Nat Ross’s BC Bike Race Diary – Day 1
Editor's Note: Subaru/Gary Fisher pro endurance racer Nat Ross will be sharing daily diaries from the BC Bike Race with VeloNews.com readers. This is the first installment.
Editor's Note: Subaru/Gary Fisher pro endurance racer Nat Ross will be sharing daily diaries from the BC Bike Race with VeloNews.com readers. This is the first installment.
Under brilliant blue skies and a hot summer sun, the BC Bike Race start gun fired to launch more than 400 riders from around the world into the first stage of the second annual multi-stage mountain bike event. Over the next 7 days, racers will cover stages totalling more than 550 kilometers as they race a combination of singletrack and logging roads from Victoria to Whistler.
Luna's Czech rider, Katerina Nash, beat teammate Georgia Gould to win the Kenda cross-country event at the Deer Valley Resort race on Saturday. In the men's race, Kona's Ryan Trebon prevailed over Jeremiah Bishop (Trek/VW) and Canadian Geoff Kabush, (Team Maxxis). Check back to VeloNews.com on Sunday for a complete report on the cross-country, as well as a report on the downhill, dual slalom and short track events.
Kyle Wamsley (Colavita-Sutter Home) outsprinted his breakaway companions Saturday to win the Cox Charities Cycling Classic in Providence, Rhode Island. It was the seventh edition of the hilly riverfront criterium and the race's first appearance on the National Racing Calendar. A stiff headwind along the back stretch — combined with constant primes for the first 20 laps — kep the field together for the first half of the race.
David Veilleux (Kelly Benefit Strategies / Medifast) won his second consecutive stage on Saturday and took the overall lead of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania. [nid:78968][nid:78965] Veilleux finished with his teammate and fellow Canadian, stage 2 winner Keven Lacombe, after dropping the remaining breakaway companion in the final kilometers of the 91-mile stage from Ligonier to downtown Pittsburgh. Phil Gaimon (Fiordifrutta) held on for third.
Samuel Sánchez will be back at the Tour de France only for the third time in his career, so he’s looking to make up for lost time. His two previous Tour starts, in 2002 and 2003, both ended early when he missed time cuts. Since then, Sánchez has grown in stature both as a rider and as a team leader. Despite riding into third overall at last year’s Vuelta a España, “Samu” has no pretensions about riding for GC in the Tour. He’ll leave that task to Euskaltel-Euskadi teammates Haimar Zubeldia and Mikel Astarloza, who finished fifth and ninth last year, respectively.
Kelly Benefit's Canadian strong man David Veilleux won Friday's soggy fourth stage of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania, surviving torrential rain and nearly 7,000 feet of climbing to win the sprint ahead of breakaway companions into Latrobe, Pennsylvania. South Africa’s Christoff Van Heerden (Konica Minolta) finished third and moved into the race lead. [nid:78955]
With their team barred from this year's Tour de France, Astana teammates Levi Leipheimer and Chris Horner have decided to race in the Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic instead. The five-day race will take place in and around Bend, Oregon, on July 9-13.
Specialized is on a roll with its sponsored athletes and not-yet-released bikes. Christoph Sauser just won the world mountain bike championships on a new Epic, which will be formally introduced next week and available later this year. But the bike that’s here now is the Roubaix SL2, the bike Tom Boonen won Paris-Roubaix on this spring, well before it was available for sale.
As the bike industry continues its headlong charge for stiffer-lighter-faster hardware, Shimano is keeping up its end of the deal with the upcoming Dura-Ace road group. VeloNews got a chance to ride the 10-speed group. Here are some brief first opinions.
More than 30 years after company founder Mike Sinyard brought the Specialized Turbo to market as a high-performance clincher, the Californian company is releasing another Turbo. This time, it’s a tubeless road model. Not yet available, the Turbo Tubeless was designed in conjunction with the tubeless Roval wheel that Specialized will sell. Weighing in at 290 grams, the S-Works Turbo Tubeless model features a supple 127tpi casing and, thanks to the lack of a tube, very low rolling resistance. Other models will be available later in the year.
