Saturday 21 January 2012

The Unstoppable Ms. Vos

Can Vos be beaten in CX?
(image credit: Nicola CC BY-SA 3.0)
Rabobank's star rider Marianne Vos has scored a fourteenth consecutive victory, winning the Elite Women class at the Grote Prijs Skidôme Rucphen cyclo cross ahead of Daphny van den Brand and Nikki Harris on a muddy and windswept parcours.

Of course, many riders would want to take it easy today, with the Hoogerheide round of the CX World Cup scheduled for tomorrow; but not Vos - or perhaps she wins even when she's taking it easy? That the multiple World and National Champion even shows up at a relatively minor event such as this to race in front of small numbers of spectators is as admirable as her extensive palmares, and evidence of her great love for the sport.

Bart Aernouts won the Elite Men's race, Max Gulickx won the Novices race, Koen Weijers won among the Juniors and Freek de Jonge was the victorious Amateur.

Elite Women
1 Marianne Vos
2 Daphny van den Brand
3 Nikki Harris
4 Reza Hormes Raven Stijn
5 Arenda Grimberg
6 Asa Maria Erlandsson
7 Nancy Bober
8 Yara Kastelijn
9 Kajsa Snihs
10 Iris Ockeloen
11 Christine Vardaros
12 Ayako Toyooka
13 Nicolle De Bie Leyten
14 Lotte Eikelenboom

Elite Men

1 Bart Aernouts
2 Mariusz Gil
3 Tom Meeusen
4 Gerben De Knegt
5 Lars Van Der Haar
6 Jim Aernouts
7  Dave De Cleyn
8 Stan Godrie
9 Joeri Adams
10 Floris De Tier
11 Jiri Polnicky
12 Niels Wubben
13 Jens Adams
14 Sven Beelen
16 Patrick Van Leeuwen
17 Diether Sweeck
18 Vincent Baestaens
19 Isaac Suarez
20 Magnus Darvell
21 Daniel Peeters
22 Jonas Pedersen
23 Yu Takenouchi
24 Kristof Cop
25 Ingmar Uytdewilligen


Amateurs
1 Freek de Jonge
2 Ivar Hartogs
3 Eddie van der Grijn
4 Gerard Kooistra
5 Roel van Houtum
6 Dennis Moolhuijsen
7 Atse Ten Brinke
8 Tom van Braak
9 Marcel Scheffer
10 Ronald Kolkman
11 Micha de Vries
12 Lars Rietveld
13 Patrick de Laat

Juniors
1 Koen Weijers
2 Kevin Suarez Martinez
3 Onno Verheyen
4 Dennis Wahlqvist
5 Richard Jansen
6 Emil Linde
7 Stig Callay
8 Robbie van Bakel
9. Kevin Dupont
10 Koen van de Ven
11 Jelle Vanden Dries


Novices
1 Max Gulickx
2 Bram Welten
3 Sieben Wouters
4 Vincent Peeters
5 Jordi Talen
6 Kelvin Bakx
7 Sjoerd van de Stelt
8 Kevin van Bennekom
9 David Hockx
10 Thomas Visser
11 Bob Olieslagers
12 Wesley Floren
13 Erik Boer
14 Tommie Bone
15 Sjoerd Bax
16 Yorick Verberne
17 Ruben Bekkers
18 Lars Akkermans
19 Olaf Remmerswaal
20 Thom Martens
21 Teun van de Ven
22 Ruben De Goede
23 Tim Kouwenhoven

Vuelta a Andalucia Starters

The universally popular Jens Voigt will be racing
(image credit: Kuebi CC BY-SA 3.0)
Subject to change, not all riders yet confirmed.


RadioShack-Nissan-Trek
  1   IRIZAR ARANBURU, Markel
  2   BENNATI, Daniele
  3   GERDEMANN, Linus
  4   MONFORT, Maxime
  5   SCHLECK, Frank
  6   VOIGT, Jens
  7   ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, Haimar
Rabobank
  11   MOLLEMA, Bauke
  12   KRUIJSWIJK, Steven
  13   MATTHEWS, Michael
  14   GARATE, Juan Manuel
  15   LLAMAZALES Barredo, Carlos
  16   NIERMANN, Grischa
  17   KELDERMAN, Wilco
Vacansoleil-DCM
  21   HUMMEL, Kenny Van
  22   RUIJGH, Rob
  23   POELS, Wout
  24   LIGTHART, Pim
  25   MARCATO, Marco
  26   CARRARA, Matteo
  27   SELVAGGI, Mirko
Katusha
  31   FRIERE, Oscar
  32   MORENO FERNANDEZ, Daniel
  33   HORRACH RIPPOLL, Joan
  34   FLORENCIO, Xavier
  35   ISAYCHEV, Vladimir
  36   TROFIMOV, Yuri
  37   VORGANOV, Eduard
  38   MENCHOV, Denis
Jurgen van de Walle
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0
Lotto - Belisol
  41   VANENDERT, Dennis
  42   VANENDERT, Jelle
  43   WALLE, Jurgen van de
  44   LEIJEN, Joost van
  45   WILLEMS, Frederick
Movistar
  61   VALVERDE, Alejandro
Team NetApp
  71   KONIG, Leopold
  72   HUZARSKI, Bartosz
  73   BRANDL, Matthias
  74   BARTA, Jan
  75   SCHORN, Daniel
  76   HOLLENSTEIN, Reto
  77   DIETZIKER, Andreas
Spider Tech Powered by C10
  81   ANDERSON, Ryan
  82   BOIVIN, Guillaume
  83   HOULE, Hugo
  84   GILBERT, Martin
  85   LACOMBE, Keven
  86   PARISIEN, Francois
  87   SELANDER, Bjorn
Cofidis
  91   MATE MARDONES, Luis Angel
  92   DEMARET, Jean-Eudes
  93   BUFFAZ, Mickael
  94   DUMOULIN, Samuel
  95   DUQUE, Leonardo Fabio
  96   MONIER, Damien
  97   VALENTIN, Tristan

Vuelta a Andalucia Prologue Preview


The Vuelta a Andalucia kicks off on the 19th of February, providing us with a chance to get an early look at riders' form and - for fans in cycling's North European homelands - a reminder of what the sun looks like. It's an event with a long pedigree, having first been run in 1925 (though that was the last one until 1955), and has been won by some of the greatest names in the sport over the years, including Rudi Altig, Freddy Mertens, Gerrie Knetemann, Oscar Freire and Joost Posthuma.

Castillo de Sancti Petri, San Fernando
(image credit: Peejayem CC BY-SA 2.5)
The prologue is an almost perfectly flat 6km time trial to be held along the Avenida San Juan Bosco in San Fernando, a town known locally as La Isla - and it was in fact an island at one time though it's since been connected to the mainland and as such has become a peninsula, the natural defensive advantages of this geography being a major factor in the city's resistance to Napoleon's forces in 1810, when San Fernano and the Province of Cadiz surrounding it were the only part of Spain that didn't become subject to French control. There is archaeological evidence of human inhabitation stretching right back to into palaeolithic times in the region, but San Fernando didn't become a city until the Phoenicians developed it into an important centre of the fish salting industry. They also built a temple to their god Melkart here, which was later re-dedicated to Hercules when the Romans took control of the region. The Romans established many potteries and built the first bridge between the island and the mainland, which allowed the city to become rich - however, it was during the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella that it really became prosperous, its port being one of the main arrival points for ships laden with goods and gold from the newly-discovered Americas. While San Fernando resisted Napoleon, it fell to the French in 1823, two years after his death. This point marks the beginning of the city's downfall - once the French had left, five years later, it became lawless until the 1868 Revolution when it was taken over by Juan Bautista Topete when he formed a rebel government standing in opposition to that of Queen Isabel II. As a result, the city came under frequent bombardment from the Royalist Navy and sustained much damage. The 20th Century was not kind to San Fernando - the hardships that all Spain endured under the Fascist government of Franco was compounded here by the loss of the ship-building industry and the decline of salt-manufacturing. Neither was ever replaced and, to make matters worse, the population began to grow rapidly during the latter half of the century and now stands at around 97,000 - this had led to widespread unemployment and poverty. While the city enjoys some income from tourism, it remains one of the poorest in Spain and as such will be thankful for the influx of people and euros attracted by the race.

