Sunday, 26 February 2012

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).

Saturday, 25 February 2012

Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne and live streams

Oude Kwaaremont many only reach 111m above sea level,
but like several of the hills in this race it's one of the most
respected climbs in cycling
(image credit: Marcel Baguette CC BY-SA 3.0)
The Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, the opening event of the Belgian cycling season, is a race for the hard men and women of cycling with its tough hills and bone-shattering cobbles. Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne has more of the same, but less of it. Make no mistake, however - this is not an easy race for anyone. There are some steep hills along the 195km parcours, but with the last one some 50km before the finish line this is a competition that can suit the sprinters; which is a likely reason that in the 67 years the two races have been run nobody has ever managed to win both in a single season.

The race starts in Kuurne but never quite reaches Brussels, turning back at Galmaarden some 25km from the capital. It's on the return that it encounters the low but very steep climbs of the Flemmish Ardennes, taking in some of the same hills as the Omloop but adding a few others for good measure; several of them approaching or even surpassing a 10% gradient. The first is Edelareberg, 28km from the start; then there's La Houppe after 86km; Kanariebeg at 94km; Kruisberg at 99km; Oude Kwaaremont at 105km and cobbled for the last 1.6km; the Cote de Trieu at 119km, Tiegemberg at 131km and finally the entirely cobbled Nokereberg at 142km.

Cav at Gent-Wevelgem, 2009
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0)
Predictions: Several teams are sending the biggest of their hitters to this race - when riders such as Tom Boonen (winner in 2007/2009 and the only rider still active to have won two editions), Andre Greipel and Greg Van Avermaet are competing, it's exceedingly difficult to make a prediction. However, take a look at Team Sky: they have Flecha, an excellent Classics rider albeit one who will be tired from the Omloop; Ian Stannard, who was third here in 2010; Christopher Sutton, who won this race last year; Jeremy Hunt, third in 2009; Mathew Hayman, a rider who has specialised in the cobbled Classics for almost a decade and Alex Dowsett, young, eager and looking for glory. Six good, strong riders, each of them capable of winning this race on a good day.

They also have Mark Cavendish. We all know that Cav can't climb, but while the hills of the K-B-K are steep none are long in comparison to the giants of the Grand Tours - and while it takes him a long time and a lot of effort to get up those, get up them he does. If Sky can get him to those last 50km in one piece, protect him until the finish line is in sight and then light the blue touchpaper, there's only one possible outcome. 

It'll be tough to do it, but would leave no doubts that Sky is now complete and ready to take on the world. That is a prize that will encourage heroic effort. (It'll also be the third anniversary of the day when Team Sky was announced to the world, so what better way to celebrate?)

(start lists, live streams and other shiny stuff after the map...)

click to enlarge
Sports-Livez live streams 1 / 2 / 3 / 4  / 5 / 6
Sporza
(available from 14:00 CET/13:00 GMT, 26th of February)


Tickers: If you're stuck at work and your idiot boss thinks that watching cycling isn't important, you can still follow the action via a live ticker (which is far harder for anyone to notice on your screen). Several are available, including some that autotranslate into English with varying and sometimes amusing degrees of success, such as Sporza and Sport.be. Cycling News has one in English, though in our experience they're not as quick with the updates as the foreign tickers.

Weather: Little change from the Omloop, which benefitted from what was probably about the best weather a Belgian February can offer. If anything, a little warmer due to lighter wind. While it may be cloudier, no rain is expected.

Starters
SKY
Team (GBR)
1.
Cavendish
Mark
 (GBR)
2.
Sutton
Chris (AUS)
3.
Flecha
Juan
Antonio (ESP)
4.
Dowsett
Alex (GBR)
5.
Barry
Michael (CAN))
6.
Hunt
Jeremy (GBR)
7.
Haymann
Matthew (AUS)
8.
Stannard
Ian (GBR)

OMEGA
PHARMA_‐
QUICK‐STEP (BEL)
11.
Boonen
Tom
12.
Steegmans
Gert
13.
Velits
Martin (SVK)
14.
Ciolek
Gerhald (GER)


