Showing posts with label Team Sky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Team Sky. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 February 2014

Daily Cycling Facts 25.02.2014

Team Sky's first race, the 2010 Cancer
Council Helpline Classic
(image credit: Ant CC BY 2.0
Team Sky
On this day in 2009, the creation of Team Sky was announced. Sponsored by the satellite television broadcasting, telephony and broadband internet provided BSkyB, the team is managed by Dave Brailsford and began with an annual budget of more than £30 million. Other sponsors included IG Markets, Marks&Spencer, Gatorade and Oakley. Italian manufacturer Pinarello provided the bikes and Jaguar provided cars, thus enabling the team an easy win in the unofficial "poshest team car" stakes. The team is based in Manchester and maintains a logistics base in Belgium and an operational base in Italy.

Planning to build a British core, the first riders confirmed by the team were Steve Cummings, Peter Kennaugh, Ian Stannard, Chris Froome, Russell Downing and Geraint Thomas. Morris Possoni, Chris Sutton, Michael Barry, Kjell Carlström, John-Lee Augustyn, Greg Henderson, Lars Petter Nordhaug, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Thomas Löfkvist, Kurt Asle Arvesen, Ben Swift, Simon Gerrans, Juan Antonio Flecha, and Bradley Wiggins would join them later.

Sky won its first race, the Cancer Council Helpline Classic in Adelaide at which Greg Henderson and Chris Sutton took the top two places, and then received a wild card entry for the Tour de France alongside invites to the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a Espana. Bradley Wiggins became the first Sky rider to wear a Grand Tour leader's jersey when he won the Giro prologue and, weeks later, Ben Swift won the Tour de Picardie. Immediately a favourite for the Tour, in the end the team was less successful than they had hoped with Thomas Löfkvist's 17th overall being the best result. They withdrew from the Vuelta following the death of soigneur (called a "carer" on Sky's official website, as is the preferred term since Willy Voet tried to drive a car full of drugs over ta border in 1998).

2011 got off to a good start with Ben Swift coming 3rd overall at the Tour Down Under and Flecha and Hunt did well at the Tour of Qatar. Boasson Hagen took the Points Classification and was 2nd overall at the Tour of Oman, then Wiggins finished Paris-Nice in 3rd and Geraint Thomas was 2nd in the Dwars door Vlaanderen. In June, Wiggins won the Critérium du Dauphiné, a race that is frequently considered to reveal riders destined for future Tour success and thus making himself a favourite when the Tour began. However, he abandoned with a broken collar bone after a crash involving several riders in Stage 7, the day after Boasson Hagen had won Sky's first ever Tour Stage and the race ended with Rigoberto Urán the highest-placed Sky rider at 24th overall. Chris Froome would later win Stage 17 at the Vuelta, dropping Geox-TMC's surprise star Juan José Cobo as they fought towards the finish line at the summit of Peña Cabarga.

Bradley Wiggins becomes the first
British Tour de France winner, 2012
Sky's mission statement, the reason it had been brought into existence, was also announced that day: they were going to deliver Britain its first ever Tour de France winner. Many British cycling fans thought this was something they'd never see, but early in 2012 it became apparent that Sky had evolved into an extraordinarily professional, well-drilled team: Edvald Boasson Hagen won the Sprint Classification victory at the Tour Down Under in January followed by the same title at the Volta ao Algarve, where team mate Richie Porte won the General Classification and the team won the Team Classification. What's more, Bradley Wiggins had found the greatest form of his career so far, winning Paris-Nice and the Tour de Romandie a few months later - excellent results that saw him become the favourite for the Tour de France. In fact, Wiggins didn't merely win the Tour, he dominated it; taking the General Classification lead from Fabian Cancellara in Stage 7 before retaining it through to the end of the race, also winning Stages 9 and 19. Meanwhile, new team member Mark Cavendish (who would leave for Omega Pharma-Quickstep at the end of the season) won Stages 2, 18 and 20 while Chris Froome won Stage 7 before coming second overall and then in 2013, Froome won. Sky's mission statement had stated that the first British win would come within three years - in four and half, they managed two.


Gee Atherton
Gee Atherton
(image credit: Courtney Nash CC BY 2.0
George David "Gee" Atherton, one of Britain's most successful mountain bikers, was born on this day in 1985 near Salisbury. His first major success was a bronze medal for the Downhill Race at the British National Mountain Bike Championships in 2000, when he raced in the Youth Class. He won the same event in 2001, again as a Youth, then again in 2002 and 2003 as a Junior and in 2004 as an Elite rider - the same year he won Round 3 of the UCI Downhill Cup; which he would win outright in 2010 when he beat three-time champion Greg Minnaar.

Like many downhill riders, Gee also rides 4X - a race in which four riders compete against one another on a downhill course featuring prepared BMX-style jumps. He won Round 1 of the UCI 4X Cup in 2007 along with the European Downhill Championship, but has tended to leave 4X for older brother Dan. He won the UCI Downhill Championships in 2008, the same year younger sister Rachel won the Women's Class, then took British Downhill Championship in 2009 and the UCI World Downhill Cup the following year.


Connie Carpenter-Phinney
Now retired, Connie Carpenter-Phinney was one of the many cyclists to have also excelled in speed skating. She was born in Madison, USA on this day in 1957. In 1972 when she was 14, she competed in the speed skating event at the Winter Olympics; thus becoming the youngest American athlete to take part in the history of the Winter Games (a record that still stands).