The riders start just across the road from the police station (36°27'53.20"N 6°11'32.44"W) and travel south-west along the wide dual-carriageway road, past the Instituto de Educacion Secundaria Sancti-Petri on the left with a peculiar igloo-shaped portico and a conical steeple - this marks the location of the finish line. There are many empty lots along the street, behind which buildings in varying states of repair can be seen. but the clean and modern structures by the roadside show that limited prosperity is returning to the city. The road surface is good here, but a shallow gulley and low kerb on the right - separating the road from parking places - may be best avoided as it appears to collect dust which, very often, means there'll also be broken glass, stones and other puncture-causing debris. This feature extends along almost the entire parcours, in and out. Unless the road is resurfaced for the event, riders will also need to look out for potholes around a drain cover as they pass by the Calle San Nicolas as it leads off to the right 190m from the start (marked 1 on the map) - there's a narrow smooth strip to the left of the drain, whereas the route to the right is wider but will require deft handling to avoid hitting the kerb directly ahead which protrudes some was into the road before the roadside parking spaces begin again.

The parcours (click for enlargement)
(mapping: OpenStreetMap CC BY-SA 2.0)
65m ahead, the landscape opens up on the left of the road and we get our first glimpse of the remains of the salt-producing areas. Other than a few ramshackle bits of wood here and there, nature has taken over to such an extent that from ground level the area looks like a salt marsh. From above, the regimented and geometric layout can clearly be seen. Small craft are able to navigate the tidal channels and boat-owning locals may well use it as a good place from which to see the riders pass. 390m from the start, the parcours arrives at the Ronda del Estero roundabout (2). The palm trees in the centre are encircled by a ring of gravel which, if any has managed to get into the road, could cause problems in the same way that the gravel that collects on the outer edge of mountain hairpins does, but if the road has been swept the section around the ronda is not technical and unlikely to cause problems - however, construction sites along the road may mean diesel spills on the road surface as riders turn when arriving at and leaving the feature.

It's a pancake-flat parcours - expect to see the time trial specialists getting up to
full speed.
Having left the roundabout behind, the riders pass onto the Avenida de la Ronda del Estero; a road that is perfectly straight and, but for a few drain covers, free of hazards for half a kilometre. Due to the short length of the stage, riders will be likely to get up to high speeds on both the outward and inward journeys along this section. It ends at a roundabout almost identical to the previous one and presents the same dangers, then enters a 406m section that curves gradually to the right and is again hazard-free apart from a few drain covers. The next roundabout (3) also has gravel and is made slightly more technical than the last as the right-hand passage around it is tighter. The following 461m section is much like the previous but curves gradually to the left, the road surface remaining good throughout, then it arrives at another roundabout with more gravel (4). The passage around this one is tighter than the last, but not so tight as to make crashes likely. Meanwhile, the Avenida de la Constitucion de 1978 to the right is one of the main roads leading into the city and the road surface shows evidence of sand dropped from construction site traffic - this and diesel spills could form a potential hazard if not removed.

Iglesia de San Pedro y San Pedro
(image credit: Peejayem CC BY-SA 2.5)
The following section, just under 1km in length, is the final one before riders reach the turning point and head back to the finish line. It bends slightly left 110m after the roundabout (5), then runs perfectly straight until the very end. The surface is very good for the initial 190m after the roundabout until the road reaches the Calle del Pinto Torres Aley on the right (5a) - some rather poor quality repairs here had left a rough section and an ideal place for bits of glass and so on to collect, but this may have been put right since. There were a few rough spots by the construction sites a little further on, but if these have been completed the road is likely to have been resurfaced - in which case, it'll be a fast section. The road ends at the turning point marked by a small roundabout (6) on the Calle Cayo Junio Draco - passage around it is tight and the road here was in bad shape in the past due to heavy vehicles from the construction sites directly ahead, but again this may have been repaired.

The return journey uses the opposite side of the road which, for the first 800m, is straight and good quality; thus allowing riders to get a fast start. It then reaches same rough section as before by the Calle del Pinto Torres Aley (5a), but the hazard is increased here because vehicles leaving the marshy area to the right leave large amounts of sand (and, in wet weather, mud) on the road, making it slippery. Caution is required as far as the first roundabout (5). Getting around the roundabout is straightforward - the bends are reasonably tight, but the road is wide and offers plenty of room for a bike. The race is now on the 461m section  between roundabouts, the surface on this side being equally as good as the opposite but the passage about the next roundabout is also tight (4). The following 406m section is very good and ends in a less technical roundabout (3), as is the next half kilometre; though the open area to the right (3a), which appears to be used as a car and lorry park, tends to result in sand on the road - and as ever with trucks, possible diesel spills. If the wind is blowing from the east, riders may also need to look out for carrier bags and other litter blown across from this area.

Salt marshes to the east of the parcours
(image credit: Peejayem CC BY-SA 2.5)
The next roundabout is the Ronda del Estero (2) - there is another large, open area to the right here (2a) which makes this passage around it potentially more hazardous than earlier because gravel from the roundabout is joined by sand: photographs of the section show a lot of it on the tarmac. Once around it, the riders pass back onto the Avenida San Juan Bosco for the final section; as straight and smooth as the opposite side and hence an ideal spot for spectators who wish to see just how fast professional time trial specialists can ride - they'll be travelling at full speed along this final part of the course. The finish line is by the  igloo-shaped portico at the Instituto de Educacion Secundaria Sancti-Petri (36°27'51.00"N 6°11'33.90"W).

More stages: Pro 1 2 3 4 (not yet available)
Provisional start list

Daily Cycling Facts 21.01.12

Emile De Beukelaer, who died on this day in 1922, was the most successful professional cyclist of the 1880s who later founded and became the first president of the Union Cycliste Internationale, then based in Paris, later in Geneva and now in Aigle. The organisation was created on the 14th of April 1900 to oppose the British-based International Cycling Association after an extended row over whether or not Britain should be permitted one team to represent Great Britain in international events or four to represent England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. Belgium, Switzerland, Italy and the USA, the most powerful cycling nations of the day, joined forces with the French and as a result the ICA had little change of retaining any real power. Britain was then banned from the new organisation and was not allowed to join until 1903.

Rob Hayles, the British track cyclist who also competes in road racing with the Endura team, was born on this day in 1973.  He received a 14-day suspension from racing in 2008, the same year he became National Road Race Champion, after a blood test found his haematocrit level to be 0.3% over the legal limit, though no decisive evidence of doping was discovered. Hayles won silver and bronze in the 2004 Athens Olympics, bronze in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, gold and silver at the 2006 Commonwealth Games and has won a total of two gold, five silver and one bronze in the Track World Championships.

Other births: Carlos Sandoval (Guatemala, 1928); Thomas Montemage (USA, 1927); Léon Ponscarme (France, 1879, died 1916); Leonel Rocca (Uruguay, 1915, died 1965); Maritza Corredor (Colombia, 1969); Raivis Belohvoščiks (Latvia, 1976); Davis Pereira (Brazil, 1958); Osvaldo Castellan (Italy, 1951); Alfred Mohr (Austria, 1913); Magali Faure-Humbert (France, 1972); Manfred Gieseler (Germany, 1933); Gunnar Björk (Sweden, 1891, died 1980); José Viejo (Spain, 1949); Aleksey Bochkov (USSR, 1970); Pyotr Ugryumov (USSR, 1961)

Friday 20 January 2012

Hoogerheide CX World Cup Preview

This Sunday (22.01.12) brings us the final round of the 2012 Cyclo Cross World Cup, to be held in the North Brabant village of Hoogerheide - a community with a long history of hosting CX events as it's home to the GP Adri van der Poel and, in 2009, the World Championship which took place on this very course (though small modifications have been made for this weekend's event). This is a village with a serious love of the sport, even by Dutch and Belgian standards, and they know how to celebrate it. With 283 riders signed up to race in five classes - including current World Champions Zdenek Stybar and Marianne Vos, the race guarantees plenty of action and will be accompanied by the usual beer, chips, sausages and other good things that are on offer at Dutch and Belgian cyclo cross events.

