Thursday Roundup: from Spain to Colorado

Fotoreporter Sirroti

With both the Vuelta and the US Pro Cycling Challenge underway, we take a look at the progress made by riders in these two races:

The Vuelta has been heating up, with some technical finishes, late climbs, and a full-blown mountain top finish early in the three-week stage race keeping things interesting. The General Classification contenders seem to not have come to an agreement on the extent to which they will race aggressively. Stage 4, which finished on the high summit of Sierra Nevada, saw only Katusha’s Daniel Moreno and SaxoBank-Sungard’s Chris Anker Sorensen distance themselves from the group of race favorites – albeit after Vincenzo Nibali took an honest dig off the front on the long climb. The race failed to split apart – a sign that many were riding conservatively this early in the Grand Tour.

Moreno – Stage 4’s winner – and his teammate Joachim Rodriguez argued otherwise the following day, as Moreno set up Rodriguez for a stunning attack up the obscenely steep poweclimb to Valdepeñas de Jaén. The Classics-esque parcours was more impressive as a stage win than an opportunity to gain time, but Rodriguez didn’t celebrate until after the line – a sign that he took the opportunity to gain as many prescious seconds as he could. Less than a week into this Vuelta and Katusha just may be salvaging their season – Moreno and Rodriguez pulling in back to back stage wins, wearing the Points and Mountains jerseys, and with Rodriguez high on the GC. A fine showing thus far after an anonymous all-Russian Tour.

On Stage 6, Liquigas responded to Rodriguez with a late sortie of their own, leading the chase of a late breakaway over a Category 2 climb. Their kamikaze descending – a Nibali trademark – blew the race apart on a finish that could have easily been a sprint victory. Instead, the race shattered, with four Liquigas riders and Movistar’s Lastras, already with a stage win to his credit this Vuelta, pulling out a lead in front. Liquigas played the stage to perfection by keeping the break within reach, pursuing on the downhill, and when gaps opened, keeping the pressure on all the way home – until the final 100 meters, however, when Liquigas looked disoriented, and Peter Sagan claimed the stage win over his faltering captain to prevent a heavily outnumbered Lastras from claiming the honors.

Nibali and Liquigas as well as Rodriguez’s Katusha squad are racing this Vuelta very smartly. They know it’s not going to come down to a three-stage high-mountain showdown like the Tour did (though the Queen Stage on Stage 15, ending with the Angrilu climb, offers good terrain for fireworks). Rather, with disbursed, technically climbing stages spread early and midway through the Vuelta, combined with surprsingly few opportunities to reclaim major time in the last week of the race, this Vuelta may be won on snatches of seconds here and there. Thus Rodriguez’s win was particularly savvy, and Nibali’s fourth place this morning a potential failure.

Halfway around the world, the US Pro Cycling Challenge is well underway, with a fast downhill time trial and two mountainous stages resulting in the young Tejay Van Garderen taking the leader’s jersey from the previous day’s stage winner Levi Leipheimer as George Hincapie outsprinted a small group on Stage 2. With a mixture of seasoned European racers, fatigue from the Tour de France, and hungry lower-level professionals, the USA Pro Cycling Challenge and it’s hilly parcours at an altitude that has caused much difficulty (expressed profusely through the Twitter accounts of your favorite pros), we think this race is still anybody’s game. Pave editor-in-chief Whit Yost grades some standout riders on their performance thus far in a feature for Bicycling Magazine – go on over and take a look.

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The Sticky Bidon – August 24, 2011

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, August 24, 2011

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

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The Sticky Bidon – August 23, 2011

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

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

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Discuss: Cavendish Abandons the Vuelta

Fotoreporter Sirotti

The big news from this morning’s Stage 4 of the Vuelta is the abandon of HTC’s Mark Cavendish. Apparently he was suffering a bit too hard to go on – yesterday’s tweet hinted as much but Cavendish is no stranger to riding himself in shape over the first few days of a Grand Tour.

There are a few possible explanations for Cavendish’s abandon: This year’s Vuelta could be just a bit too challenging for him, as it’s loaded up front with some difficult days. He could be uncommitted to any further success while wearing HTC’s colors, as the team is folding after this season. Or, he could be displeased with his role at the Vuelta – on Stage 2 he was the leadout man for teammate John Degenkolb, and after having won a basketfull of stages and the Green Jersey at the Tour, could feel like the Vuelta is small potatoes. After all, he’s the sprinter version of Lance Armstrong – the only wins worth winning are the biggest and best.

