The Sticky Bidon – February 22, 2011

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

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2011 Team-by-Team Season Preview: Garmin-Cervélo

Copyright Slipstream Sports


Each year, Pavé previews the upcoming road season with a countdown of the top-20 teams in the sport. We pick things up today with #5.

#5 – Team Garmin-Cervélo

With one huge exception, no team made a bigger splash this past off-season than Garmin-Cervélo.  By joining forces with the backbone of the Cervélo TestTeam—a move that allowed GM Jonathan Vaughters to acquire the majority of the TestTeam’s talented classics contingent—Garmin went from “on the cusp” to “cup runneth over” in a matter of days.

And it’s easy to see why. Take a squad that already contained Tyler Farrar, Martijn Maaskant, David Miller, and Johan Van Summeren; add Thor Hushovd, Heinrich Haussler, Roger Hammond, and Andreas Klier from Cervélo; throw in Sep Vanmarcke—last year’s Ghent-Wevelgem revelation; and you have the makings of one of the finest and deepest classics teams ever assembled.  Not to mention, a major headache for whomever is responsible for determining who rides where.

That said, were I newly-signed DS Peter Van Petegem, here’s what I would do: first, I’d send Thor and Haussler to the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad, Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne and Paris-Nice.  Farrar, Miller, and Van Summeren would tackle L’Eroica and Tirreno. At San Remo, Haussler and Farrar would be my co-captains, with Thor providing a lead-out for the American—Haussler gets to try his hand in a break.  Then Haussler tackles the E3 with Miller, Van Summeren, Maaskant, and Klier, while Farrar returns Thor’s San Remo favor with a lead-out in Ghent-Wevelgem the next day—with Vanmarcke and Hammond helping out.  At Flanders, Haussler and Farrar are my two co-captains with Hushovd playing the role of uber-lieutenant, while all eggs will be in the World Champion’s basket at Roubaix.

Needless to say, it’s a complicated mess of expectations and egos to sort out—doing it smoothly will determine the success of the team’s March and April.  If all goes well, Garmin could easily win a Monument or two or three; on the other hand, too many cooks have spoiled more than pot in the past. Here’s hoping Garmin’s not left with a bad taste in its mouth by mid-April.

At the same time—despite its off-season acquisitions—Garmin’s not a team built only for the cobbled classics. With Ryder Hesjedal, Daniel Martin, Christian Vande Velde, and Tom Danielson on board, this is a squad that has the potential to perform well in the Ardennes classics, short stage races, and place a rider inside the top-10 at all three Grand Tours.

Of the four, Hesjedal and Martin are the marquee names. The Canadian started his fantastic 2010 with a strong performance in the Basque Country before finishing second in Amstel, ninth in Fleche, and twelfth in Liege. At the Tour two months later, he put in the performance of a lifetime, riding consistently from Arenberg to the Tourmalet on his way to a seventh-place finish in Paris.  Top-10 results in several summer classics and semi-classics confirmed the rider’s potential.

This summer, there’s little reason to doubt the Canadian’s ability to replicate if not improve upon his performance from last year. His progression has been steady, the talent is clearly there, and there’s an aggression that was not displayed by past Garmin GC success stories such as Vande Velde and Bradley Wiggins. In short, this guy’s for real.

As for Dan Martin, the Irishman is still waiting for his first Tour de France, but if he peaks for July like he peaked for last August, Vaughters will be hard-pressed to leave him off the roster. That said, Martin’s demonstrated an affinity for racing in Italy, and on a terribly hilly parcours, it might be worthwhile to see what he can do as the team’s undisputed leader at the Giro. As for Vande Velde, he’ll serve the team best as a lieutenant, but should not be discounted in short stage races as he can still climb and time trial better than most.  Tom Danielson will once again be the team’s main man for the Vuelta.