Click for enlargement
The parcours is 2,646km in length with a good mix of surfaces: 67% is grassy pastureland - some mown and some rough, 18% tarmac or paved and 15% is woodland. Organisers have asked competitors and the public to stay off the route until official training on Saturday afternoon, but they say it rained heavily on Thursday and, according to AccuWeather, showers are expected on Friday and Saturday with heavier rain on Saturday night; so it ought to be a good muddy race. There's a possibility of light showers on Sunday, but other sites predict no rain and even sun - near perfect conditions for spectators.

The start line (51°25'33.80"N 4°19'9.13"E) is on Scheldeweg, some 160m north of the crossing with Onderstat, then the route follows the road south over a bridge, then through trees until taking a turn left into the field behind the graveyard, then turn right back to Scheldeweg and across into the field on the other side of the road where the VIP tent and pits will be located (51°25'19.51"N  4°19'13.71"E). A couple of tight loops then take it west to the woods where a short section of trail leads to a track at the edge of the trees. After a few metres, it heads back into the woods - the latter part of the trail traverses a slope descending towards the west, which means that if the rain has been sufficiently heavy to shift soil and leaves, this section may be extremely slippery and a likely spot for crashes.

The route continues north to the far edge where it comes out into more pastureland. Immediately to the west of the field - on the riders' left as they enter - the topography drops to sea level. This will cause rainwater nd mud to run down the slope, creating another section with the potential to become slippery. Three tight hairpins in the field lead into a short straight section heading south back into the woods the riders just left, where they'll pass through a technical section with several tricky corners and a brief loop into the field, then back into the trees for more technical stuff and by-pass a sculpture that resembles the framework of a Mongolian yurt hidden among the trees. Having emerged a short while later, they cross the field and head back towards the pits.

After heading along the eastern edge of the field for a short while, they turn left and head towards the public hospitality (and beer) tent (51°25'24.63"N 4°19'9.87"E) and pass through a short and non-technical woodland section to arrive at the next field. An initial straight section across the grass leads to another hairpin before the parcours heads over a track and into another short wooded section with two tight bends, then back onto the field (this side of the field is likely to be less slippery than the other) and through a hedge before reaching a paved road. This heads north for a short way, then loops back on itself to return to the hedge and enters a technical series of hairpins prior to a final straight section heading north before rejoining the Schledeweg just south of the start line for another lap. On the final lap, riders will complete the same route, then head south along Scheldeweg for approximately 280m to the finish line (51°25'23.88"N 4°19'12.62"E) which will be located by the left turn into the field by the graveyard.


As tends to be the way in this part of the world, the entire parcours is at low altitude with the highest part only just topping 20m, whereas the lowest - in the field just north of the main wooded section - are only around 8m above sea level. However, that gives us 12m to play with and there are some short, steep ramps along the way - however, unless the route gets really wet, they should all be ridable with one or two exceptions and so we can expect a very fast race with little need for riders to shoulder their bikes. The organisers have provided a very useful 3D profile, which can be viewed here.

The Beginners race starts at 09:00, the Juniors at 10:00, Under-23s at 11:10, Elite Women at 13:30 and Elite  Men at 15:00 (all times CET, -1hr for GMT). The awards ceremonies will be held close to the finish line on Scheldeweg (51°25'23.10"N 4°19'13.63"E) roughly five minutes after each race - Juniors from 10:45-10:55, U-23 12:05-12:14, Elite Women 14:15-14:45 and Elite Men 16:10-16:20.

Further details: Tickets are available for €8 in advance from Primera Niels Elzakker at 122 Raadhuisstraat in Hoogerheide (51°25'25.35"N 4°19'24.47"E) or will be on sale at the entry points marked on the map for €10 on Sunday.

Sports-Livez will, as usual, be streaming the Elite Men race live online and Live Televisie are streaming the Elite Women.

Official Site

STARTERS (Subject to change)


Elite Men
World Champion Zdenek Stybar
(image credit: Kid For Today CC BY-SA 3.0)
1 STYBAR Zdenek OMEGA PHARMA-QUICKSTEP
2 SIMUNEK Radomir BKCP - POWERPLUS
3 DLASK Petr MADETA FITNESS / SPECIALIZED
4 ZLAMALIK Martin KDL TRANS
5 KYZIVAT Vladimir
6 POLNICKY Jiri WHIRLPOOL - AUTHOR
7 BAMBULA Ondrej
8 NYS Sven LANDBOUWKREDIET
9 PAUWELS Kevin SUNWEB - REVOR
10 VANTORNOUT Klaas SUNWEB - REVOR
11 ALBERT Niels BKCP - POWERPLUS
12 MEEUSEN Tom TELENET - FIDEA
13 AERNOUTS Bart RABOBANK - GIANT OFF-ROAD TEAM
14 PEETERS Rob TELENET - FIDEA
15 VANTHOURENHOUT Dieter BKCP - POWERPLUS
16 VANTHOURENHOUT Sven LANDBOUWKREDIET
17 DENUWELAERE Jan STYLE & CONCEPT (Sub)
18 VAN COMPERNOLLE Kenneth STYLE & CONCEPT (Sub)
19 DUVAL Aurelien
20 MOUREY Francis FDJ-BIG MAT
21 CHAINEL Steve FDJ-BIG MAT
22 BOULO Matthieu ROUBAIX LILLE METROPOLE
23 BOURGOIN Clément
24 PFINGSTEN Christoph CYCLINGTEAM DE RIJKE
25 WALSLEBEN Philippe BKCP - POWERPLUS
26 MEISEN Marcel BKCP - POWERPLUS
27 WEBER Sascha
28 SICKMUELLER Johannes FEENSTRA STEVENS BIKE TEAM
29 QUAST Ole
30 POWERS Jeremy TEAM RAPHA FOCUS
31 TREBON Ryan LTS / FELT
32 JOHNSON Timothy CANNONDALE / CYCLOCROSSWORLD.COM
33 PAGE Jonathan PLANET BIKE
34 DRISCOLL James CANNONDALE / CYCLOCROSSWORLD.COM
British Champion Ian Field
(image credit: Roleur Magazine)
35 JONES Christopher TEAM RAPHA FOCUS
36 SUAREZ FERNANDEZ Isaac
37 RUIZ DE LARRINAGA IBANEZ Javier
38 DE KNEGT Gerben RABOBANK - GIANT OFF-ROAD TEAM
39 VAN AMERONGEN Thijs AA DRINK - LEONTIEN.NL CYCLING TEAM
40 AL Thijs AA DRINK - LEONTIEN.NL CYCLING TEAM
41 VAN DEN BRAND Twan ORANGE BABIES CYCLING TEAM
42 WUBBEN Niels RABOBANK - GIANT OFF-ROAD TEAM
43 VAN LEEUWEN Patrick ORANGE BABIES CYCLING TEAM
44 HUENDERS Mitchell
45 VAN IJZENDOORN Eddy ORANGE BABIES CYCLING TEAM
46 HEREIJGERS Kobus ORANGE BABIES CYCLING TEAM (Sub)
47 LUISMAN Jordy (Sub)
48 DARVELL Magnus
49 FIELD Ian HARGROVES CYCLES
50 TARAMARCAZ Julien BMC MOUNTAINBIKE RACING TEAM
51 HEULE Christian CANNONDALE / CYCLOCROSSWORLD.COM
52 WILDHABER Marcel SCOTT - SWISSPOWER MTB - RACING
53 ZAHNER Simon
54 FRANZOI Enrico SELLE ITALIA GUERCIOTTI
55 COMINELLI Cristian TX ACTIVE BIANCHI
56  GIL Mariusz BABOCO CYCLING TEAM
57 CICHOSZ Marek
58 RICHEY Craig
59 TAKENOUCHI Yu
60 TSUJIURA Keiichi TEAM BRIDGESTONE ANCHOR
61 BAUSCH Gusty
62 HELMIG Christian
63 PARBO Joachim
64 SOROKIN Dimitriy
65 RATTRAY Lewis


