Monday 28 May 2018

Philippa York: Chris Froome and trying to understand the unbelievable

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What did you think of this year’s Giro d’Italia? That’s the prominent question I’ve seen flying around over the last few days, ever since Team Sky’s and Chris Froome’s resurrection on stage 19.

Well, I watched stage 19 from Venaria Reale to Bardonecchia. I sat for hours, followed intently, and noted all the faults and tactical errors made in the pursuit of Chris Froome during his 80-kilometre solo attack, and when it was all done and dusted on Friday evening, I was left scratching my head. In fact, I’m still struggling to make coherent sense of what occurred.

That night I heard the question, ‘What do you think of the ride Chris Froome has done today?’ being posed to Sean Kelly, and his reply was the one that summed it up: “Unbelievable.”

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He didn’t say amazing, or predictable, or unsurprising. No, it was ‘unbelievable’. And that sums up quite eloquently what happened. Describing an event as unbelievable becomes the only tangible way to summarise something you can’t understand, something that defies logic and has experts such as proven race winners and former pros searching for a semblance of reality. It was unbelievable.

To bring in some context, we need to take a look at the race as a whole. Froome's Giro began with a fall in Jerusalem and was followed by iffy form and calls from ex-riders like Alberto Contador for the Team Sky leader to abandon ship and concentrate on the Tour de France. As a rider, when you hear such talk you know that things are dire. That’s because Contador raced with Froome, and he knows the signs, sees the grimaces, recognises the tormented hollow face we all saw after a few of the mountain finishes, and his conclusion was that the Giro was over for his former rival. We all thought Froome would take note. 

It wasn’t just Team Sky’s leader who appeared to be struggling; none of his teammates were remarkable, either. But when the race hit the Zoncolan on stage 14 we saw the return of the manic twiddling of a tiny gear from Froome as he rode away from the strongest guys in the race. Up until then we’d seen Froome’s high cadence but it had only been matched by his consistency with going backwards. From nowhere, all that changed on the hardest climb of the race, and even the revelation of this Giro, Simon Yates couldn't close the gap. That performance was slightly believable because as a rider you can hurt yourself over and above the norm with a big effort but you pay over the next days, and that's exactly what happened on the stage to Sappada. Froome was human again and suffering from what was, in every rider’s words, a brutal race. 

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/philippa-york-chris-froome-and-trying-to-understand-the-unbelievable

Chris Froome takes a provisional place in history with Giro d'Italia victory

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When Chris Froome announced his intention to ride the Giro d'Italia via a short video at the route presentation in November, it was with the objective of emulating Eddy Merckx and Bernard Hinault by winning cycling's three Grand Tours in succession.

The initial hype surrounding the proposed 'Froome Slam' was rather dulled two weeks later when it emerged that the Team Sky rider had returned a positive test for salbutamol en route to Vuelta a España victory in September.

The case has yet to be resolved and Froome will lose his Vuelta title if he is found guilty of an anti-doping rule violation, and so his place in history is very much a provisional one at this juncture, despite Merckx telling La Gazzetta dello Sport, "I welcome him to the club."

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And so, while the salbutamol case proceeds at a glacial pace, Froome sits – at least for the time being – alongside Merckx and Hinault as the only riders to hold the Tour de France, Vuelta and Giro titles at the same time. He also joins – provisionally, of course – Merckx, Hinault, Jacques Anquetil, Felice Gimondi, Alberto Contador and Vincenzo Nibali as the only riders to win all three Grand Tours during their careers.

Merckx notched up his triple by completing the Giro-Tour double in 1972, and then adding the Vuelta (then held in spring) the following year. The Belgian proceeded to win his fourth Giro immediately afterwards, but the Grand-Tour-winning sequence ended when he opted against competing in the 1973 Tour de France.

A decade on from Merckx, Bernard Hinault completed the Giro-Tour double in 1982, and then added the 1983 Vuelta. The Frenchman's run of successive Grand Tour wins stopped at three after a knee injury prevented him from defending both his Giro and Tour crowns that summer.

