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Interbike goes public at OutDoor Demo East
Want to get a sneak peek at the latest and greatest in cycling gear? Here’s your chance — Interbike is adding two consumer days to its OutDoor Demo East show this fall. The show is scheduled for October 8-11 at Roger Williams Park in Providence, Rhode Island. The first two days are for the cycling industry only, but Saturday and Sunday will be open to the public.
Voeckler kits up for Circuit de la Sarthe
Thomas Voeckler (Bouygues Telecom) will mount a defense of his title at this week's 57th Circuit de la Sarthe, which begins Tuesday in France. The French rider broke his clavicle on March 13 in the sixth stage of Paris-Nice and wasn’t expected to race, but the former Tour de France yellow jersey-holder will be back in competition less than four weeks after his crash. Voeckler, a winner this year at Haut Var and Etoile de Bèsseges, has also confirmed he will start the Giro d’Italia next month.
Sánchez takes Pais Vasco opener
Luís León Sánchez continues on his spring rampage, winning the opening stage and donning the leader’s jersey of the Vuelta al País Vasco in Spain. But it almost didn’t happen. The 25-year-old Caisse d’Epargne rider was gapped on a fierce second-category climb with 8km remaining in the 142.5km opening stage and only regained contact with 3km to go.
OUCH-Maxxis wins on both coasts
Long Beach, CA – With no races on the national calendar this week, several riders from the OUCH Pro Cycling Team Presented by Maxxis took to the streets for local races on both coasts. The result was two race wins and one overall omnium title, courtesy of John Murphy and Bobby Lea. On Saturday, Murphy followed up his Redlands Criterium win from the week before by winning a convincing sprint from a nine-rider break in the inaugural Long Beach Bicycle Festival.
Contador skipping Ardennes classics
Alberto Contador (Astana) confirmed he will not race any of the upcoming Ardennes classics. Contador was mulling a start in such races as Flèche Wallonne or Liège-Bastogne-Liège, but he’s left them for later rather to risk injury or illness that might setback his preparation for the Tour de France. “Basque Country will be the last race of this first block and when I finish the race, I am going to take a small vacation to disconnect. I will turn off the mobile phone and later focus on preparing for the Tour,” Contador said.
Davis remains atop UCI rankings
Allan Davis (Quick Step) continued his grip on the UCI world rankings following Sunday’s Tour of Flanders. Flanders, the fifth event in the newly combined ProTour-historic calendar points system, saw some movement in the ranking system. Heinrich Haussler (Cervélo TestTeam), second at Milan-San Remo, bounced from sixth to second in the rankings following his second place at Flanders. Davis leads with 182 points and Haussler slotting into second with 167. Luis León Sánchez (Caisse d’Epargne), winner of Paris-Nice, slipped from second to third, with 111 points.
Cervelo’s Ted King outsprints Tim Johnson at Marblehead.
Cervelo's Ted King outsprinted OUCH-Maxxis' Tim Johnson Sunday at New England's traditional road season opener, the Michael Schott Memorial Circuit Race, on Marblehead Neck in Massachusetts. The Pro/1-3 race featured a few nationally known pros with New England connections, including King, Johnson, Adam Myerson, Mark and Frank McCormack and young cyclocross star Nick Keough.
Orthotics for Cycling
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A crash at the bottom of the descent of the Koppenberg
VeloNews reader Anne-Marie Parramore sent us a remarkable series of photos taken as the peloton comes off the Koppenberg in Sunday's Tour of Flanders.
Bouet rides bonus to victory in Portugal
French rider Maxime Bouet (Agritubel) snagged a third-place time bonus in the final stage to claim overall victory at the 27th Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal on Sunday. Candido Barbosa (Palmeiras Resort) shot to his third victory of the week in the 169km stage from Vendas Novas to Evora, with Cesar Quiterio (CC Loulé) coming across second. Bouet slipped into third and the finish-line bonus bounced him from second to victory in the five-day stage race.