15.
Van
Keirsbulck
Guillaume
16.
Maes
Nikolas
17.
Terpstra
Niki (NED)
18.
Vandenbergh
Stijn

LOTTO
‐
BELISOL (BEL)
21.
Greipel
Andre (GER)
22.
Henderson
Greg (AUS)
23.
Bak
Lars (DEN)
24.
Reynes
Vicente (ESP)
25

Sieberg
Marcel (GER)
26
.Cordeel
Sander
27.
Van
Genechten
Jonas
28.
Willems
Frederik

KATUSHA (RUS)
31.
Paolini
Enrico (ITA)
32.
Galymzyanov
Denis (RUS)
33.
Kristoff
Alexandr
 (NOR)
34.
Gusev
Vladimir (RUS)
35.
Kuchynski
Aleksandr (BLR)
36

Selig
Reudiger (GER)
37.
Haller
Marco (AUT)
38.
Isaychev
Vladimir (RUS)

RABOBANK (NED)
41.
Renshaw
Mark (AUS)
42.
Breschel
Matti (DEN)
43.
Tankink
Bram (NED)

44.
Bol
Jetse (NED)

45.
Leezer
Tom (NED)
46.
Wijnants
Maarten
47.
Flens
Rick (NED)
48.
van
Winden
Dennis (NED)

GARMIN
‐
BARRACUDA (USA)
51,
Farrar
Tyler (USA)
52.
Klier
Andreas (GER)
53.
Maaskant
Martijn (NED‐)
54.
Kreder
Michel (NED)
55.
Fischer
Murilo
 (BRA))
56.
Rarthe
Jacob (USA)
57.
Bauer
Jack (NZL)
58.
Rosseler
Sebastien

GREENEDGE (AUS)
61.
Keukeleire
Jens
62.
Kruopis
Aidis (LIT)
63.
Meyer
Travis (AUS)
64.
Mouris
Jens (NED)
65.
Docker
Mitchel (AUS)
66.
Vaitkus
Thomas (LIT)
67.
Tuft
Svein (CAN)
68.
Wilson
Matthew (AUS)

FARNESE
VIVI

–
SELLE
ITALIA (GBR)
71.
Pozzato
Filippo (ITA)
72.
Balloni
Alfredo (ITA)
73.
Gatto
Oscar (ITA)
74.
Favilli
Elia (ITA)
75.
Mazzanti
Luca (ITA)
76.
Hulsmans
Kevin
77.
Giordani
Leonardo (ITA)
78.
Riccibitti
Davide (ITA)

BMC
RACING
TEAM. (USA)
81.
Ballan
Alesandro (ITA)
82.
Van
Avermaet
Greg
83.
Phinney
Taylor (USA)
84.
Quinziato
Manuel (ITA)
85.
Blythe
Adam (GBR)
86.
Schär
Michael (SUI°
87.
Wyss
Danilo (SUI)
88.
Lodewyck
Klaas

AG
2R
–
LA
MONDIALE (FRA)
91.
Elmiger
Martin (SUI)
92.
Goddaert
Kristof
93.
Hinault
Sébastien (FRA)
94.
Shpilevskiy
Boris (RUS)
95.
Casper
Jimmy (FRA)
96.
Belletti
Manuel (ITA)
97.
Mondory
Lloyd (FRA)
98.
Ravard
Anthony (FRA)

VACANSOLEIL
–
DCM (NED)
101.
Devolder
Stijn
102.
Van
Hummel
Kenny (NED)
103.
Feillu
Romain (FRA)
104.
Boeckmans
Kris
105.
Mol
Wouter (NED)
106.
Mortensen
Martin (DEN)
107.Selvaggi
Mirko (ITA)

108.
Pavarin
Marcello (ITA)

TEAM
NETAPP (GER)
111.
Schillinger
Andreas (GER)‘
112.
Seubert
Timon (GER)
113.
Koenig
Leopold (GER)
114.
Barta
Jan (CZE)
115.
Benedetti
Cesare (ITA)
116.
Schorn
Daniel (AUT)
117.
Huzarski
Bartosz (POL)
118.
Dietziker
Andreas (SUI)

