Saturday 21 April 2012

Evening Cycle News

Paracycling in US MTB Nats - Van Dijk victory in Borsele - Cav supports Millar for London - Other racing news


Racing
Paracycling debuts in US MTB Nats
Sun Valley Adaptive Sports and US Cycling have announced that paracycling will form a part of the USA National MTB Championships for the first time this year with a handcycling cross country race taking place on the 5th of July at the Sun Valley course. (More from Cycling News)

Van Dijk victory in Borsele
Ellen van Dijk (Specialized-Lululemon) won the Omloop van Borsele after approaching the finish line in a group of seven riders and getting the better of them after a furious final sprint. Gracie Elvin, 2009 Australian Under-23 Mountain Bike Champion, performed extraordinarily well to take second place, holding off Rabobank's Sarah Düster who took third. The top ten looks like this:

  1.  Ellen Van Dijk Specialized-Lululemon 3h3'18"
  2.  Gracie Elvin ST
  3.  Sarah Düster Rabobank ST
  4.  Chantal Blaak AA Drink-Leontien.nl ST
  5.  Amy Pieters Skil-Argos ST
  6.  Melissa Hoskins GreenEDGE ST
  7.  Megan Guarnier Team TIBCO ST
  8.  Kirsten Wild AA Drink-Leontien.nl +46"
  9.  Laura Van Der Kamp Dolmans-Boels ST
  10.  Anastasiya Chulkova ST
(Full results)
(For photos of the race, Bart Hazen is the man to see)


Cav would love to ride with Millar in London
After Dave Brailsford's announcement that he would select David Millar for Team GB if a challenge to the IOC lifetime ban on any athlete to have been found guilty of doping is successful, Mark Cavendish has said that he "would love him to be on the team for London." However, Millar has not yet given any indication that he would accept a place on the team even if the rules are changed: "I've nailed myself to a few crosses and I'm not sure if I'm prepared to go for the final big one on this," he told the press last month. (More from the Daily Mirror)

Other Racing News
"Spain's Joaquim Rodriguez is hoping to make amends for a missed opportunity in 2006 by upstaging former teammate Alejandro Valverde to claim his maiden win at Liege-Bastogne-Liege." (AFP)

"Swiss bike manufacture BMC has committed to sponsoring its eponymous WorldTour team for four more years" (Velonation)

Cycling
Why Cyclists Wear Ugly Shirts and Other Important Things (Winnetka-Glencoe Patch)

Tommy Godwin's unbreakable cycling record (BBC)

Belfast ghost bike: Widow moved by memorial at site of husband’s accident (Belfast Telegraph)

Cycling offers hope to amnesia sufferer (New Zealand Herald)

La Doyenne 2012

Intro - Climbs and Parcours - points of interest and sights - Weather - Favourites - Coverage

The parcours - click to enlarge
(for a zoombable .pdf, click here)
It's that time of year again. The Flanders Classics, Milan-San Remo and the lunacy that is Paris-Roubaix are all over, as is the first of the Ardennes Classics La Flèche Wallonne; which means it's time for La Doyenne, the oldest of the Monuments, Liège-Bastogne-Liège. First held 120 years ago, La Doyenne was like many races from the latter half of the 19th Century and the first of the 20th originally organised with a view of promoting newspaper sales, in this case L'Expresse - the fact that it was published in French is the reason that the race remained within the French-speaking Walloon region rather than venturing into Flanders, where the cycling-mad natives speak various dialects of Dutch.

Some also call it the toughest Classic, tougher even than Paris-Roubaix. Moreno Argentin, who won four times, said, "Riders who win at Liège are what we call fondisti - men with a superior level of stamina. [The climb of] La Redoute is like the Mur de Huy in that it has to be tackled at pace, from the front of the peloton. The gradient is about 14 or 15 per cent, and it comes after 220 or 230 kilometers, so you don't have to be a genius to work out how tough it is. Liège is a race of trial by elimination, where it's very unlikely that a breakaway can go clear and decide the race before the final 100km. You need to be strong and at the same time clever and calculating - in this sense it's a complete test of a cyclist's ability."

Profile
The Parcours
The race follows its usual format this year with a relatively straight-forward 98km route south to Bastogne that has little in the way of challenging climbs, then a tough 159.5km with ten hard climbs on the way back to Liège. Riders start out from the Place Saint-Lambert in Liège before riding out into the Province of Luxembourg (not to be confused with the Grand Duchy, which it borders), the least-populated part of Belgium; reaching first climb the Côte de La Roche-en-Ardenne after 70km before arriving at the little village Ortho (which has a very interesting medieval church, incidentally). The parcours between La-Roche-en-Ardenne and over the hill to Ortho is around 9km with an average gradient of 5.2% but the steepest part, just before 72km into the race, reaches 17% and it hits 12.5% another half a kilometre up the road.
Climbs with official gradients (gradients in the text refer to absolute maximums, measured on the inside of bends, and are taken from Cycling.be)  

Km 70.0 - Côte de La Roche-en-Ardenne - 2.8 km climb to 6.2 %
Km 116.5 - Côte de Saint-Roch - 1.0 km climb to 11 %
Km 160.0 - Côte de Wanne - 2.7 km climb to 7.3 %
Km 166.5 - Côte de Stockeu (Stèle Eddy Merckx) - 1.0 km climb to 12.2 %
Km 172.0 - Côte de la Haute-Levée - 3.6 km climb to 5.7 %
Km 185.0 - Col du Rosier - 4.4 km climb to 5.9 %
Km 198.0 - Côte du Maquisard - 2.5 km climb to 5 %
Km 208.0 - Mont-Theux - 2.7 km climb to 5.9 %
Km 223.0 - Côte de La Redoute - 2.0 km climb to 8.8 %
Km 238.0 - Côte de La Roche aux Faucons - 1.5 km climb to 9.3 %
Km 252.0 - Côte de Saint-Nicolas - 1.2 km climb to 8.6 %
With the first hill completed, it's only 27km to the turning point at 97km. The feed station is at 98km, then the riders head north on the much hillier return journey. They arrive at the Côte de Saint-Roch after 116.5km, a notoriously harsh climb with an average gradient of 11% and a maximum of 20%, then continue for 43.5km to the Côte de Wanne at 160km, average 7.5% and maximum 13% and into Wanne.

6km after the village is the Côte de Stockeu, sometimes known as the Jewel of Liège-Bastogne-Liège. It's 2.3km in length with an average gradient of 9.9% and a maximum, halfway along, of 21%. Just past the steepest section stands a monument to Eddy Merckx, a likeness of the rider emerging from a rough-hewn lump of granite that also bears a plaque outlining his 525 professional victories - hence the Col's other name, Stèle Eddy Merckx. A cyclist formed from granite no doubt has artistic significance but, as great as he was, even Merckx experienced difficulties on Stockeau; which means there's no shame for those who abandon here.

Côte de la Haute-Levée lies 5.5km ahead, a comparatively easy climb with its average 5.6%; however, the steepest part is still hard-going at 12%. There's a welcome and much flatter 15km section - including the second feed stage at 175km - between it and the Col du Rosier (approached from the south) is by the standards of the Ardennes Classics an easy climb with an average gradient of 3.9% and a maximum 10%. Having passed Spa - hometown of Hercule Poirot and one of Europe's most beautiful cities - the race reaches the Côte du Maquisard at 198km, slightly steeper than the last climb with an average of 5.1% but an equal maximum.