Elite Women

World Champion Marianne Vos
(image credit: Nicola CC BY-SA 3.0)
1 VOS Marianne STICHTING RABO WOMEN CYCLING TEAM
2 VAN DEN BRAND Daphny AA DRINK - LEONTIEN.NL CYCLING TEAM
3 VAN PAASSEN Sanne BRAINWASH WIELERPLOEG
4 DE BOER Sophie TELENET - FIDEA
5 STULTIENS Sabrina BRAINWASH WIELERPLOEG
6 GRIMBERG Arenda
7 VAN RIJEN Linda SKIL - KOGA
8 HORMES Reza ORANGE BABIES CYCLING TEAM
9 VAN NIEUWPOORT Tessa
10 KALVENHAAR Annefleur GIANT DEALERTEAMS
11 VERBERNE Lana (Sub)
12 KUIJPERS Evy (Sub)
13 KUPFERNAGEL Hanka
14 SCHWEIZER Sabrina
15 BRUCHMANN Gesa
16 CHAINEL-LEFEVRE Lucie
17 MANI Caroline
18 KRASNIAK Julie TEAM RAPHA FOCUS
19 MOREL PETITGIRARD Marlène
20 MIKULASKOVA Martina
21 NASH Katerina LUNA PRO TEAM
22 HAVLIKOVA Pavla TELENET - FIDEA
23 WYMAN Helen KONA FACTORY RACING
24 HARRIS Nikki TELENET - FIDEA
25 DAY Gabriella
British Champion Helen Wyman
26 LAST Annie
27 COMPTON Katherine RABOBANK - GIANT OFF-ROAD TEAM
28 MILLER Meredith CALIFORNIA GIANT CYCLING
29 ANTONNEAU Kaitlin CANNONDALE / CYCLOCROSSWORLD.COM
30 DOMBROSKI Amy CRANKBROTHERS - THE RACE CLUB
31 DUKE Nicole CANNONDALE / CYCLOCROSSWORLD.COM
32 SMITH Andrea
33 VARDAROS Christine BABOCO CYCLING TEAM
34 ACHERMANN Jasmin
35 HENZELIN Lise-Marie
36 MAURER Sabrina
37 CANT Sanne BOXX VELDRITACADEMIE
38 VANDERBEKEN Joyce
39 QUINTENS Hilde
40 DE BIE - LEYTEN Nicole TELENET - FIDEA
41 BOBER Nancy STYLE & CONCEPT
42 THIJS Katrien
43 VAN DE STEENE Kim
44 MICHIELS Githa TREK - KMC TRADE TEAM VZW
45 ROSSI Vania
46 ARZUFFI Alice Maria
47 SCANDOLARA Valentina S.C. MICHELA FANINI ROX
48 ERLANDSSON Asa Maria
49 SNIHS Kajsa
50 MAJERUS Christine
51 WASIUK Olga
52 FURMANE Madara
53 ARDAVE Lelde
54 HANSEN Nikoline
55 KLOPPENBURG Margriet Helena
56 TOYOOKA Ayako
57 MIYAUCHI Sakiko


Under-23

1 VAN DER HAAR Lars
2 TEUNISSEN Mike
3 GODRIE Stan
4 BOSMAN Gert-Jan
5 VAN EMPEL Micki
6 VAN DER POEL David
7 VAN DER HEIJDEN Michiel
8 N EISING Tijmen (Sub)
9 VAN KESSEL Corne (Sub)
10 NCh BOSMANS Wietse
11 N BRAET Vinnie
12 VANTHOURENHOUT Michael
13 MERLIER Tim
14 VERMEERSCH Gianni
15 SWEECK Laurens
16 ADAMS Jens (Sub)
17 SWEECK Diether (Sub)
18 ALAPHILIPPE Julian
19 VENTURINI Clément
20 JOUFFROY Arnaud
21 MENUT David
22 BOUVARD Kévin
23 THOMINET Camille
24 NIPL Vojtech
25 NESVADBA Jan
26 PAPRSTKA Tomas 
27 HNIK Karel
28 POLNICKY Radek
29 SKALA Jakub
30 PETRUS Lubomir (Sub)
31 BOROS Michael (Sub)
32 LIENHARD Fabian
33 GRAND Arnaud
34 FORSTER Lars
35 WILDHABER Michael
36 SCHWEIZER Michael
37 MAYER Yannick
38 WALSLEBEN Max
39 ECKMANN Yannick
40 GEISLER Jannick
41 MCDONALD Zach
42 KAISER Cody
43 SILVESTRI
44 BRAIDOT Luca
45 KONWA Marek
46 PILIS Bartosz
47 KOSTECKI Patryk
48 MALEC Wojciech
49 GOMEZ ELORRIAGA Inigo
50 GOMEZ ELORRIAGA Jon
51 HIDALGO GARCIA David
52 VUELTA IZQUIERDO Michel
53 JAMES Steven
54 GALLAGHER Kenta
55 GRAY Luke
56 CLARKSON Jack
57 DIAS DOS SANTOS Vincent
58 REICHLING Lex
59 HANSEN Kenneth
60 PEDERSEN Jonas
61 OLSEN Emil Arvid
62 SÖDERQVIST Ludwig
63 KALINA Talius
64 MANIKAS Domas
65 COTÉ BOUVETTE Felix
66 ORANGE Kiernan
67 EISING Tijmen
68 VAN KESSEL Corne
69 DOLFSMA Emiel
70 VERBERNE Douwe

Daily Cycling Facts 20.01.12

Cyrille Guimard
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0)
Cyrille Guimard
Cyrille Guimard was born on this day 1947 in Bouguenais, France. He was a rider of considerable talent,  becoming National Champion in road racing, track and cyclo cross. As a sprinter, he won almost a hundred races during his eight professional seasons. He won a total of eight stages at the Tour de France and wore the yellow jersey for eight days in 1973 before winning the overall Combativity award, also winning two stages and the Points Classification at the 1971 Vuelta a Espana.

However, his success before a knee problem ended his racing career was minor compared to his performance as a directeur sportif. During his time with the Castorama, Cofidis, Système U-Gitane, Super U, Renault-Elf-Gitane and Gitane-Campagnolo teams, he directed some of the greatest Tour riders in history including Greg LeMond (winner of three Tours and two World Championships), Laurent Fignon (two Tours and one Giro d'Italia), Marc Madiot (winner of two Paris-Roubaix), Charly Mottet (winner of three Critérium du Dauphiné), Lucien van Impe (winner of one Tour, six Tour King of the Mountains classification and two Giro d'Italia King of the Mountains classifications) and, greatest of all, Bernard Hinault (winner of five Tours, one Tour Points classification, one Tour Mountains classification, three Tour Combativity classifications, three Giros, two Vueltas a Espana, a World Championship and - well, just about everything else). Van Impe said, "Without him, I don't know if I would ever have won the Tour."

Guimard trained many great riders, but none
so great as The Badger
(image c/o Granny Gear)
Guimard was no stranger to controversy, either as a rider or as a directeur sportif. He provided a positive sample in a doping test in 1973 at a time when he was under the care of no less than Dr. Mabuse, real name Bernard Sainz, the extremely questionable "sports doctor" who had no medical training and who received a three-year prison sentence in 2008 for his dubious activities in cycling and horse racing. His personality, sometimes abrasive, led to clashes; most notably with Hinault who was - and still is - an abrasive character himself, and in 1976 he threatened to run van Impe over with a team car if he didn't attack Joop Zoetemelk (it worked, though - van Impe attacked and won the stage). He was involved with Cofidis right from the start, helping to create the team, but was pushed out in 1997 after a court case in which he stood accused of obtaining credit by pretences and false accounting and for which he received a suspended jail sentence.