Modern era

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I was drug tested every day of Giro - Froome

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Britain's Chris Froome tells the BBC there should be "no question at all" about the validity of his Giro d'Italia success.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44277687

Sunday 27 May 2018

'People have made up their minds about Froome'

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Chris Froome's Grand Tour hat-trick changes the history books, but not the conversation around his standing in the sport

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44273794

Chris Froome wins Giro d'Italia to claim historic Grand Tour treble

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Chris Froome becomes the first Briton to win the Giro d'Italia and only the seventh man to claim all three Grand Tour titles.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44272406

Saturday 26 May 2018

Froome set for historic Giro victory after holding off nearest rival Dumoulin

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Chris Froome is set for a historic Giro d'Italia victory as he leads with just the procession into Rome to come.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44264833

Friday 25 May 2018

Yates set to lose Giro d'Italia lead as Froome attacks

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Britain's Simon Yates is set to lose the leader's pink jersey at the Giro d'Italia after falling well adrift on stage 19.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44258030

Callum Skinner: Drugs cheats should face harsher punishments

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Olympic champion Callum Skinner has called for harsher punishments for athletes caught doping to help rid sport of cheats.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44255577

Thursday 24 May 2018

Giro leader Yates loses time as Schachmann wins stage 18

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Britain's Simon Yates has his overall lead cut in half after a dramatic day at the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44243128

UCI BMX World Championships: Great Britain name nine-strong team for Baku

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British Cycling announce a nine-strong team to represent Great Britain at next month's UCI BMX World Championships in Azerbaijan.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44239176

Wednesday 23 May 2018

Giro d'Italia: Simon Yates keeps lead as Elia Viviani wins sprint finish

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Britain's Simon Yates retains his overall lead at the Giro d'Italia after a wet sprint finish to stage 17 in Iseo.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44228351

Let's Ride 2018: City/town centre streets closing for British Cycling events

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British Cycling is bringing you the chance to cycle around traffic-free streets of some UK cities and towns with the 2018 'Let's Ride' events.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/get-inspired/44195236

Charlie Tanfield and Ethan Hayter added to GB track cycling team

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World and Commonwealth pursuit champion Charlie Tanfield is added to the GB cycling team along with Ethan Hayter.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44224169

Tuesday 22 May 2018

Yates retains Giro lead after fine time trial

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Britain's Simon Yates produces a fine time trial to limit his losses on Tom Dumoulin and retain his grip on the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44215971

Monday 21 May 2018

Giro d'Italia 2018: Rest Day 3 Recap

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The second week of the Giro d'Italia saw Simon Yates (Mitchelton-Scott) confirm his status as the strongest rider in the race and strengthen his grip on the maglia rosa with two further stage victories and second place on Monte Zoncolan.

It was a meant to be a week filled with intermediate and sprint stages, ahead of a mountainous weekend billing, but the drama came early on Tuesday's mammoth 244km rolling stage from Penne to Gualdo Tadino, where Yates' teammate Esteban Chaves was unceremoniously dumped out of the general classification contest. Having perhaps misjudged the rest day, Chaves, who was second overall, was dropped on the early climb of Fonte della Creta and eventually lost 25 minutes after a protracted and ultimately futile chase. Once the dust had settled, Matej Mohoric (Bahrain-Merida) broke free of the reduced peloton and dispatched Nico Denz (AG2R La Mondiale) in a two-up sprint.

The following stage featured an uphill finale in Osimo, and Yates once again showed his rivals a clean pair of heels. Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb) held him in a dramatic pursuit but Yates clung on for his second stage win. The time gaps were small but Yates' display was once again significant.

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The long stage to the Imola racing circuit on Wednesday started out quietly enough but intensified in the final hour thanks to driving rain and wind. The bunch split in the finale, leaving Elia Viviani (Quick-Step Floors) out of the equation and the door open for Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe), who seized the moment with a spectacular long-range effort on the F1 track. Viviani would have his revenge a day later as he triumphed in a more traditional bunch sprint in Nervesa della Battaglia.

Saturday saw the stage everyone had been waiting for, finishing atop the fearsome Monte Zoncolan, widely billed as the hardest climb in Europe. It turned out to be the scene of a remarkable resurgence from Chris Froome (Team Sky), who attacked with 4.3km to go and soloed all the way to the top. Yates soon attacked himself and was bearing down on his compatriot throughout the final kilometre, and although he was unable to make the catch and claim the stage win, he put time into his direct rivals, with Dumoulin and Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) finishing a little behind Domenico Pozzovivo (Bahrain-Merida) and Miguel Angel Lopez (Astana).

Sunday saw a more subtle - but still very hilly - stage in the Dolomites, with four categorised climbs ahead of the uphill finish to Sappada. Yates became the first rider since 2003 to win three stages in pink as he left his rivals for dead on the final climb, finishing 41 seconds ahead of an uncooperative chase group of Dumoulin, Pozzovivo, Pinot, Lopez, and Richard Carapaz. Froome's resurgence proved a false dawn; the Sky rider was dropped just before Yates' attack and eventually lost 1:30.