Mont-Theux is 10km further on, average 5.3% and maximum 11%, then at 223km the legendary Côte de La Redoute with its average gradient of 9.7% and maximum 22%. The Côte de La Roche aux Faucons is 15km ahead at 238km - near enough to the finish and steep enough (average 9.9%, maximum 16%) to sometimes prove decisive to the race's outcome - if a strong climber can get a lead here, then keep it over the final climb and through the last 5km, he may take victory. There remain 14km to the Côte de Saint-Nicolas with a steep average of 7.6% and maximum of 13%, followed by the last 5km to Ans - the final 1.5km climbs 79m, which by my reckoning creates an average gradient of 5.5% with the steepest part rising to 13%.

Places of Interest
Montagne de Bueren, Liège
Liège, a city of almost 200,000 inhabitants, once the industrial and now the economic centre of Wallonia, traces its history back to at least 558CE and has much to see, despite having been the destination of 1,500 V1 and V2 missiles after the Allies took the city from Germany at the end of the Second World War (a time during which the people of Liège showed the humanity and bravery, often at great personal risk, by refusing to let the Nazis round up and ship off the city's Jewish population - most of whom would survive the war hidden away in monasteries). The city's most important buildings are St. Paul's Cathedral, dating from the 10th Century but a cathedral only since the early 19th C.; the vast Palace of the Prince Bishops, dating from the 16th C. and the Montagne de Bueren - an outdoor flight of 400 stone steps (maximum gradient 44.2% - who's up for a go at climbing those on their bike, then?). 1.5km away, near Embourg, is a 19th C. fort, one of several surrounding the city, but it's not open to the public and there's little to see.

La Roche-en-Ardenne
Sougné-Remouchamps (called Sougné-Remonchamps on the course guide) at 20km is famous for its caves, which are open to the public who can join tours completed partially by boat along the subterranean River Rubicon. Harzé (27.5km) has a castle which is much younger than it looks, dating from the 16th C but resembling an 11th or 12th C. structure. Manhay (46.5km) has a preserved Panzer tank positioned on a plinth, a memorial to the 1944/5 Battle of the Bulge which saw black American serviceman placed into active combat positions for the first time. La Roche-en-Ardenne (66km) had a 12th C. castle that now lies in ruins, largely as a result of the 19th C. locals who stripped it of masonry to build their homes.

Bastogne (98km), a city of 14,000 people, is also famous for its role in the Battle of the Bulge. It was here that the Nazis, led by crack SS troops, briefly gained the upper hand over the Americans and, for three weeks, surrounded General McAuliffe's troops. The Nazis sent a negotiator to ask him to surrender, but the General replied "Nuts!" and ordered his men to keep fighting. There are several monuments to their eventual victory in the city, including a preserved Sherman tank on a plinth. There's another Panzer tank commemorating the meeting of Generals Patton and Montgomery during the Battle of the Bulge at Houffalize (114.5km), a town considered the centre of Belgian mountain biking - a round of the World Cup was hosted here in 2010.

Tavigny
Tavigny (121km) has a grand chateau with two turrets (your esteemed author, then aged 11, camped in the grounds of the chateau during a family holiday, fell in love with an American woman aged at least 45 and befriended a white goat). Another castle, the Château des Comtes de Salm, once lay a short distance north of Salmchâteau (146.5km) but only the gatehouse and a few ruins exist today - this one too has a goat connection, as legend claims that treasure buried in the grounds is protected by a golden goat. Excavations have indeed turned up numerous gold coins, but it appears the goat prefers to remain a legend. In Stavelot (165.5km) is an unusual Benedictine monastery, founded in 1951, where the monks make a living not by brewing and cheese-making as tends to be the way in Belgium but from the manufacture of latex emulsion paint. The area, including Francorchamps (175.5km), is world famous for the Spa-Francorchamps motor racing circuit which has been in use since 1921 - incredibly fast and, before changes were made, notoriously dangerous, many drivers called it the most beautiful track in the world.

Spa (192km), also known as the Water City, is the place that gave its name to all other places in the world that have water with supposedly health-promoting effects. The water here has been famous since Roman times and wealthy people from across Europe would come here to bathe in it, claiming various medicinal benefits. In the 18th C. the first casino opened up to give them something to do at night as well (aristocrats get up to all sorts of no good if you don't keep them amused, after all) and the rich began building chateaux, rapidly making the city very prosperous indeed. I have swum in the waters at Spa, which a guide said would relieve and possibly even cure my arthritis. It did not.

Franchimont Castle
11.5km from Spa lies Theux, site of Franchimont Castle. Of great military importance since the 11th C., the castle lost strategic value in the 17th C. when improvements in artillery brought it within range of guns on the other hills nearby and it was put into use as a prison until the Napoleonic era when it was sold to a wealthy business man who used it as a quarry, turning it quickly into a ruin. Though unfortunate, this destruction may well have been of aesthetic benefit; and it's a beautiful sight today. Boncelles (241.5km) has another of those 19th C. forts protecting Liège, part of the same network as the one at Embourg. Mostly subterranean, its grey aeration tower gives away its presence and acts as a landmark. Seraing (242km) became a manufacturing centre during the Industrial Revolution, home to factories and mills established by Lancashire-born John Cockerill - the same man who produced the cast iron (not bronze from captured French cannon, as locals will try to tell you) lion atop the Butte du Lion as seen in the Brabantse Pijl two weeks ago. Though not so well-known in Britain, Cockerill is famous throughout Wallonia as the Father of Belgian Industry (and unlike most entrepreneurs of his day, he wasn't a greedy, exploitative fatcat either - by all accounts, he took an active interest in the well-being of those who worked in his factories and by the standards of the times treated them very well). Finally, having passed through the centre of Liège, the riders arrive at the finish line at Ans (257.5km), a contiguous suburb of the city and home to the medieval Château de Waroux which was at the centre of the Guerre des Awans et des Waroux in the 13th C., a private feudal war between enemy noble families that left 30,000 people dead (hence the point above about keeping the aristocracy amused).

Weather
La Doyenne has seen some atrocious weather during its long history, most notably in 1980 when heavy snow fell along the entire parcours and commentators renamed it neige-Bastogne-neige ("snow-Bastogne-snow", which they probably thought extremely witty). It won't snow this year (probably; you never can tell in the Ardennes) but it's not going to be what anyone would call a nice day either. Temperatures at Liège as the riders set out won't be much above 6 or 7C and a 19kph south-westerly will take the edge off that, making it feel more like 1 or 2. There's a very high chance it'll be raining, too. It should be warmer when they get back, around 11C, but it'll still be raining. Bastogne is set to be at least a degree or two colder and rain look equally probable here.

Favourites
Samuel Sanchez
The Brothers Schleck (RadioShack-Nissan) said on Friday that they intended to win, but their form thus far this season suggests they're going to have a hard job making it happen - however, let's not forget that both of them can climb like angels and if they do suddenly start performing well they could both do well. Frank in the top ten? Perhaps. Joaquin Rodriguez (Katusha) also climbs like an angel and he can ride like a demon on the flat sections too - he won't like the weather, being from warmer climes, but rivals will have to work hard to keep him at bay. Unless the unforeseen happens, his team mate Oscar Freire will as always be lurking around at the front of the pack when the finish line draws within site and he's shown time and time again that if an opportunity arises, he'll grab it. Philippe Gilbert (BMC), last year's winner, enters the race as many people's favourite and he's started showing a return to form recently after a slightly lacklustre start to the season, so this may prove to be his day. Finally, my choice: Samuel Sanchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) - the Tour of the Basque Country is, oddly, not as far removed from this race in terms of similarity as it is geographically: the hills are bigger, but along the way there are a lot of tough little ramps. This was especially the case on the final stage which on paper looked flat, but in reality turned out to be a series of nasty surfaces and cruel little climbs. Upon it, Sammy was in his element and performed far beyond expectations, slaughtering the opposition and gaining a decisive victory. He's also one of the very few climbers able to descend every bit as quickly, which while this is a race that does not tend to give rise to successful breakaways might still give him the advantage he needs to at least remain well-placed for the final uphill sprint. (Start list here)

Coverage
British Eurosport are covering the race live between 14:00 and 16:00BST. Online feeds of varying legality will be up from around 13:00BST (14:00 local time/CEST) and as ever, Sports-Livez is a good place to look for them. The official race ticker will be available at the official race website; Eurosport, Sporza and Cycling News all have their own in English. Twitterers seem to have decided on #LBL as the hashtag of choice.