On the bike, she won the National Road and Track Pursuit Championships in 1976, 1977 and 1979 and was victorious in numerous criterium races. She won an Olympic cycling gold medal in 1984 after beating Rebecca Twigg in a sprint. She is married to Davis Phinney, the first US rider to win a stage at the Tour de France and the couple have two children, one of whom - Taylor - is himself a professional cyclist, a three-time World Pursuit Champion and winner of two editions of the Under-23 Paris-Roubaix.


On this day in 2005, Victoria Pendleton set a new British Women's Record when she completed the 1000m Time Trial in 1'10.854".


Other cyclists born on this day: Jan Jansen (Netherlands, 1945); Kwok Ho Ting (Hong Kong, 1988); Gerard van Vliet (Aruba, 1964); Dorus Nijland (Netherlands, 1880, died 1968); Guo Shuang (China, 1986); Bogdan Yanchev (Bulgaria, 1913); Svatopluk Buchta (Czechoslovakia, 1966); Pavel Tesař (Czechoslovakia, 1967); Billy Kerr (Ireland, 1945); Frank Verleyen (Belgium, 1963); Artūras Kasputis (USSR, 1967); Bruno Loatti (Italy, 1915, died 1962); Ferenc Habony (Hungary, 1945); Yves Van Massenhove (Belgium, 1909, died 1990).

Monday, 25 February 2013

Daily Cycling Facts 25.02.2013

Team Sky's first race, the 2010 Cancer
Council Helpline Classic
(image credit: Ant CC BY 2.0
Team Sky
On this day in 2009, the creation of Team Sky was announced. Sponsored by the satellite television broadcasting, telephony and broadband internet provided BSkyB, the team is managed by Dave Brailsford and began with an annual budget of more than £30 million. Other sponsors included IG Markets, Marks&Spencer, Gatorade and Oakley. Italian manufacturer Pinarello provided the bikes and Jaguar provided cars, thus enabling the team an easy win in the unofficial "poshest team car" stakes. The team is based in Manchester and maintains a logistics base in Belgium and an operational base in Italy.

Planning to build a British core, the first riders confirmed by the team were Steve Cummings, Peter Kennaugh, Ian Stannard, Chris Froome, Russell Downing and Geraint Thomas. Morris Possoni, Chris Sutton, Michael Barry, Kjell Carlström, John-Lee Augustyn, Greg Henderson, Lars Petter Nordhaug, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Thomas Löfkvist, Kurt Asle Arvesen, Ben Swift, Simon Gerrans, Juan Antonio Flecha, and Bradley Wiggins would join them later.

Sky won its first race, the Cancer Council Helpline Classic in Adelaide at which Greg Henderson and Chris Sutton took the top two places, and then received a wild card entry for the Tour de France alongside invites to the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a Espana. Bradley Wiggins became the first Sky rider to wear a Grand Tour leader's jersey when he won the Giro prologue and, weeks later, Ben Swift won the Tour de Picardie. Immediately a favourite for the Tour, in the end the team was less successful than they had hoped with Thomas Löfkvist's 17th overall being the best result. They withdrew from the Vuelta following the death of soigneur (called a "carer" on Sky's official website, as is the preferred term since Willy Voet tried to drive a car full of drugs over ta border in 1998).

2011 got off to a good start with Ben Swift coming 3rd overall at the Tour Down Under and Flecha and Hunt did well at the Tour of Qatar. Boasson Hagen took the Points Classification and was 2nd overall at the Tour of Oman, then Wiggins finished Paris-Nice in 3rd and Geraint Thomas was 2nd in the Dwars door Vlaanderen. In June, Wiggins won the Critérium du Dauphiné, a race that is frequently considered to reveal riders destined for future Tour success and thus making himself a favourite when the Tour began. However, he abandoned with a broken collar bone after a crash involving several riders in Stage 7, the day after Boasson Hagen had won Sky's first ever Tour Stage and the race ended with Rigoberto Urán the highest-placed Sky rider at 24th overall. Chris Froome would later win Stage 17 at the Vuelta, dropping Geox-TMC's surprise star Juan José Cobo as they fought towards the finish line at the summit of Peña Cabarga.

Bradley Wiggins becomes the first
British Tour de France winner, 2012
Sky's mission statement, the reason it had been brought into existence, was also announced that day: they would, they promised, win a Tour de France within five years - something no British rider nor British team had ever done and something many British cycling fans thought they would never see. However, early in 2012 it became apparent that Sky had evolved into an extraordinarily professional, well-drilled team: Edvald Boasson Hagen won the Sprint Classification victory at the Tour Down Under in January followed by the same title at the Volta ao Algarve, where team mate Richie Porte won the General Classification and the team won the Team Classification. What's more, Bradley Wiggins had found the greatest form of his career so far, winning Paris-Nice and the Tour de Romandie a few months later - excellent results that saw him become the favourite for the Tour de France. In fact, Wiggins didn't merely win the Tour, he dominated it; taking the General Classification lead from Fabian Cancellara in Stage 7 before retaining it through to the end of the race, also winning Stages 9 and 19. Meanwhile, new team member Mark Cavendish (who would leave for Omega Pharma-Quickstep at the end of the season) won Stages 2, 18 and 20 while Chris Froome won Stage 7 before coming second overall. Sky had been in existence for just three and a half years.

Gee Atherton
Gee Atherton
(image credit: Courtney Nash CC BY 2.0
George David "Gee" Atherton, one of Britain's most successful mountain bikers, was born on this day in 1985 near Salisbury. His first major success was a bronze medal for the Downhill Race at the British National Mountain Bike Championships in 2000, when he raced in the Youth Class. He won the same event in 2001, again as a Youth, then again in 2002 and 2003 as a Junior and in 2004 as an Elite rider - the same year he won Round 3 of the UCI Downhill Cup; which he would win outright in 2010 when he beat three-time champion Greg Minnaar.

