International Cyclocross Weekend Wrap-Up: Krawatencross and Superprestige Hoogstraten

Photo courtesy of Tim Van Wichelen

This weekend saw two excellent races – Saturday’s Krawatencross Lille, the penultimate race of the Gazet van Antwerpen Trofee, and Sunday’s Superprestige Hoogstraten, also the second-to-last race in that series. Sven Nys went into the weekend leading both series, but threatened by Kevin Pauwels and Zdenek Stybar in both. Leading two of cyclocross’s grand slam series sounds like a good place to be, but Stybar and Pauwels have both been incredibly strong in 2011. Nys couldn’t rest on his considerable laurels – it would be a weekend of fighting for him.

First, at Krawatencross, a fast course sent a rather prestigious group of five into the final laps together: Nys, Stybar, Pauwels, Niels Albert, and Bart Wellens. Stybar rode as though posessed, controlling the front and constantly trying to break apart the group. He succeeded in putting Albert and Wellens in difficulty and small gaps opened up here and there, but nothing stuck – all rode well through the course (check out the body english they used to navigate a twisting sandpit).

The five entered the final straight together for a sprint, which offered much tactical intrigue on its own. Stybar had been racing as though he didn’t want the race to come down to a sprint; Nys on the other hand seemed either reluctant to contribute to Stybar’s effort to shatter the group, or was just desperately keeping Stybar on a short leash. If Nys felt that his chances were best in a sprint finish, he hasn’t been paying attention lately, since Kevin Pauwels has showed more than once that he’s got quite a spurtje in his legs in the closing meters.

Stybar opened up the sprint and almost held it all the way to the line; a sprinting Nys was unable to come around (suggesting that rather than playing his odds on a sprint, he had just been keeping Stybar close out of desperation), but Pauwels enrolled the current and former World Champions into Sprinting 101, accelerating in the generous draft of both Stybar and Nys, only putting himself into the wind in the final 50 meters, closing the door every so slightly on Nys as an insurance policy, and sealing the deal with a textbook bike throw that likely made the difference between first and second.

After the race, Stybar said that once he knew that Nys wasn’t coming around, he eased with about 20m to go and Pauwels surprised him, but the video replay suggest that he was soundly beaten in a sprint all the way to the line. The lesson to take is the put your money on Pauwels if he enters the asphalt among the leaders. Nys will have to watch out for Pauwels on the final GvA Trofee race on the 20th in Oostmalle – they’re separated by only two points. Whoever bests the other will win the overall.

On Sunday, Hoogstraten’s mud-rutted up-and-down affair offered Nys another chance to seal the deal on a series victory before its final race. It was a course that offered racers plenty of difficult moments and many crashes throughout the race. Reminiscent of the saying about Paris-Roubaix that a winner doesn’t need good luck but rather, needs absolutely no bad luck whatsoever, Nys rode a perfect race when others bobbled here and there or slid out on the loose, uneven descents (prompting CyclingNews to quip that “the ground was like a magnet for Zdenek Stybar”). In the final lap and a half, Nys was able to put enough insurance time into his nearest chaser, Niels Albert, that Nys was able to take a clean bike for the final few hundred meters between the last pit and the finish line. As he crossed the line, he licked his thumb and placed to his chest, the internationally understood gesture for I’m sizzlin’, and held up all ten fingers: with the win he clinched his tenth victory in the Superprestige series. His run extends back to 98-99, only interrupted by Richard Groenendaal (00-01), Bart Wellens (03-04), and Stybar (09-10).

Posted in Featured, Races | Leave a comment

The Sticky Bidon – February 7, 2011

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, February 7, 2011

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

Posted in Featured, Sticky Bidon | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Monday Musette – Race Wrap-Up, De Peet, & Garmin’s German GPS

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Here’s this week’s Monday Musette:

1. Elia Viviani gave Liquigas its first win of the season with a sprint win in Saturday’s GP Costa degli Estruschi. The young Italian’s win was aided by fourth-place finisher Peter Sagan, a rider from whom much is expected later this spring. Androni Giocatolli’s Roberto Ferrari took second, continuing his terrific form, and Farnese Vini’s Elia Favilli was third—making Saturday the first time that I can remember seeing two Elia’s on a podium. An interesting note: 5-time winner Alessandro Petacchi was nowhere to be seen over the weekend, perhaps an ominous sign considering the rumors of his drug use last season.

2. In France, Ag2r’s Anthony Ravard won the 5-day Etoile des Besseges with a canny bit of tactical riding Saturday and Sunday. Ravard went into Saturday’s Stage 4 only one second behind Vacansoleil’s Johnny Hoogerland. Third-place in the day’s first intermediate sprint in Saint-Aamboix brought Ravard level with the Dutchmen heading into the final day. Ravard must have been super-motivated to take the win; he won Sunday’s first time bonus and took third on the stage, cementing his place atop the final podium.

But while Ravard deserves all the credit in the world for seizing control of the GC in the last two stages, the question has to be asked: what happened to Vacansoleil? With the strongest team in the race and not one, but two riders finishing on the final podium, one has to wonder if the team has too many cooks to stir the pot.

3. The peloton made a statement at the first race of the Challenge Mallorca Sunday by defying the UCI and racing with radios. But while the officials left for the beach, the race organization and the riders honored their commitment to fans and sponsors, putting on quite a show with Tyler Farrar taking his first win of the season for Garmin-Cervelo. (He followed it up with another “official” win today.) It’s clear that the radio issue is to be one of this season’s defining controversies with several key players entrenched on both sides. And while I’m impressed at the riders’ defiant display, I have a hard time believing they would have done it at a more important event.

