3 Days of De Panne – Mid-Race Mini-Preview

Photo by Luc Claessen/ISPA Photo

The 35th KBC Driedaagse van De Panne-Koksijde began today with Stage 1 of the four-stage/three-day event. The final warm-up for many riders before this Sunday’s Tour of Flanders, De Panne has increasingly seen less of the Ronde’s top favorites take part as they choose to avoid risking an event often known for flu-causing weather and Ronde-ruining crashes. Instead, second-tier contenders and sprinters participate, hoping to score one final win before relegated to supporting roles Sunday.

Of the major contenders for the Ronde Sunday, Vacansoleil’s Stijn Devolder, Katusha’s Filippo Pozzato, and BMC’s Alessandro Ballan all lined-up today. Devolder and Ballan won De Panne in 2005 and 2007, respectively, making the Italian the last De Panne winner to win the Tour of Flanders in the same week.

Vacansoleil’s Lieuwe Westra is my pick to win this year’s race—he finished second today and is by far one of the event’s better time trialists—although Devolder’s not be ignored either. Lotto’s Andre Greipel won the sprint at the end of today’s Stage 1 after spending much of the finale off the front—he could easily add another win or two to his tally. As for tomorrow and Thursday morning, also look for HTC’s John Degenkolb and Rabobank’s Michael Matthews to continue their budding rivalry. Thursday afternoon’s time trial should be Westra’s chance to take the leader’s jersey, while Sky’s Bradley Wiggins, RadioShack’s Jesse Sergeant, and UnitedHealthcare’s Scott Zwizanski should challenge him for the stage victory.

As for Devolder, Pozzato, and Ballan? I wouldn’t be surprised to see them in a break tomorrow—just to test their legs. But for them, the real test comes Sunday.

Share your comments and picks below.

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E3 is Dead. Long Live E3.

Photo by Tim van Wichelen

If the order of this weekend’s events were reversed – that is to say, if the racing came before the pre-race media posturing from everybody who’s not a bike racer looking to gain a bit of exposure for whatever they’ve got to say – then it would come as a pretty serious surprise that the organizers of the E3 are claiming that Ghent-Wevelgem’s move from the Wednesday before the Ronde to the same weekend as E3 threatens to kill it. From where we were sitting, E3 blew Ghent-Wevelgem out of the water. If this weekend’s racing was E3’s death knell, it was spectacular.

In a sense, the concern for E3 is understandable. Ghent-Wevelgem is a World Tour race, and teams and headline riders may be looking to limit their fatigue in the weekend before Belgium’s Chrismas, The Superbowl, and World Series All Rolled Together Into One Unholy Party – that is to say, the Ronde van Vlaanderen, of course. Faced with a weekend of two major races, they will naturally choose the race that will garner them points toward season-long standings: Ghent-Wevelgem.

However, as this weekend’s racing quite clearly demonstrated, the E3 has the potential to be a far superior race. Its bergs are more numerous, closely packed, and are clustered closer to the finish line, thus approximating the Ronde. In comparison, Ghent-Wevelgem’s parcours usually features a more humane arrangement of hills and a long and flat (albeit frequently crosswindy) drag to the finish that, as this weekend’s race showed, offers a peloton the opportunity to suck up the day’s final breakaway. It’s not to say that Ghent-Wevelgem is an easy or boring race – but E3’s better.

Fabian Cancellara’s impressive victory at E3 this past weekend could, of course, both prove our point and help the E3 maintain its profile. If Cancellara goes on to another year of success at the Ronde and Paris-Roubaix, riders focusing on those two races in subsequent years may choose the E3 over Ghent-Wevelgem. It may be too soon to declare the death of E3.

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The Sticky Bidon – March 28, 2011

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, March 28, 2011

Seen any cool links we missed? Share ’em in the comments below!

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E3 & Ghent-Wevelgem Winners and Losers

Photo by Tim Van Wichelen

Good morning to one and all. Thanks to those who joined us in Pavé’s live race coverage and commentary, The Feed Zone, for Saturday’s E3 Prijs and Sunday’s Ghent-Wevelgem. Thanks also to guest commentator Inner Ring, who once again shared his knowledge and insight. Without further ado, here’s what stuck with us from this weekend’s Belgian races:

Winners:

Fabian Cancellara, who won the E3 Prijs in just about the best way you can win a race – attack the field, join a move, tow it to the next move, tow that one to the front break, drop the break, and win. He showed the full effect of the form that he’s only been hinting at and hiding in advance of the Ronde with a performance that was positively Merckxian. The fact that this came after three efforts to rejoin the field after three mechanicals between 80k and ~60k to go make it doubly impressive.