Why did Griffin really say what he said?

Most people will by now be aware that Addison Lee minicabs boss John Griffin has got himself into a bit of bother by claiming that cyclists should be considered responsible for their own injuries and/or deaths on London's roads simply because they choose to ride in "some of the most congested spaces in the world...[on] a vehicle which offers them no protection except a padded plastic hat."

Griffin has donated around a quarter of a million pounds to the Conservative Party (and now enjoys the business of six government departments in Whitehall, oddly enough), including £25,000 to Boris Johnson's 2008 mayoral election, which he seems to believe gives him the right to do pretty much whatever he wishes - such as earlier this week when he instructing his 2,200+ drivers to illegally use bus lanes (reserved for buses, licensed black cab taxis, cyclists and emergency vehicles) during the 20,000 journeys they make every day simply because he thinks it's unfair that his minicabs aren't allowed to do so - an instruction that Transport for London director Leon Daniels called "utterly irresponsible."

In addition, Griffin believes that cyclists should be forced to pay road tax; despite the fact that nobody in Britain has paid road tax since 1937, when it was abolished (he's unaware of this, apparently): "It is time for us to say to cyclists: 'You want to join our gang, get trained and pay up.'" he said in an editorial piece published in Addison Lee's Add Lib lifestyle magazine, copies of which are placed in the cabs for customers to read.

Here's an open letter to Mr. Griffin...

Bicycles have been around longer than cars, and they
offer several advantages in busy cities
Hold on a minute there, John matey. Do cyclists want to join your gang? Er - well, no we don't, to be honest. In fact, quite the opposite, which is why we cycle instead of drive cars. We rather like the fact that our vehicles burn fat and save fuel while yours burn fuel and make you fat. We're quite happy with the way ours don't fart noxious fumes all over the place too (the same isn't true of our backsides, we admit that - if you spend any length of time in a racing crouch you've really got to let it out to avoid stomach cramps). What's more, we've been around for longer than you lot in your funny metal boxes. The bicycle has been around for almost two centuries, since 1817 when Baron von Drais invented what he called a Laufmaschine. In the early 1860s, two Frenchmen added a mechanical crank drive, thus creating something more akin to a modern bicycle. The first official bike race took place in 1868 (it wasn't the first unofficial race, of course - that would have taken place the first time there were two bikes in the same place). In 1885, John Kemp Starley introduced his Safety Bicycle, the first modern bike. The first car - which, arguably, has less in common with a modern car that Drais' Laufmaschine has with a modern bike, incidentally - was Karl Benz's Patent-Motorwagen, which didn't show up until 1886. So it looks like it was you car drivers who joined our gang, actually.

You know another reason we prefer cycling to driving? Because - as several studies have demonstrated - we can get from Point A to Point B in a busy city such as London considerably faster than cars can. Hence all those cycle couriers, police officers and even paramedics on bikes. Actually, come to think of it, the real reason you said what you said, which you now say you said to encourage debate and improve safety, wouldn't have been an attempt to frighten people off cycling in London because more and more are cottoning onto the advantages bikes have over cars and you're scared of losing business, would it?

London-based cyclists are (or anyone who can get there is) invited to join a mass "die-in" outside the company's headquarters on Monday the 23rd of April. Meet at 6pm on the corner of Stanhope Street/William Road (51°31'37.80"N 0° 8'27.00"W). Road accident cosmetics and fake blood are welcome. More details here.

Daily Cycling Facts 21.04.12

Gaston Rebry
Paris-Roubaix fell on this date in 1935 and 1946. Belgian Gaston Rebry won for a third time in 1935, the second man to do so - he'd won the year before too but as his first win had been in 1931 he couldn't equal Octave Lapize's 1911 record of three consecutive records (and nobody would until Francesco Moser in 1980). The finish in 1935 was moved to the Flandres horse racing track at Marcq, where it would remain the following year. 1946 brought the first of two consecutive victories for another Belgian rider, Georges Claes.

The twelfth edition of La Flèche Wallonne was held on this date in 1948, returning to April for the first time since it began in 1936. It ran, as it would for the next twelve years, between Charleroi and Liège; covering a distance of 234km. The winner was Fermo Carmellini, the first Italian to achieve victory in this race - in Carmellini's day, Italians were commonly supposed to be unsucessful riders unless racing in their homeland and completely useless in the often cold, always gruelling North European Classics. However, he was just the first of many: as of 2011, La Flèche Wallonne has been won by an Italian eighteen times - the second highest number after the 38 Belgian victories. The race was held on this day again in 1951: the fifteenth edition and the first to be won by a Swiss, Ferdy Kübler - when he won Liège-Bastogne-Liège the following day, he became the first man to win the Ardennes Double. It ran once again between Charleroi and Liège but followed a different route that was 14km shorter. The 32nd edition, held in 1968, also fell on this date and was 222.5km running between Liège and Marcinelle, as it had been for the last three years and would be for three more. The winner was Rik Van Looy, the King of the Classics and the first man to win all five Monuments. In 2004, the 68th edition also took place on this day - it took a 199.5km route between Charleroi and Huy and was won by Davide Rebellin who, as he then won Liège-Bastogne-Liège four days later, became the fifth man to win the Ardennes Double. The last time the race was held on this date was the 74th edition in 2010. That year, it covered 198km, once again between Charleroi and Huy and was won for the first time by an Australian, Cadel Evans.

The seventh and thirteenth editions of La Flèche Wallonne Féminine fell on this day in 2004 and 2010. 2004 was won by Sonia Huguet. 2010, which took place on a 109km loop beginning and finishing at Huy rather than running between Charleroi and Huy as the men's race did, was won by the British rider Emma Pooley. As the Welsh rider Nicole Cooke had won three editions, Pooley's victory tied Great Britain with the Netherlands as the most successful nation in this race. (For comparison, no British man has ever won the men's event - but guess which race gets the most coverage in the British cycling press?)

Giovanni Battaglin
(unknown copyright)
The Vuelta a Espana began on this day in 1981 and covered 3,446km in 19 stages. Frenchman Régis Clère won the prologue and then unexpectedly led the race all the way to Stage 8b, an individual on the Sierra Nevada where Giovanni Battaglin took over and, despite the admirable efforts of Pedro Muñoz, remained leader for the rest of the race. Just three days after the Vuelta ended, the Giro d'Italia started - and Battaglin won that too, becoming the second man to win both races in a single season. Some people have called winning two Grand Tours with only three days of recovery between them the greatest feat ever achieved in professional cycling. (The first rider to win both in a season, incidentally, was Eddy Merckx in 1973 - however, he had a luxurious five days between in which to recover.)

James Starley
English inventor James Starley was born in Albourne on this day in 1831 and, working on his father's farm in childhood, invented a new type of rat trap made from part of an old umbrella and a willow branch. During his teenage years he left home and went to London where he was employed as a gardener and developed a  mechanism that permitted ducks to pass through a door in a fence but prevented rats from following, also repairing watches to earn extra money. His employer purchased a sewing machine and, when it broke down, asked Starley if he could repair it - not only did he do so, he improved it with modifications As a result the machine's owner recommended him to the manufacturer, Josiah Turner, who gave him a job in 1859. Two years later, Turner and Starley went into partnership and opened a new factory in Coventry.