Paolini wins final, Pietropolli tops Lombarda
Luca Paolini (Acqua e Sapone) sprinted to his first victory of the 2009 season in Sunday’s sixth and final stage at the 39th Settimana Lombarda. Paolini out-kicked last year’s Italian champion Giovanni Visconti (ISD) and Miguel Angel Rubiano (CZP) in a photo finish out of a four-up sprint to claim the win in the 153km stage from Montello to Bergamo and conclude the week of racing across northern Italy.
Teutenberg takes women’s Flanders
Ina Teutenberg (Columbia-Highroad) sprinted to victory in the sixth women's Tour of Flanders, held over the cobblestones in the heart of Flanders from Oudenaarde to Ninove. Coming across the line second in the second round of the women’s World Cup series was Kirsten Wild (Cervélo TestTeam) with Emma Johansson (Red Sun) rounding out the podium in third.
Devolder repeats at Flanders
When Stijn Devolder was asked Sunday what was different about his second Tour of Flanders victory in two years, he was close to tears. “A friend of mine died at the Tour of Qatar in February, and I promised to remember him the first time I won a race this year,” Devolder said. He was talking about Frederiek Nolf, the Topsport Vlaanderen team rider who died in his sleep one week short of his 22nd birthday.
Watch Tour of Flanders LIVE!
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Boonen: “Flanders harder to win than Roubaix”
Tom Boonen’s race resume runs deep, having won races and stages around the world. Perhaps best known in the United States for his Tour de France stage wins and two victories at Paris-Roubaix, the Quick Step rider’s favorite race lies in his native Belgium, with the Tour of Flanders.
Remember him? Vandenbroucke wins in France
Frank Vandenbroucke – once one of cycling’s top stars who tumbled into a spiral of drug abuse and an apparent suicide attempt – is back in the winner’s circle. The 34-year-old Vandenbroucke won Saturday’s 15km time trial and grabbed the overall leader’s jersey at La Boucle de l’Artois, a second-division French race. Not counting a 2005 kermesse, Vandenbroucke hasn’t won a race in a decade since he won eight races in 1999, including Het Volk, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, two stages at the Vuelta a España and second in the Tour of Flanders.
Pozzovivo wins big in Lombarda; Pietopolli takes lead
Domenico Pozzovivo (CSF-Navigare) picked a good time to win his first race as a professional, winning Saturday’s decisive climbing stage at the Settimana Lombarda in northern Italy. The 26-year-old attacked out of a lead, seven-man group and held off veteran Davide Rebellin (Diquigiovanni) to win by two seconds in the 159km queen stage starting and finishing in Flero. Italian Daniele Pietopolli (LPR) finished third at two seconds back as part of a group of six chasers that also included Rebellin to grab the leader’s jersey with just one stage remaining.
De la Fuente wins in Spain
David de la Fuente earned his Fuji-Servetto team an important victory in Saturday’s GP Miguel Indurain to open “Basque Week” in Spain. De la Fuente – the most aggressive rider in the 2006 Tour de France – marked a late-race surge by Alexander Kolobnov (Saxo Bank) and two-time winner Fabian Wegmann (Milram) a mountainous course through the hills around Estella. The 191.4km course featured no less than 11 rated climbs, but wasn’t decided until the final kilometer up a short steep climb to the line.
Barbosa wins again in Portugal
Two days after winning a stage by default, Candido Barbosa (Palmeiras Resort) won straight up in Saturday’s fourth stage at the Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal. Barbosa out-kicked Daniel Petrov (Madeinox Boavista) in the 164.7km stage from Alter do Chao to Nisa to claim victory. Coming through third was Francisco Mancebo (Rock Racing), giving the American squad its second top-three of the week. There were no major shakeups in the overall standings. Hector Guerra (Liberty Seguros), winner of Friday’s time trial, retained the overall leader’s jersey.
Expect surprises to emerge in misty Flanders
Over the course of a nearly 100-year history, the Tour of Flanders has never been as popular as it is today. With a $2 million budget, crowds estimated at 700,000, and 840 volunteers patrolling the 261.5km route, the fabled cobblestone classic from Bruges to Meerbeke is Belgium’s largest annual sport event. The organizing newspaper, Het Nieuwsblad, devoted 24 pages to its Saturday race preview, and expects to fill another 24 pages on Sunday.