However, talent of the sort possessed by Guimard cannot be stifled. In 2003, he was taken on as technical director of the Velo Club Roubaix, a position that he still holds. During his early days with the club he trained a young and unknown rider from Luxembourg named Andy Schleck - so it seems possible that the world has not yet seen the last Tour winner to come out of the Guimard stable.

Josef Fischer
The German cyclist Josef Fischer was born on this day in 1865. Little is known about him, but he won't vanish from the pages of cycling history because in 1896 he won the first Paris-Roubaix, the race so hard it's become better known by its nicknames, "The Hell of the North" and "A Sunday In Hell." To date, he is the only German rider to have ever won the event.

Kaarle McCulloch, winner of gold and silver medals at the 2010 Commonwealth Games, was born on this day in 1988 in Campbelltown, New South Wales. She has also won numerous gold, silver and bronze medals at many other events, including four (two gold, one silver, one bronze) as a junior at the 2006 Australian Track Championships during which she competed at Elite level in the Team Sprint.

Other births: Clyde Sefton (Australia, 1951); Catherine Marsal (France, 1971); Elisha Hughes (Antigua and Barbuda, 1959); Gerrit Van Gestel (Belgium, 1958); Miloslav Loos (Czechoslovakia, 1914, died 2010); Abelardo Ríos (Colombia, 1952); Radoš Čubrić (Yugoslavia, 1934); Yury Kashirin (Soviet Union, 1959); François Hamon (France, 1939); Marie-Claude Audet (Canada, 1962); Nancy Contreras (Mexico, 1978); Mahmoud Abbas (Egypt, 1978); Dario Gasco (Argentina, 1987); Thomas Barth (East Germany, 1960); Falk Boden (East Germany, 1960).


Tomorrow: Emile De Beukelaer, first president of the UCI

Thursday 19 January 2012

OMG culture shock!

Lovely, lovely beer
(image credit: JMCStrav CC BY 3.0)
It's not often that you'll see football mentioned on this website - in fact, we promise that this is the last time - but it's worth mentioning that FIFA have declared beer must be sold at all venues hosting matches in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. "Fifa General Secretary Jerome Valcke said the right to sell beer must be enshrined in a World Cup law the Brazilian Congress is considering," says the BBC.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, footy fans in Doha, Qatar are in high spirits. As reported by Al Jazeera: "Frenzied celebrations erupt across tiny Gulf nation after it wins bid to host 2022 football World Cup. Massive celebrations erupted on the streets of Doha, Qatar's capital, after Fifa, football's world governing body, announced the tiny Gulf country will host the sport's biggest tournament in 2022."

We foresee problems here: according to Wikipedia (thank goodness the blackout's over, eh folks? I bet there wasn't much school homework done last night), "Qatar bans the importation of alcohol and it is a punishable offense to drink alcohol or be drunk in public. Offenders may incur a prison sentence or deportation. Alcohol is, however, available at licensed hotel restaurants and bars, and non-Muslim expatriates living in Qatar can obtain alcohol on a permit system at the Qatar Distribution Center, the only distributor allowed to sell alcohol." 

Keeping tabs on small numbers of alcohol-drinking infidel is one thing, but does Qatar have a hope in hell on controlling several hundred thousand beer-swilling football fans? Probably not.

But then, Qatar also hosts a round of the UCI Asia  (cycling) Tour which is popular with European riders and fans who fancy a bit of winter sun. Fair play to them if the can stop the Dutch and Belgian fans getting shit-faced while they watch - have you seen Dutch Corner on the Alpe d'Huez?

In similar "OMG culture shock!!!" news, the Tour Down Under (ongoing atm) is all a-quiver at the moment after a woman complained because a foreign rider did what professional cyclists do during a race: yanked down his shorts and did the dirty deed right there in front of her and her eleven-year-old daughter. Apparently, public urination is strictly forbidden in Australia, which rather disproves the stereotype commonly believed by the British that "the Colonials lack fine manners" (apart from India, of course, where they probably had books on etiquette while we Brits were still living in caves - or, more likely, in Southern Europe wondering how to oust the Neanderthals).

Of course, in a civilised nation such as France the woman would grabbed the nearest receptacle and bottled it for future sale on Ebay.

Different strokes for...actually, we're not going there. But it's good to see that no matter how weird we all seem to one another, sport - and cycling in particular - brings us together.

(With thanks to @northernsooner and Wrongfellow)

Roelandts out of hospital, planning return

Roelandts
(image credit: Matthieu Riegler CC BY 3.0)
Jürgen Roelandts, the Lotto-Belisol rider who sustained a fracture to his sixth cervical vertebra (the parts of the spine directly below the skull) at the Tour Down Under two days ago, has been released from hospital and told the Gazet van Antwerpen newspaper that he plans to return to competition in time for this year's Tirreno-Adriatico - thus scotching reports soon after the 70kph crash that he might never cycle again.

"The doctors here have told me I'll need to wear a collar for six weeks, but [I can continue] limited training," says the 26-year-old from Asse, Flanders; adding, "We'll see what the Belgian doctors think." The race will be held between the 7th and 13th of March and is used by many riders as preparation for the Milan-San Remo, one of the Monument races in the European Classics, but Roelandts has not given indication that he plans to compete in that event too.

Directeur sportif Herman Frison is also optimistic: "There'll be some more tests - first, our team doctor, who may forward the rider to specialist Dr. Toon Claes in Herentals. How soon will Roelandts be back? I'm no doctor, but as a rider he's very impatient and won't want to be stuck on the sidelines for long."

Daily Cycling Facts 19.01.12


On this day in 1903, L'Auto announced its intention to run
a bike race later in the year. Six months later, the greatest
sporting event the world has ever seen began at the Cafe
au Reveil Matin, Paris.
A new race
On this day in 1903, the French newspaper L'Auto announced that its plans to organise what it called "the greatest cycling trial in the entire world" later that same year. The race would extend pass through Paris, Lyon, Marseille,  Toulouse, Bordeaux and Nantes before returning to Paris and would begin on the 31st of May.

The entry fee for the event was 20 francs - a reasonably large sum of money at the time, which many riders were unable to afford and with one week to go only 15 had entered. L'Auto's editor Henri Desgrange was forced to postpone the start to the 1st of July (and later to the 19th) in the hope of attracting a few more, but in the end had to introduce a 5 francs per day expenses payment for the leading 50 riders and increase the prize fund to the fabulous sum of 20,000 francs.

That proved far more tempting and 60 riders set off from Paris. Desgrange remained unconvinced that the race, which had been thought up by an employee at the paper, would be a success and stayed away so that he couldn't be blamed if it descended into chaos. However, it proved successful beyond their wildest dreams: 20,000 fans were there to see Maurice Garin as he crossed the finish line after 19 days and 2,428km, and Desgrange was more than happy to be associated with it in future (except a few years later when the race first passed through the Pyrenees - he stayed away again because he was worried the riders would be eaten by bears). He may not have invented the epic race, but it was ever after known by the name he gave it: the Tour de France.


Carla Swart, who was born on the 26th of November in 1987, was killed on this day in 2011 while on a training ride in South Africa. Swart was South African by birth but had been raised in the USA - an investigation into her death discovered that she had looked over her left shoulder before turning as she would have done in the USA, rather than over her right shoulder as cyclists accustomed to traffic in nations where vehicles drive on the left would do, and as a result failed to see a truck. Lees-McRae College in North Carolina, where she studied, runs a scholarship named in her honour.


Francesco Moser's Hour Record
On this day in 1984, Francesco Moser set a new Hour Record at 50.808km. Four days later, he broke it with 51.151km. Both of these are classified as "Best Human Effort" records due to the radical nature of Moser's bike which was fitted with disc wheels and various other goodies, resulting in the UCI's decision to issue a decree that the official record had to be set on a bike similar to that used by Eddy Merckx when he set the 1972 record that Moser was trying to break (the Human Effort category was then introduced so as not to stifle innovation, and predictably has become far more interesting than the main UCI record).