Like many downhill riders, Gee also rides 4X - a race in which four riders compete against one another on a downhill course featuring prepared BMX-style jumps. He won Round 1 of the UCI 4X Cup in 2007 along with the European Downhill Championship, but has tended to leave 4X for older brother Dan. He won the UCI Downhill Championships in 2008, the same year younger sister Rachel won the Women's Class, then took British Downhill Championship in 2009 and the UCI World Downhill Cup the following year.

Connie Carpenter-Phinney
Now retired, Connie Carpenter-Phinney was one of the many cyclists to have also excelled in speed skating. She was born in Madison, USA on this day in 1957. In 1972 when she was 14, she competed in the speed skating event at the Winter Olympics; thus becoming the youngest American athlete to take part in the history of the Winter Games (a record that still stands).

On the bike, she won the National Road and Track Pursuit Championships in 1976, 1977 and 1979 and was victorious in numerous criterium races. She won an Olympic cycling gold medal in 1984 after beating Rebecca Twigg in a sprint. She is married to Davis Phinney, the first US rider to win a stage at the Tour de France and the couple have two children, one of whom - Taylor - is himself a professional cyclist, a three-time World Pursuit Champion and winner of two editions of the Under-23 Paris-Roubaix.


On this day in 2005, Victoria Pendleton set a new British Women's Record when she completed the 1000m Time Trial in 1'10.854".


Other cyclists born on this day: Jan Jansen (Netherlands, 1945); Kwok Ho Ting (Hong Kong, 1988); Gerard van Vliet (Aruba, 1964); Dorus Nijland (Netherlands, 1880, died 1968); Guo Shuang (China, 1986); Bogdan Yanchev (Bulgaria, 1913); Svatopluk Buchta (Czechoslovakia, 1966); Pavel Tesař (Czechoslovakia, 1967); Billy Kerr (Ireland, 1945); Frank Verleyen (Belgium, 1963); Artūras Kasputis (USSR, 1967); Bruno Loatti (Italy, 1915, died 1962); Ferenc Habony (Hungary, 1945); Yves Van Massenhove (Belgium, 1909, died 1990).

Sunday, 26 February 2012

All aboard the Sky train!

Cav at Gent-Wevelgem, 2009
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
"Jered Gruber ‏ @jeredgruber
It's funny when something lives up to the hype, tales, and stories. Belgian racing is everything you've heard. All true, no exaggeration."
Even in the early stages of this year's Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne, World Champion Mark Cavendish looked the most likely winner - Team Sky had sent him to the race with seven strong riders, six of them experienced Classics capable of winning this race for themselves (as one of them, Chris Sutton, proved last year). Halfway through they'd got themselves arranged into a clever tactical layout with Cav well-protected to preserve his freshness when the breakaway was pulled back in, but enough of them near the front to have a shot at the line if the break made it.

With 50km to go, the outcome looked even more certain. By now Sky looked as though they riding a team time trial - turning a big ring, eating up the miles and paying little attention to the break that had split into weaker, competing groups and thus doomed itself. They waited until the 20km to go point before picking up the pace and beginning to put pressure on Lotto-Belisol; home to Andre Greipel, the only rider in this race with a chance of stopping Cav.

A small amount of lost time with a slightly fudged right corner as the Manx star avoided street furniture made no difference and by the time they entered the final 5km the team had formed a spearhead at the front of the peloton, too confident in their abilities to trouble themselves unduely when FDJ briefly took over. In the end, it was an easy win - Sky's strategy ran like clockwork, and Cav hardly broke into a sweat as he crossed the line to take his first victory of 2012. FDJ's Yahueni Hutarovich tried to catch him, but by the time he'd got his front wheel level with the Missile's back wheel the 26-year-old was already sitting up in celebration. There are those who will complain it wasn't the exciting, heroic triumph that fans expect from the Classics, but it was a superbly clever one - because it worked so well and for the psychological effect: if Cav can do that without even trying, what can he do when he makes an effort?

That a British rider has won a Classic would always be good news; but the fact that it was Cav is better still. Right now, cycling is on the cusp of becoming bigger than it has ever been in this country; perhaps bigger even than it has been in France for many years. Cav is the highest-profile rider since Tom Simpson, maybe even more so, and today's victory will make it onto more than a few news reports tonight - each time that happens, the British public like cycling just a little bit more. Nice one, Mark. Tom would've been proud.

(results below)

Mark Cavendish is the first British rider to win this race and the first current World Champion
to do so since Johan Museeuw in 1997. It's also the second win here in two years for Sky as
Christopher Sutton won last year.

