Showing posts with label Albasini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albasini. Show all posts

Friday, 20 December 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 20.12.2013

Rik van Looy, the Emeror of Herentals and the King of the
Classics
Rik van Looy
King of the Classics Rik van Looy was born on this day in 1933 in the town that bears everyone's favourite Belgian placename, Grobbendonk. Rik became the first man to win all five Monuments - Milan-San Remo, Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix, Liège–Bastogne–Liège and the Giro di Lombardia, a feat since repeated by only Roger De Vlaeminck and Eddy Merckx.

In addition, he won nineteen stages at the Vuelta a Espana (including eight in 1965 alone, also overall Points classification in 1959 and 1965), twelve stages at the Giro d'Italia (and Mountains classification in 1960), seven stages at the Tour de France (and overall Points classification in 1963) and many other races; yet never won a Grand Tour with his best results being 3rd overall in the Vuelta for 1959 and 1965. He was also a skilled track rider, winning eleven six-day events.

Van Looy grew up with a love of cycling and took a paper-round during his youth so that he could save up for a second-hand racing bike. In his first race, he was lapped five times and left in a bad mood, vowing that he would never race again - however, at some point it occurred to him that a far better course of action would be to train hard and ensure he never again suffered such a humiliating defeat. That drive to win would manifest itself again in his professional career when he became a team leader - colleagues remember him as a hard taskmaster who expected all members to ride for him at all times and would not tolerate anything other than total, unquestioning obedience.

Known for his lightning-fast sprint, van Looy - like many sprinters - was simply too heavy to win a Tour, suffering badly in the mountains due to his muscular physique, yet he won the Mountains Classification at the 1960 Giro d'Italia, a feat that cannot be easily explained. All in all, he is thought to have won around 500 races during a career that spanned 17 years and came to an end only because of his anger at younger cyclists who, in his opinion, failed to show him the respect he felt he deserved.


Lucien Petit-Breton,
18.10.1882 - 20.12.1917
Lucien Petit-Breton
On this day in 1917 Lucien Georges Mazan was killed when he crashed into a car near the WW1 front at Troyes. He had emigrated to Argentina with his family when he was six years old and, some time in 1898/9, he won a bicycle in a lottery competition and began racing under the false name Louis Breton so he could keep his sport secret from his father who wanted him to get a "proper job."

Despite taking Argentine nationality, Mazan was drafted into the French Army in 1902 and returned to his native country to serve. He continued racing, winning the Bol d'Or in 1904, but had to change his name once again, adopting Petit so avoid confusion with another rider name Lucien Breton. In 1907, he won the first Milan-San Remo and then entered the Tour de France. By the end of Stage 5, he was far down the leadership and appeared to have no chance of a good result - the race was decided on points in those days and, while Petit-Breton was in second place, leader Emile Georget was way ahead. Then, in Stage 9, Georget's bike broke and he had to finish on a replacement. Since the rules of the day demanded that riders fixed broken bikes without assistance unless the bike had been declared beyond repair by judges, which it had not, he was fined 500 francs. Then, in Stage 10, organisers rather unfairly decided that their previous decision was an insufficiently harsh punishment and docked him 44 points by relegating him to last place for the stage - putting him in 3rd place overall and Petit-Breton in first, a position he held for the remainder of the race.

A year later, he won Paris-Brussels, the Tour of Belgium and a second Tour of France, including Stages 2, 7, 9, 11 and 14 - and thus became the first rider to win two Tours, since Maurice Garin had been disqualified and stripped of his second win for cheating in 1904.

In 1978, six decades after his death, Petit-Breton became the hero of a rather peculiar episode of the TV drama series Les Brigades du Tigre in which he was played by Jacques Giraud. In it, two detectives are assigned to follow the 1908 Tour where a mystery man has been murdering cyclists, leading most of them to want to abandon the race for their own safety. Petit-Breton, meanwhile, is far braver than the rest and manages to persuade them to continue. The series is available on DVD but, to be fair, only really worth seeking out by obsessive Petit-Breton fans, if such people still exist.

Michael Albasini
Born in Mendrisio, Switzerland on this day in 1980, Michael Albasini is a rare climber who can also sprint; a combination that saw him win the Mountains and Points competitions at the Tour de Suisse in 2006. He had first come to note when he won the Under-19 National Road Race Championship in 1998, then became Under-23 European Champion four years later before going on to win the Points competition at the Tour de Suisse in 2005. In 2009 he won the Tour of Austria and was ninth at La Flèche Wallonne; a year later he won the Tour of Britain and in 2011 the Mountains competition at the Tour of the Basque Country.