The last weekend in June will see the National Racing Calendar split between coasts with a pair of big money criteriums. For the right coasters, the Cox Charities Cycling Classic in Providence, Rhode Island will be making its debut on the men’s NRC calendar on Saturday while the West Coast will host the 47th edition of the Manhattan Beach Grand Prix in Manhattan Beach, California, on Sunday.
Riders throughout Europe are contesting national championships this week, with several countries holding time trials on Wednesday and Thursday. In the Russian time trial championship, Astana’s Vladimir Gusev was the fastest rider on the difficult circuit of Krylatskoe in Moscow. Young talented rider Timofey Kritskiy (Team Katyusha) was second, Vladimir Karpets (Caisse d’Epargne) third.[nid:78932]
Fiordifrutta’s Jamie Driscoll took a slim victory in the longest stage of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania on Thursday. The 168-kilometer stage was made even more difficult when strong winds and rain threatened the international field at the starting line in Camp Hill. While the sun broke through as riders lined up, but the strong winds continued to disrupt the day.
Belgian superstar Tom Boonen is the major absence from the Quick Step team's Tour de France roster, announced Thursday, due to a recent positive test for cocaine. The news of Boonen's career setback — which will not lead to sporting sanctions — left Tour de France officials to quickly decide he was not welcome at the July 5-27 race. The Belgian outfit had hoped for some clemency for the race's reigning green jersey champion, underlining the fact he tested positive for a recreational drug. But Quick Step has accepted the Tour owners' (ASO) decision.
A new study released by researchers in Denmark raises further questions about the effectiveness of the urine test used to detect the presence of the red-blood-cell-boosting drug EPO. The test has been in use in cycling since 2000 and is currently the detection method regarded as standard in anti-doping laboratories around the world.
French cycling legend Jeannie Longo has all but clinched a place in the Beijing Olympics at the age of 49. The five-time world champion staked her claim with an outstanding win in the time-trial at the French National Championships on Thursday. She finshed in 31 minutes 16 seconds, more than a minute ahead of second-placed Edwige Pitel. The French team for China has yet to be named, but her win in the national championships puts her in prime position to grab a spot. [nid:78920]
Liquigas will lineup without green-jersey candidate Daniele Bennati for next week’s Tour de France. The Italian sprinter has been forced out of the Tour after problems with his Achilles tendon that flared up during Giro d’Italia, where he won three stages and the points jersey.
George Hincapie will be heading to France for the 13th time of his career as part of the Team Columbia-High Road roster revealed Wednesday. Hincapie, 35 on Sunday, said the team brings a diverse squad with strong options for stage victories and a shot at the top 10. “I’d love to win another stage,” Hincapie told VeloNews. “We have a good team. We’ll have a great team for the sprinters. We have Tommy (Lovkvist) for the young rider’s jersey and we’ll have Kim (Kirchen) for the overall, so hopefully we can meet all those goals.”
The Tour of Ireland is back for 2008 and both top-level American teams will be starting the five-day, five-stage race across the green hills of the Emerald Isle set for August 27-31. Team Columbia, with likely starts from Mark Cavendish and Michael Rogers, and Garmin-Slipstream both confirmed they would be among 16 international teams lining up in Dublin.
Suggested retail: $299 Web site: www.sampsonsports.com Available: This month. Sampson Sports' new Stratics SL road bike brakes tip the scale at 231 grams per pair. The brakes are dual-pivot front and rear, with cold-forged arms, carbon fiber pad holders, adjustable shoe angle, easy to use cable adjusters and indexed quick-release openers. The brakes are available with a red anodization, clear coated for durability.