Results

1     Mark Cavendish (GBr) Sky Procycling 4:27:30
2     Yauheni Hutarovich (Blr) FDJ-Big Mat
3     Kenny Robert Van Hummel (Ned) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team
4 Arnaud Demare (Fra) FDJ-Big Mat  
5 Alexander Serebryakov (Rus) Team Type 1 - Sanofi  
6 Tom Veelers (Ned) Project 1t4i  
7 Sébastien Chavanel (Fra) Team Europcar  
8 Stefan Van Dijk (Ned) Accent Jobs - Willems Veranda's  
9 Alexander Kristoff (Nor) Katusha Team  
10 André Greipel (Ger) Lotto Belisol Team
11 Guillaume Boivin (Can) Spidertech p/b C10  
12 Aidis Kruopis (Ltu) GreenEdge Cycling Team  
13 Manuel Belletti (Ita) AG2R La Mondiale  
14 Adrien Petit (Fra) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne  
15 Mark Renshaw (Aus) Rabobank Cycling Team  
16 Adam Blythe (GBr) BMC Racing Team  
17 Guillaume Blot (Fra) Bretagne - Schuller  
18 Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin-Cervelo  
19 Luca Paolini (Ita) Katusha Team  
20 Leif Hoste (Bel) Accent Jobs - Willems Veranda's  
21 Alessandro Bazzana (Ita) Team Type 1 - Sanofi  
22 Jean-Pierre Drucker (Lux) Accent Jobs - Willems Veranda's  
23 Michaël Van Staeyen (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator  
24 Romain Feillu (Fra) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
25 Steven Caethoven (Bel) Accent Jobs - Willems Veranda's  
26 Alexander Porsev (Rus) Katusha Team  
27 Davy Commeyne (Bel) Landbouwkrediet  
28 Gert Steegmans (Bel) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
29 Pier Paolo De Negri (Ita) Farnese Vini - Selle Italia  
30 Martin Gilbert (Can) Spidertech p/b C10  
31 Baptiste Planckaert (Bel) Landbouwkrediet  
32 Timon Seubert (Ger) Team NetApp  
33 Laurens De Vreese (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator  
34 Thomas Leezer (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team  
35 Gediminas Bagdonas (Ltu) An Post - Sean Kelly  
36 Tom Van Asbroeck (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator  
37 Yukiya Arashiro (Jpn) Team Europcar  
38 Robin Stenuit (Bel) Wallonie Bruxelles - Credit Agricole  
39 Rony Martias (Fra) Saur - Sojasun  
40 Jens Keukeleire (Bel) GreenEdge Cycling Team  
41 Christopher Sutton (Aus) Sky Procycling  
42 Tom Boonen (Bel) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
43 Kevin Lacombe (Can) Spidertech p/b C10  
44 James Vanlandschoot (Bel) Accent Jobs - Willems Veranda's  
45 Fabio Polazzi (Bel) Wallonie Bruxelles - Credit Agricole  
46 Sébastien Turgot (Fra) Team Europcar  
47 Edwig Cammaerts (Bel) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne  
48 Sven Vandousselaere (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator  
49 Grischa Janorschke (Ger) Team NetApp  
50 Maxime Vantomme (Bel) Katusha Team  
51 Jean-Lou Paiani (Fra) Saur - Sojasun  
52 Michael Schär (Swi) BMC Racing Team  
53 Kris Boeckmans (Bel) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
54 Martijn Maaskant (Ned) Garmin-Cervelo  
55 Christophe Laborie (Fra) Saur - Sojasun  
56 Niels Wytinck (Bel) An Post - Sean Kelly  
57 Nikolas Maes (Bel) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
58 Pieter Ghyllebert (Bel) An Post - Sean Kelly  
59 Lloyd Mondory (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale  
60 Renaud Dion (Fra) Bretagne - Schuller  
61 Guillaume Van Keirsbulck (Bel) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
62 Mirko Selvaggi (Ita) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
63 Klaas Lodewyck (Bel) BMC Racing Team  
64 Egidijus Juodvalkis (Ltu) Landbouwkrediet  
65 Alexey Tsatevitch (Rus) Katusha Team  
66 Stijn Neirynck (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator  
67 Roy Curvers (Ned) Project 1t4i  
68 David Boucher (Fra) FDJ-Big Mat  
69 Taylor Phinney (USA) BMC Racing Team  
70 Kevin Hulsmans (Bel) Farnese Vini - Selle Italia  
71 Johan Le Bon (Fra) Bretagne - Schuller  
72 Florent Barle (Fra) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne  
73 Markus Eichler (Ger) Team NetApp  
74 Vicente Reynes Mimo (Spa) Lotto Belisol Team  
75 Matti Helminen (Fin) Landbouwkrediet  
76 Philippe Legrand (Bel) Wallonie Bruxelles - Credit Agricole  
77 Hugo Houle (Can) Spidertech p/b C10  
78 Jimmy Engoulvent (Fra) Saur - Sojasun  
79 Stijn Ennekens (Bel) An Post - Sean Kelly  
80 Ian Stannard (GBr) Sky Procycling  
81 Jack Bauer (NZl) Garmin-Cervelo  
82 Travis Meyer (Aus) GreenEdge Cycling Team  
83 Vegard Stake Laengen (Nor) Team Type 1 - Sanofi  
84 Danilo Wyss (Swi) BMC Racing Team  
85 Martin Mortensen (Den) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
86 Romain Lemarchand (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale  
87 Vincent Jerome (Fra) Team Europcar  
88 Kevin Van Impe (Bel) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
89 Juan Antonio Flecha Giannoni (Spa) Sky Procycling  
90 Jonas Van Genechten (Bel) Lotto Belisol Team  
91 Laszlo Bodrogi (Fra) Team Type 1 - Sanofi  
92 Mathew Hayman (Aus) Sky Procycling  
93 Sébastien Hinault (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale  
94 Greg Henderson (NZl) Lotto Belisol Team  
95 Stijn Vandenbergh (Bel) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
96 Johan Vansummeren (Bel) Garmin-Cervelo  
97 Ole Gabriel Rasch (Nor) FDJ-Big Mat  
98 Mark Mcnally (GBr) An Post - Sean Kelly  
99 Laurent Evrard (Bel) Wallonie Bruxelles - Credit Agricole  
100 Maarten Wynants (Bel) Rabobank Cycling Team  
101 Greg Van Avermaet (Bel) BMC Racing Team  
102 Jérémie Galland (Fra) Saur - Sojasun  
103 Steve Houanard (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale  
104 Jetse Bol (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team  
105 Stijn Devolder (Bel) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
106 Koen Barbe (Bel) Landbouwkrediet  
107 Lars Boom (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team  
108 Marco Haller (Aut) Katusha Team  
109 Martin Elmiger (Swi) AG2R La Mondiale  
110 Luca Mazzanti (Ita) Farnese Vini - Selle Italia  
111 Manuel Quinziato (Ita) BMC Racing Team 0:00:20  
112 Alessandro Ballan (Ita) BMC Racing Team  
113 Frederik Willems (Bel) Lotto Belisol Team 0:00:29  
114 Dennis Van Winden (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team 0:00:35  
115 Jens Debusschere (Bel) Lotto Belisol Team  
116 Dominique Rollin (Can) FDJ-Big Mat  
117 William Bonnet (Fra) FDJ-Big Mat  
118 Egoitz Garcia Echeguibel (Spa) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne 0:00:40  
119 Wouter Mol (Ned) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team  
120 Niko Eeckhout (Bel) An Post - Sean Kelly  
121 Marcel Sieberg (Ger) Lotto Belisol Team  
122 Jeremy Hunt (GBr) Sky Procycling 0:01:30  
123 Matti Breschel (Den) Rabobank Cycling Team 0:01:46  
124 John Degenkolb (Ger) Project 1t4i 0:01:54  
125 Sylvain Chavanel (Fra) Omega Pharma-Quickstep  
126 Matthieu Ladagnous (Fra) FDJ-Big Mat 0:02:08  
127 Sébastien Delfosse (Bel) Landbouwkrediet  
128 Aliaksandr Kuschynski (Blr) Katusha Team 0:02:12  
129 Kristof Goddaert (Bel) AG2R La Mondiale 0:02:19  
130 Jan Ghyselinck (Bel) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne  
131 Thomas Voeckler (Fra) Team Europcar  
132 Alex Dowsett (GBr) Sky Procycling 0:03:05  
133 Bernard Eisel (Aut) Sky Procycling  
134 Jimmy Casper (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale 0:03:31  
135 Martijn Verschoor (Ned) Team Type 1 - Sanofi  
136 Jérôme Baugnies (Bel) Team NetApp 0:04:52  
137 Tom Stamsnijder (Ned) Project 1t4i 0:05:25  
138 Oscar Gatto (Ita) Farnese Vini - Selle Italia  
139 Matthew Wilson (Aus) GreenEdge Cycling Team