Starley aboard one of his own
"Salvo" tricycles
At that time, Coventry was the world centre of bicycle manufacturing and, inspired by a French bike belonging to a nephew of Turner's, the two men decided they would start producing their own, as designed by Starley. Not content with the bikes of the day, he soon set about making improvements and is credited a being the man who perfected chain drive. Towards the end of his life, Starley rode a "sociable" tricycle - a bike which seats two riders side-by-side - with his son, also named James. Early sociables had independently-driven wheels, with the rider on the right powering the right rear wheel and the rider on the left powering the other rear wheel, which meant that unless the riders were of equal strength the bike was impossible to ride for any great distance. One day, whilst he was struggling to pedal at the same rate as the younger man, Starley suddenly exclaimed "I have it!" and got off the bike. Then he sat down and sketched out the world's first differential gear system - as now found on the powered axle of every motor vehicle.

Starley was an inspiration to his nephew John Kemp Starley, who designed the Rover Safety Bicycle as an alternative to the penny-farthing and the first example of a modern bike. The Rover sold so well that, for a while, the name was used to refer to all bikes rather as we now refer to all vacuum cleaners as "Hoovers."


Monika Schachl became National Cross Country Mountain Bike Champion of her native Austria in 2005. Having made the move into road cycling, she won Stage 5 at the Krasna Lipa Tour Féminine in 2006 and 2007, then in 2008 took the National Championship titles for the Road Race and Individual Time Trial as well as second place in the National Hill Climb Championship.

Sergey Yakovlev, who was born in Temirtau, Kazakhstan on this day in 1976, won the Tour de l'Ain and his National Championship in 2000 and Stage 7 at the Tour de Suisse in 2003.

On this day in 2000, French mountain biker Eric Barone set a new downhill speed record at Les Arcs. Riding downhill on snow and using a prototype bike created for the attempt, he reached 222kph - a speed that at the time of writing hasn't been bettered. Barone, who was born on the 4th of November in 1960, also holds a record for highest speed on gravel at 172kph.

Today is the anniversary of The Great Jarrow Bicycle Match, which took place in 1888 and which saw the five-time American champion W.A. Rowe pitting his skills against local rider W. Wood. The race was a straightforward affair with the men racing over 20 miles on an earthen track and the winner was awarded the fantastic sum of £175 - £100 of which had been put up by Rowe. Some 4000 people (including a few ladies, according to news reports) turned up to watch and were delighted when the British rider won after 66 minutes.

Other births: Tomaž Nose (Slovenia, 1982); Vladimir Isaychev (Russia, 1986); Arnaud Geyre (France, 1935); Louis Weintz (USA, 1885, died 1969); Karl Magnussen (Denmark, 1915, died 1966); Jean Goujon (France, 1914, died 1991); Vincenzo Ceci (Italy, 1964); Marcel Roy (Canada, 1942); Vítor Gamito (Portugal, 1970); Salvatore Palmucci (San Marino, 1940).

Friday 20 April 2012

Evening Cycle News 20.04.12

Schlecks want La Doyenne - Teams start announcing Giro squads - Romandie Routes Revealed - Millar may still be picked for London - Minicab boss angers cyclists, "die-in" to take place outside office this Monday - London mayoral hopefuls clash on cycling safety - Other cycling news from around the world

Racing
Schlecks determined to win La Doyenne
Following a somewhat lacklustre start to the season, the Brothers Schleck say that they are determined one of them will win Liège-Bastogne-Liège this weekend.

"I can’t tell you now what we plan to do. One time I went on Redoute,” Andy told journalists at a press conference near Liège. “Is it on La Roche? Is it on Saint Nicolas? We have to wait until the race."

Andy won La Doyenne three years ago, but which brother goes for the win remains to be seen - he's the most successful of the two, but Frank has demonstrated better form so far this year.

Lotto-Belisol and BMC announce Giro squads
Thor Hushovd
Teams have begun announcing their line-ups for 2012's first Grand Tour, the Giro d'Italia - which kicks off in the Danish city Herning in a fortnight's time. Lotto-Belisol and BMC were first to publish lists: Lotto are sending Lars Ytting Bak, Gaetan Bille, Brian Bulgac, Bart DeClerc, Francis DeGreef, Adam Hansen, Olivier Kaisen, Gianni Meersman and Dennis Vanendert. Meersman, as reported yesterday, has been experiencing knee problems - he and any other rider who cannot ride will be replaced by one of the two substitutes Kenny Dehaes and Gert Dockx.

BMC plan to send Alessandro Ballan, Mathias Frank, Thor Hushovd, Taylor Phinney, Marco Pinotti, Mauro Santambrogio, Ivan Santaromita, Johann Tschopp and Danilo Wyss.

Romandie Routes Revealed
The Tour de Romandie starts next Tuesday and organisers have published details of the course on the official race website. The race begins with an individual time trial prologue of 3.4km at Lausanne, Stage 1 covers 184.5km between Morges and La-Chaux-de-Fonds, Stage 2 covers 149.1km between Montbeliard and Moutier, Stage 3 covers 157.6km between La Neuveville and Charmey, Stage 4 covers 184km between Bulle and Sion and the Stage 5 team time trial covers 16.5km beginning and ending at Crans-Montana.

Mountains higher than 1,000m this year are Les Bugnenets (1,116m, Stage 1), La Cibourg (1,081m, Stage 1), Col de la Tourne (1,129m, Stage 1), Haut de la Cote (1,035m, Stage 1), La Communal de la Sagne (1,158m, Stage 1), Les Genevez (1,025m, Stage 2), Le Chatelard (1,1002m, Stage 3), Col del Mosses (1,452m, Stage 4), Bas Nendaz (1,008m, Stage 4), Veysonnaz (1,473m, Stage 4) and St-Martin (1,423m, Stage 4). Maps. profiles and videos are available here.

David Millar in 2008
Team GB would pick Millar if lifetime ban rule repealed
Dave Brailsford, performance director at Team GB says that he will pick Scottish cyclist David Millar if the British Olympic Commission are not successful in retaining a rule that bans for life any athlete who has been banned from competition after failing a dope test. (More details from Wales Online)

Millar was banned following one of the most high-profile investigations into an individual cyclist ever seen, returning to cycling shortly before the 2006 Tour de France. After making a full confession, he became widely viewed as one of the most honest professional cyclists and, as one of the more articulate and intelligent members of the peloton, has become a spokesperson on the sport and riders' rights. However, he is famously a very sensitive and emotional person, suffering badly with depression while serving his ban and, as a result, it's far from certain is he would even accept his selection: "I am quite happy looking forward to 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games," he told the Daily Telegraph newspaper last month. "That will be a much more joyful experience than me going to the Olympics as a black sheep. I've nailed myself to a few crosses and I'm not sure if I'm prepared to go for the final big one on this."

Cycling
Minicab boss angers...er...just about everyone
Addison Lee minicabs boss John Griffin has caused controversy after claiming that cyclists in London are irresponsible in "throwing themselves onto some of the most congested spaces in the world...[on] a vehicle which offers them no protection except a padded plastic hat."

His comments, which he made in his editorial section in Addison Lee's in-house magazine Add Lib, created a storm on the Internet with cyclists, road safety campaigners and the majority of responsible motorists very much not in favour. Generally, a company would be pleased to find its name trending on Twitter, but in this case almost all Tweets were from people stating they'd never use an Addison Lee cab again and were about to or had already cancelled their account with the firm.