Along the way, look for Haussler, Farrar, and Hushovd to grab their share of Grand Tour stage wins, with Garmin’s long-coveted Tour stage a major goal. It will be interesting to see how Farrar and Hushovd co-exist in July. Will one work for stages while the other goes for green? The new points format will likely suit a team with two sprinters, but who will play which role for Garmin remains to be seen.

If all goes well, Garmin’s #5 ranking might look too low by the end of the season. And with one of the deepest squads in the sport, and young talent a-plenty, they might as well get used to being at the top.

Man of the Hour: Thor Hushovd won the biggest race of his career at last season’s World Championships; now he gets a chance to be the first rainbow-wearing Roubaix winner since Bernard Hinault in 1981.

On the Hot Seat: Heinrich Haussler had quite an unlucky 2010 as injuries, crashes, and more injuries pretty much derailed his entire season. He needs to remain patient and build his form slowly in 2011; a rash display of over-exuberance will get him nowhere—except maybe injured.

Up-and-Comer: This is a tough one to pick, as Garmin’s assembled some of the finest young talent in the sport over the past few seasons. American Andrew Talansky rode impressively when in Europe last season, finishing second overall at the Tour de l’Avenir. This season, he’s already off to an impressive start thanks to a fourth-place ride in the Tour Mediterranéan. Garmin will need to resist the urge to ask too much of this future star too soon.

Best Pick-Up: Even before they signed Ronde and Roubaix-winner Peter Van Petegem to a short-term contract, Garmin-Cervélo might have had the best classics director in the sport in rider Andreas Klier. One of Van Petegem’s personal mentees from his days with TVM-Farm Frites, Klier knows just about every stretch of Flemish berg and straat as well as the locals do—after all, he’s a local himself after moving there several years ago. Look for Klier to be the Classics difference-maker for Garmin—especially if the races are run without radios.

Biggest Loss: Svein Tuft was beginning to hit his stride last summer, winning time trials at the Tour of Denmark and ENECO Tour on his way to finishing second and fifth overall respectively. Will Garmin miss those two wins? Maybe not—but Tuft is a powerful rider who was able to perform well in those odd parts of the season when everyone else is either training or resting. In other words: he’s a handy guy to have around.

And that’s it for #5. By now I’m sure you’ve guessed the four remaining teams in the ranking—but in which order will they arrive?

Share your comments below.

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An Interview with Steve Hampsten – Part 1


Photo Courtesy of Steve Hampsten/www.hampsten.com


This weekend, Austin, Texas hosts the 7th annual North American Handmade Bicycle Show—affectionately known as “NAHBS”—where many of the worlds finest bicycle and accessory craftsmen will assemble to show their wares, exchange ideas, and in some special cases, maybe enjoy a ride or two.

This year, one of our favorite builders, Steve Hampsten from Seattle, Washington’s Hampsten Cycles, will make the trip, armed with a beautiful array of bikes designed using traditional principles and materials and geared for racers and enthusiasts alike.  While you may know Steve more for his brother’s exploits, his framesets are proof that there’s more behind the family name than just legendary Grand Tour victories.

Thanks for the taking the time to answer some questions, Steve. Let’s begin with an easy one: what’s your 6-word memoir?

SH – “A Life Gloriously Mis-spent with Bicycles”

Before making bicycles, you spent about 18 years as a chef in Madison, Wisconsin and Seattle, Washington.  Are there any similarities between creating the perfect meal and the perfect frame?

SH – I initially learned classic French cuisine, straight out of Escoffier, then started playing with Nouvelle Cuisine (small portions, high prices)—this was all back in the early 1980s. After that, for me, came New American cooking, followed by many years of Italian food—mostly Northern Italian. So in the restaurants I worked in I was usually the “Italian” guy or the “Classic” guy—meaning that I understood the basics of cooking pretty thoroughly and I liked to work in a fairly traditional realm.

So when I’m executing a dish from the menu or creating a special for that evening, I’m bring my knowledge, my love for what I’m doing, and my feel for the ingredients used to that particular dish. I’m not really asking myself if the customer will like what I’m doing—it’s almost a given that they will.

