Boonen Skips E3 Prijs for Ghent-Wevelgem – A Good Call?

Photo by Luc Claessen/ISPA Photo

Last night, we received this press from Quick-Step regarding their rosters for this weekend’s races. Share your comments below.

23-Mar-2011: Quick-Step Cycling Team will be lining up this weekend at the E3 Prijs Vlaanderen and Gent-Wevelgem, with two squads ready to rumble.

Tom Boonen will be participating in the Gent-Wevelgem.

“We chose this option because at this point in the season the team needs to rack up some important points for the team standings” Team Manager Patrick Lefevere says “This is why we decided to put Tom Boonen in the Gent Wevelgem; our aim is to ride a good race and collect valuable points for our team classification.”

“It isn’t easy for me to choose between two races of such stature and tradition” Tom Boonen says “I would have liked to race in both of them, but we’ve chosen Gent Wevelgem because for us at this time the World Tour is really important.”

What are your thoughts on Boonen missing a race he’s won 4 times to try and earn the team World Points? Is it a sensible move, or yet another why the World Tour’s a bad idea?

Share your comments below.

 

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2011 Dwars door Vlaanderen – What We Noticed

Photo By Luc Claessen/IPSA Photo

 

Welcome back, Nick! With a fantastic win in yesterday’s Dwars door Vlaanderen, Saxo Bank’s Nick Nuyens resurrected a career—and a classics team—that many felt had been left for dead.  Here’s what we noticed:

1. So let me get this straight: Rabobank signed Matti Breschel—last year’s Dwars winner, to replace Nick Nuyens—this year’s Dwars winner. Funny how that worked out, huh?

2. And speaking of irony, the score is now Saxo Bank 6, Leopard Trek 2.

3. But seriously, let’s give Nick Nuyens credit for his terrific ride today. After breaking the race apart on the Oude Kwaremont, the Belgian bridged with Sky’s Gerraint Thomas to Frederic Amorison and Rob Goris—the final two survivors from the day’s long breakaway—and held-off a charging field that was eager to produce a field sprint. After two seasons of more or less anonymity, Nuyens appears to have found the talent that earned him wins in the Omloop Het Volk and Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne and finished second in the Ronde.

4. As for Thomas, the man from Wales is someone to watch over the next few weeks—especially in a race like Ghent-Wevelgem where a small group sprint is a distinct possibility.

5. Run without radios, today’s race certainly produced an exciting finish. But you can’t attribute the outcome to the absence of earpieces as Nuyens and Thomas were well within sight of the peloton—they knew who they were chasing and how much road they had left.

6. Speaking of the chasing peloton, Garmin-Cervélo and Quick-Step had the race (more or less) right where they wanted it and came away with nothing to show for it. With each passing race, the pressure mounts on the two super squads.

7. That said, Quick-Step’s Tom Boonen seems to be coming along quite nicely. He put in a few exploratory attacks to soften the bunch and had little to no trouble following the important moves. I think we’ll get a better idea of his form Saturday Sunday, but for now, he looks to be on-track for Flanders and Roubaix.

8. Despite his penchant for playing “caboose”, Stijn Devolder laid down an attack inside the final 30 kilometers—before promptly heading back to his usual spot at the back of the field. Peter Van Petegem made a living gambling at the back of the bunch; can Devolder get away with the same strategy?

9. Even though they didn’t win, Leopard Trek looks as if it’s ready to dominate the cobbled monuments in much the same way Saxo Bank did last year. Four and five riders-wide at certain points during yesterday’s race, Spartacus and his army seem primed for battle.

10. Team Sky rode a terrific race as well—Flecha looks storng and he has a team surrounding him that has the ability to give Leopard Trek a run for its money. Of the three biggest races held in Belgium thus far this season, Sky has a win and two second-places—an impressive record.

11. Greg Van Avermaet is clearly enjoying the form of his life. While BMC is not on the current list for Saturday’s E3 Prijs; Sunday’s Ghent-Wevelgem is a race perfectly suited to the Belgian’s talents. He’s been one of the peloton’s most exciting riders since the start of the season—here’s hoping he ends up with something show for it.

12. Did you see Johan Vansummeren’s move to get himself to the front right before Knokteberg?

13. At what point will Tom Veelers earn himself a World Tour ride?

Well, that’s enough for one race, I guess. What did you notice?

Share your comments below.

 

 

 

 

 

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The Sticky Bidon – March 23, 2011

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Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, March 23, 2011

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

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10 in ’11: Riders to watch this Spring – Part 1

Spring! After having spent the winter riding through snow and slush – or even worse, riding on a trainer – Spring never comes soon enough. Not to mention, the proper racing season starts! Nothing against the early season races in Australia and the Middle East, but the road racing season doesn’t really begin until there’s racing in Belgium, France and Italy.