Canadian all-rounder Keven Lacombe (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast/USA) jumped ahead of a late-race, 18-rider breakaway to triumph in stage 2 of the American Eagle Outfitters® Tour of Pennsylvania on Wednesday. LaCombe took his first stage win ahead of the South African speedster Christoff Van Heerden (Konica Minolta) and Ryan Baumann (Sakonnet Technology).
High Road Sports has announced the riders that will start the 2008 Tour de France. The roster consists of nine riders from eight different countries, and five aged 25 and under. “We plan to be competitive in every stage without losing the focus on the support for Kirchen in the General Classification” explains Team Director Rolf Aldag. “This team is able to exploit and dictate the tactics on some stages”.
When Americans think of cycling, the first, and often only, thing that pops to mind is the Tour de France. For me, starting out as a truly fredly 15-year-old on an ill-fit bike wearing kits that I can’t help but cringe at now, it was the same. The Tour is the pinnacle of the sport; the dream of every young cyclist. My career has taken twists and turns, had some big swings up and down, but I’m now on track to take part in the biggest of the big: The Tour de France.
Philadelphia’s downtown cycling fans were offered a second round of excitement Tuesday afternoon when the current U.S. national criterium champion, Daniel Holloway (VMG-Felt) lit up the final 200-meters in Stage 1B of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania presented by Highmark Healthy High 5. Holloway captured a convincing field sprint victory in this elite U25 competition ahead of Jacob Keough (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast) and Christoff Van Heerden of South Africa (Konica Minolta Continental) in the 25-lap criterium of day one.
Steven Van Vooren (Johan Bruyneel Cycling Academy) won the kickoff to the inaugural American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania on Tuesday in Philadelphia. Vooren took stage 1a, a 3.51km prologue time trial in Philadelphia, in four minutes and 18 seconds. Keven LaCombe (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast) was second at three seconds back with Christoff Van Heerden (KON-Konica Minolta Continental) third at four seconds.
Russian Denis Menchov, one of the pre-race favorites, has been named as team leader for the nine-man Rabobank squad for the July 5-27 Tour de France, the Dutch team announced in the Netherlands on Tuesday. Menchov is a double winner of the Vuelta a España who finished fifth in the 2006 Tour de France. The team will also be in the hunt for stage wins, and perhaps the Tour’s points jersey, with the addition of Oscar Freire, the Spaniard who is a triple world road race champion (1999, 2001 and 2004). Freire won the Gent-Wevelgem ProTour one-day classic in April and is
The newly renamed Garmin-Chipotle team unveiled its Tour de France roster, which features three of only four Americans in the entire Tour peloton. The team, formerly known as Slipstream-Chipotle, is making its debut in the world’s biggest bicycle race, but the roster, released on Tuesday, includes several Tour de France veterans.
This year’s Tour de France should be a little more interesting following news Tuesday that outspoken Italian rider Riccardo Riccò will take the July 5 start in Brest. Riccò ? whose verbal outbursts are almost as lethal as his accelerations in the mountains ? will take aim at the best young rider’s white jersey during his second Tour appearance. The 24-year-old Riccò, seen by many in Italy as the heir to deceased Giro and Tour winner Marco Pantani, is considered a longshot for the Tour's yellow jersey.
The first surprise in Johan Bruyneel’s new autobiography is that he lived vicariously through Lance Armstrong. The Belgian achieved as a sport director what he could never do during his 11-year racing career. “I was lucky enough to win two stages and take the yellow jersey, but I knew that I could never win the whole race,” Bruyneel told VeloNews in a recent interview. “It’s a big compensation to do as a sport director what I couldn’t do myself physically.”
Dear Readers,
I’ve got a bit of product testing and Tour de Suisse course scouting to tell you about.
Suggested retail: $20. Web site: www.mirrycle.com The Mirrycle Road Mirror was developed exclusively to fit Shimano STI shifter/brake levers while allowing the unrestricted use of the lever. The company says the mirror fits Sora, Tiagra, 105, Ultegra and Dura-Ace levers. The mirror can be folded out of the way or quickly removed for bike storage or rides where a mirror isn't desired. It can be attached to the right or left lever.