FDJ_‐
BIG
MAT (FRA)
121.
Hutarovich
Yauheni (BLR)
122.
Bonnet
William (FRA)
123.
Rasch
Gabriel (NOR)
124.
Guesdon
Frédéric (FRA)
125.
Boucher
David (FRA)
126.
Ladagnous
Matthieu (FRA)
127
.Demare
Arnaud (FRA)
128.
Rollin
Dominique (CAN)

ACCENT
JOBS‐WILLEMS
VERANDA’S
 (BEL)
131.
Hoste
Leif
132.
Van
Dijk
Stefan (NED)
133.
Drucker
Jempy (LUX)
134.
Cappelle
Andy
135.
Van
Landschoot
James
136.
De
Wilfde
Sjef
137.
Goris
Rob
138.
Caethoven
Steven

EUROPCAR (FRA)
141
.Voeckler

Thomas (FRA)
142.
Arashiro
Yukiiya (JPN)

143.
Chavanel
Sébastien (FRA)
144.
Gaudin
Damien (FRA)
145.
Haddou
Said (FRA)
146.
Veilleux
David (CAN)
147.
Hurel
Tony (FRA)
148.
Turgot
Sébastien (FRA)

TEAM
TYPE
1
–
SANOFI (USA)

151.
Bodrogi
Laszlo (FRA).
152.
Bazzano
Alessandro (ITA)
153.
Colli
Daniele (ITA)
154.
Eldridge
Joe (USA)
155.
Fortin
Filippo (ITA)
156.
Laengen,
Vegard
Stake (SLO)
157.
Serebrykov

Aleander (RUS)
158.
Verschoor
Martijn (NED)

SAUR
–
SOJASUN. (FRA)
161.
Engoulvant
Jimmy (FRA)
162.
Martias
Rony (FRA)
163.
Galland
Jérémie (FRA)
164.
Laborie
Christophe (FRA)
165.
Lemoine
Cyriel (FRA)
166.
Paiani
Jean‐Lou (FRA)
167.
Coyot
Arnaud (FRA)
168.
Tortelier
Etienne (FRA)

TOPSPORT
VLAANDEREN‐MERCATOR
 (BEL)
171.
Lietaer
Eliot
172
Wallays
Jelle
173.
Neyrinck
Stijn
174.
De
Vreese
Laurens
175.
Vanoverberghe
Arthur
176.
Vanspeybrouck
Pieter
177.
Van
Staeyen
Michael
178.
Vandousselaere
Sven

BRETAGNE
–
SCHULLER (FRA
181.
Dion
Renaud (FRA)


182.
Pichon
Laurent (FRA)
183.
Lequatre
Geoffroy (FRA)
184.
Delpech
Jean‐Luc (FRA)
185.
Blot
Guillaume (FRA)
186.
Lebon
Johan (FRA)
187.
Halleguen Matthieu (FRA)
188.
Vachon
Florian (FRA)

COFIDIS,
le
crédit
en
ligne. (FRA))
191.
Duque
Leonardo (COL)
192.
Fouchard
Julien (FRA)
193.
Saramotins
Aletjej (LET)
194.
Labbe
Arnaud (FRA)
195.
Garcia
Egoitz (ESP)
196.
Barle
Florent (FRA)
197.
Petit
Adrien (FRA)
198.
Demaret
Jean‐François (FRA)

PROJECT
1t4i (NED)
201.
Degenkolb
John (GER))
202.
De
Kort
Koen (NED)
203.
Curvers
Roy (NED)
204.
De
Backer
Bert
205.
Timmer
Albert (NED)
206.
Klemme
Dominic (GER)
207.
Veelers
Tom (NED)
208.
Stamsnijder
Tom (NED)

LANDBOUWKREDIET
 (BEL)
211.
Stallaert
Joeri
212.
Devillers
Gilles
213.
Traksel
Bobbie (NED)
214.
Honig
Reinier (NED)
215.
Claeys
Kevin
216.
Planckaert
Baptiste
217.
Breyne
Jonathan
218.