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Saxo’s Kroon calls Pozzato the favorite for Sunday’s Tour of Flanders
Fabian Cancellara is ready for the Tour of Flanders, he just doesn’t know how ready. The Saxo Bank star said earlier this year that winning the Ronde van Vlaanderen was a big goal of his — but that was before a shoulder injury and a sinus problem sidetracked his training. On Friday evening in Belgium, Cancellara said the important thing is that he is here to race with his team.
Bennati to ride Flanders
Daniele Bennati isn’t going to let muscle pain keep him out of the Tour of Flanders, though it’s likely he’ll have plenty more of that after Sunday’s punishing course. The Liquigas sprinter confirmed he will race Sunday despite some lingering pain from a crash dating back to the second stage of Tirreno-Adriatico. Team doctors said Bennati was suffering from intense muscle pain in his right thigh, which flared up again during this week’s Three Days of De Panne. Bennati, however, insists on racing and the team is standing by his decision.
French rider Jerome Coppel wins the Route Adélie de Vitré in France
French rider Jerome Coppel delivered another victory for FDJeux after kicking to victory in Friday’s Route Adélie de Vitré in France. Coppel came through one second ahead of the chasing David Le Lay (Agritubel), with Romain Feillu (Agritubel) coming through third to round out the podium. Critérium International winner Jens Voigt (Saxo Bank) came through with a group at 3:45 in 35th.
With a TT win, Hector Guerra (Liberty Seguros) takes control of the Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal
Spanish rider Hector Guerra (Liberty Seguros) took control of the Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal on Friday, pulling the double in the 19km time trial. Guerra won the race in 24:05, 18 seconds faster than runner-up Christophe Moreau (Agritubel). Guerra also takes over the lead, moving just two seconds ahead of Vitaliy Kondrut (ISD).
RockyMounts PitchFork
Price: $90 Colors: Red, orange, pink, yellow, green, blue, silver, and black Web site: www.rockymounts.com RockyMounts is replacing its Lariat SL rack with the all-new PitchFork. The new rack is RockyMounts' standard in fork-mounted bike carriers for Thule and Yakima crossbars. The new design is a bit more sleek with a low-profile design for better aerodynamics.
Alessandro Petacchi snags his second win at the Settimana Lombarda and maintains his overall lead
Another sprint in Italy and another victory for Alessandro Petacchi. The Italian snagged his second win at the Settimana Lombarda in Friday’s stage into Vertova to retain his grip on the overall lead. Already a winner on Wednesday (plus a member of LPR’s winning team time trial squad to open the race Tuesday), Petacchi made easy work of Luca Paolini (Acqua e Sapone). Francisco Ventoso, the Spanish sprinter on Carmiooro, crossed the line third in the 183.6km course. The race continues Saturday with the 159km fifth stage starting and finishing in Flero.
Shimano shaves some weight and adds Dura-Ace 7900 features to its more affordable group
Shimano is revamping its Ultegra group, cutting weight from the second-in-line road parts and, in trademark trickle-down fashion, incorporating many features that the company added to its Dura-Ace group last year. The company claims that the new Ultegra 6700 group will be more than 150 grams lighter than the current Ultegra 6600 and 45 grams lighter than the Ultegra SL group.
2009 Ghent-Wevelgem preliminary start list
Rabobank 1 Brown, Graeme 2 Flecha Giannoni, Juan... 3 Hayman, Mathew 4 Horrillo Mun?oz, Pedro 5 Leezer, Tom 6 Nuyens, Nick 7 Stamsnijder, Tom 8 Van Emden, Jos Quick Step 11 Boonen, Tom 12 Devolder, Stijn 13 Hovelijnck, Kurt 14 Hulsmans, Kevin 15 Tosatto, Matteo 16 Van Impe, Kevin 17 Velo, Marco 18 Weylandt, Wouter Silence - Lotto 21 Cretskens, Wilfried 22 Elijzen, Michiel 23 Hoste, Leif 24 Kaisen, Olivier 25 Lang, Sebastian 26 Ljungblad, Jonas 27 Roelandts, Jurgen 28 Scheirlinckx, Staf