The season has already seen some great racing at. But there’s still plenty of Spring racing left – and with that racing, comes a whole new cast of racers to keep an eye on.

In our first 10 in ’11 series, we’ll take a look at 10 riders who Pavé thinks are poised to make a name for themselves this Spring and in the future. Some you may have already heard of, and some you may not be familiar with – yet. Here are our first three riders to watch this Spring.

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Andrew Talansky was a late-2010 signing for Garmin-Cervélo – but don’t think of him as being a total neophyte. Talansky spent 2009 as a neo-pro for Amore &Vita – McDonalds, getting a taste of pro racing that didn’t quite agree with him. Dropping back in to the amateur ranks with California Giant Berry Farms in the US, and Team USA internationally, Talansky showed his skill with a win in the U23 national championships, and a second in the prestigious Tour de l’Avenir. For those wondering how he’d adjust to being a pro again for Garmin-Cervélo, he finished the 2011 Tour Méditerranéen in fourth place, having coming in fourth on the steep stage 5 finish on Mount Faron. He also performed admirably at Paris-Nice, with a nice top-10 finish in the stage 6 time trial, ahead of far more experienced riders. We probably won’t see him in the Classics, given the insane firepower Garmin-Cervélo is bringing, and when we do see him, it’ll be service his team mates. Keep an eye on him in time trials and on the (probably rare) occasion he’s left to fight for his own in hilly breaks.

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Steve Chainel is FDJ’s 2011 pickup who is looking increasingly like a valuable pickup from the near-crumbling of BBox before it was saved by Europcar. Though it may come as a surprise to see a FDJ squad at the front of major spring races, they’ve put together an impressive young classics squad – Chainel and teammate Yoan Offredo already flew the colors admirably at Milan-San Remo, and it was Chainel who launched from the field to pull Offredo and breakmates Van Avermaet and O’Grady to the Poggio with an advantage over their rivals.

Chainel’s a crossover from cyclocross – he netted a number of top-ten results at major races throughout the season. In the 2009/2010 CX season he struggled to last the full hour at race pace, but he stepped it up for 2010/2011, and despite a strong CX season, he appears to be making the transition to the road with aplomb. Keep your eyes on Chainel.

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Last year – his sophomore year as a pro, Liquigas’s Daniel Oss declared himself to be a spring contender with respectable placings at Gent-Wevelgem (5th) and in a stage of the Three Days of de Panne (4th). With a Grand Tour in his legs – last year’s Tour de France, during which he won a combativity award – he should be able to develop further. Paired with another talented youngster, Peter Sagan, he may be on leadout duty for a while, but he’ll gun for the win in some tune-up races. With eyes on Sagan, he may have the opportunity to slip away from the field for a strong win.

We’ll cover another three riders we think everyone should keep their eyes on in our next installment. Stay tuned!

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The Rise of Canadian Cycling – Part 1

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If you’ve been trolling our Comments section over the past few months, you might have noticed a distinctly Canadian voice flying the maple leaf flag for his favorite compatriots. Sensing an opportunity to shed some well-deserved light on the topic of Canada’s recent cycling history, I reached out to the author and asked if he would be willing to share his thoughts. Here’s Canadian Mike’s first installment:

Damn that Steve Bauer.  It all started with him.  The history of modern Canadian cycling is inexorably tied to Steve. Not to diminish the international accomplishments of previous generations of crazy Canucks (I’m looking at you, Joclyn Lovell), but Los Angeles ’84 is where it all began.

That silver medalist behind Alexei Grewal, Bauer spent first years as a pro with La Vie Claire, before moving to the legendary 7-Eleven/Motorola.  His 2nd-place finish at Roubaix in 1990 inspired a generation of Canadian youth to throw a leg over the top tube (it certainly inspired me!).

But who else can we consider the forefathers of Canada’s European professional contingent?  Alex Steida was the first North American to wear the yellow jersey—and boy does he ever hang on to that!  Brian Walton won the Milk Race back when it really meant something and a silver medal in the Olympic points race. Gord Fraser deserves mention as well, although he largely made his fortune riding domestically after spending a few hard luck years trying to make it in Europe.  But aside from those three, Canadian cycling—while vibrant regionally and with many racers making a solid living domestically—was not widely represented in the European pro peloton.

Then in 1996, the torch was passed as Michael Barry entered his rookie campaign at the same time Bauer was retiring. Simultaneously, the hockey-mad country began to develop a network of talent scouting that gave rise to many of today’s professionals—many of whom used to be hockey players who used cycling for summer training!

To be continued…

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The Sticky Bidon – March 22, 2011

Photo Luc Claessen/ISPA Photo

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, March 22, 2011

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

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