Delfosse
Sébastien

SPIDERTECH
POWERED
BY
C10 (CAN)
221.
Bell
Zachary (CAN)
222.
Boiven
Guillaume (CAN)


223.
Houle
Hugo (CAN)
224.
Gilbert
Matin (CAN)
225.
Lacombe
Keven (CAN)
226.
Boily
David (CAN))
227.
Mc
Carty
Jonathan (USA)
228.
Seelander
Bjorn (USA)

AN
POST
–
SEAN
KELLY
TEAM (BEL)
231.
Eeckhout
Niko
232.
Ghyllebert
Pieter
233.
Bagdonas
Geminidas (LTU)
234.
Ennekens
Stijn
235.
McNally
Mark (GBR)
236.
Benett
Sam (IRL)
237.
Cassidy
Mark (IRL)
238.
Van
Bilsen
Kenneth

WALLONIE
–
BRU
–
CR.
AGRICOLE
(BEL)
241.
Bertholet
Quentin
242.
De
Witte
Jonathan
243.
Dron
Boris
244.
Everard
Laurent
245.
Polazzi
Fabio
246.
Legrand
Philippe
247.
Stenuit
Robin
248.
Van
Hoecke
Justin

Cycling awakens - Omloop Het Nieuwsblad (with results)

(image credit: Dzipi CC BY-SA 2.0)
Results below.

Today is the day - prepare for the real awakening of a new road cycling season.

Yes, we've had the Tours of Down Under, Qatar and Oman and the UCI continue in their efforts to globalise cycling, but make no mistake - the sport remains (almost) as Eurocentric as ever, and it's not truly out of hibernation before the first of the Classics. Hence the joyous feeling among cyclists everywhere this morning, for today is the day of the legendary Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.

Having begun in 1945 when it was organised by Flemmish newspaper Het Volk - who saw a prime opportunity to grab some public attention when rivals Het Nieuwsblad faced accusations of collaboration after continuing to run the Ronde van Vlaanderen throughout the Second World War (with the help of a few cycling-loving Nazi officers, no less) - now serves as the ideal opportunity to get a look at riders' form. The Grand Tours are still a long way off, but how each individual rider responds to the cold weather and tough cobbles of Northern Europe after spending much of the winter at training camps in balmier climes down south is always illuminating. Het Volk, incidentally, ceased publication in 2008 and was purchased lock, stock and barrel by Het Nieuwsblad, largely so as to be able to take over ownership of this very race - hence the change in the name.

(image credit: Eddy Van Laere CC BY-SA 3.0)
The parcours today is 200.3km in length and, as ever, features a number of short but extremely steep climbs, some on cobbled roads, in addition to the flat cobbled sections that can shake bikes and riders to pieces. The first is Haaghoek, 2km of rough cobbles leading straight into the 6.9% Tenbosse. Kluisberg is not as steep, but it's long and with several shorter climbs in the region it marks what for many riders is the hardest part of the race. Nearer to the end, those who have survived - unlikely to be all those who start - reach Molenberg, a climb that is less than half a kilometre in length yet, due to the mixture of asphalt and jagged cobbles and a gradient that tops 7%, one of the most notorious climbs in cycling.

Who's in with a chance? Most will agree than Tom Boonen and Philippe Gilbert are the most likely winners (and if Gilbert's having an off-day, keep an eye on team mate Greg Van Avermaet - he might do rather well on this parcours and has the form to match); but this early in the season - and on this parcours - quite literally anything could happen. One of the many wonderful things about this race (and several of Belgium' other major races, for that matter) is that the organisers are sufficiently enlightened as to run a Women's event too. It takes a shorter but no less challenging route 119.4km in length, featuring many of the same climbs including the Molenberg. The level of athletic performance among the Elite Women's teams is extraordinarily well-matched at present with several outfits in with a real chance of victory today, which makes predicting a winner with any hope of accuracy far harder than it is for the men's race. If Marianne were here, things would be different - likewise Emma Pooley, arguably the best female climber in the world today, but neither are. That leaves the race wide open and subject to surprise, meaning it could prove the more enthralling of the two events - which makes it even more of a pity that the television networks haven't yet caught up with the organisers and cottoned on to the fact that there's a large potential audience who would like to watch women's cycling on TV.

Live streams available from 13:00 GMT: Sports-Livez 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 (the Women's race won't be shown)

Weather: Thermometers will show around 8-9C at midday and the early afternoon, but a 10km north-westerly wind will take the edge off that and make it feel more like 5C in exposed spots. Rain is not expected anywhere along the parcours.