4. Finally, the 10th edition of the Tour of Qatar kicked-off Sunday with Lars Boom employing his cyclocross skills to win the race’s opening Prologue on a technical, cobbled 2.5-kilometer circuit. Interestingly, Boom decided after several test runs to let some air out of his tires, giving him a bit more grip and stability over the uneven surface. Attention Zdenek Stybar: you now have your first target for 2012.

5. Unfortunately for Boom, his lead would not last long as Tom Boonen made the Garmin-led split at the end of today’s Stage 1, taking the victory and overall race lead. Boom is reportedly suffering from stomach problems—he missed the move and perhaps his best chance for an important early victory. As for Boonen, he’s clearly out to prove he’s still one of the best riders in the sport after an injury-riddled season in 2010.

6. Speaking of Garmin, the squad is apparently talking to Belgian classics legend Peter Van Petegem about filling the DS vacancy created by Matt White’s firing. Unfortunately for PVP, he must answer to the organizers of the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and the Tour of Flanders (he’s the race director of both events) and perhaps more importantly, his wife (he helps her run a bed and breakfast in the Flemish Ardennes). The move is a clear indication of Garmin’s desire to find success at both the Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix, races Van Petegem knows all too well.

And should he make the switch, I hope Peter remembers the little people who helped him get where is—like that young American DS who gave him some good advice before winning a stage at Paris-Nice.

Photo by Jeff Quenet

7. That said, should the team fail to sign De Peet, they can rest comfortably knowing that they might just have the next best thing in Germany’s Andreas Klier. If it’s available near you, pick-up a copy of Issue 2 of Peloton Magazine—Jered Gruber’s interview with Klier is worth the purchase price alone. Klier is clearly one of the most experienced classics riders of his generation and he owes much of his knowledge to Van Petegem, his mentor at Farm Frites during the beginning of his career. While Hushovd and Haussler might be higher profile signings, I consider Klier’s knowledge and expertise as equally invaluable. 

That’s it for today—enjoy your week. Team-By-Team Season Preview continues tomorrow, starting with team #16, and ends two days before the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad.

Share your comments below.

Posted in Featured, Musette | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Sticky Bidon – February 4, 2011

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, February 4, 2011

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

Posted in Featured, Sticky Bidon | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Weekend Preview – Bessèges, Mallorca, and Qatar


http://www.letour.fr/indexTQA_us.html


Lots of racing this weekend—let’s take a quick look:

1. In France the Etoile de Besseges wraps-up with two stages this weekend, the most difficult of which is Saturday’s Stage 4.  The stage starts and finishes in the town of Ales and tackles three categorized climbs on the day—although the last is not too close to the finish.  Vacansoleil’s Johnny Hoogerland took a narrow lead after finishing second in today’s stage; look for him to have little trouble defending it through to the end.  For some reason or another, Vacansoleil really wants this race. (Hey guys, you’ve already been invited to the Tour.)

2. Saturday also features the 16th edition of Italy’s GP della Costa Etruschi.  No startlists have been made available (you can find one here), but I see that Lampre’s Alessandro Petacchi has been scratched from the start list in Qatar, likely to attend an event he’s won the last seven years in a row (he’s not riding Etruschi either).  Assuming they’re at the start (they will be), look for the usual list of Italian sprinters to challenge Ale Jet for the win—Gavazzi, Modolo, Ferrari, and Giananni immediately come to mind.

3. In Spain, the five-race Challenge Mallorca begins Sunday with several teams bringing large squads to the traditional Spanish season-opener.  Riders can pick and choose which they days ride, making the event a popular destination for those still easing their way into the season.  Notable participants include Radio Shack, Movistar, Omega Pharma-Lotto (with Gilbert and Greipel), Leopard Trek (the Schlecks), Rabobank (Freire’s always good for a win or two), Quick Step, Euskaltel, HTC-High Road, Katusha, and Garmin-Cervelo.

Geox-TMC is also slated to ride—it will be interesting to see how they fare.  At this point, just making to the race with kits, cars, and bikes will be a victory.  Mallorca also marks Philippe Gilbert’s first chance to race in 2011—his team was surprisingly left uninvited to the Tours of Qatar and Oman.

4. And speaking of Qatar, the six-day event begins Sunday with a 2-kilometer prologue.  With the exception of Gilbert and one or two others, most of the sport’s spring classics protagonists will be racing here including Quick Step’s Tom Boonen, Leopard Trek’s Fabian Cancellara, Katusha’s Filippo Pozzato, Sky’s Juan Antonio Flecha, and Garmin’s Heinrich Haussler and Thor Hushovd.

As most days will likely end in a sprint, look for the winner of Sunday’s Prologue to take the overall honors—unless one of the race’s sprinters can ride well enough to keep himself in contention with time bonuses.  Cancellara’s the obvious choice, but keep you eyes on Lars Boom.  He can win a prologue and he’s just the kind of rider to slip into a breakaway—as Wouter Mol did last year to take the win for Vacansoleil.  I also have a hunch that Quick Step will win a stage—with Chicchi.

It’s too bad that we’ll miss our first chance to see Taylor Phinney line-up for BMC.  The American’s knee problems have returned, unfortunately just in time for a race that suited him well.

Who are you looking forward to seeing make his debut this weekend?  What are your picks and predictions?

Share your comments below.

Posted in Featured, Races | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Sticky Bidon – February 3, 2011

Ronde van Vlaanderen, 2011 - rvv.be

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, February 3, 2011


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

Posted in Featured, Sticky Bidon | Tagged , | 2 Comments