Albasini in 2009
Albasini joined the Australian GreenEDGE team for 2012 and was selected to race at the Volta a Catalunya. Although he was not one of the favourites for the race, after he won Stages 1 and 2 the team made a magnificent job of protecting him throughout the remaining five stages and, despite finishing outside the top ten on all but one of those five stages, he ultimately finished in first place overall with an advantage of 1'32" - which had not changed since the end of the second stage.

In 2013, still with GreenEDGE (now known as Orica-GreenEDGE), Albasini won Stage 4 at Paris-Nice and was second on Stage 14 at the Tour de France.


Rogers at the 2012 Olympics
Michael Rogers
Born in 1979 in Barham, New South Wales, Australian cyclist Michael Rogers won both the Tour of California and Vuelta a Andalucía in 2010. He has been World Time Trial Champion twice and finished 9th overall in the 2006 Tour de France and 7th in the 2009 Giro d'Italia. Rogers rode in 2011 and 2012 with Team Sky, after stating that he would no longer concentrate on the longer stage races as he felt they didn't suit him; in his first year with the British team he was 12th overall at Paris-Nice and in the second he won two stages and the General Classification at the Bayern Rundfahrt, then came 23rd at the Tour de France, sixth in the Individual Time Trial at the Olympics and ninth at the Post Danmark Rundt. He switched to Saxo-Tinkoff for 2013 and was second overall at the Tour of California, sixth at the Critérium du Dauphiné, sixteenth at the Tour de France and won the Japan Cup.

In 2012, Rogers was awarded the bronze medal for the Individual Time Trial at the 2004 Olympics. The race had been won by Tyler Hamilton who later confessed to doping and returned his gold medal, resulting in upgrades for the rest of the finishers (suspicions had been raised immediately after the race when a sample provided by Hamilton tested positive but escaped punishment due to a laboratory mistake destroying his B sample; a month after the Games he again tested positive at the Vuelta a Espana and was banned for two years). However, in December 2013, just days before his 34th birthday, news broke that Rogers had himself tested positive, the banned bronchodilator Clenbuterol having been detected in a sample he'd provided at the Japan Cup in October. He denied knowingly ingesting the drug, suggesting that it had most likely got into his body via contaminated meat - Clenbuterol is sometimes given to beef cattle, illegally in many nations, to produce leaner meat, this being the same explanation given by Alberto Contador when he tested positive for the drug. As is the case with all athletes following a failed test, Rogers has the right to request a test of the B sample provided at the same time as the positive sample; by his birthday he had not made that request and was provisionally suspended from his SaxoBank-Tinkoff team (also Contador's team) pending a full investigation.


Paralympian cyclist Matthew Gray was born in Perth, Australia on this day in 1977. At the 2000 Paralympic Games he won gold medals in the LC1-3 Sprint and LC1 Time Trial, setting a new world record in the latter. He was later awarded the Order of Australia for his efforts.

Karel Kaers, a Belgian professional, died on this day in 1972. Among Kaers' 30 wins were a World Road Championship title (aged just 20, he won the first time he entered and became the youngest ever world champ), National Pursuit and Road Champion titles, the Six Days of Paris, Copenhagen, London and Brussels, a Tour of Flanders and the Circuit de Paris. He was born on the 3rd of June 1914, making him 58 when he died.


It's the anniversary of the death of Albert van Vlierberghe in 1991, the Belgian professional rider and winner of three stages in the Tour de France and Giro d'Italia. Vlierberghe's sixth place result after one stage of the 1979 Deutschland Tour is controversial since notorious ex-soigneur Willy Voet claimed that he gave the rider a lift in his car so as to avoid a hilly section - whether or not this is true will probably never be known and opinions must be based entirely on personal opinions of Voet and his capacity for lying.

Thursday, 20 December 2012

Daily Cycling Facts 20.12.2012

Rik van Looy, the Emeror of Herentals and the King of the
Classics
Rik van Looy
King of the Classics Rik van Looy was born on this day in 1933 in the town that bears everyone's favourite Belgian placename, Grobbendonk. Rik became the first man to win all five Monuments - Milan-San Remo, Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix, Liège–Bastogne–Liège, Giro di Lombardia, a feat since repeated by only Roger De Vlaeminck and Eddy Merckx.

In addition, he won nineteen stages at the Vuelta a Espana (including eight in 1965 alone, also overall Points classification in 1959 and 1965), twelve stages at the Giro d'Italia (and Mountains classification in 1960), seven stages at the Tour de France (and overall Points classification in 1963) and many other races; yet never won a Grand Tour with his best results being 3rd overall in the Vuelta for 1959 and 1965. He was also a skilled track rider, winning eleven six-day events.

Van Looy grew up with a love of cycling and took a paper-round during his youth so that he could save up for a second-hand racing bike. In his first race, he was lapped five times and left in a bad mood, vowing that he would never race again - however, at some point it occurred to him that a far better course of action would be to train hard and ensure he never again suffered such a humiliating defeat. That drive to win would manifest itself again in his professional career when he became a team leader - colleagues remember him as a hard taskmaster who expected all members to ride for him at all times and would not tolerate anything other than total, unquestioning obedience.