Stage 10: Penne - Gualdo Tadino, 244km

Stage 11: Assisi - Osimo, 156km

Stage 12: Osimo - Imola, 214km

Stage 13: Ferrara - Nervesa della Battaglia, 180km

Stage 14: San Vito al Tagliamento - Monte Zoncolan, 186km

Stage 15: Tolmezzo - Sappada, 176km

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/giro-ditalia-2018-rest-day-3-recap

Sunday 20 May 2018

Giro d'Italia: Simon Yates extends lead with fine solo win on stage 15

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Britain's Simon Yates rides to a brilliant solo win on stage 15 of the Giro d'Italia to extend his overall lead.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44190618

Tour of California: Adam Yates narrowly misses podium place

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Britain's Adam Yates could not reduce the two seconds he needed to seal a podium spot at the Tour of California.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44187814

Saturday 19 May 2018

Froome beats Yates to win thrilling Giro stage on Monte Zoncolan

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Britain's Chris Froome takes his first Giro d'Italia stage win as Simon Yates extends his overall lead on the infamous Monte Zoncolan.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44184660

Tour of California: Adam Yates finishes second on stage six

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Britain's Adam Yates takes second place on the penultimate stage of the Tour of California to stay fourth overall.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44181093

Emakumeen Bira Women's WorldTour 2018 - Start list

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via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/emakumeen-bira-womens-worldtour-2018-start-list

Monte Zoncolan: A ride to resurrection - Preview

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After two sprint stages on flat roads from central Italy to the northeast, the Giro d'Italia heads deep into the mountains on Saturday with the terrible Monte Zoncolan as the first part of a weekend double whammy of climbing.

The locally called 'Kaiser' dominates the Carnia mountains in the Friuli region close to the border with Austria and Slovenia. It is neither long nor high, but it is steep – very steep – with the 11.9 per cent average and sections at 20 per cent earning the Zoncolan the title of hardest climb in Europe.

The Zoncolan will test the riders' strength, climbing ability, and determination. For many, it will be easier to quit than to ride on, with the riders of the gruppetto making it to the finish thanks to 'help' from the tifosi that pack the roadside, ready to give anyone who needs it a bit of a push.

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With everyone at their physical limits, there is little room for race tactics amongst the overall contenders. Any time gaps may not be huge, but the Zoncolan will have, like always, a significant impact on the 2018 corsa rosa.

There are 100,000 people expected to watch the stage on the steep slopes, with many packing the open-air natural stadium created by the mountain slope that overlooks the final 500 metres of the climb. It is a celebration of professional bike racing.

The Giro d'Italia will climb Monte Zoncolan for only a fifth time in its history on Saturday during stage 14, but it has already become legendary.

Simoni: I went on the front and never looked back

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via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/monte-zoncolan-a-ride-to-resurrection-preview

Friday 18 May 2018

Tour de Yorkshire: Astana sports director suspended after near miss

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The driver of the Astana team car that almost hit a volunteer during the Tour de Yorkshire is suspended for 50 days.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44174201

Giro d'Italia: Elia Viviani wins stage 13 as Simon Yates retains lead

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Britain's Simon Yates maintains his overall lead as Italian sprinter Elia Viviani wins a sprint finish on stage 13 of the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44174145

Thursday 17 May 2018

Giro d'Italia: Sam Bennett wins stage as Simon Yates retains lead

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Britain's Simon Yates maintains his overall lead as Ireland's Sam Bennett wins a sprint finish on stage 12 of the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44160170

Time trial tech at the Tour of California - Gallery

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This article originally appeared on BikeRadar.

At the Amgen Tour of California, many of the world's very best teams assembled for the start of Wednesday's time trial in a hodge podge of rented vehicles, with follow vehicles ranging from wrapped team cars to pick-up trucks.

The actual cycling gear was mostly straight-forward professional grade, but there was still a fair amount of quirky solutions to be found.

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BikeRadar wandered the team pits and loitered behind the starting house for a close look at all the riders' gear.

Suction cups, protruding camera booms, ice vests and plenty of electrical-tape and cardboard solutions were to be found.

Click or swipe through the gallery above for a look inside the gear of stage 4 of the Tour of California. 