Stuart O’Grady, who demonstrated perfect teamwork by dropping out of the break to help Cancellara chase down the last group on the road. It was a beautiful and selfless move. But did Cancellara need it?

Sep Vanmarcke of Garmin-Cervelo. This youngster impressed at last year’s Ghent-Wevelgem, making the select break and attacking it in the closing kilometers only to get reeled in and still sprint for second. This year, he was the Garmin-Cervelo representative furthest up the road, where he rode with aplomb, attacked the break when it stopped being beneficial. When he was finally reeled in, he stayed with the lead group and sprinted for 4th place. It must be said that Garmin-Cervelo really won the first half of E3 – with Vanmarcke, Haussler, and Hushovd in the three main groups of the race after Andreas Klier set up a crucial split on the Taaienberg, it was theirs to lose.

Tom Boonen. His Ghent-Wevelgem start was a bit of a surprise after a poor early spring for Quick Step led to a schedule reshuffle. However, he stomped the field sprint and picked up a valuable win to put Quick Step on the only scoreboard that matters – the Belgian scoreboard. The Ronde is this weekend – Boonen’s Ghent-Wevelgem should be a nice bit of confidence.

Thomas Voeckler. Is there any race this guy can’t impress in? He was in the break all day at Ghent-Wevelgem, and then, when that crumbled, took up position at the front of the bunch.

Losers:

Tom Boonen. You may remember him from the “Winners” portion of this post, but it’s hard to shake the feeling that, compared to Cancellara’s E3 performance, Ghent-Wevelgem was a consoluation prize. The two go face to face next weekend at the Ronde, and good lord, did you see what Canc did to the field on Saturday? If Boonen’s not shaking in his Sidis, then he’s a good actor. See also: Pyrrhic victory.

Thor Hushovd and Garmin-Cervelo. There’s no video of Cancellara’s initial attack on Saturday, so we don’t know what Thor did when he realized that Cancellara raised his flag. Thor either missed the move or couldn’t follow it. With Garmin-Cervelo was placed so strongly and looking so in control of the race until this point, this bit of neglect was the first moment of a strong position crumbling. It’s too bad – Thor looked powerful up until that point, putting the hurt on with hard accelerations up the bergs. But missing that move is a black eye.

Furthermore, Tyler Farrar was outsprinted for third behind Tom Boonen and Daniele “Mister Second Place” Bennati at Ghent-Wevelgem. If Thor Hushovd had made the front group when the peloton split, could Farrar have won? Apply a second black eye to Thor for this weekend’s performance; when was the last time he won out of a breakaway?

Sky’s Ian Stannard attacked the three-man move in the closing kilometers of Ghent-Wevelgem as the peloton breathed down their necks. It seemed for a bit that he could hold the gap, but he was sucked up as Boonen, Farrar, et al were opening up their sprint. Verdict: at 2k to go, he went too early, and doomed the trio and himself.

Katusha had three riders in the decisive move at E3 on Saturday, and what did they wind up doing?

Bram Tankink of Rabobank, through no fault of his own. Rather, his facial expressions when he cramped hard, painfully, and almost comically make him deserve a bit of sympathy. Cancellara dropped him like a stone and went on to ride to the E3 finish alone; credit Tankink with another effort to stay on his wheel – but that was sunk with another painful-looking round of cramps.

Stijn Devolder. Another Belgian weekend spent at the back.

Post-finishline crashes. At Ghent-Wevelgem, it was FDJ’s Yoan Offredo, who after an exhausting race and a hard sprint didn’t have time to brake from 65kph or room to maneuver in a tight bunch and struck his leg on a photographer straying into the road. Offredo swung over 90 degrees before crashing hard, which led to this tender but painful-looking moment with Cofidis’s Leonardo Duque. Far be it for me to tell race photographers how to do their job, but it seems that there are a handful cause post-finish-line crashes every year, and that seems unnecessary.

Ghent-Wevelgem. Normally considered a race that ends with a sprinter winning from a small group, it was a fairly mundane affair this year. And this after teams choosing Ghent-Wevelgem over E3 led to rumors of E3’s demise? More on that later this week.

Those are our thoughts – what’d you notice during the race? What impressed you, and what disappointed you? Share your thoughts below.

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The Feed Zone: Ghent-Wevelgem 2011

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The Feed Zone: E3 Prijs Vlaanderen 2011

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