Griffin went on to say that it's his belief that cyclists should pay road tax: "It is time for us to say to cyclists: ‘You want to join our gang, get trained and pay up.'" He is, apparently, unaware that nobody has paid road tax since 1937, when Churchill abolished it.

If you as a cyclist would like to let Addison Lee know your thoughts on the matter, the good news is that you can by using their customer contact webpage - which is here. Obviously you should be polite, even though their boss has just said that if you deserve it if someone runs you over and kills you.

London-based cyclists are (or anyone who can get there is) invited to join a mass "die-in" outside the company's headquarters on Monday the 23rd of April. Meet at 6pm on the corner of Stanhope Street/William Road (51°31'37.80"N 0° 8'27.00"W). Road accident cosmetics and fake blood are welcome. More details here.

London mayor and rivals clash on cycling
London mayoral candidates Boris Johnson (Conservative) and Ken Livingstone (Labour) clashed on the subject of cycling after Johnson, the current mayor, claimed that although sixteen cyclists died on London's roads last year the fatality rate is actually falling. Livingstone then brought up the matter of Bow roundabout, a notorious accident blackspot - according to Johnson's opponents, Transport for London recommended changes to make the roundabout safer for cyclists in 2010, but these changes have not been put in place and Kulveer Ranger, Johnson's former cycling advisor, says that he was never consulted on the matter.

Bow roundabout
"Your office instructed Transport for London to remove the cycling safety measures," Livingstone said during a televised debate. "Within a month two cyclist were killed and when the police investigation is over your office may be subject to a corporate manslaughter charge." The two cyclists he mentioned were killed in an accident on the roundabout late last year.

"That’s absolutely outrageous, not only because it’s from a man who can’t ride a bike, but one who stands on a platform of cutting investment," replied Johnson, who cycles daily but is considered by many to do so as a PR exercise.

Meanwhile, Liberal Democrat candidate and ex-police officer Brian Paddick is even more forthright than Livingstone: "Boris Johnson's policy is killing cyclists," he said during the same debate. (More from the Huffington Post)

Newswire
Amber Neben turns challenges into opportunities (ESPN W)

Allergy and asthma diagnosis for Astana’s Kessiakoff, Swedish rider believes he’s found reason for lack of form (Velonation)

Moore Large bringing Knog, Lake, Limar and more to Irish Cycling Show (Bike Biz)

Katusha meets after Galimzyanov's doping positive (Cycling Weekly)

25 hot bikes at Road Cycling Show this weekend (Cycling Weekly)

Earth Day in Detroit - Motor City becomes Cycle City (Forbes)

Route announced for inaugural Pedal The Plains bike riace across eastern Colorado (Denver Post)

Dismiss Cyclists At Your Own Peril: The Jackson Huang Lesson (Eagle Rock Patch)

"Chain gangs: spot London's cycling tribes" (Evening Standard)

Wealthy cyclist Joshua Rechnitz donates $40million to New York to build velodrome (The Brooklyn Paper)

Distance Cycling season kicks off this weekend when the Randonneurs roll into Talkeetna, Alaska (KTNA)

Daily Cycling Facts 20.04.12

Henri Pélissier
Paris-Roubaix fell on this date in 1919 and 1930. 1919 was the first time the race had been held since the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, and it was the most momentous year in the event's long history.

All wars are destructive and terrible; but the world had never before seen an apocalypse such as that which scoured the landscape of Northern France and Belgium, leaving only suffering and nine million deaths in its wake. When the organisers sent an exploratory party over the route, nobody was quite sure what they'd find - were there still roads? Did any villages remain? As they traveled further, the damage grew progressively worse until they were surrounded by utter annihilation. The blackened, devastated land was empty, save for scorched stumps and the rotting corpses of cattle. L'Auto reported,
"We enter into the centre of the battlefield. There's not a tree, everything is flattened. Not a square metre that has not been hurled upside down. There's one shell hole after another. The only things that stand out in this churned earth are the crosses with their ribbons in blue, white and red. It is Hell!"
Paris-Roubaix's nickname comes not from the comparatively minor suffering of those who race, nor from the tough cobbled roads which, for much of the event' history, were simply examples of how roads were in that place and in those times. It comes from what the organisers found: L'Enfer du Nord, The Hell of the North.

After he'd been first to cross the finish line, which that year only was on the Avénue de Jussieu behind a dairy that had been one of the few buildings to survive, a victorious Henri Pélissier summed the day up to perfection. "This wasn't a race," he told the crowds, then added, "it was a pilgrimage."

Was Jean Maréchal cheated
out of Paris-Roubaix victory?
In 1930, the finish line was moved to the Avénue des Villas where it would remain until 1934. The Frenchman Jean Maréchal was first over the line with an advantage of 24 seconds over his Belgian rival Julien Vervaecke, but his victory was disallowed because, as Maréchal passed by him, Vervaecke had crashed into a ditch - and according to some spectators who'd been standing nearby, the Frenchman has punched him hard on the shoulder as he went by.

However, Jacques Augendre - whose Vélo-Légende is considered one of the most authoritative histories of French cycling - doubted the incident ever happened, or at the very least that it happened quite like judges heard. Maréchal, he says, was riding as "an individual for a little bike-maker, Colin, and he got to Roubaix alone. His happiness was short-lived. Arbitrarily accused of having provoked a fall by Julien Vervaecke, with whom he had broken away, he was disqualified without any sort of hearing. Important detail: Vervaecke belonged to the all-powerful Alcyon team, run by the no less powerful Ludovic Feuillet..."

La Flèche Wallonne has also taken place on this date. The first to do so was the 33rd edition, which took place in 1969 on a 222km parcours running from Liège to Marcinelle, and the winner was Jos Huysmans. The next time it was held on this date was in 1978 when for a fifth and final time it both started and finished at Verviers, following a 223km loop that Frenchman Michel Laurent was the fastest to complete. The 58th edition, also on this date, was in 1994 and for the eleventh year in a row it ran from Spa to Huy, the route in between being 205km from end to end. The winner, Moreno Argentin, had also been victorious in the 1990 and 1991 editions, making him the third rider to have won three. Another Italian, Danilo di Luca, won when the 69th edition fell on this date in 2005. The 201.5km parcours that year ran between Charleroi and Huy. Philippe Gilbert won the last time the race was held on this date in 2011, continuing the Belgian supermacy in this race that has seen them win 38 editions, 20 more than nearest rivals the Italians. For the 14th consecutive year, the parcours ran from Charleroi to Huy. Though the trend has been for shorter races as average speeds have increased since the earliest days of the race (the second and third editions were 280km), 2011 saw the largest increase - 3km - since 1992. For days later, Gilbert also won Liège-Bastogne-Liège and became the seventh rider to have achieved the Ardennes Double.

The eighth edition of La Flèche Wallonne Féminine fell on this day in 2005, covering a 105.5km loop starting and ending at Huy. Nicole Cooke won for a second time, her first victory having been two years earlier. 2011 saw the 14th edition, again on this day. At 109.5km - raced, once again, on a loop starting and finishing at Huy - was the longest in the race's history. The winner was Marianne Vos - between 2007 and 2009, the Dutch superstar had equalled the record of three consecutive wins set in the men's race by Marcel Kint in 1945. With this fourth victory, she beat the record for multiple wins set in either race.

Marino Lejarreta
(image credit: Historia del Ciclismo)
The Vuelta a Espana began on this day in 1982, the edition consisting of 19 stages and 3,456km in total. It would be the first time that riders were disqualified for doping: 48 hours after he'd won, it was announced that Angel Arroyo - along with Vicente Belda, Pedro Muñoz and Alberto Fernández - had tested positive for methylphenidate, a psychostimulant drug with properties similar to cocaine that has become better known in the years since as Ritalin. Arroyo disputed the result and requested that his B sample also be tested, which proved disadvantageous when it too turned out positive and he was given a 10 minute penalty that put him in 13th place overall and left Marino Lejarreta the winner. At the time, the incident was considered to be the worst scandal to have ever hit cycling.