Parcours here

Elite Men results
(Elite Women results and brief review here)
(Detailed review of the Elite Men's race at Podium Cafe)

1 Sep VANMARCKE BEL GRM 4:52:34
2 Tom BOONEN BEL OPQ +0
3 Juan Antonio FLECHA GIANNONI ESP SKY +0
4 Heinrich HAUSSLER AUS GRM +25
5 Greg VAN AVERMAET BEL BMC +25
6 Marco MARCATO ITA VCD +25
7 Lloyd MONDORY FRA ALM +25
8 Matthieu LADAGNOUS FRA FDJ +25
9 Alexandre PICHOT FRA EUC +25
10 Staf SCHEIRLINCKX BEL ACC +25
11 John DEGENKOLB GER PRO +25
12 Luca PAOLINI ITA KAT +25
13 Maarten WYNANTS BEL RAB +25
14 Kristof GODDAERT BEL ALM +25
15 Bobbie TRAKSEL NED LAN +25
16 Sébastien TURGOT FRA EUC +25
17 Leif HOSTE BEL ACC +25
18 Oscar GATTO ITA FAR +25
19 Jelle WALLAYS BEL TSV +25
20 Frédéric AMORISON BEL LAN +25
21 Sylvain CHAVANEL FRA OPQ +25
22 Davy COMMEYNE BEL LAN +25
23 Bernhard EISEL AUT SKY +25
24 Mathew HAYMAN AUS SKY +25
25 Laurens DE VREESE BEL TSV +25
26 Ian STANNARD SKY +25
27 Christian KNEES GER SKY +25
28 Dominique ROLLIN CAN FDJ +25
29 Thor HUSHOVD NOR BMC +25
30 Matti BRESCHEL DEN RAB +36
31 Philippe GILBERT BEL BMC +41
32 Koen DE KORT NED PRO +41
33 Stijn VANDENBERGH BEL OPQ +51
34 Dries DEVENYNS BEL OPQ +51
35 Andreas KLIER GER GRM +54
36 Bram TANKINK NED RAB +59
37 Marcus BURGHARDT GER BMC +1:05
38 Alessandro BALLAN ITA BMC +1:32
39 Aleksejs SARAMOTINS LAT COF +5:22
40 Kevin HULSMANS BEL FAR +5:22
41 Laszlo BODROGI FRA TT1 +5:30
42 Ramon SINKELDAM NED PRO +5:30
43 Mirko SELVAGGI ITA VCD +5:30
44 Taylor PHINNEY USA BMC +5:30
45 Vegard Stake LAENGEN NOR TT1 +5:30
46 Vicente REYNES MIMO ESP LTB +5:30
47 Jens DEBUSSCHERE BEL LTB +5:30
48 Maxime VANTOMME BEL KAT +5:30
49 Sébastien HINAULT FRA ALM +5:30
50 Marcel SIEBERG GER LTB +5:30
51 Pieter VANSPEYBROUCK BEL TSV +5:30
52 Romain LEMARCHAND FRA ALM +5:30
53 Johan LE BON FRA BSC +5:30
54 Stijn DEVOLDER BEL VCD +5:30
55 James VANLANDSCHOOT BEL ACC +5:30
56 Tomas VAITKUS LTU GEC +5:30
57 Renaud DION FRA BSC +5:30
58 Björn LEUKEMANS BEL VCD +5:30
59 Jens KEUKELEIRE BEL GEC +5:30
60 Arnaud GERARD FRA FDJ +5:30
