What You Missed This Morning…In Chicago
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Steve Hed has never approached business in a conventional way. When he first met his wife, Anne, she was a struggling young triathlete who wanted to race the Ironman. She went into Grand Performance bike shop in Minneapolis because she’d heard that its owner often helped triathletes with expenses. Her heart sank when the barefoot guy covered in grease in the back of the shop turned out to be Steve Hed, the shop’s owner, but she asked anyway.
Roman Kreuziger's recent strong performances at the Tour de France, Tour of Switzerland and the Clásica San Sebastián have moved him up to third on the UCI World Ranking, just behind the much-more-heralded Andy Schleck and Alberto Contador. Kreuziger, a 23-year-old with Liquigas, was ninth overall at the Tour de France, and third at the Swiss Tour (which he won in 2008). His second at San Sebastián, behind Quick Step's Carlos Barredo, moved him up from fifth to third in the new rankings released this week.
Teams are already releasing preliminary start lists for the upcoming Vuelta a España (August 29-September 20) and Rabobank will bring a strong team with sights on overall victory and stage wins. The Dutch outfit released 10 names for the Spanish tour and will look to Robert Gesink, who crashed out of the Tour de France with a fractured wrist in stage 5, to take aim for the final podium.
Mikel Astarloza – the Basque climber who facing allegations that he took the banned blood booster EPO – says he never doped ahead of the 2009 Tour de France. Astarloza, winner of stage 16 and 11th overall in the this year’s Tour, is facing a possible two-year ban after urine samples taken in an out-of-competition control June 26, but strongly declared his innocence in an emotional press conference Tuesday.
Carbon mid- and deep-section wheels are all the rage in road racing, and for good reason. A deep aerodynamic profile helps slice through the wind, and using carbon as the rim material helps keep weight to a minimum. Most high-end deep section carbon wheels have that perfect blend of light weight and improved aerodynamics.
Organizers promise some surprises in the third edition of the all-new Tour of Missouri, which kicks off on Labor Day in St. Louis and concludes a week later in Kansas City. Christian Vande Velde (Garmin) won last year’s edition, while George Hincapie (Discovery) triumphed in the inaugural event, and race director Jim Birrell says it will take a strong man to win the 2009 tour, too.
Italian Angelo Furlan (Lampre-N.G.C.) dominated a sprint finish to win the second stage of the Tour of Poland Monday. Furlan beat Belgian Jurgen Roelandts (Silence-Lotto) and Argentina's Juan Jose Haedo (Saxo Bank) to take the victory in the 219km stage between Serock and Bialystok. Borut Bozic (Vacansoleil), the winner of stage was, retained the overall lead despite a tie on time with Furlan, whose teammate David Loosli sits third overall at one second back. Tuesday’s stage 3 is a 225,1km leg from Bielsk Podlaski to Lublin.
Geoff Kabush (Maxxis-Rocky Mountain) took aim at a first-ever World Cup win and hit his target in round 6 of the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup, held Sunday in Bromont, Quebec. Lene Byberg (Specialized) also took her maiden World Cup win, thanks to power, prowess and an 11th-hour tire switch when she decided that mud would become a factor.
The promoters of the Tour of Elk Grove call it the "richest stage race in the world." And with more than $150,000 on the line for a 7.7km time trial, a 150km road race and a 110km criterium, the dollars-per-kilometer average is quite astronomical.
Wheels keep spinning across Europe with a full week of racing in Poland, Portugal and Spain. The ProTour calendar clicked back into gear with Saturday’s Clásica San Sebastián and again on Sunday with the start of the week-long Tour of Poland, which slipped into the calendar slot previously held by the now-defunct Tour of Germany.
Editor's note: This corrects an earlier version of the article that said Vinokourov was "expected" to ride in Astana kit. Alexander Vinokourov will return to racing Tuesday after serving a two-year doping ban for homologous blood doping at the 2007 Tour de France. Vinokourov will get back in the saddle for Tuesday's criterium race at Castillon-la-Bataille in southwestern France, organizers said.