Known for his lightning-fast sprint, van Looy - like many sprinters - was simply to heavy on account of his muscular physique to win a Tour because he suffered in the mountains. Yet, he won the Mountains Classification at the 1960 Giro d'Italia, a feat that cannot be easily explained. All in all, he is thought to have won around 500 races during a career that spanned 17 years and came to an end only because of his anger at younger cyclists who, in his opinion, failed to show him the respect he felt he deserved.


Lucien Petit-Breton,
18.10.1882 - 20.12.1917
It's also Michael Rogers' birthday. Born in 1979 in Barham, New South Wales, the Australian cyclist won both the Tour of California and Vuelta a Andalucía in 2010. He has been World Time Trial Champion twice and finished 9th overall in the 2006 Tour de France and 7th in the 2009 Giro d'Italia.

Lucien Petit-Breton
On this day in 1917 Lucien Georges Mazan was killed when he crashed into a car near the WW1 front at Troyes. He had emigrated to Argentina with his family when he was six years old. Some time in 1898/9, he won a bicycle in a lottery competition and began racing under the false name Louis Breton so he could keep his sport secret from his father who wanted him to get a "proper job."

Despite taking Argentine nationality, Mazan was drafted into the French Army in 1902 and returned to his native country to serve. He continued racing, winning the Bol d'Or in 1904, but had to change his name once again, adopting Petit so avoid confusion with another rider name Lucien Breton. In 1907, he won the first Milan-San Remo and then entered the Tour de France. By the end of Stage 5, he was far down the leadership and appeared to have no chance of a good result - the race was decided on points in those days and, while Petit-Breton was in second place, leader Emile Georget was way ahead. Then, in Stage 9, Georget's bike broke and he had to finish on a replacement. Since the rules of the day demanded that riders fixed broken bikes without assistance unless the bike had been declared beyond repair by judges, which it had not, he was fined 500 francs. Then, in Stage 10, organisers rather unfairly decided that their previous decision was an insufficiently harsh punishment and docked him 44 points by relegating him to last place for the stage - putting him in 3rd place overall and Petit-Breton in first, a position he held for the remainder of the race.

A year later, he won Paris-Brussels, the Tour of Belgium and a second Tour of France, including Stages 2, 7, 9, 11 and 14 - and thus became the first rider to win two Tours, since Maurice Garin had been disqualified and stripped of his second win for cheating in 1904.

In 1978, six decades after his death, Petit-Breton became the hero of a rather peculiar episode of the TV drama series Les Brigades du Tigre in which he was played by Jacques Giraud. In it, two detectives are assigned to follow the 1908 Tour where a mystery man has been murdering cyclists, leading most of them to want to abandon the race for their own safety. Petit-Breton, meanwhile, is far braver than the rest and manages to persuade them to continue. The series is available on DVD but, to be fair, only really worth seeking out by obsessive Petit-Breton fans, if such people still exist.

Michael Albasini
Born in Mendrisio, Switzerland on this day in 1980, Michael Albasini is a rare climber who can also sprint; a combination that saw him win the Mountains and Points competitions at the Tour de Suisse in 2006. He had first come to note when he won the Under-19 National Road Race Championship in 1998, then became Under-23 European Champion four years later before going on to win the Points competition at the Tour de Suisse in 2005. In 2009 he won the Tour of Austria and was ninth at La Flèche Wallonne; a year later he won the Tour of Britain and in 2011 the Mountains competition at the Tour of the Basque Country.

Albasini in 2009
Albasini joined the Australian GreenEDGE team for 2012 and was selected to race at the Volta a Catalunya. Although he was not one of the favourites for the race, after he won Stages 1 and 2 the team made a magnificent job of protecting him throughout the remaining five stages and, despite finishing outside the top ten on all but one of those five stages, he ultimately finished in first place overall with an advantage of 1'32" - which had not changed since the end of the second stage.


Paralympian cyclist Matthew Gray was born in Perth, Australia on this day in 1977. At the 2000 Paralympic Games he won gold medals in the LC1-3 Sprint and LC1 Time Trial, setting a new world record in the latter. He was later awarded the Order of Australia for his efforts.

Karel Kaers, a Belgian professional, died on this day in 1972. Among Kaers' 30 wins were a World Road Championship title (aged just 20, he won the first time he entered and became the youngest ever world champ), National Pursuit and Road Champion titles, the Six Days of Paris, Copenhagen, London and Brussels, a Tour of Flanders and the Circuit de Paris. He was born on the 3rd of June 1914, making him 58 when he died,

It's the anniversary of the death of Albert van Vlierberghe in 1991, the Belgian professional rider and winner of three stages in the Tour de France and Giro d'Italia. Vlierberghe's sixth place result after one stage of the 1979 Deutschland Tour is controversial since notorious ex-soigneur Willy Voet claimed that he gave the rider a lift in his car so as to avoid a hilly section - whether or not this is true will probably never be known and opinions must be based entirely on personal opinions of Voet and his capacity for lying.

Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Cyclopunk's News Digest 20-21.03.12

More GreenEDGE victories as Albasini wins twice in Catalunya
Michael Albasini
(image credit: Manfred Werner-Tsui CC BY-SA 3.0)
Michael Albasini of GreenEDGE took a second stage victory at at the Volta Ciclista a Catalunya on Tuesday afternoon, having won Stage 1 after spending a large part of the race in break with Timothy Duggan (Liquigas-Cannondale), Ben Gastauer (AG2R La Mondiale), Anthony Delaplace (Saur Sojasun) and Nicolas Edet (Cofidis) for company, the five men achieving a lead of 6'05" for a while.

On Monday, the peloton seemed content to let them get away with it for just a little too long - when it was eventually decided that the gang of five needed to be put back in their place, it rapidly began to look as though they'd been left just a little too long. The gap was shortened to around three minutes as the race entered the final 25km of the 138.9km total, but it was by now clear that the break had worked. Delaplace fought him all the way to the end after Edet had had enough, but he wasn't fast enough to prevent the 31-year-old Swiss rider crossing the line with a 42" advantage. Edet then took third, 1'14" down on the winner.


Tuesday's Stage 2 was an entirely different beast. 161km in length, it featured a tough climb in the form of Alt dels Angels - though only 480m in height, the road to the top is sufficiently steep for the mountain to be graded Category 1, the second-toughest of all, and 235m Cat 3 Alt de la Ganga some 15km before the Angels got under way had already taken its toll on the riders' legs. Starting and ending at Girona ( once home to George Hincapie, Tyler Hamilton and Lance Armstrong), the parcours looped north and then east up to Salvador Dali's birthplace Figueres, then south and west to the mountains and back to the city.

An early break consisting of Jordy Simon, Julian Sanchez and Cyril Bessy got ahead early on in the race and for a while had seven minutes on the peloton; but they were swept up with 42km to go when the Alt de la Ganga proved too much for them. Tejay van Garderen and others attacked on the way up the last climb but their attempts failed to have the effect they wanted, leaving several riders with plenty enough energy to form a lead group as the end of the stage drew near. GreenEDGE had done a fine job of getting Albasini, who is more of an all-rounder rather than a climbing specialist, over the mountains and into the final kilometre; which is where he made his move, following Uran to within 200m of the line and then using his considerable skills as a sprinter to power past and beat the twenty riders who went with him by a tiny margin. Dario Cataldo took second place, followed by Sky's Rigoberto Uran in third. (Full stage results when available.)

Tomorrow, they face the 210km Queen Stage and the Hors-Categorie Ports del Canto and Aine; at 1,730 and 1,947m respectively, the most challenging climbs in any of the seven stages.

Other news
Paris-Roubaix organisers AMO have announced the list of teams they've invited to take part in this year's edition of the legendary, mad, bad and dangerous to know Monument. 18 WorldTour outfits and seven wildcards made it onto the list and will soon announce their rosters for the race, to be held on the 8th of April. WorldTour teams: AG2R-La Mondiale, Astana, BMC, Euskaltel-Euskadi, FDJ-Big Mat, Garmin-Barracuda, GreenEdge, Katusha, Lampre-ISD, Liquigas-Cannondale, Lotto Belisol, Movistar, Omega Pharma-QuickStep, Rabobank, RadioShack-Nissan, Sky, SaxoBank, Vacansoleil-DCM. Wildcards: Bretagne-Schuller, Cofidis, Farnese Vini-Selle Italia, Project 1t4i, Saur-Sojasun, Team Europcar, Team NetApp.

Omega Pharma-QuickStep's Sylvain Chavanel has been given a clean bill of health following the recent bout of bronchitis that forced him to miss Milan-San Remo and seriously messed up his plans at Paris-Nice. The 32-year-old Frenchman recovered significantly quicker than expected and, having originally said he'd be taking this week off, will now ride in Wednesday's Dwars Door Vlaanderen.

Right after yesterday's reports that Rein Taaramäe and Thor Hushovd are having to take a break due to illness comes news that Katusha's Joaquim Rodriguez, one of the strongest climbers in the contemporary peloton, has developed tendinitis - probably as a result of new shoes at Tirreno-Adriatico. Team doctors will now concentrate on getting him well in time for the Vuelta Ciclista al País Vasco, which he led for four of six stages last year before a disastrous Stage 6 time trial left him outside the top ten in the overall General Classification.