The San Francisco Twilight Criterium on September 13 is the newest race in the USA CRITS series. "Nothing compares to a 40 mph night-time race,” said event supporter Ryan Dawkins, president of Project Sport. Dawkins is working with Andy Ball, CEO of Webcor Builders, to put on the event. The four-corner, one-kilometer course will start and finish at Union Street—the so-called Rodeo Drive of San Francisco. The Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz and the San Francisco Bay will be visible from almost the entire course.[nid:78866]
Suggested retail: $79.99 Sizes: small, medium, large, extra large. Available from: www.kbsmedifast.com or www.mtborah.com The Kelly Benefit Strategies/Medifast domestic road team is using new jerseys manufactured from a knit fabric with 47 percent recycled fibers from post-consumer and post-industrial waste. Mt. Borah, which makes the team jerseys, estimates that for every dozen jerseys made with the process, two gallons of gas are saved.
Germany’s Gerolsteiner hopes it can crack the top 10 and win a stage in the upcoming Tour de France. The team brings Markus Fothen and Bernhard Kohl as GC hopes with Stefan Schumacher leading the charge in the hunt for an elusive stage victory. “Fothen and Kohl can challenge for the overall race, while we are looking for stage victories in the last week,” said team sporting director Christian Henn.
The Basque climbers at Euskaltel-Euskadi will be angling toward the podium this year. Haimar Zubeldia and Mikel Astarloza, fifth and ninth in last year’s Tour, headline the orange-clad Basques in its collective effort to improve on the team’s steady 2007 performance.
Spain's Alberto Contador, who is looking to win the Tour of Spain in September to add to victories in the Tour of Italy and Tour de France, said Monday that winning the world's three main cycling races would be better than winning an Olympic medal. "I want to do well at the Tour of Spain even if that means that in order to prepare myself better for it I am not at 100 percent for the Games," he told reporters in Madrid. "I have won the Tour de France and the Giro and if I achieved a triple it would be more historical than getting an Olympic medal," he added.
Bobby Julich won’t be heading back to the Tour de France for another crack at the maillot jaune. The 36-year-old veteran ? third overall in 1998 ? was left off the nine-man, Tour-bound squad revealed Monday by Team CSC-Saxo Bank. “I think we could have taken two teams to the Tour de France, with so many good riders to choose from,” said team manager Bjarne Riis on the team’s Web page. “We have taken the nine sharpest riders and we hope we can meet our ambitions with them.”
The second year of the Tour of Missouri will capitalize on the success of the inaugural race, again visiting Kansas City and St. Louis, but will also bring the action to new towns. The seven-day race from St. Joseph to St. Louis will kick off September 8 and feature squads from Team Columbia (formerly High Road) and Garmin-Chipotle (formerly Slipstream). Here is a breakdown of the stages. Stage 1 – Monday, September 8 St. Joseph to Kansas City, 90 miles
With the Univest Grand Prix no longer a U25 amateur-only event, organizers of this year’s inaugural Tour of Pennsylvania stage race are wasting no time stepping up to claim the unofficial title of the biggest U25 amateur race in the country. While even the best domestic events typically have humble beginnings, thanks to generous sponsorship from American Eagle Outfitters and the enthusiastic backing of the city of Pittsburgh, organizers seems to be launching one of North America’s top-notch stage races virtually from scratch.
You’ve already seen Giant’s new road bike, the TCR Advanced SL. Prototypes have been in service by the High Road (now Columbia) team since last year’s Tour de France. The bike and its radically shaped tubes have been highly visible all season, so it comes as no surprise that it will be in the company's product line for 2009.