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Igor Anton (Euskaltel-Euskadi) won the 32nd Subida a Urkiola on Sunday. Anton finished eight seconds ahead of Xavi Tondo (Andalucía-Cajasur) and nine up on Freddy Montaña (Boyaca) at the end of the 160.4km Basque Country race near Durango, Spain. Last year's champion, David Arroyo (Caisse d’Epargne), finished fourth at 10 seconds back.
Marianne Vos (Team DSB Bank) won Sunday’s Open de Suède Vargarda in Sweden, outsprinting Kirsten Wild (Cervélo TestTeam) and Emma Johansson (Red Sun Cycling Team). The 132km circuit race in Vagarda was the eighth round of the women’s 10-race World Cup. Vos has now closed to within three points of World Cup leader Johansson in the series standings, while Wild has moved up from sixth to third overall. The next round of the World Cup, the Grand Prix de Plouay-Bretagne in France, is scheduled for August 22.
Borut Bozic (Vacansoleil) sprinted to victory in the first stage of the 66th Tour of Poland on Sunday. David Loosli (Lampre-N.G.C) and Blazej Janiczak (Polska-BGZ) broke away early in the 96km circuit race in Warsaw and built a lead of some five minutes before the peloton finally retrieved them on the final lap. Columbia-HTC tried to get its train rolling for sprinter Andre Greipel, but Bozic showed him a clean pair of heels with Francesco Gavazzi (Lampre-N.G.C.) third. "It's my first victory in the ProTour, I was waiting for so long,” Bozic said.
Rising Danish prospect Jakob Fuglsang wrapped up overall victory at the Tour of Denmark on Sunday after finishing safely in the main bunch to successfully defend his crown in his national tour. Fuglsang, who won last year racing for the Designa Kokka team, and joined Saxo Bank as a stagiaire after returning from the Beijing Summer Olympic Games, where he competed in mountain biking. Racing full-time on the road this year with Saxo Bank, Fuglsang won stage 3 to take the lead and then rode to fifth in the time trial in stage 5 to defend.
The latest Tour de France doping scandal involving stage-winner Mikel Astarloza could jeopardize the future of one of Spain’s few remaining top professional teams. According to reports in the Spanish media, Astarloza’s provisional suspension for failing an out-of-competition control for the banned blood booster EPO could threaten financial backing of the Euskaltel-Euskadi team.
Carlos Barredo (Quick Step) won a wet Clásica San Sebastián in Spain's northern Basque region on Saturday. Barredo beat Czech rider Roman Kreuziger of Liquigas in a sprint to the line at the end of the 237-kilometer mountainous course that begins and ends in the city. The two were seven seconds ahead of a group led by Frenchman Mikael Delage. Canadian Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Slipstream) finished fifth.
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Mike Olheiser (warp9bikes.com/Tristar) put 43 seconds into his nearest competitor in Friday’s time trial, taking back-to-back elite national champion jerseys after his win in the road race on Thursday. Adrian Hegyvary (Hagens-Berman) took second, while Greg Krause (MapMyRide-Giant) took third. In the women’s elite time trial, the time between the top three was much slimmer, as Jessica Phillips (Team Lip Smacker) took the gold just one second ahead of Evelyn Stevens (Webcor Builders), and just 23 seconds ahead of defending champion, Alison Powers (Team Type 1). Two-timing
The Bissell Pro Cycling team issued a terse press release Friday noting that it had dismissed Kirk O’Bee for a contract breach that involved a violation of the team’s “zero-tolerance policy” regarding performance-enhancing drugs. Short on specifics, the team’s statement referred to “actions (that) are an isolated incident that occurred independently and without the knowledge of both team management and his teammates.” The team also noted that O’Bee is now cooperating with both the U.S. and World Anti-Doping Agencies to address an apparent doping violation.
Alejandro Valverde will have something to prove when the Clásica San Sebastián, one of the top one-day events on the UCI ProTour, takes places on Saturday in northern Spain. The 29-year-old Caisse d'Epargne rider was recently banned from competing in Italy for two years by the Italian Olympic Committee after he was implicated in the Operación Puerto doping scandal. The decision, which Valverde has contested, ruled him out of the Tour de France, the 16th stage of which passed through Italy.