If we apply this to the bikes we sell, I feel like the customers know what kind of bikes I’m doing, they know what the flavors are going to be, they simply want me to translate that into a bike for them personally. You know—it works. And the bicycles—like my cooking—are fairly traditional and classic.


Steve and Max - Photo Courtesy of Hampsten Cycles/www.hampsten.blogspot.com


For those readers who might be meeting Hampsten Cycles for the first time, what would you like them to know?  What impressions do you hope they’ll take away?

SH – Andy and I are the principals in Hampsten Cycles and we both started riding in about 1965 and racing in 1975. Andy is a retired professional racer who won the Giro d’Italia in 1988, finished fourth in the Tour de France twice, and had some other good results. Andy now leads tours in Italy with Cinghiale Cycling Tours and is a mean cook in his own right.

I/Steve am an ex-chef, I’ve worked in bike shops off and on since 1975, I can weld and blacksmith, I’ve brazed bicycle frames, and we’ve been doing the bike company since 1999. I guess the impression I’d like people to have is that we’re both been around bicycles for a long time, we love riding, and we’re thrilled to be doing what we’re doing—I love my job.

How would you describe the philosophy of Hampsten Cycles?  What experiences shaped it?

SH – Maybe it wasn’t thinking that we could do better, but that no one was doing it quite the way we thought it could be done.

Some of this goes back to when Andy started Cinghiale Cycling Tours, his marketing was basically: hey, come over, ride with us, we think you’ll be blown away by what great roads we have, what great food there is, and what nice people you’ll get to ride with. And so many of his customers seemed to show up on bikes that maybe didn’t fit them well as they did 20 years ago or weren’t as well-suited to riding in Italy as they could have been.

At the same time I was working at Match Bicycle Company, building Schwinn Paramounts, and working with some pretty good framebuilders; Martin Tweedy, Curt Goodrich, Kirk Pacenti, Mark Bulgier, Tim Isaac, et. al. I looked at what we were doing with the Paramounts and so much of it seemed market-driven and involved heavy/oversized tubing and geometry that could have been improved upon. And at Match we’d have these long conversations on how frames could be better built and what geometry would make sense if we were designing them for ourselves and our friends. And we sneered at all the aluminum frames coming from China and carbon was still pretty uncommon and titanium was what rich people rode.

Then at some point the coin dropped and we started talking about putting the family name on a down tube and having them built at Match for folks like us who were a little older and not racing anymore and where should we retire to when we got rich off this gig?

Our philosophy, if we have one, is that we build the bikes we ride and we do them the way we think they should be done. So that rules out cyclocross bikes, track bikes, TT bikes—we have built these in the past but we don’t now because we don’t ride them anymore. And others far smarter than us make mountain bikes so we don’t go there.

But interestingly, while you might rule out certain types of bikes, as a builder you embrace many different materials.  Why so diverse?  Do you have one material you prefer over the rest?

SH – I’ve ridden bikes from all the materials we build and it seems pretty obvious that one can build a good bicycle from anything currently being used. Steel we like for the sweet ride, ease of construction, and reasonable price. Ti is great for the comfortable ride over big hits, light weight, and general bombproof-ness. Aluminum I like for the race-like feel, relative ease of working, and overall stiffness; carbon is good for those wanting a quieter ride and a light frame. We’re not currently selling carbon frames but I still feel it’s a good material in this application.

As to having a material preference…not so much. For me it’s usually about do I want to ride a light bike with skinny tires or maybe something comfy with fenders and bigger tires? Or a light stiff bike with skinny tires and fenders? So many choices…and what to wear?

With so many options, I imagine it’s hard for some customers to choose what they want—or they have something in mind that just doesn’t make sense. How do you handle situations in which the customer might not be right?  What happens when the experience of the builder comes into conflict with the desire of the buyer?