61 Vincent JEROME FRA EUC +5:30
62 Steve HOUANARD FRA ALM +5:30
63 Anthony GESLIN FRA FDJ +5:30
64 Angelo TULIK FRA EUC +5:30
65 Gerald CIOLEK GER OPQ +5:30
66 Frederik WILLEMS BEL LTB +5:30
67 Manuel QUINZIATO ITA BMC +5:30
68 Mickael DELAGE FRA FDJ +5:30
69 Gabriel RASCH NOR FDJ +5:30
70 Sven VANDOUSSELAERE BEL TSV +5:30
71 Bert DE WAELE BEL LAN +5:30
72 Koen BARBE BEL LAN +5:30
73 Gert STEEGMANS BEL OPQ +5:30
74 Thomas VOECKLER FRA EUC +5:30
75 Jeremy HUNT SKY +5:30
76 Christopher SUTTON AUS SKY +5:30
77 Maarten TJALLINGII NED RAB +5:30
78 Lieuwe WESTRA NED VCD +5:30
79 William BONNET FRA FDJ +5:30
80 Stijn NEIRYNCK BEL TSV +5:30
81 David VEILLEUX CAN EUC +7:45
82 Edwig CAMMAERTS BEL COF +7:45
83 Markus EICHLER GER APP +7:45
84 Evert VERBIST BEL ACC +7:45
85 Rob GORIS BEL ACC +7:45
86 Preben VAN HECKE BEL TSV +7:45
87 Frederik VEUCHELEN BEL VCD +7:45
88 Romain ZINGLE BEL COF +7:45
89 Aliaksandr KUSCHYNSKI BLR KAT +7:45
90 Jack BAUER NZL GRM +7:45
91 Baden COOKE AUS GEC +7:45
92 Dirk BELLEMAKERS NED LAN +7:45
93 Andreas SCHILLINGER GER APP +7:45
94 Guillaume BOIVIN CAN SPI +7:45
95 Jérôme BAUGNIES BEL APP +7:45
96 Michael SCHÄR SUI BMC +7:45
97 Martin ELMIGER SUI ALM +7:45
98 Paul MARTENS GER RAB +7:45
99 Maxim BELKOV RUS KAT +7:45
100 Pier Paolo DE NEGRI ITA FAR +7:45
101 Alexander KRISTOFF NOR KAT +7:45
102 Marco HALLER AUT KAT +7:45
103 Mathieu HALLEGUEN FRA BSC +7:45
104 Florian VACHON FRA BSC +7:45
105 Jean-Lou PAIANI FRA SAU +7:45
106 Manuel BELLETTI ITA ALM +7:45
107 Lars BOOM NED RAB +7:45
108 Martijn MAASKANT NED GRM +7:45
109 Ramunas NAVARDAUSKAS LTU GRM +7:45
110 Nico SIJMENS BEL COF +7:45
111 Egidijus JUODVALKIS LTU LAN +7:45
112 Carlos BARREDO LLAMAZALES ESP RAB +7:45
113 Kevin ISTA BEL ACC +12:44
114 Arnoud VAN GROEN NED ACC +12:44
115 Martijn VERSCHOOR NED TT1 +12:44
116 David BOUCHER FRA FDJ +12:44
117 Leonardo GIORDANI ITA FAR +12:44
118 Timon SEUBERT GER APP +12:44
119 Christophe LABORIE FRA SAU +12:44
120 Sander CORDEEL BEL LTB +12:44
121 Andy CAPPELLE BEL ACC +12:44