Rolf Sørensen
He might not be as well-known overseas as Bjarne Riis and Jakob Fuglsang, but Rolf Sørensen remains Denmark's all-time most successful rider in history by a long chalk with 53 professional victories including some of the most prestigious events.

Rolf Sørensen
(image credit: Eric Houdas CC BY-SA 3.0
Born in Gladsaxe on this day in 1965, Sørensen took the same route that many of his nation's cyclists have followed by moving to Italy in search of a professional career, making the trip when he was 17. He didn't take long to get noticed, forming part of the winning team at the 1983 Junior Time Trial World Championships and the Amateurs class at the Trofeo Matteotti two years later. He also soon found himself with a nickname, Il Biondo, picked due to his Scandinavian blond hair.

After turning professional in 1986, he won the Points competition at the Danmark Rundt, then won the Youth Classification a year later before winning the Points and the Youth classes in 1988. One year after that, he was 3rd at Gent-Wevelgem, revealing his future potential as a Classics specialist. The Classics, in fact, would turn out to be the source of his most impressive results with victory at Paris-Tours in 1990, 2nd at Milan-San Remo and 3rd at both the Tour of Flanders and Liège–Bastogne–Liège in 1991, 1t at Paris-Brussels in 1992, 1st at Liège–Bastogne–Liège and at the Milano-Torino and Rund um den Henninger-Turm semi-Classics in 1993, another Paris-Brussels in 1994, 2nd at Milano-Torino in 1995and 1st at the Tour of Flanders and 3rd at Züri-Metzgete in 1997. He also performed very well in the shorter stage races, winning Tirreno-Adriatico overall in 1992 at Tirreno-Adriatico and a stage in each of the five times he entered the event and Stages 1, 2 and 6 at the 1993 Tour de Romandie. Unusually for a Classics specialist, he didn't do badly in the Grand Tours either - he won Stage 14 at the 1994 Tour de France when he was also 19th overall, Stage 13 at the Tour in 1996 when he was 28th overall and Stage 9 at the 1995 Giro d'Italia before retiring in 2002. In 1991, after his team won the Team Time Trial, he wore the Tour's yellow jersey for four days until a crash left him with a broken collar bone.

Fedor den Hertog
(image credit: Left This Year)
Fedor den Hertog, born in Utrecht on this day in 1946, won the National Militaries Road Championship in 1966 and began adding good results over the next few years after leaving the Forces. In 1969, he won the Tour of Britain (known then as the Milk Race after its main backer) and dominated the Rheinland-Pfalz Rundfahrt where he won 9 out of 11 stages and finished with a 36 minute advantage over his quickest rival. This brought him several very good offers to turn professional, but he refused out of a belief that riding for a team would limit his freedom to enter races as and when he chose.

He won the Omloop der Kempen and Ronde van Limburg in 1970, then another Tour of Britain and a National Amateur Track Championship a year later and followed up in 1972 with the Tour de l'Avenir, a race created partly to reveal riders with the potential to perform well in Europe's most important cycling events. One year later, he won the Olympia's Tour and, finally, was made an offer he couldn't refuse - the Frisol team had got him for 1974, and he was soon riding in the Tour de France. Few riders do well in their first Tour because the race is so much bigger, harder and beyond anything else; but den Hertog grabbed some very impressive finishes: he was 11th on the prologue, 2nd in Stage 12 and 14th in Stage 21b, managing a very respectable 27th place overall. He didn't win any stages in 1975, when he was again riding with Frisol, but upped his final General Classification placing to 18th. Having stayed away in 1976, he won Stage 10 in 1977 before abandoning with a knee problem in Stage 13. That same year, he also won Stage 3 at the Vuelta a Espana, Stage 5 at the Tour Méditerranéen and the National Road Race Championship.

In the 1978 Tour de France he finished just off the podium for Stage 22 and was 25th overall, then finished Stage 8 in 3rd place in 1979 but dropped to 48th overall and retired soon afterwards. In 2007 he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, which would lead to his death at the age of 64 on the 12th of February in 2011.

Jennie Reed, born Kirkland, Washington on this day in 1978, won numerous National and World track titles between 1994 and 2008.

Bernard Quilfen, who was born in Argenteuil on this day in 1945, won Stage 14 at the Tour de France in 1977 and was fourth in Stage 21 a year later. He was, perhaps, one of the first riders to concentrate almost entirely on the Tour, a phenomenon that culminated in Lance Armstrong, as he achieved very little else; he won Pontoise in 1977, his first Tour year, but that he won nothing at all in his other Tour years of 1979 and 1980 suggest that all other races were merely preparation for the Tour. In retirement, Quilfen became a directeur sportif of Cofidis.

Marco Lietti was born in Gravedona on this day in 1965 who won Stage 16 at the Tour de France in 1991. During his ten season career from 1988 to 1997, he rode only for teams based in his native Italy.

On this day in 1930, the Union Vélocipédique Française set up a Bicycle Polo Commission in reponse to the growing popularity of the sport which appears to have first been played in France five years previously, an import from over the Channel where it's been played since at least 1895 when the Northampton, Newcastle, Coventry, Melton Mowbray and Catford clubs were formed.

Other births: Daryl Perkins (Australia, 1943); Alojz Bajc (Yugoslavia, 1932); Jaap Meijer (Netherlands, 1905, died 1943); Boyan Kotsev (Bulgaria, 1930); Joseph Said (Malta, 1954); Mikoš Rnjaković (Yugoslavia, 1964); Daud Ibrahim (Malaysia, 1947, died 2010); Erol Küçükbakırcı (Turkey, 1952); Kobi Scherer (Switzerland, 1931); Didier Faivre-Pierret (France, 1965).

Thursday 19 April 2012

EXCLUSIVE: UCI and WADA explain recent decisions

Two-year suspension and
 stripped results for Hofmann
Ever-vigilant in their quest to end the scourge of doping in professional cycle racing, the UCI and WADA conducted a joint press conference this morning in which they outlined reasons and details behind three recent decisions.

The first is the retroactive suspension of Switzerland's Albert Hofmann, who confessed to the use of LSD whilst cycling in 1943. Brian Stüllbishews, acting as a spokesman for the UCI, explained:

"While LSD has not been recognised in the past as a drug with performance-enhancing effects, we felt that as its medical value is also questionable we needed to act quickly in order to prevent Hofmann's case setting a precedent - which is why we've worked fast and reached the decision to ban the rider after only 69 years. 
At present, there is no evidence of widespread LSD use in cycling, and we want it to stay that way. Studies have demonstrated that the drug can have powerful psychiatric effects, and as far as we're concerned race organisers have a hard enough job already without having to track down riders who have left the parcours after being abducted by glowing elves, chasing flying unicorns and/or experiencing a sudden, impossible-to-ignore craving for 27 Mars bars and a packet of crisps.
Therefore, we have taken the decision to ban Hofmann from competition for a period of two years beginning on the 19th of April 1943 and he will be stripped of all results gained during that time."

When asked to cite the studies, Stüllbishews replied: "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, Bez out of the Happy Mondays - loads of stuff, really." He also noted that the tendency among some riders to see elves, unicorns and so on without first consuming LSD will be taken into account, holding up a photograph of Andy Schleck as he did so.

Hofmann was unavailable for comment when Cyclopunk tried to contact him, due to having been dead since 2008. However, his lawyer claimed that he would be unlikely to be all that concerned about the ban because he was a chemist, not a professional cyclist.