Overcoming training plateaus and preparing for altitude in the Midwest
Irish rider Daniel Martin handed Team Garmin-Chipotle a tidy victory after holding onto his lead in Sunday’s finale at the 32nd Route du Sud. Martin, 21, who claimed the leader’s jersey in Saturday’s “queen stage” across the Pyrenees, sewed up the win by finishing safely in the main pack at 6:50 behind stage winner Jussie Veikanen (FDJeux) in the final 207.1km stage from Saint-Gaudens to Castres.
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the ninth stage of the Tour de Suisse, a 168-kilometer race from Altdorf to Bern.
Today's features rolling terrain, with two Category 4 climbs, the first above the village of Hueb at 142.8km and a climb to Aargauerstalden, at 159.9km. The peloton rolled out of Altdorf - the start of yesterday's hillclimb - about an hour ago.
CSC's Fabian Cancellara chased down a last-kilometer attack by FdJ's Phillipe Gilbert, passed him and soloed to his second stage win in this year's Tour de Suisse on Sunday. The stage finished near Cancellara's hometown of Wohlen bei Bern, Switzerland. Liquigas's Roman Kreuziger finished in the main pack on the final day to retain the overall lead he took in Saturday's time trial.
Colavita-Sutter Home speedster Alejandro Borrajo won the 2008 AT&T Downtown Austin Criterium, the fourth installment of the 2008 USA CRITS Series. Borrajo fought off a well-stocked field of top-shelf criterium racers to take the fifth edition of the NRC race. Despite the Toyota-United train controlling the final five laps of the race, Borrajo found his way past Henk Vogels (Toyota-United) and Cuban teammate Ivan Dominguez (who came in second and third respectively.
Stage five of the 2008 Tour de Nez, a 45-mile up and down affair in and around the Village at Northstar resort, gave onlookers one last chance to see the main protagonists of the stage race fight it out on the tough technical course. The 1.75-mile loop took riders over stretches of the cobblestones that run through the village, lending an old-school feel to the race.
Team Garmin-Chipotle is poised to win its first European stage-race victory thanks to a stunning performance Saturday by its young Irish neo-pro, Dan Martin, up the summit finish to Super Bagneres in the four-climb stage across the heart of the Pyrénées. Martin, 21, attacked on the day’s final climb to finish fourth in the stage and surge into the overall lead. Entering Sunday’s 207km finale from Saint Gaudens to Castres over three category-three climbs, Martin holds a 1:42 lead over French powerhouse Christophe Moreau (Agritubel).
It’s been more than 10 years since a Canadian has lined up for the Tour de France. That’s likely to change in 2008 as it’s expected that not one, but two Canadians could be lining up in Brest to end Canada’s Tour drought that dates back to 1997 with Gordon Fraser. Ryder Hesjedal and Michael Barry are both hoping to earn Tour berths on Garmin-Chipotle and Team Columbia, respectively.
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the eighth stage of the 2008 Tour de Suisse, a 25-kilometer individual time trial, from Altdorf to the top of the Klausenpass.
Liquigas’s Roman Kreuziger, a former world junior road champion, turned in a spectacular performance Saturday, winning the eighth stage of the Tour de Suisse, a 25-kilometer uphill time, and vaulting into the overall lead with just one stage remaining.
As expected, the fourth stage of the 2008 Tour de Nez stage race provided a big shake up in the general classification, as Kelly Benefit’s Andy Bajadali took the leader’s jersey away from BMC’s Ian McKissick. Eric Wohlberg of the Symmetrics team was able to come away with a hard earned victory on the 6.5 mile mountain circuit, while putting himself back into contention for the overall title.
Many of the country's best criterium racers — from Tina Pic to Ivan Dominguez, Rahsaan Bahati to Rebecca Larson — line up Saturday in Austin, Texas, for the fourth leg of the 2008 USA CRITS series. The second annual AT&T Downtown Austin Criterium presented by AMLI has a $30,000 prize list.
| 1 | Jeff Hopkins | Team Inferno Pro Cycling | 593 |
| 2 | Rahsaan Bahati | Rock Racing | 502 |