Daily Cycling Facts 25.02.12

Heinrich Haussler
Heinrich Haussler
(image credit: Thomas Ducroquet CC BY-SA 3.0
Heinrich Haussler, born on this day in 1984 in Inverell, New South Wales with joint Australian/German nationality, was raised in Australia until the age of 14 when he relocated to Germany feeling that he would be better placed in Europe to realise his professional cycling ambitions. He got his professional contract in 2005 with Gerolsteiner and immediately made his name by winning Stage 19 at the Vuelta a Espana. in 2008, he revealed that he planned to compete for Australia in the 2010 World Championships.

However, this led to complications with the 2008 Worlds and Olympics, as under UCI rules any rider who gives up a place on one national team is automatically suspended from both competitions for a period of three years; meaning he would not be able to ride for either team in the meantime. The UCI also demanded that to ride for Australia, he would have to formally surrender his German nationality, which he was unwilling to do. Finally, in 2010, he decided that he would comply with the demand, but was then unable to compete in the Worlds for Australia due to an injured knee.

Haussler has been highly successful in both Classics and stage races, winning the GP Triberg-Schwarzwald and coming 2nd in Milan – San Remo and the Ronde van Vlaanderen and 7th in Paris-Roubaix in 2009 as well as 2nd in the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad a year later and also won tages 1 and 5 at the 2006 Vuelta a Murcia, Stages 2 and 4 at the 2006 Circuit Franco-Belge, Stage 1 at the 2007 Critérium du Dauphiné, Stage 13 (and the stage's Combativity Award) at the 2009 Tour de France, Stages 1 and 5 at the 2009 Volta a Algarve, 2nd overall and the Sprint and Youth Classificiations at the 2009 Tour of Qatar, Stage 2 at the Tour de Suisse and the Points Classfication at the Tour of Qatar in 2010, Stage 2 at the inaugural 2011 Tour of Beijing, the Points Classification at the 2011 Paris-Nice  and Stages 2 and 3 at the 2011 Tour of Qatar where he also won the Points Classification for a third time and came 2nd in the overall General Classification. His nickname, Barbie, came about due to his platinum blonde highlighted hair.

Susanne Juranek
(image credit: Radcross.de)
Susanne Juranek
Susanne Juranek, born in Brake, Germany on this day in 1975, moved to Goslar during childhood and began mountain biking. She would move again to Oldenburg a few years later, a much flatter part of the country with a vibrant cyclo cross scene and soon moved into that discipline which turned out to be the one in which she would make her name. She won her first major race in Hamburg in 2006 before coming 3rd in the Gieten Superprestige later in the year, then came 3rd again at Elite level in the 2007 National Championships. She won at Vechta in 2009, then won a bronze medal in the Masters classification at the 2011 World Cyclo Cross Championships in Belgium.

José Antonio González, born in San Felices de Buelna on this day in 1946, became Spanish Road Race Champion in 1970 and won Stage 7b at the Tour de France that same year. In 1971, he won Stage 11b at the Vuelta a Espana, then Stage 17b in the same race one year later along with the first of his four wins at the Vuelta al País Vasco (1972, 1975, 1977 and 1978). He won Stage 10 at the 1976 Vuelta a Espana, his last Grand Tour, then picked up a number of stage wins at smaller races before his retirement in 1980.

Other births: Maurice Schilles (France, 1888, died 1950); Edi Ziegler (Germany, 1930); Akifumi Sakamoto (Japan, 1982); Jackson Rodríguez (Venezuela, 1985); Jan Ingstrup-Mikkelsen (Denmark, 1944); William Palacios (Colombia, 1964); Karel Štark (Czechoslovakia, 1942); Grzegorz Krejner (Poland, 1969); Peter Pryor (Australia, 1930, died 2005); Thorsten Rund (Germany, 1976); Iliya Velchev (Bulgaria, 1925); Silvestro Milani (Italy, 1958); Gerhard Lauke (East Germany, 1952); Kazimierz Krzemiński (Poland, 1902); Giuseppe Petito (Italy, 1960); Sandi Papež (Yugoslavia, 1965); John Barnard (Great Britain, 1886, died 1977); Manuel Fernández (Spain, 1971).

Friday, 24 February 2012

Omloop Het Nieuwsblad live streams

(image credit: Eddy Van Laere CC BY-SA 3.0)
Since even Eurosport haven't footage of the first big European race of the 2012 cycling season, ITV4 have no plans to increase cycling coverage and the rest of the channels don't care, British fans are going to have to watch on internet streams instead.

Seriously, TV channel executives: Britain has fallen in love with cycling in a major way. You're missing a huge opportunity to massive increase your viewing figures here.

Anyway, here's some streams...

Sports-Lives 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 (all streams live at around 14:00 CET, 13:00 GMT)

It goes without saying that the Women's race won't be shown at all.

Daily Cycling Facts 24.02.12

Vilma Rimšaitė
Vilma Rimšaitė, born in Lithuania's fourth largest city Šiauliai on this day in 1983, seemed destined for a life in music during her childhood when she earned a place at a specialist music school and won awards for her singing. At the age of six, she began to ride BMX and, spurred on by her BMX enthusiast father, soon demonstrated she was equally as talented at that - just three years later she took part in the European Championships, the continent's most prestigious BMX competition.