Francesco Moser
(image credit: Roadworks)
Moser's record is also controversial due to his association with Dr. Francesco Conconi, the man who used his expertise in developing new anti-doping measures to find drugs that could not be traced, which he would then supply to cyclists at considerable expense. Conconi, who is generally thought to have been responsible for introducing EPO into cycling (and thus giving rise to a new and notorious era in the sport), later wrote a book describing how he had "prepared" Moser for the record using methods such as blood doping that are now very much illegal, bannable offences (to be fair to Moser, Merckx - who now condemns doping but was caught three times during his professional career - and most of the previous record holders would almost certainly have also been "prepared").

On the 15th of January in 1994 Moser - then aged 43 - set a new Veteran Hour Record at 51.840km, again in Mexico City and aboard a bike inspired by the one featuring washing machine parts used by Graeme Obree to set two more Human Effort Hour Records in 1993 and 1994. Note that this distance is greater than the one he set ten years earlier when he was 33.

Firmin Lambot
Firmin Lambot, Belgian winner of two Tours de France (1919 and 1922) died on this day in 1964. Born in the 14th of March 1886 in Florennes, Lambot became a saddler and rode 50km each day to work when he was 17 which gave him the fitness he required to win his first race, for which he was awarded the princely sun of five francs - which he promptly put towards purchasing his first racing bike and began entering more races. By 1908 he had turned professional and won the Tours of Belgium and Flanders, then entered the Tour for the first time in 1911 and came 11th overall. He was 18th the next year, 4th in 1913 and 8th in 1914, the final Tour before the First World War.

Firmin Lambot, the man who
won two Tours through luck.
After the conflict had ended, Lambot returned to racing and entered a 24-hour event at the Veldrome Buffalo (so-called because the original velodrome on the spot had hosted Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. It was also the site of the first official Hour Record on the 11th of May 1893, set by none other than Henri Desgrange who would go on to become the Tour's first director) in Paris, 1919. Once the race was over, he was approached by Globe Cycles who invited him to join their team for that year's Tour.

Lambot looked set for second place, trailing behind Eugène Christophe for most of the race. However, the 1919 race featured one of Christophe's several, famous, broken forks, which allowed the Belgian to take the lead. Spectators did not take kindly to the Tour being won as a result of another rider's misfortune (especially when the lucky rider was a Belgian and the unlucky one a Frenchman) and so organisers decided to award him the same prize money as Lambot. Then, after the race, a collection was started to gather money that would be given to Christophe in consolation. In the end, the fund reached 13,310 francs - many times more than Lambot made from winning the race, though he may have taken some comfort from being subsequently offered a new contract with Peugeot with a salary of 300 francs a month.

He finished 3rd in 1920 behind Philippe Thys and Hector Heusghem (both Belgians, as were the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th riders which must have really irked the French fans), the 9th in 1921 before winning for a second time in 1922. This victory, like the first, was controversial and for the same reason: this time, Hector Heusghem had broken his bike and, as the rules of the day stated, was given a one hour penalty for swapping it for a new machine which allowed Lambot to take over the race leadership. Without the penalty, Heusghem would have beaten him by as much as sixteen minutes and 2nd place Jean Alvoine by three. Nevertheless, Lambot had become the first man to win a Tour without winning any of its stages and, at 36, the oldest man to ever win a Tour.

Hans Daams
Johannes ("Hans") Wilhelmus Antonius Daams, who raced as Hans Daams, was born on this day in Valkenswaard, Noord Brabant, Netherlands in 1962. He competed in the 1984 Olympics but failed to finish his race, then became professional from 1985 to 1989, first with Kwaantum Hallen-Yoko and later with PDM. Whist his career doesn't sound the greatest in history, he enjoyed some success as an amateur before the Olympics and his final year - in which he won two stages and the overall classification at the Tour of the Americas - suggests that he could have gone further, but his career was brought to an early end by cardiac arrhythmia. His daughter Jessie, born in 1990, is a professional rider with Garmin-Cervélo and shows a very great deal of promise on road (especially as a climber) and track.

Álvaro Mejía Castrillón was born on this day 1967 in Santa Rosa de Cabal, Columbia. Before retiring after the 1997 season, he enjoyed a respectable career in which he won numerous races in South America, Volta Ciclista a Catalunya, the Route du Sud, a stage at the Critérium du Dauphiné, the Young Rider Classification at the 1991 Tour de France and came 4th overall in the 1993 Tour.

Other births: Silvio Martinello (Italy, 1963); Stanislav Moskvin (USSR, 1939); José Antonio Escuredo (Spain, 1970); Hakim Mazou (Congo, 1970); Heinz Hasselberg (Germany, 1914, died 1989); Wang Shusen (China, 1967); Orfeo Pizzoferrato (Italy, 1951); Matti Herronen (Finland, 1933).

Tomorrow: Cyrille Guimard, the greatest team manager of all time

Wednesday 18 January 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 18.01.12


Captain Gérard's Folding Bicycle

Bicycle History
On this day in 1896, an English patent was issued for "Captain Gérard's Folding Bicycle," a machine that had been patented in France two years previously. According to the English patent details, the machine was jointly invented by Captain Gérard and Charles Morel - this was in fact not the case. Gérard, then a French Army lieutenant, had come up with the idea that a folding bike might prove a useful method of transport for troops and had patented a design for one in 1893, but it seems he knew little about bikes and those to whom he showed his design advised him that it wouldn't work. He set about looking for someone who could assist in improving the design and eventually came across Morel who, rather than trying to modify Gérard's bike, suggested that they go into business selling his own design; evidently believing that the public would want to buy a machine tough enough for the military. The bikes were first sold in France in the summer of 1895 and proved enormously popular with the company opening a shop in Paris that autumn - in time, the army link would become less tenuous when 25 of them were put to military use. Gérard would later be promoted to captain and put in charge of a cycling regiment, and the bike was subsequently also sold to the Russian and Romanian armies. In time, the two men argued and shut down their company, selling manufacturing rights to Peugeot, Michelin and the French Army.


The Bull from Grimstad, Thor Hushovd
(image credit: Paul Hermans CC BY-SA 3.0
Birthdays
Thor Hushovd, 2010 National and World Champion and the first Norwegian leader of the Tour de France, was born today in 1978. Highlights of his career have been winning the Under-23 Paris-Roubaix (1998), the Tour de Normadie (2001), the Tour of Sweden (2001), two earlier spells as National Champion (2004 and 2005) as well as stages at the Tour de France, Giro d'Italia, Critérium du Dauphiné and Vuelta a Espana, two Points Classification wins at the Tour and two podium finishes at Paris-Roubaix.

At 1.83m tall and 83kg, Hushovd - frequently know as "Big" Thor Hushovd as well as his other nickname The God of Thunder and among the most popular riders with fans of all nationalities - is one of the physically largest and strongest riders in the peloton, using his strength and weight to full effect when descending as was seen in Stage 13 of the 2011 Tour when he hit speeds as high as 112kph (68mph). Yet, in 2010, he was injured by a little girl; snapping his collar bone in a crash after colliding with her. He was trying to go to her aid when he realised he was injured - fortunately, she was not.


Happy birthday to retired Peter van Petegem, who began his professional career with PDM in 1992 and retired after a year with Quick Step-Innergetic in 2007. In addition to winning bronze at the 2003 World Championships, Petegem was chiefly known as a Classics specialist and is one of only ten riders to have won the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix in a single season.

Christophe Kern, winner of the 2002 Under-23 Liège-Bastogne-Liège, the 2011 French Time Trial Championship and stages at the Tour de l'Avenir and Critérium du Dauphiné was born on this day in 1981 in Wissembourg, Bas-Rhin, Alsace.

Luzia Zberg was born on this day in 1970 in Altborg, Uri, Switzerland. Now retired, she was National Road Race Champion from 1991-1994, National Individual Time Trial Champion in 1994 and 1995 and represented her country in the 1992 Olympics.

Belgian sprinter, one-time winner of Paris-Tours and podium finisher in a few Vuelta a Espana Wim Arras was born on this day in 1964. Arras' career appeared to be approaching a peak as he entered his late 20s, but was then cut short when he was injured in a motorcycle accident in 1990.