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/time-trial-tech-at-the-tour-of-california-gallery

Amgen Women's Race: 5 riders to watch

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The Amgen Women's Race marks the 11th round of the 2018 Women's WorldTour (May 17-19) that is set to kick off on Thursday in Elk Grove. Defending champion Anna van der Breggen (Boels Dolmans) is currently leading the series but will not be competing in the three-day race, instead opting to race at the Emakumeen Bira in Spain.

Cyclingnews has picked five riders to watch during the Amgen Women's Race, which includes a flat, fast stage in and out of Elk Grove on May 17, the 'queen stage' in South Lake Tahoe on May 18, and a circuit around the State Capitol in Sacramento on May 19.

Katie Hall (UnitedHealthcare)

California native Katie Hall seems almost destined to win the Amgen Women's Race, but it just hasn't happened yet. A build-up that includes overall title victories at the Joe Martin Stage Race, Tour of the Gila and Redlands Bicycle Classic means that there is no question that Hall is on a seemingly unstoppable winning streak.

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The Amgen Women's Race, however, is in a league of its own when it comes to women's stage racing in the US as the only Women's WorldTour event held in North America. As such, it brings in the best teams and riders in the world.

Hall has shown her class at the marquee event, winning the mountain stage into South Lake Tahoe twice. Last year, she won the stage and wore the leader's jersey for two days. She was up against the likes of Van der Breggen, who captured an intermediate time bonus on the final stage in Sacramento and won the overall title by a mere one second, leaving Hall to have to settle for second place.

Van der Breggen is currently leading the Women's WorldTour after winning Strade Bianche, the Tour of Flanders, Flèche Wallonne and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. Her Boels Dolmans team told Cyclingnews in April that they would not return to defend her title because they have chosen to instead compete at the conflicting Emakumeen Bira in Spain.

Megan Guarnier (Boels Dolmans)

Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon-SRAM)

Ruth Winder (Sunweb)

Arlenis Sierra (Astana)

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/amgen-womens-race-5-riders-to-watch

2018 Tour of California time trial start times

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via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/2018-tour-of-california-time-trial-start-times

Wednesday 16 May 2018

Mohoric moving through the gears

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It is easy to forget just how young Matej Mohoric (Bahrain-Merida) is. The Slovenian has been on the world stage for quite some time, after all. Winning the junior world title in Valkenburg in 2012 signalled him out as a rider to watch. Repeating the feat at under-23 level the following autumn made him one of the most sought-after talents in world cycling.

Since moving up to WorldTour level in 2014, Mohoric has never quite lived up to the billing of his amateur exploits, but a stage win at last year’s Vuelta a España signalled that his stock was rising steadily. Victory on stage 10 of the Giro d’Italia in Gualdo Tadino on Tuesday continued that upward trajectory, and there is ample margin for improvement – Mohoric won't turn 24 until the end of this season.

"I'm only 23 years old and I'm already in my fifth season as a professional," Mohoric said on Tuesday afternoon. "I’m starting to be seen as an 'old' rider even though at next year’s Giro I'll still be eligible for the white jersey classification."

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Tuesday's demanding stage from Penne to Gualdo Tadino was the longest of the Giro, and looked to lend itself to a break from distance. That was ultimately how the race played out, but only after a ferocious opening 100 kilometres of racing that saw Esteban Chaves (Mitchelton-Scott) lose all hope of final overall victory

Mohoric had infiltrated the day's early break as planned, but the forcing of Team Sky and Sunweb meant that he and his companions were pegged back as general classification contenders formed an on-the-hoof alliance to put a struggling Chaves into further difficulty. Mohoric's race began all over again on the final climb of Annifo, when he chased an attack by his former teammate Davide Villella (Astana).

"The first part of the stage was very hard. I was in the break of 13 initially and then Chaves was in difficulty so the bunch worked very hard behind and they caught us before the halfway point," Mohoric said. "At that point, I stayed close to Domenico Pozzovivo to protect him, because the GC is the team's priority. But when I saw Villella go, I asked Domenico permission to go after him. Now I'm happy to have seized the opportunity."

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/mohoric-moving-through-the-gears

Britain's Yates wins stage 11 to extend Giro lead

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Britain's Simon Yates puts in a sublime late attack to win his second stage of the Giro d'Italia and extend his advantage in the leader's pink jersey.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44145175

Tuesday 15 May 2018

Tour of California analysis: Bernal in the driver’s seat after stage 2 win

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Stage 2 at the Amgen Tour of California promised a GC shakeout, and it delivered. Egan Bernal (Team Sky) climbed to the top of the general classification as expected. Rafal Majka (Bora-Hansgrohe) lived up to expectations after his runner-up performance last year with second on the stage, and Adam Yates (Micthelton-Scott) proved that he is on his way back from injury at Volta a Catalunya with a third-place result.