SH – When I’m dealing with a customer I’m pretty good about letting them know what I think will work and what won’t. If it comes down to aesthetics – color, say, or choice of decals—I realize that I’m on less firm ground than, say, discussing geometry and gearing or equipment. So I make my recommendations, I hope they listen, and at some point I may have to just shut up and make the sale. Or, if I feel that the customer is being a big PIA or that my principles are being compromised, I may have to fire them—or they may fire me. I’ve seen all these scenarios and while the un-fun ones have happened, they are rare; they happen less as I get better at this, and I’m sorry to anyone reading this that I’ve been rude to—probably.

Come back Thursday for Part 2 of our chat with Steve. And if you’re lucky enough to be heading to NAHBS, stop-by and take a look at his beautiful bikes.



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Cyclocross Weekend Wrap-Up: GvA Trofee

Photo by Tim Van Wichelen

This past weekend saw two races, and though Saturday’s race in Cauberg had plenty of big names to pay attention to on the starting line, it was Sunday’s race in Oostmalle, culminating the season-long Gazet Van Antwerpen Trofee, that was the highlight of the weekend.

Saturday’s race saw veteran Bart Wellens take the win ahead of Philipp Walsleben and Niels Albert. Since his 5th place at Worlds, Walsleben has racked up some very decent results, with several podium finishes to his name. It’s a fine way to end the season for the German champion.

A few people opted to miss Saturday’s race, notably Kevin Pauwels, who entered Sunday locking horns with Sven Nys in a battle for the GvA Trofee. The GvA Trofee is one of international cyclocross’s three major series, along with the UCI World Cup and the Superprestige. Sven Nys has had an iron grip on the Superprestige and GvA Trofee for most of the past decade, and a considerable number of World Cup series victories, to boot. Every year he races, somebody asks if he’s getting too old to consistently race at the top level. This year, with a raft of talented youngsters putting up good results, his neck-and-neck battle with Kevin Pauwels in the final race of the GvA Trofee took on poetic proportions: would the old man hand the reigns to a new young champion?

Pauwels had the benefit of a deep Telenet-Fidea team, working for him in a final race before he moves to Sunweb-Revor. Zdenek Stybar and Bart Wellens are two good men to have on your side. The early part of the race saw a group of ten trading attacks; Nys tried to go alone, but Stybar chased him down, with Aernouts, Pauwels, Vantornout, Wellens, and de Knegt all behind. Halfway through the race, Niels Albert took advantage of the standoff between Sven Nys and Telenet-Fidea, jumping away and quickly opening up a fifteen-second gap.

Behind, the situation deteriorated. Nys and Pauwels, each seeking advantageous position, bumped elbows repeatedly. Some moments looked as though the racers were engaged in a cyclocross match sprint, slowing to a painfully dreary pace on the turns before going full throttle on the straightaways. On the final lap, Pauwels punctured, lost seconds before he could take a bike change in the pit, and fought hard enough to reach the lead group again. But it was all for naught – the finish line came too soon, and Nys, coming down the straightaway with Bart Aernouts and Zdenek Stybar, could ease his sprint and sit up, his arms in the air, having defeated Pauwels to win his seventh consecutive GvA Trofee, and his eighth in nine years.

Pauwels later admitted that the pressure gotten to him, even if he didn’t use those words. He fumed about Nys’s tactics and revealed that he was unaware that the race was on the final lap. Nys, on the other hand, said that he was “in an ideal position to come out winning” – a bold statement considering his defeat two weeks ago in a sprint by Pauwels, but one that shows the confidence that his deep experience offers him. Nys knew how to defeat Pauwels in Oostmalle.

It was a fine way to end the season.

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The Sticky Bidon – February 21, 2011

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, February 21, 2011


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

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2011 Team-By-Team Season Preview: Katusha


Fotoreporter Sirotti


Each year, Pavé previews the upcoming road season with a countdown of the top-20 teams in the sport. We pick things up today with #6.

#6 – Katusha

With 2010’s #1-ranked rider, an improved classics squad, and a bevy of Russian talent to keep the sponsors happy, 2011 should be a banner year for Katusha.