Daily Cycling Facts 26.02.12

Team Sky's first race, the 2010 Cancer
Council Helpline Classic
(image credit: Ant CC BY 2.0
Team Sky
On this day in 2009, the creation of Team Sky was announced - as was their intention to win the Tour de France within five years. Sponsored by the satellite television broadcasting, telephony and broadband internet provided BSkyB, the team is managed by Dave Brailsford and began with an annual budget of more than £30 million. Other sponsors included IG Markets, Marks&Spencer, Gatorade and Oakley. Italian manufacturer Pinarello provided the bikes and Jaguar provided cars, thus enabling the team an easy win in the unofficial "poshest team car" stakes. The team is based in Manchester and maintains a logistics base in Belgium and an operational base in Italy.

Planning to build a British core, the first riders confirmed by the team were Steve Cummings, Peter Kennaugh, Ian Stannard, Chris Froome, Russell Downing and Geraint Thomas. Morris Possoni, Chris Sutton, Michael Barry, Kjell Carlström, John-Lee Augustyn, Greg Henderson, Lars Petter Nordhaug, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Thomas Löfkvist, Kurt Asle Arvesen, Ben Swift, Simon Gerrans, Juan Antonio Flecha, and Bradley Wiggins would join them later.

Sky won its first race, the Cancer Council Helpline Classic in Adelaide at which Greg Henderson and Chris Sutton took the top two places, and then received a wild card entry for the Tour de France alongside invites to the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a Espana. Bradley Wiggins became the first Sky rider to wear a Grand Tour leader's jersey when he won the Giro prologue and, weeks later, Ben Swift won the Tour de Picardie. Immediately a favourite for the Tour, in the end the team was less successful than they had hoped with Thomas Löfkvist's 17th overall being the best result. They withdrew from the Vuelta following the death of soigneur (called a "carer" on Sky's official website, as is the preferred term since Willy Voet tried to drive a car full of drugs over ta border in 1998).

2011 got off to a good start with Ben Swift coming 3rd overall at the Tour Down Under and Flecha and Hunt did well at the Tour of Qatar. Boasson Hagen took the Points Classification and was 2nd overall at the Tour of Oman, then Wiggins finished Paris-Nice in 3rd and Geraint Thomas was 2nd in the Dwars door Vlaanderen. In June, Wiggins won the Critérium du Dauphiné, a race that is frequently considered to reveal riders destined for future Tour success and thus making himself a favourite when the Tour began. However, he abandoned with a broken collar bone after a crash involving several riders in Stage 7, the day after Boasson Hagen had won Sky's first ever Tour Stage and the race ended with Rigoberto Urán the highest-placed Sky rider at 24th overall. Chris Froome would later win Stage 17 at the Vuelta, dropping Geox-TMC's surprise star Juan José Cobo as they fought towards the finish line at the summit of Peña Cabarga.

