sprint, was born on this day in 1968.

Rudolf Mitteregger, winner of the Tour of Austria in 1970, 1974 and 1977, was born on this day in Gaal, Austria, in 1944.

Theo Eltink, like his nation's current most famous cyclist Marianne Vos and many others, showed promise as a speed skater before deciding to concentrate on cycling. He was born in Eindhoven, Netherlands, in 1981 and would later become a member of Rabobank TT3, a team that serves as a training ground for young riders hoping to be offered a contract with the professional Rabobank team. While still an amateur, he won stages at the Tour de l'Avenir and Tour des Pyrénées, also taking a bronze medal in the Under-17 class at the 1997 National Cyclo Cross Championships and then a silver in the Under-23 class in 2003. The team gave him his chance to turn professional in 2005 and he entered his first Grand Tour - the Giro d'Italia, at which he managed an impressive 29th in the overall General Classification

On this day in 2006 in the early hours of the morning, Spanish rider Isaac Gálvez López died of injuries sustained when he hit crash barriers following a collision with Dimitri De Fauw during the Six Days of Ghent the previous day. He was 31 years old and had been married for three weeks. De Fauw suffered terrible depression after the accident and committed suicide on November the 6th, 2009.

Francesco Chicci, 31 today
(image credit: johnthescone CC BY 2.0)
Happy birthday Francesco Chicci, stage winner at the Four Days of Dunkirk, Tour of Britain, Tour of Denmark, Tour of Qatar and Tour of California and Under-23 World Road Race champ in 2002. He's currently riding with Quick Step and was born in Camaiore, Italy, in 1980.

Jan Schur, son of the famous East German cyclist Gustav-Adolf Schur, was born on this day in 1962 in Leipzig. Now retired, he represented his country in the 1988 Olympics.

Today is the final day of the first Brizzy Bike Fest, a festival celebrating bicycles, cyclists and bike culture in Brisbane. Any nearby? What are you waiting for?!

If it's easier to get to Derby in England, there's Round 4 of the National Cyclo Cross Trophy at Moorways Stadium.

Other births: Carl Lorenz (Germany, 1913, died 1993); Ian Banbury (Great Britain, 1957); Dick Ploog (Australia, 1936, died 2002); Juan Brotto (Argentina, 1939, died 2009); Arnulfo Pozo (Ecuador, 1945); Batsükhiin Khayankhyarvaa (Mongolia, 1958); Brian Keast (Canada, 1953); Jonathan Garrido (Spain, 1973); Sirop Arslanian (Lebanon, 1966).