The second and third items for clarification relate to Dutch cyclist Daan de Groot, who has been found to have obtained an unfair advantage at the Tour de France. Stüllbishews once again summed up the case:

De Groot escapes ban, cabbage
not as fortunate
"It has come to our attention recently that there are concerns we take too long in reaching decisions. Therefore, we have decided to streamline our methods and processes so that we can begin to clear a backlog of cases. That we can now close de Groot's case is proof that we have been successful in this aim. 
During Stage 13 of the 1955 Tour, when temperatures reached 40C, de Groot was seen to stop, get off his bike and walk into a field of cabbages where he plucked some leaves from one of the plants. He was then observed to place two of these leaves under the collar of his jersey and another beneath his casquette. This appears to have had a cooling effect which can be viewed as having granted him an unfair advantage over other riders who were not similarly equipped. 
Therefore, we have decided that de Groot's stage victory that day will be disallowed and cabbage is henceforth banned from competition under new UCI Regulation 5,483,382.46, Part 3c, section 917, subsection 38.2, paragraph 285. However, the rider will not become subject to a ban."

Cycling news from around the world 19.04.12

Ricco receives 12-year ban - Martin back on the bike, Leipheimer still off - Prijs stad Roeselare attracts stellar line-up - Halfords Tour to end in Stoke with a tribute to Tommy Godwin - Meersman and Van de Walle out of La Doyenne - Will Holczer "walk away" from Katusha? - Cycling in the News

Ricco receives 12-year ban
Ricardo Ricco, the Italian rider who was thrown out of the 2008 Tour de France and banned for 20 months  after testing positive for EPO derivative CERA, then sacked by Vacansoleil-DCM in February 2011 when a self-administered  transfusion using blood more than three weeks old left him close to death, has been handed a twelve-year ban by the Italian National Anti-Doping Tribunal at the request of the National Olympic Committee. Now aged 28, the ban virtually guarantees the end of his career. (More from Velonation)


Tony Martin's been for a ride
Martin back in the saddle, Leipheimer still out
Omega Pharma-QuickStep's Tony Martin has ridden his bike for the first time since an accident last week that left him, in his own words, with his face "totally smashed," but he's quick to point out that he's a long way from returning to full training. Hit by a car during a training ride, the German sustained fractures to his cheekbone, eye socket and lower mandible.

"I pedalled for 30 minutes yesterday on a bike path near home and today I went out again riding my bike for about an hour," says the 26-year-old current World Time Trial Champion. "Obviously, these aren't training sessions, but just some pedalling to get used to the bicycle and the road again. I am trying to listen to my body and I'm pedalling without taking any type of risk. It's a very pleasant feeling, especially thinking about the fact that a week ago I was lying in a hospital bed. Right now I am focusing on my body and I am only thinking about recovering fully. I will start more intense training sessions only when I feel like I'm ready for it and the team's medical staff will say it is ok to do so."

Things aren't going so well for Levi Leipheimer
Meanwhile, team mate Levi Leipheimer has been unable to get on his bike since an accident on the 1st of April in which he too was hit by a car. Now aged 38, Leipheimer turned professional fufteen years ago and is one of the oldest riders in the Pro Tour peloton - his slow recovery will almost inevitably lead some to wonder if his retirement may be imminent.

"The situation isn't pleasant at all," Leipheimer explained. "Ever since the day of the accident I haven't managed to get back on my bike out on the road, and I honestly don't know when that will be possible. Recovery is slower than we expected. I still have pain in my leg and I'm having trouble walking. I also have pain in my ribs and hips due to the fall, this is limiting my movement. The Tour of California was one of the objectives for my season - I wanted to be competitive in order to win a fourth overall title. At this point, merely participating will be a success. I will put in my best effort to manage to be on the starting line, even though it won't be easy."

Omega Pharma-QuickStep will provide further updates on both riders' health nest week.

Prijs stad Roeselare attracts perhaps the finest line-up so far this year
La Doywhat? If you want to see a selection of world-class cyclists gathered together in one place, then Roeselare in West Flanders (hometown of Jean-Pierre "Jempi" Monseré) is the place to be this Sunday. Point your camera in any direction you like and you'll have a reasonably high chance of getting at least one of the world's finest professional cyclists in the frame, because this year's edition of the Prijs stad Roeselare has attracted what may be the most illustrious start list seen thus far this season.

Want to see the best bikers in the business? Look to
Flanders this weekend
Among them: Amber Neben, Ina-Yoko Teutenberg, Chloe Hosking, Clara Hughes, Eleonora van Dijk, Ashleigh Moolman, Megan Guarnier, Nicole Cooke, Rochelle Gilmore, Pia Pensaari, Monique van de Ree, Adrie Visser, Evelyn Arys, Emma Trott, Laura Trott, Sharon Laws, Marijn de Vries, Shelly Olds, Kirsten Wild, Lizzie Armitstead, Loes Gunnewijk, Amanda Spratt, Shara Gillows, Emma Johansson, World Champion Giorgia Bronzini, Annemiek van Vleuten, Iris Slappendel, Sarah Duster, Liebeth de Vocht and Marianne Vos. There could not be a more cast iron guarantee of first-rate bike racing than that. (Full provisional start list here)

The parcours is 129.5km in length and features a number of challenging climbs after an initial flatter section including Kemmelberg, the hill that hits a gradient of 15% and familiar from Gent-Wevelgem, Scherpenberg (max. 17%) , Schomminkelberg (max. 13%), Rodeberg (max. 16%) and several others before riders complete three laps of an 8.9km circuit.


The legendary Tommy Godwin
Halfords Tour to end in Stoke-on-Trent with a TT in honour of Tommy Godwin
Stoke-on-Trent has been selected to host the final of this year's Halfords Tour on the 14th of June, the already-legendary urban race series that pits riders against one another on short, tight city circuits that allow fans - and, crucially, TV cameras - to see the peloton pass by several times, thus negating the age old "two hours of waiting for ten seconds of excitement" problem.

Equally legendary is Tommy Godwin, who was born in Stoke in 1912. Godwin's cycling achievements are remarkable - he won his first race, a 40km time trial, at the age of 14 on a heavy delivery bike he'd modified by hacksawing off the metal luggage racks. In 1939, he cycled 120,805km in 365 days. Almost seven-and-a-half decades later in the present day, that record remains unbroken. A time trial named in his honour will form part of the event, followed by the final of the Johnson HealthTech women's series won last year by Helen Wyman (who, as six-time National CX Champion, is also something of a legend).

Meersman and Van de Walle to miss La Doyenne
Lotto-Belisol's Gianni Meersman has been found to have an accumulation of fluid in his knee, an indication that the joint has been overworked and forcing the team to pull him from their  Liège-Bastogne-Liège selection. If he doesn't recover in time, he also won't be able to start the Tour de Romandie, which would leave him unprepared for the upcoming Giro d'Italia. Jurgen van de Walle, who badly bruised his ribs in a crash at La Flèche Wallonne, is also out for the time being; leaving Lotto's La Doyenne line-up looking at present to be Jurgen Van den Broeck, Jelle Vanendert, Dennis Vanendert, Gaëtan Bille, Brian Bulgaç, Bart De Clercq, Francis De Greef and Gert Dockx.