Gee Atherton
Gee Atherton
(image credit: Courtney Nash CC BY 2.0
George David "Gee" Atherton, one of Britain's most successful mountain bikers, was born on this day in 1985 near Salisbury. His first major success was a bronze medal for the Downhill Race at the British National Mountain Bike Championships in 2000, when he raced in the Youth Class. He won the same event in 2001, again as a Youth, then again in 2002 and 2003 as a Junior and in 2004 as an Elite rider - the same year he won Round 3 of the UCI Downhill Cup; which he would win outright in 2010 when he beat three-time champion Greg Minnaar.

Like many downhill riders, Gee also rides 4X - a race in which four riders compete against one another on a downhill course featuring prepared BMX-style jumps. He won Round 1 of the UCI 4X Cup in 2007 along with the European Downhill Championship, but has tended to leave 4X for older brother Dan. He won the UCI Downhill Championships in 2008, the same year younger sister Rachel won the Women's Class, then took British Downhill Championship in 2009 and the UCI World Downhill Cup the following year.

Connie Carpenter-Phinney
Now retired, Connie Carpenter-Phinney was one of the many cyclists to have also excelled in speed skating. She was born in Madison, USA on this day in 1957. In 1972 when she was 14, she competed in the speed skating event at the Winter Olympics; thus becoming the youngest American athlete to take part in the history of the Winter Games (a record that still stands).

On the bike, she won the National Road and Track Pursuit Championships in 1976, 1977 and 1979 and was victorious in numerous criterium races. She won an Olympic cycling gold medal in 1984 after beating Rebecca Twigg in a sprint. She is married to Davis Phinney, the first US rider to win a stage at the Tour de France and the couple have two children, one of whom - Taylor - is himself a professional cyclist, a three-time World Pursuit Champion and winner of two editions of the Under-23 Paris-Roubaix.


On this day in 2005, Victoria Pendleton set a new British Women's Record when she completed the 1000m Time Trial in 1'10.854".


Other births: Jan Jansen (Netherlands, 1945); Kwok Ho Ting (Hong Kong, 1988); Gerard van Vliet (Aruba, 1964); Dorus Nijland (Netherlands, 1880, died 1968); Guo Shuang (China, 1986); Bogdan Yanchev (Bulgaria, 1913); Svatopluk Buchta (Czechoslovakia, 1966); Pavel Tesař (Czechoslovakia, 1967); Billy Kerr (Ireland, 1945); Frank Verleyen (Belgium, 1963); Artūras Kasputis (USSR, 1967); Bruno Loatti (Italy, 1915, died 1962); Ferenc Habony (Hungary, 1945); Yves Van Massenhove (Belgium, 1909, died 1990).

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

Cav to Sky!

After months of speculation comes confirmation



In spite of the rumour mill going into overdrive over the last couple of weeks and all sorts of worries that it wouldn't happen due to problems with sponsors and bike suppliers, it's finally official - World Champion Mark Cavendish has joined the British-based Team Sky.

Though his eventual destination seemed virtually a foregone conclusion following the announcement that HTC-Highroad boss Bob Stapleton had been forced to release Cav and his team-mates following difficulties in securing new sponsorship, rumours and theories that he might go elsewhere soon surfaced - in the last week, one of the more convincing ones centred around the merging Omega Pharma-Lotto and Quick-Step's new agreement with Specialized. However, a comment made by Bernhard Eisel (who will also ride with Sky next year) apparently revealed the truth.

Confirmation came late on Tuesday afternoon, with Sky boss Dave Brailsford publishing the following statement on Sky's website:

"Mark is the greatest sprinter of his generation and is well on his way to becoming the greatest of all time. He is a rider of exceptional talent who has proved his pedigree at the very highest level of our sport.
Mark is a born winner and what excites me most is the attitude he brings to all the teams he rides for. We want to inspire more fans to get into cycling and I can think of no one better to help us do that. We are delighted that the new world champion will be riding for Team Sky next season."
Mark himself then provided further confirmation by Tweeting the message seen at the top of this article.


What does this mean for the future of British cycling? First and foremost, we now have in Sky what is far and away the strongest British-based ProTeam that has ever put cleat to pedal. Alongside Cav, Bradley Wiggins, Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas are among the most effective General Classification contenders in the world today, while the rest of the team - including the next generation superstars Edvald Boasson Hagen, Ben Swift and Alex Dowsett - are more than capable of racking up win after win and adding points to the grand total.

Will 2012 bring us the first ever Tour de France win by a British team and/or rider? It's looking more possible than ever before.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

Cav to Sky confirmed?

Betting news website Bettor.com reports that Omega Pharma-Lotto manager Patrick Lefevere revealed an interesting nugget of information, reinforcing hopes that UCI World Road Champion will be riding with Team Sky in the next season despite contrary rumours.

"This season I have not yet exchanged three words with Cavendish," he told them. "I have negotiated with his friend and teammate Bernhard Eisel. He was quite clear to me and said: 'Sorry, but Mark needs to go to Sky for many reasons and I am going along. We have now been signed.' So, to my knowledge Cavendish is no longer free."

The website also says that in addition to Cav's preference for Specialized bikes over the Pinarellos that Sky are contracted to ride for a three year period there have been problems with sponsors: the Manx sprinter is personally sponsored by Nike, whereas Sky are sponsored by Adidas. As the two sports equipment firms directly compete with one another, he would almost certainly lose Nike's support upon joining Sky.