Walter Riccomi was born on this day in Montecarlo, Italy, in 1951. Riccomi finished the Giro d'Italia in 7th place overall once and 9th place overall twice as well as a 5th place overall at the Tour de France, yet never won a single stage. He seems to have been far more suited to one-day races, as his wins at Aix-en-Provence, the GP Città di Camaiore and generally better results in the earlier stages of multi-day events would seem to suggest.

Gerrit Voorting was born on this day in 1923 in Velsen, Noord-Holland, Netherlands. In addition to winning silver at the 1948 Olympics in London, Voorting won Stage 4 in the 1953 Tour de France, led the race for a day in 1956, then won Stage 2 and led for three days in 1958. He is the brother of Adrie, who represented the Netherlands in the 1952 Olympics.

Ken Farnum, born on this day in 1931, was the first Barbadian to ever compete in the Olympics (1952, Helsinki). Cyclists from Barbados had dominated the Carribean grass track racing for scene for many years by that point, but the country had no Olympic committee. As a result, he rode for Jamaica in the Sprint and 1km Time Trial, but won medals in neither.

Other births: Richard Roett (Barbados, 1943); Eva Loweová-Orvošová (Slovakia, 1971); Vladimir Miholjević (Croatia, 1974); Teodor Černý (Czechoslovakia, 1957); Oksana Saprykina (Ukraine, 1979); Luvsangiin Erkhemjamts (Mongolia, 1943); Günther Ziegler (Germany, 1933); Ute Enzenauer (Germany, 1965); Valery Yardy (USSR, 1948, died 1994).


Tomorrow: Moser sets a new Hour Record and a French 
newspaper announces its plan to hold a bike race

Tuesday 17 January 2012

Big crash at Tour Down Under

A broken hip could easily have
spelled the end of 40-year-old
 Guesdon's career
(image credit: Ludovic Peron CC BY-SA 3.0) 
Jürgen Roelandts may never ride again, reports Sky TV

The first stage of the Tour Down Under was marked by a high speed crash today with several riders suffering serious injuries. Jürgen Roelandts (Lotto-Belisol) has a neck fracture, Frédéric Guesdon (FDJ) a broken hip and Matteo Montagutti (AG2R) a snapped collarbone. Around 20 riders in all were involved in the 70kph accident.

FDJ has since stated that x-rays confirm 40-year-old Guesdon's hip is indeed broken; but  initial hopes that, as the break is relatively minor, the rider could make a full recovery and return to racing in time for Paris-Roubaix now look unlikely. The rider had previously stated that he would retire following the Monument, which will be held on the 8th of April, but directeur sportif Yvan Madiot now believes this is unlikely.

Roelandts underwent a scan which revealed that he has a fractured sixth cervical vertebrae and as such is fortunate to have escaped paralysis - fears that he might have other injuries have proved unfounded. Sky TV  reported fears that he too might face early retirement, but other sources are far more optimistic and his team haven't produced a press release to support the British broadcaster's report.

The crash took place 1km from the finish line of the 149km stage and was caused when Kenny van Hummel collided with a 70-year-old female spectator, who received minor injuries. Some spectators have criticised crowd control at the event - however, race directors told AdelaideNow that the rider had lost control on a patch of dirt, causing him to skid into the woman rather than the crash resulting from a failure to keep the road clear. Robbie McEwen of GreenEDGE, the Australian team launched one year ago today, was also in the crash; Vacansoleil's Romain Feillu fell earlier and is suffering stomach pains but will race again in the next stage.

Greipel, now riding with
Lotto-Belisol
(image credit: Manfred Werner-TSUI
CC BY-SA 3.0)
A group of four riders broke away early in the race and built a lead of  11'40"  before being caught by the peloton with 12km to the end of the  stage for a sprint finish. André Greipel, who used his Twitter account to pass on "get well soon" messages to the injured riders, won the stage - his ninth in the Tour to date - when he edged ahead of Alessandro Petacchi as they reached the line at the bottom of a short hill; thencriticised Petacchi's tactics after the race by claiming that he was veering from left to right with little care for the crash. The Italian rider refutes the claims, adding that he had nothing to do with the accident as it happened behind him and says that other than hearing it, he was unaware of what had happened. Race officials have viewed footage and support him, feeling that his conduct was not irregular.

Conditions along the parcours, which stretched from Prospect to Clare, are described as having been "brutal" with powerful winds and temperatures of 40°C. Fabio Sabatini of Liquigas-Cannondale took 3rd place. Greipel has attacked organisers, saying that in his opinion the parcours was unnecessarily dangerous. Race director Mike Turtur responded by saying that riders were given sufficient detail concerning hazards and the final section, but adds that he will meet Greipel to discuss the issue and his concerns.

Roelandts also used his Twitter to pass on congratulations to the German rider and posted a photograph of himself in the Accident and Emergency Department at Adelaide Hospital.

Video of the final sprint and crash

Daily Cycling Facts 17.01.12

On this day in 2011, GreenEDGE launched with the express aim of entering the first Australian Tour de France team in the 108-year history of the race. The team is managed by Shane Bannan and Andrew Ryan with Neil Stephens as directeur sportif. Clothing is provided by sponsors Santini Maglificio Sportivo and bikes by SCOTT Sports SA, financial backing by industrialist Gerry Ryan, owner of Jayco Australia. It plans to recruit 75% of its riders from Australia and - welcome news in these times - will also run a women's team. At the time of writing, 18 of the 30 riders (the maximum permitted in a UCI ProTeam) are Australian, along with three Dutch, two Canadians and one each from South Africa, Switzerland, Japan, Belgium, Eritrea and Lithuania.

Luca Paolini
(image credit: Fanny Schertzer CC BY-SA 3.0)
Katusha's Italian rider Luca Paolini was born in Milan on this day in 1977. Paolini's home was raided by police as part of Operazione Athena in 2006, but no evidence that the rider was using doping products was found and he did not undergo any prosecution.

Miguel Martinez, a French cross-country mountain biker and winner of a gold medal for the event at the 2000 Olympics, was born in this day in 1976.

Christophe Riblon, winner of the Stage 14 Ax-3 Domaines (mountain finish) in the 2010 Tour de France, was born today in 1981.

David Stevenson was born in Clough, Ireland, on this day in 1882 and represented Scotland at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm and where he was part of the squad that finished the Team Time Trial event in fourth place. After the Games, he seems to have vanished from history - the rest of his life, including the date of his death, is unknown. Rudolf Kramer, born on the same day in Vienna, was part of the Austrian team that finished in 7th place in the same event that year. Like Stevenson, his later history and date of birth are unknown.

Other birthdays: Michael Vaarten (Belgium, 1957); Robert Schneider (USA, 1944); Max Leiva (Guatemala, 1966); Lutz Heßlich (East Germany, 1959); Robert Burns (Australia, 1968); Grégory Rast (Switzerland, 1980); Michael Weiss (Austria, 1981); Mohamed Touati (Tunisia, 1939); Don Myrah (USA, 1966); David Brinton (USA, 1967); Allegro Grandi (Italy, 1907, died 1973); Claude Carlin (France, 1961).

Tomorrow: Captain Gérard's Folding Bicycle and Thor Hushovd

Monday 16 January 2012

UCI CX World Cup Liévin results

Still only 24 years old, Vos seems unstoppable
(public domain image)
Marianne Vos proved that the recent swap to a Giant bike after so long on her trusty Stevens creates absolutely no impediment whatsoever to her continuing domination of women's cycling - unless, of course, she's secretly riding a Stevens in Giant's clothing - with another superb win that saw her cross the line a full 48 seconds ahead of 2nd place Daphny Van Den Brand despite a crash that left her on the ground during the race. The 24-year-old Dutch superstar fell hard enough to still feel it late on Monday: "Adrenaline: best painkiller that your body makes itself. Rode smoothly to the finish after my crash yesterday. Today, however, it stopped working," she said.