Laurent Fignon — the two-time French winner of the Tour de France — has alleged in his new autobiography that his team was paid off by the Colombians in 1987 to allow climbing star Luís “Lucho” Herrera to claim overall victory in the Vuelta a Espana. Fignon recounts that Herrera’s team approached Fignon’s sport director Cyril Guimard at Système U-Gitane with an offer of 30,000 French francs per rider if they didn’t attack and helped ease the way for Herrera’s lone grand-tour victory of his career.
The 2009 Tour de France isn’t scandal-free anymore. Mikel Astarloza – the Basque climber from the Euskaltel-Euskadi team who won stage 16 in this year’s Tour – has been provisionally suspended after testing positive for EPO, the UCI reported Friday. The news comes as a blow to the Tour, which seemed to be leaving three years of scandal in the rear-view mirror with what appeared to be a dope-free Tour in 2009.
Alberto Contador doesn’t want to stay at Astana even if Lance Armstrong won’t be around next season. According to a report in Thursday’s L’Equipe, the two-time Tour de France winner has turned down a multi-million-euro contract extension and is trying to break his remaining year that he has with the Kazakh-backed team.
Bradley Wiggins, the Garmin-Slipstream rider who has made a spectacularly successful transition from the velodrome to the road, has released his blood profile data for the past year-and-a-half. The 29-year-old Wiggins equaled the best Tour de France finish by a Briton with fourth place in this year’s race and has said he wants to improve on that feat by 2011. The reigning individual pursuit Olympic champion and member of the gold-medal winning team pursuit squad in Beijing said he is fully committed to racing on the road, at least through 2012.
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Meredith Miller (Team Tibco) attacked out of a break to solo across the line for her first stars- and-stripes jersey on Saturday in the women’s elite road race at USA Cycling’s Junior, U23, Elite and Paralympic National Championships in Bend, Oregon.
Concerned that UCI rules for race equipment could be bad for business, several suppliers of UCI-registered teams have formed a coalition to present their concerns to the sport's governing body. The new Global Organization of Cycling Equipment Manufacturers includes most of the major suppliers to ProTour teams, including SRAM, Cannondale, Cervelo, Bianchi, FSA, Specialized and Felts. Phil White, the co-founder of Cervelo and one of the founders of GOCEM, said manufacturers provide about 100 million Euros in annual support of professional cycling.
Marketing manager Adrian Montgomery at Scott USA knows he’s got a good thing going. For one, his brand is on the upswing. After five years back in the U.S. market, Scott bicycles are gaining traction with dealers and riders alike. Scott sponsors the Columbia-HTC team, and with speedster Mark Cavendish racking up wins at a furious clip, the brand is earning more recognition than ever. Plus, with the new Plasma3 TT bike turning heads this spring at the Giro d’Italia, even more people are paying attention to Scott bikes.
Most American cycling fans credit three-time Tour de France winner Greg LeMond and the first U.S. rider in Tour de France, Jock Boyer, as the two who busted down the door for Lance Armstrong and the current field of U.S. riders in the European peloton. But American boots made the first real dents in Old World cycling’s tradition-bound portico in the early 1970s.
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In the latest issue of VeloNews, we reported that three road races held in Michigan and sponsored by Priority Health had been canceled for 2009 — the May 24 Priority Health Tour de Leelanau, which was to be part of USA Cycling’s Professional Tour, and the September 12 Priority Health Grand Cycling Classic and the September 13 Priority Health Ann Arbor Cycling Classic, each part of USA Cycling’s National Racing Calendar.
OUCH-Maxxis' Rory Sutherland has retaken he lead of the National Racing Calendar individual men's standings from Bissell's Tom Zirbel, who held the lead for a few weeks. A fourth place overall at the Cascade Cycling Classic helped Sutherland, who is the defending NRC champ, to take the lead.