She spent the late 1990s and early years of the 21st Century concentrating on her academic studies, graduating from high school before taking a place at Šiauliai University and completing a degree in Business Management. Her studies done, she was free to return to BMX competition and was given a place on her nation's Olympic team with whom she rode in the 2008 Games in Beijing. In 2009, she won a bronze medal at the UCI BMX World Championships.


Bradley McGee
Bradley McGee was born in Sydney, Australia on this day in 1976 and became his nation's most successful male cyclist alongside Cadel Evans. His long string of wins began in 1993 with four Junior and Under-19 National titles followed by another six, two Commonwealth Games gold medals and an Under-19 3000m World Record (3'19.878") the next year. In 1995, competing at Elite level, he took two more National and one World Championship titles on the track.

Bradley McGee, 2005 Tour de France
(image credit: GSL CC BY-SA 2.5
More National titles came in 1997 along with a new Australian Hour record at 50.052km, then two more Commonwealth Games golds in 1998. In 1999, he began to make a name for himself in stage races by winning the prologue at the Tour de Normandie and the prologue and Stage 10 at the Tour de l'Avenir. In 2002, he won the Points Competition at the Critérium du Dauphiné, the World Individual Pursuit Championship, another Commonwealth gold and Stage 7 at the Tour de France. He won the prologue of the Tour a year later and wore the yellow jersey for three days.

2004 saw him win his first Olympic gold, having won bronze in 1996 (2) and 2000 (1), along with 1st place overall at the Route du Sud and 8th overall at the Giro d'Italia, in which he won the prologue and wore the maglia rosa for three days. He won the Points Classification at the Tour de Suisse in 2005 and wore the race leader's golden jersey for four days at the Vuelta a Espana. His last major victory was a gold medal in the Team Pursuit race at the UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics, then he retired at the end of the season.

Jan Ghyselinck, born on this day in 1988 in Tielt, Belgium, is a rider who showed enormous promise as an amateur when he won the Giro della Toscana Juniors, Ronde van Vlaanderen Juniors, U23 Ronde van Vlaanderen, two Junior and one Under-23 National Time Trial Championships. He then turned professional with HTC-Highroad, a team with a reputation for seeking out and developing future stars, in 2010. Originally signed up as a neo-pro, wins at Mandel - Leie - Schelde in 2010 and a string of good results earned him a full professional contract with the team for 2011. Highroad folded at the end of the 2011 season due to problems with sponsorship, causing the riders to look to other teams - Cofidis confirmed that they had signed Ghyselinck in September that year.

Clara Hughes
(image credit: Tabercil CC BY-SA 2.0)
On this day in 2010 Clara Hughes - the only Canadian athlete to have won medals in both the Summer and Winter Olympics and one of the most successful Canadian cyclists of all time - announced her retirement from speed skating. She remains a professional cyclist and, at the age of 38, won countless new fans with a fantastic solo breakaway at the 2011 World Road Race Championship in Copenhagen, considered by many to have been the highlight of the competition.

Stefan Steinweg, born in Dortmund, Germany on this day in 1969, won his first World Championship in 1989 in the Points Race. The next came in 1991 with the Amateur Team Pursuit and was followed by a gold medal in the same event at the Olympics the following year. Since then, he has won two World Madison Championships riding alongside Erich Weispfennig and won ten criterium races on the road.

Leon Vandaele was born on this day in 1933 in Ruddervoorde, Belgium. As a rider who excelled in one day races, his greatest results were victories at the Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne in 1954 and 1961, the Omloop van het Houtland in 1956, the Kampioenschap van Vlaanderen in 1956, 1957 and 1958 and, greatest of all, Paris-Roubaix in 1958. He died on the 30th of April, 2000.

On this day in 2008, Matt Manger-Lynch was killed when he collided with a car during the Tour da Chicago alleycat race. His death, which sparked several discussions on radio, television and the Internet, was partly responsible for bringing alleycat racing - unofficial urban events - to widespread attention, having previously been known only to the bike messengers who originally organised them and to a few "underground" cycling clubs.

Other births: Frank Brazier (Australia, 1934); Héctor Mellado (Chile, 1925); Vera Hohlfeld (Germany, 1972); Bernardo Alfonsel (Spain, 1954); Fujio Ito (Japan, 1945); Helge Hansen (Denmark, 1925); John Watters (Australia, 1955).