A handful of possible contenders saw their GC aspirations evaporate on the slopes of Gibraltar Road, losing more than two minutes to Bernal. Peter Stetina (Trek-Segafredo) lost 2:11, Rob Britton (Rally Cycling) and Brent Bookwalter (BMC Racing) each lost 2:25, Lachlan Morton (Dimension Data) lost 2:45, Gavin Mannion (UnitedHealthcare), and Ian Boswell (Katusha-Alpecin) each lost 2:55, TJ Eisenhart (Holowesko-Citadel) lost 2:58 and Neilson Powless (LottoNL-Jumbo) lost 3:39.

While many of the pre-race favourites slipped out of contention, there were also a number of surprises. Antwan Tolhoek (LottoNL-Jumbo) hasn’t raced since February at the Abu Dhabi Tour, yet finished fourth on his seventh race day of the year. UAE Team Emirates had two riders in the top 10, with Kristijan Durasek in sixth and Edward Ravasi in ninth. Trek-Segafredo’s Ruben Guerreiro was 10th.

Tejay van Garderen’s performance on Gibraltar is a little harder to judge. The 2013 Tour of California winner finished eighth, 50 seconds behind Bernal. While it’s not the best scenario, he thinks leaves him in with a chance.

"He said in the bus this morning that if he could keep it within minute, that he was confident in his chances," Brent Bookwalter told Cyclingnews after the stage. “He’ll need a really inspired, really 'on day', and maybe Bernal needs to be a little off. But it’s definitely possible. Tejay’s got good memories of the San Jose area for the TT, and I think he’ll get better in the next few days. We still have stage 3 and stage 6, too, it’s not just all on the TT."

When Van Garderen won the overall classification in 2013, his victory in the San Jose time trial helped cement his advantage. But the course that year had an uphill finish, so it was quite different than Wednesday's 34.7km test.

Standing in Van Garderen’s way, of course, is the fact that Bernal is also a quality rider in the time trial. He’s the reigning Colombian time trial champion, and he won the time trial at the mountain Tour de Romandie last month ahead or Primoz Roglic (LottoNL-Jumbo) and Richie Porte (BMC Racing).

Team Sky's Egan Bernal points to his sponsor's logo after winning stage 2 of the 2018 Tour of California

Majka has struggled in the time trial previously but he’s focused on the discipline in the off-season and was third in the Vuelta a San Juan time trial in January. Yates is hot and cold in time trials. Both riders were happy with their performances on Gibraltar and hope it bodes well for the rest of the week.

"I kind of knew where I was, but you never know for sure until you get on the climb and you see how everyone else is going,"Yates said. "But I’m pretty happy with how I’m going and we’ll just keep going and see how we do," Yates said.

Majka said top-three on the stage was good for him.

"It’s a good performance," the Pole said. "I hope to have a good time trial, and still we have three more stages hard, so we’ll see."

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Tolhoek, now fourth overall at 40 seconds back, also struggles in the time trial, while Durasek has recently improved his race against the clock and finished 15th at the Tour de Romandie 9.9km time trial. Brandon McNulty, the junior time trial world champion in 2016 and the U23 runner-up last year, is currently 13th overall, 1:25 back, and could ride into the top 10 with a good time trial.

Martinez, currently sixth overall at 40 seconds with Tolhoek and Durasek, could be the wildcard in the deck.

“He’s a good time trial rider,” EF Education First-Drapac General Manager Jonathan Vaughters told Cyclingnews.

"In the Colombian national championships he was second to Bernal by like three or four seconds [it was six seconds – ed.]. So he’s a good TT rider, for sure. Dani, for a first-year pro, 21 years old and has an outside shot at the podium, that’s kind of where we are. That was the game we were playing to come in here."

Vaughters also handicapped the other leaders Martinez hopes to pass in the GC.

"Majka’s not that good in the time trial," he said. "Bernal’s good. Yates can be good, so he’ll be in there. Tejay will ride a good time trial, for sure."

For his own part, Bernal said he wasn’t sure if the margin he gained on Gibraltar Road will be able to hold off the challenges in San Jose.