Newswire
Cycling News says that at Katusha manager Hans-Michael Holczer told them in January that if the team were to be hit by two or three doping scandals it would be "time to walk away." With Denis Galimzyanov's recent confession, the magazine contacted Holczer to ask if he'd be leaving... (More from Cycling News)

"Neenan Travel and their Tour Operating Division Breakaway.ie today announced their sponsorship of Cycling Ireland’s Girls Talent Team 2020, the newly formed high performance squad which is ultimately aimed at preparing Irish female youth cyclists for the 2020 Olympic Games..." (Irish Cycling)

"Nicole Cooke's bid to stake a claim for leadership of the British cycling road race team at the London Olympics suffered a blow yesterday when she failed to finish the latest round of the women’s World Cup..." (Wales Online)


"A total of 120 cyclists comprising 20 teams including a Sabah team have confirmed to compete in Sabah's first international cycling road race, the Tour of Borneo 2012 to commence from April 27 to May 1..." (Daily Express of East Malaysia)

"The Coventry Sports Trust is to lay on more indoor cycling classes to cope with soaring demand..." (Coventry Telegraph)

Daily Cycling Facts 19.04.12

Fischer's facial hair was said to be
"thick and elaborate"
(copyright expired)
Paris-Roubaix fell on this date in 1896, 1908 and 1964. 1896 was the first time the race was ever held; originally scheduled for Easter Sunday, the 4th of April, but postponed two weeks after strong opposition from the Roman Catholic Church which pointed out that riders wouldn't have time to attend Mass before setting out. Only half of those who had entered showed up on the day with Maurice Garin the favourite and also enjoying massive popular support due to the bike shop he owned with his two brothers in Roubaix; but in the end he finished in third place - he looked set for second, but was involved in a crash between two tandems - one of which was his pace vehicle. 2nd place was taken by the Danish rider Charles Meyer with a three minute advantage over Garin and a 25 minute disadvantage behind Josef Fischer who finished in 9h17' and, to date, remains the only German rider to have ever won the event. In 1900, Fischer finished 2nd but that same year he won Bordeaux-Paris and, three years later, was 15th in the first ever Tour de France.

Georges Passerieu, the closest to a
British Paris-Roubaix winner
(copyright expired)
1908 winner Georges Passerieu was French, but he was born in London - so we Brits can at least claim a British-born rider has won Paris-Roubaix, even if a British rider never has. Later that year, Passerieu won Stages 1 (which, coincidentally, was run between Paris and Roubaix), 5 and 13, third place overall and was the only man to make it over the Ballon d'Alsace and Chartreuse mountains without pushing his bike at the Tour de France in the year it was made especially memorable by the sight of organisers arriving at the finish of one stage in a horse-drawn carriage after Henri Desgrange's car broke down.

Peter Post became the first Dutch rider to win Paris-Roubaix in 1964 and, in doing so, also won the Ruban Jaune for setting the fastest average speed in a race more than 200km long that year (45.131kph - which, by the way, has yet to be bettered in this race, though it has been beaten in several other events). Post was primarily a track rider who won 65 Six Day events, including Brussels in 1965 when he paired up with Tom Simpson, but he performed well on the roads too; winning the Ronde van Nederland in 1960, a National Road Race Championship in 1963 and 2nd place behind Eddy Merckx in the 1967 Flèche Wallonne.

Achiel Buysse
The Ronde van Vlaanderen fell on this day in 1943. 90 riders - from 127 starters - failed to finish while Achiel Buysse became the first man to win three times.

La Flèche Wallonne has taken place on this day, too - three times, in fact. The first to do so was the 34th edition in 1970, won for a second time by Eddy Merckx. The route ran between Liège and Marcinelle for a sixth consecutive year and was 225km in length. The trend since the early days of La Flèche hasbeen for shorter and shorter races, with modern events covering some 80km less than the second and third editions - however, when the race was next held on this date three years later in 1973, it covered 249km between Verviers and Marcinelle. With the exception of 1972, which had been half a kilometre longer, this made it the longest for more than a quarter of a century. It was won by André Dierickx, who would take a second victory two years later. The last time it was held on this date was the 70th edition, which took place in 2006. That year, it covered 202km between Charleroi and Huy and it was won by Alejandro Valverde, who then won Liège-Bastogne-Liège four days later to become the sixth rider to win the Ardennes Double.

The ninth edition of La Flèche Wallonne Féminine took place on this day in 2006, covering 106km - until 2010, the longest in race history - on a loop beginning and ending at Huy. The winner was Nicole Cooke, equalling the men's record of three victories. Since 1999, the race had formed a round of the UCI Women's Road World Cup - which Cooke would also win, as she had done once before in 2003.

The Vuelta a Espana started on this day in 1983 and covered 3,398km in 19 stages. Bernard Hinault was widely considered the favourite to win. Giuseppe Saronni was expected to give him a hard time but, having won Stages 9 and 10, abandoned after Stage 15. Hinault didn't get it all his own way, however, with the hard-fought battle between him and an alliance of tough Spanish riders making for a race that many consider the finest in Vuelta history. In the end, Hinault's strength was sufficient to triumph; but he paid the price after riding so hard he developed tendinitis and missed that year's Tour de France.


Kevin van Impe was born in Aalse, Belgium on this day in 1981 and is the nephew of 1976 Tour de France winner Lucien van Impe - Kevin's father, Frank, was also a professional cyclist who won races in the 1970s and 1980s. In March 2008, when van Impe was at a crematorium in Lochristi making arrangements for the funeral of his baby son Jayden, who had died shortly after birth, he was approached by anti-doping officials who demanded he supplied a sample. The rider asked them to come back later but was told that failure to comply immediately would constitute a refusal, for which he would be sanctioned. Paris–Nice and Tirreno–Adriatico were disrupted by protests that year as riders displayed support for van Impe and their disgust at the testers.

Rosane Kirch, born in Bacabal, Brazil on this day in 1976 is a retired professional cyclist who came 2nd in the overall General Classification at the 2008 Route de France Féminine.


Bicycle Day
Today is Bicycle Day, marking the anniversary of an event in 1943 when Swiss chemist Dr. Albert Hofmann rode his bike home from his laboratory. Nothing remarkable there, surely?

Dr. Albert Hofmann
It was a bike ride with a difference. Five years previously, Dr. Hofmann had synthesised a compound he named LSD-25, to which he at first paid little further attention thinking it to be of little use. However, in time he came to realise that if the substance held the properties he suspected it might, then it could prove a powerful medical tool permitting psychiatrists a door into the subconscious minds of mentally ill patients. While creating a new batch, he accidentally absorbed some and gained his first experience of LSD's effects, which encouraged him to continue his experiment. Hofmann greatly under-estimated the threshold dose of his invention and dosed himself with 250 micrograms - the actual threshold for humans is 20 micrograms. Needless to say, he began to feel a little odd a short while later and decided he'd better go home; and since the Second World War meant that motor vehicle use was restricted due to fuel shortage, that meant cycling. An assistant who accompanied him remembered that during their journey the doctor became increasingly agitated due to worry that he was going insane, with the insanity probably caused by his neighbour whom he feared was a witch.

Later, at home when the drug began to wear off a little, Hofmann settled down and relaxed. He described the experience: "...little by little I could begin to enjoy the unprecedented colors and plays of shapes that persisted behind my closed eyes. Kaleidoscopic, fantastic images surged in on me, alternating, variegated, opening and then closing themselves in circles and spirals, exploding in colored fountains, rearranging and hybridizing themselves in constant flux..."

Bicycle Day is not celebrated in the mainstream cycling world, but has a big following among counter-culture bicycle advocates and underground cycling clubs around the world and is a celebration of LSD's illicit uses  rather than a celebration of the bicycle. Hofmann despaired at this, believing that the drug should only be used under medical supervision in clinical surroundings and remaining a vehement opponent of its recreational use until the day he died, ten days after Bicycle Day in 2008.

Other births: Daniele Colli (Italy, 1982); Eduardo Manrique (Spain, 1965); Venelin Khubenov (Bulgaria, 1959); Daniele Cesaretti (San Marino, 1954); Paul Leitch (New Zealand, 1963).