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Tour de France: Stage 16 Debrief - nice day for ducks, nasty day for Schlecks

Stage 16 began under a dark cloud even though it was unexpectedly warm and sunny at Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux this morning with the sad news that Patrick Guay, a 59-year-old subcontractor working for the Tour, had been found dead. Original reports suggesting that his body had been recovered from a river proved unfounded when the ASO issued a press release stating that he had been found next to his car. Mr. Guay was the uncle of Quick Step rider Jerome Pineau who wore black bands on his arms during the stage as a sign of mourning. Guay was himself a professional cyclist during the 1970s; coming 3rd in Stage 5 of the 1976 Tour de l'Avenir. This was his 27th time working at the race and, for what little it's worth, our sympathy is with his family and friends.

Good to see David Millar riding out at
the front today.
Despite the forecasts of atrocious weather and hazardous conditions throughout the entire parcours the early sections of the race turned out to be pleasant with a decent tailwind to keep the peloton ticking over nicely, making it impossible for a breakaway group to form until later on in the day. The racing began at 13:13 and a Vacansoleil rider mounted an attack immediately but was pulled back in almost immediately.

The peloton remained intact at the 15km point when a gang of four managed to build a brief gap, but with the mighty HTC-Highroad team in the driving seat it was cursed the moment it got going and they were also caught by 16km. Somebody from Sky tried his luck a short while later but had even less success. Another gang, this time numbering eight riders tried again after around 30 minutes of racing, achieving a lead of about 50m at one point, but with the peloton still cruising like fast yachts on the tailwind their fifteen minutes of fame was cut down to just two minutes.

An assortment of others tested the waters, but nothing happened until eventually a group including Juan Antonio Flecha, David Millar, Sylvain Chavenel and others got to work and finally got out in front. They were joined for short while by Confidis' Leonardo Duque who, without obvious cause, signaled for the medics' car - however, he was soon on his way (albeit no longer as part of the breakaway) so it appears whatever problem he was having turned out to be minor.

Lieuwe Westra and then Ryder Hesjedal and Jerome Roy began to counter-attack, encouraging a fifteen man counter-counter-attack to form. Eleven of them, including Johnny Hoogerland caught him and stayed in front of the peloton as the feeding station approached. By now, conditions had worsened and rain was falling, making it reportedly impossible for some riders to release their handlebars and grab the musettes. Rumours began to circulate that race officials were considering abandoning the final loop up and around the Col de Manse with its notoriously difficult descent, but these were rapidly quashed.

Edvald Boasson Hagen took
second place.
By now, as the 91km mark came round, the lead group contained 14 riders including the two Norwegians Thor Hushovd and Edvald Boasson Hagen riding with a gap of just 13", but numbers soon dropped to 10 as various chancers discovered they were unable to match the pace and effort of keeping ahead of a peloton which had recorded an average speed of 46.4kmph during the second hour of the race.

By now the weather was very wet indeed, reducing visibility and soaking the riders. Temperatures had also dropped sharply to 11 degrees C which, combined with the wet, is easily cold enough to leave riders uncomfortable, demoralised and in pain as muscles begin to seize up.
"shit weather,shit summer,shit morale, shit pain " (@andy_kloedi, Twitter)
Once again, various counter-attackers sought to reel them back into the pack, but none could do so and the gap had soon been increased to over two minutes, allowing them an easy passage through the intermediate sprint - which neither they nor the peloton bothered to contest. Quick Step's Dries Devenyns cruised through with nobody even bothered to contest it - as was the case when the peloton rumbled through - and took the 20 points shortly before Mikhail Ignatyev decided he'd had more than enough of that boring lot and decided to attack, getting himself out in front. 2. Jeremy Roy, 17pts; 3. Tony Martin 15pts; 4. Thor Hushovd 13pts; 5. Rider Hesjedal 11pts; 6. Andriy Grivko 10pts; 7. Marco Marcato 9pts; 8. Mikhail Ignatyev 8pts; 9. Alan Perez Lezaun 7pts; 10. Edvald Boasson Hagen 6pts; 11. Fabrice Jeandesboz 5pts; 12. Samuel Dumoulin 4pts; 13. Bauke Mollema 3pts; 14. Blel Kadri 2pts 15. Sebastien Minard 1pt.

Out on the frontline, Hushovd went to work on Ignatyev and after a fight managed to drag him partially back by the time they passed the 20km to go point before he returned to the group and Devenyns and Perez Lezaun took over pursuit duties, but he managed to increase his advantage to 22" and Andriy Grivko was dropped and began the journey back to the peloton. Hushovd was soon back on the case, this time accompanied by Hesjedal, and they got him down to just 8" on the slopes of the Col de Manse; eventually catching and dropping him with 16km to go.

Mikhail Ignatyev earned the Combativity award.
Then, back in the peloton, something that many people had given up all hope of seeing every again: a classic Contador attack. El Pistolero showed precisely why he should never be underestimated when he stood up on the pedals and surged ahead for all the world as though there was no gradient at all. Andy Schleck responded, closely followed by brother Frank, soon to be joined by Cadel Evans, Thomas Voeckler and - of all people - Fabian Cancellara who seems recently to have developed the ability to climb, a skill virtually unheard of among time trial specialists.

It appears that Saxobank have been studying Andy very carefully indeed, and they might just have worked out how to defeat him. Contador's team mate Danial Navarro attacked the chasing group, pressuring the two Luxembourgers to put in more effort and then, when Contador attacked again, the Schlecks cracked - neither was able to respond, leaving Cadel Evans to go after and catch him. This was a bigger surprise than the early fine weather and Contador's tactics combined and all of Europe rang with a clicking noise as hundreds of thousands of book-keepers grabbed their calculators and worked out new odds. It seems that the king is not dead after all, but the next-in-line isn't looking too perky.