This puts a serious dent in his preparation for the World Championships in late September. Riders and pundits say that the flattish course in Copenhagen favors sprinters. Were Cavendish’s rainbow stripe ambitions ever serious? Or is this a major setback to a serious goal?

And what do you all think were his reasons for abandoning the Vuelta?

Share your thoughts below.

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The Sticky Bidon – August 22, 2011

Fotoreporter Sirotti

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

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

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Monday Musette: Vuelta, Vattenfall, and Crit Victory

Fotoreporter Sirotti

This weekend saw four notable races – the first two stages of the Vuelta a España as well as Sunday’s Vattenfall Cyclassics and the USA Pro Criterium National Championships.

1. The Vuelta’s opening Team Time Trial turned out to be a bit harder than it looked on paper, with an early climb of about 200m in elevation gain disrupting the rhythm of some of the teams, who wound up shedding riders over the 13.5-kilometer course. It seems that some of the teams may have brought their back-up mechanics, too, as both RadioShack and Lampre had some mechanicals right off the ramp. It was a problem for RadioShack in particular, as it was their GC hopeful Jani Brajkovic who was affected by the early chaindrop.

2. When it was all settled, Leopard-Trek was on top with Jacob Fuglsang in the leader’s jersey. Brajkovic isn’t he only GC hopeful left a bit behind the 8-ball by the TTT – Igor Anton sits :28 back, and Brad Wiggins lost :42 on the stage, as did Geox-TMC’s Sastre and Menchov (should they be considered GC contenders). It’s Liquigas-Cannondale’s Vincenzo Nibali, the Vuelta’s defending champ, in best position only :04 behind Fuglsang.

3. Stage two was, as predicted, a straight-up sprint to the line. Team Sky made amends for falling apart in Saturday’s TTT by delivering Chris Sutton to the line, ahead of a disappointed Vicente Reynes of Omega Pharma-Lotto, Skil-Shimano’s Marcel Kittel, and Garmin-Cervelo’s Tyler Farrar, and Rabobank’s Matti Breschel. Daniele Benatti, who finished 6th, took over the leader’s jersey from his teammate Fuglsang.

4. Interestingly enough, Mark Cavendish played leadout man for his young teammate John Degenkolb – though not with the success that we’re used to seeing from HTC.

5. Sunday’s stage win was a nice way to end the day for Team Sky, since they started it off in fine style over in Germany at the race that proves that calling something a classic doesn’t make it a classic, the Vattenfall Cyclassic. There, Sky put another of their fast finishers onto the top step as Edvald Boasson Hagen took what is doubtless a fine victory. A scan of the results sheet shows that he didn’t exactly beat a roster full of top-tier sprinters – Quickstep’s Gerald Ciolek and Vacansoleil’s Borut Bozic rounded out the podium. Interestingly enough, the bumpy parcours shed a number of sprinters, and a late move by Quickstep’s Dries Devenyns reduced the field to only the fittest. If you haven’t been watching Devenyns yet, pay attention. He had a number of fine finishes on hard stages during the Tour. Is he laying the groundwork for a very impressive 2012? Perhaps.

6. And, back over in the United States was a very stormy Pro Criterium National Championships in Grand Rapids, Michigan that saw the race delayed several times as a fierce storm tore through, knocking course barriers over and sending riders right off their bikes. When the dust cleared, the race was re-started with 30 laps of the tight, semi-technical course. It came down to a fast sprint between Bissell’s Eric Young and Jelly Belly’s Brad Huff, with Young edging Huff in a bike throw.

7. It’s a big win for Young, a neo-pro whose career highlight includes a win earlier this year at the Little 500. That race, held at Indiana University, was popularized by the movie Breaking Away, and featured school groups racing single-speed, coaster-brake equipped Schwinns with a 69″ gear around a running track. Young’s not the only Little 500 winner to go on to the ranks of American professional cycling, but he may be the first to pull on the stars and stripes just a few months after going pro.

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