The USA's Katy Compton took 3rd place followed by Caroline Mani in 4th and British champion Helen Wyman in 5th - a promising indication of a return to firm after her results were badly affected by the virus that has plagued the European cyclo cross world since before Christmas and which kept Sanne van Paassen away from this race. Wyman is a rider who likes to show appreciation for her fans and often pens a race report offering probably the best description available of the events she enters - her Liévin report is available here. Gabriella Day - who was not at Liévin - has also come down with the chest infection, telling fans on Twitter that she is taking antibiotics to combat it.

Zdenek Stybar and Kevin Pauwels took the top two places in the Elite Men's race - no real surprise there, but their positions could very easily have been reversed had Pauwels not slipped on the stairs. Sven Nys, meanwhile, took 4th behind Radomir Simunek despite always being a favourite for the podium.

Cyclocross Magazine has photographs of the Elite Women's and Elite Men's races.


Zdenek Stybar won the Elite Men's race
(image credit: Kid for Today CC BY-SA 3.0)
Elite Women
1. Marianne Vos 0:39:30
2. Daphny Van Den Brand 0:48
3. Katie Compton 1:14
4. Caroline Mani 1:19
5. Helen Wyman 1:20
6. Sophie De Boer 1:50
7. Nikki Harris1:51
8. Lucie Chainel-Lefevre 2:21
9. Pavla Havlikova 2:35
10. Sabrina Schweizer 2:41
11. Sanne Cant 2:49
12. Arenda Grimberg 2:50
13. Martina Mikulaskova 2:52
14. Jasmin Achermann 2:58
15. Katerina Nash 3:03
16. Kaitlin Antonneau 3:30
17. Sabrina Stultiens 3:58
18. Christine Majerus 4:01
19. Joyce Vanderbeken 4:02
20. Anne-Fleur Kalvenhaar 4:44
21. Julie Krasniak 4:45
22. Hilde Quintens 5:02
23. Linda van Rijen 5:16
24. Reza Hormes Ravenstijn 5:27
25. Stephanie Vaxillaire-Denuit 5:37
26. Christine Vardaros 5:55
27. Cynthia Huygens 6:06
28. Katrien Thijs 6:37
29. Lise-Marie Henzelin 7:26
30. Kim Van De Steene 7:41
31. Marlene Petitgirard 0:01
32. Nancy Bober ST
33. Githa Michiels ST
34. Ayako Toyooka ST
35. Nicolle de Bie Leyten ST
36. Margriet Kloppenburg 0:02 - -
37. Nikoline Hansen 0:03
Elite Men
  1. Zdenek Stybar 01:03:47
  2. Kevin Pauwels 00:16
  3. Radomir Simunek 00:30
  4. Sven Nys 00:44
  5. Francis Mourey ST
  6. Klaas Vantornout 00:46
  7. Simon Zahner 00:47
  8.  Rob Peeters 00:49
  9. Steve Chainel 00:53
  10. Thijs Van Amerongen 00:55
  11. Dieter Vanthourenhout 01:12
  12. Niels Albert 01:34
  13. Mariusz Gil ST
  14. Jeremy Powers 01:35
  15. Julien Taramarcaz 01:36
  16. Bart Aernouts 01:37
  17. Jonathan Page 01:39
  18. Egoitz Murgoitio 01:43
  19. Matthieu Boulo 01:48
  20. Christian Heule 01:54
  21. Philipp Walsleben 01:57
  22. Ryan Trebon 01:58
  23. Enrico Franzoi ST
  24. Aurelien Duval 02:23
  25. Clement Bourgoin 02:34
  26. Twan Van Den Brand 02:45
  27. Marcel Meisen 02:54
  28. Vladimir Kyzivat 02:56
  29. Martin Zlamalik 03:02
  30. James Driscoll 03:03
  31. Nicolas Bazin 03:16
  32.  Luca Damiani ST
  33. Yu Takenouchi 03:17
  34. Isaac Suarez 03:18
  35. Jiri Polnicky 03:22
  36. Niels Wubben 03:42
  37. Patrick Van Leeuwen 03:45
  38. Javier Ruiz De Larrinaga Ibanez 04:12
  39. Johannes Sickmuller 04:32
  40. Marcel Wildhaber 04:43
  41. Sven Vanthourenhout 04:47
  42. Martin Haring 04:52
  43. Magnus Darvell 04:54
  44. Christian Cominelli 04:55
  45. Thijs Al ST
  46. Mitchell Huenders 05:08
  47. Ole Quast 05:54
  48. Ludovic Renard 06:13
  49. Petr Dlask 00:03
  50. Ondrej Bambula ST
  51. Craig Richey 00:05
  52. Keichi Tsujiura 00:06
  53. Rattray Lewis ST
  54. David Andrew Quist 00:07
Juniors

1. Mathieu Van Der Poel 00:39:41
2. Silvio Herklotz 00:08
3. Romain Seigle 00:10
4. Anthony Turgis 00:21
5. Yorbin Van Tichelt 00:37
6. Quentin Jauregui 00:46
7. Dylan Kowalski 00:56
8.  Daan Hoeyberghs 00:57
9. Victor Koretzky 01:04
10. Stan Wijkel 01:08
11. Martijn Budding ST
12. Gioele Bertolini 01:10
13. Daan Soete 01:19
14. Dominic Grab 01:52
15. Toon Wouters 01:58
16. Felix Drumm 01:59
17. Johannes Siemermann ST
18. Hugo Robinson ST
19. Kevin Suarez Fernandez ST
20. Wout Van Aert 02:08
21. Leo Vincent 02:14
22. Tim Ariesen ST
23. Matthias Van De Velde ST
24. Quinten Hermans ST
25. Karel Pokorny ST
26. Jan Vastl 02:16
27. Mathieu Morichon 02:19
28. Pjotr Van Beek 02:37
29. Clement Russo 02:48
30. Jiri Rehák 03:15
31. Jan Brezna 03:20
32. Benoit Cosnefroy 03:24
33. Yohan Patry 03:27
34. Raphael Gay ST
35. Steffen Müller 03:33
36. Elie Gesbert 03:54
37. Aurelien Philibert 04:00
38. Magnus Skjoth 04:26
39. Yannick Gruner 04:45
40. Marco König 4:50
41. Sven Fritsch 04:56
42. Ondrej Glazja 00:01
43.  Jakub Rydval ST
44. Simon Vozar 00:02
Promises

  1. Lars Van Der Haar 00:50:30 
  2. Julian Alaphilippe 00:13 
  3. Michael Vanthourenhout 00:29 
  4. Clément Venturini 00:30 
  5. Mike Teunissen 00:31  
  6. Stan Godrie 00:34 
  7. Laurens Sweeck 00:35 
  8. Nipl Vojtech 00:40 
  9. Elia Silvestri 00:45 
  10. Tomas Paprstka 00:53  -
  11. Jan Nesvadba 00:59 
  12. Arnaud Grand 01:01 
  13. Tim Merlier 01:14 
  14. Vinnie Braet 01:35 
  15. Michiel Van Der Heijden 01:52
  16. David Van Der Poel  02:08
  17. Yannick Mayer 02:10
  18. Zach Mcdonald 02:15
  19. Luca Braidot 02:17
  20. Radek Polnicky 02:18
  21. Gianni Vermeersch ST
  22. Christophe Balannec 02:21
  23. Arnaud Jouffroy 02:28
  24. Max Walsleben ST
  25. David Menut ST
  26. Micki Van Empel 02:41
  27. Kevin Bouvard 02:46
  28. Tijmen Eising 02:54
  29. Skala Jakub 03:37
  30. Igor Smarzaro 03:47
  31. Camille Thominet 03:57
  32. Michael Schweizer 04:33
  33. Pierre Garson 04:34
  34. Maxime Huygens 00:01
  35. Luke Gray ST
  36. Elie Regost ST
  37. David Thely ST
  38. Dimitri Corriette 00:02
  39. Michel Vuelta ST
  40. Emil Arvid Olsen 00:03
  41. David Hidalgo ST
  42. Kiernan Orange 00:04
  43. Jaroslav Chalas ST