Spain’s Joaquin Rodriguez is the main focal point of the squad.  A stage winner in last year’s Tour and a fourth-place finisher at the Vuelta, Rodriguez will spend the first part of his season focused on success in the Ardennes Classics—he finished second at Fleche Wallonne last year and at Liege in 2009—before deciding whether or not to tackle the Giro d’Italia.  While the difficult course is tempting to the Spaniard and his sponsors, Rodriguez’s Giro track record isn’t great—he’ll likely benefit from a bit of rest following several months of racing in Mallorca, Paris-Nice, Catalunya, and the Vuelta al Pais Vasco.  And besides, with an eighth-place finish in last year’s Tour de France and his third-consecutive top-10 finish in the Vuelta, it’s hard to see him not riding in at least his home Grand Tour this season.

Alongside Rodriguez in many races will be Russian champion, Alexandre Kolobnev. A talented one-day rider who finished second in last year’s Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Kolobnev is arguably the team’s best stage win threat in races such as Paris-Nice, the Giro, and the Tour de France, as he’s less concerned with GC results than Rodriguez. An aggressive rider who loves to attack, many fans would be happy to see the Russian take a win in Ardennes.

In the cobbled classics, Filippo Pozzato leads the way, with help from new signee Leif Hoste and classic veteran stalwart Sergei Ivanov. A cobble specialist, Hoste has three second-places finishes in the Tour of Flanders and an eighth-place finish in Roubaix on his resumé; his expertise and horsepower should prove valuable to Pozzato as he attempts to win his first cobbled Monument.  When in form, Pozzato’s one of the strongest riders in the peloton—especially in Belgium and Northern France.  In 2009 he was arguably stronger than Tom Boonen, but suffered from poor decisions and bad luck in the Ronde and Roubaix. Last year, the Italian came down with a bad case of the flu just days before Flanders.  He skipped the Ronde, but returned with just enough fitness to finish fourth at Roubaix.

And with another flat course on tap, Pozzato will also be a contender at this year’s World Championships in Copenhagen.  He finished a lackluster fourth last year in Melbourne and would relish a second chance to win a rainbow jersey.

Overall, if Rodriguez, Kolobnev, and Pozzato manage to win the team a classic or two and maybe a Grand Tour, the Russian squad will end the year as one of the sport’s best.  But should they fall short of the expectations of sponsors and fans, they’ll be lucky to remain inside the top-10.

Man of the Hour: Joaquin Rodriguez ended last season as the world’s #1-ranked rider.  This year he looks to win his first Grand Tour—possibly at Italy’s Giro d’Italia, but more likely at the Vuelta later in the year. Along the way, Rodriguez should perform well in shorter stage races and the Ardennes Classics—all of which will help the Spaniard in his bid to defend his #1 ranking.

On the Hot Seat: Filippo Pozzato needs to win a cobbled Monument to justify all of the hype he’s received over the past two seasons. A past winner of the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and the E3 Prijs Harelbeke, only Flanders or Roubaix will suffice at this point in the Italian’s career—although a World Championship certainly wouldn’t hurt.

Up-and-Comer: Denis Galimzyanov scored several top-10 finishes in field sprints last season, including five during the first two weeks of the Vuelta—decent results for a soon-to-be 24-year-old sprinter with little to no lead-out train. Might he be the reason Katusha was willing to say goodbye to Robbie McEwen?

Best Pick-Up: Leif Hoste will bolster Katusha’s squad in the cobbled classics, possibly proving to be the difference-maker for Pozzato.  In fact, with Pozzato drawing most of the competition’s attention, Hoste might have a better chance at Roubaix than he did while leading the team with Lotto.

Biggest Loss: Katusha lost a bit of credibility when it signed Danilo Di Luca to a one-year contract—even if it’s supposedly for little-to-no money. One of the most notorious dopers of the past 10 years, Di Luca is a talented liability who needs to keep his nose clean in order justify the trust Katusha has placed in him. Unfortunately, many fans have already made up their minds.

Share your comments below.

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