Up the hill, Samuel Sanchez had joined forces with Evans and Contador after stating that if it came down to it he would offer support to his countryman. Meanwhile, Hushovd and Boasson Hagen were trailing 10" behind Hesjedal out at the front and Martin and Ignatyev were 30" behind them. As the summit passed and the trio began the long and perilous descent, Boasson Hagen took the lead for a while. This section had been predicted to be lethal with a high risk of leaves and mud on sharp bends to add to the dangers of road surfaces already made hazardous by mud. Immediately over the top it looked to be dry, but this turned out to be a small patch that had somehow escaped the rain falling since early morning in the area and conditions turned dangerous very soon.

Evans couldn't catch Contador on the way up - though he remained close - but he got the better of him on the way back down, out-braving the Spaniard around the bends and keeping his speed just that little bit higher. This, however, was all mind games as the pair engaged in a bit of psychological combat, because far ahead the Norwegian/Canadian trio were within 3.5 km of the finish line. There was no doubt now that one of them would be winning the stage, but as of yet no way to tell which. Into the final kilometre, Hesjedal was in the lead with Boasson Hagen right behind him and Hushovd on his rear wheel, so it all came down to a final mini-sprint.

Thor Hushovd, now with Garmin-Cervelo, won his second
stage if the Tour.
Boasson Hagen, proving why he's one of the most respected youth category riders in cycling, was too fast for Hesjedal, beating him across the finish line by 2"; but he wasn't quite fast enough for Hushovd who just pipped him to the post for his second stage win of the Tour as several other riders were still picking their way down into Gap on the descent. Thankfully, only one crash took place - FDJ's Arnold Jeannesson lost his grip at almost the exact same place that Joseba Beloki did back in 2003, though today it certainly was caused by tarmac melting in the sun, this also being one of the exact spots that we predicted a crash was most likely to happen in the Stage 13 Preview, so bow down before us. Oh, and we also predicted Thor as a possible winner too, but we later decided Chavenel was a more likely candidate so we can't really claim success with that one.
"That was great. Good fun that stage. Few more stages like that and we will be in Paris in no time." (Ben Swift, @swiftybswift, Twitter)
The big question today is: what the hell happened to the Schlecks? Can today be seen as proof that Andy's disappointing performance thus far this year has not been down to poor timing, psychological games or plain old sand-bagging and that he's actually just on bad form this year? Ardent Schleckies that we are, we have to confess we're seriously beginning to wonder and no longer believe he can win this Tour. Sorry, Andy.

Frank Schleck revealed his
natural grace today.
We haven't forgotten that highly impressive turn of speed he found as he approached the top of Plateau de Beille and we still think that had he accelerated a little earlier he could have won that stage. Climbers famously suffer more in bad conditions due to their virtually non-existent body fat and both Schlecks will certainly have suffered today as a result. That means there's still just a tiny chance that they'll do well in the real Alps still to come. As Frank said: "Bjarne [Rijs] is behind this. He knows we don't like the bad weather and the descent. Congratulations to them, it's a nice one."

The only trouble is, it's predicted to be 6 degrees C at Sestrieres tomorrow, the Category 1 climb where Andy was expected to do well. Worse still, it snowed today on Galibier and the temperature there is unlikely to climb any higher than 4 degrees for the rest of the week. Like we said - sorry, Andy. Maybe next year.

That Andy is angry would indeed seem to be the case as he uncharacteristically laid into Tour organisers and made his thoughts on the latter part of the stage very clear soon after it was over, though being Andy he kept his language considerably more polite than almost anyone else would have done in his situation: "People don't want a race that is decided in a downhill. We don't want crashes or thoughtless risks," he told reporters. "We have families waiting for us at home. Do the public want a fair race or a race which ends in hospital?"

It has to be said that Andy probably has a point - last week we said we would not support any measure aimed at slowing cycling down, the ASO and UCI obviously have a duty not to endanger riders' health and lives. The descent from Col de Manse is infamous and widely considered one of the Tour's most dangerous and it's arguable that with the treacherous conditions already expected this morning the final loop should have been cancelled.

Anyway; no injuries in those conditions = everyone wins.
"Time lost. Hope remains. Three days in the Alps ahead." (@leopardtrek, Twitter)
"Cool we got a telephone in the room tonight! Think this room is more up to date that last 2 nights!"(a not-that-concerned-about-today @jakob_fuglsang of Team LeopardTrek, Twitter)
Stage 16 Results:

1. HUSHOVD Thor 3h 31' 38"  
2. HAGEN Edvald Boasson + 00' 00"
3. HESJEDAL Ryder + 00' 02"
4. MARTIN Tony + 00' 38"
5. IGNATYEV Mikhail + 00' 52"
6. PEREZ LEZAUN Alan + 01' 25"
7. ROY Jérémy + 01' 25"
8. MARCATO Marco + 01' 55"
9. DEVENYNS Dries + 01' 55"
10. GRIVKO Andriy + 01' 58"



Overall General Classification results following Stage 7:

1. VOECKLER Thomas 69h 00' 56"  
2. EVANS Cadel + 01' 45"
3. SCHLECK Frank + 01' 49"
4. SCHLECK Andy + 03' 03"
5. SANCHEZ Samuel + 03' 26"
6. CONTADOR Alberto + 03' 42"
7. BASSO Ivan + 03' 49"
8. CUNEGO Damiano + 04' 01"
9. DANIELSON Tom + 06' 04"
10. URAN Rigoberto + 07' 55"


Points: Mark Cavendish; Climber: Jelle Vanendert; Youth: Rigoberto Uran; Team: Garmin-Cervelo; Combativity: Mikhail Ignatyev.