"I’m not sure because I haven’t seen the results yet," he said in the post-stage press conference.

"But the time trial will be long, so I’m not sure I can lose this time in the time trial or not. I’m not sure. I’m happy because I won today, and tomorrow we will try to keep the jersey, and then we will see for the time trial."

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/tour-of-california-analysis-bernal-in-the-drivers-seat-after-stage-2-win

Mohoric outsprints Denz to take stage 10 as GB's Yates maintains overall lead

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Matej Mohoric wins stage 10 of the Giro d'Italia as Britain's Simon Yates maintains his overall lead.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44129478

Giro leader Yates' twin brother is third in California

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Britain's Adam Yates - twin brother of Giro d'Italia leader Simon - finishes third on the second stage of the Tour of California and is in the same position overall.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44120413

Monday 14 May 2018

Giro d'Italia 2018: Rest Day 2 Recap

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The second phase of the Giro d'Italia started with a lengthy transfer from Israel to Sicily for three stages on the island off the toe of the Italian boot and then onto the mainland for a flat stage and two summit finales. Rohan Dennis (BMC) carried the maglia rosa to Sicily with the first true test of his GC capabilities to come on Mount Etna on stage 6.

Refreshed after a day off for the transfer from Israel, Lotto Fix All's Tim Wellens claimed victory on a punchy uphill finale in Caltagirone on stage 4. The race lead remained with Dennis, while Chris Froome (Team Sky) lost some time. Michael Woods (EF-Drapac) managed to steal a few seconds, as did Simon Yates (Mitchelton-Scott) in a move that would presage his sparkling performances in the mountains later in the week.

Froome was far more attentive in the second steep finale to stage 5 in Santa Ninfa, won by Enrico Battaglin (LottoNl-Jumbo), and while the overall contenders had to fight to stay together, there were no big changes in the overall aside from Miguel Angel Lopez (Astana) losing time due to a crash.

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The active volcano, Mount Etna, proved to be a suitable location for the GC action to heat up on stage 6, and Mitchelton-Scott seized control, with Esteban Chaves going in the early breakaway and staying clear until Yates jumped across to him in the final kilometers of the climb. The pair opened up 26 seconds on a group of chasers that was missing maglia rosa Dennis. The move put Yates into the overall race lead by 16 seconds ahead of Tom Dumoulin (Sunweb), with Chaves third.

The peloton moved to the mainland for a short, flat, and beautifully scenic stage to Praia a Mare, where Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe) finally turned around his record of near-misses and claimed his maiden Grand Tour victory over Elia Viviani (Quick-Step Floors).

The respite in climbing was brief, and two 200+km days followed, with back-to-back summit finishes. The first, to Montevergine di Mercogliano, was a fast grind to the finish that did little to change the overall classification. It was a fine platform for the talents of Richard Carapaz (Movistar), who jetted away in the finale to claim the first Grand Tour stage victory by an Ecuadorean rider.

Stage 4: Catania - Caltagirone, 202km 

Winner: Tim Wellens
Leader: Rohan Dennis

Stage 5: Agrigento - Santa Ninfa (Valle del Belice), 153km 

Winner: Enrico Battaglin
Leader: Rohan Dennis

Stage 6: Caltanissetta - Etna, 169km 

Winner: Esteban Chaves
Leader: Simon Yates

Stage 7: Pizzo - Praia a Mare, 159km

Winner: Sam Bennett
Leader: Simon Yates

Sam Bennett victorious in Praia a Mare

Stage 8: Praia a Mare - Montevergine di Mercogliano, 209km

Winner: Richard Carapaz
Leader: Simon Yates

Stage 9: Pesco Sannita - Gran Sasso d'Italia (Campo Imperatore), 225km

Winner and Leader: Simon Yates

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/giro-ditalia-2018-rest-day-2-recap

Froome says Giro gap is 'too big' but expects to peak for Tour de France

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Chris Froome says his bid to hold all three grand tour titles at the same time is not "likely" after crashes hampered his first week in the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44113030

Sunday 13 May 2018

Bioracer Motion: balancing wind and watts for your ideal position

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This article first appeared on BikeRadar.

Many cyclists are familiar with Bioracer Speedwear clothing, as used by some professional riders, but the Belgian company has another wing of the business that uses motion capture and aerodynamic analysis for bike fits on pros and amateurs alike.

Bioracer Motion was created as a result of more than 10,000 individual bike fits and 30 years of bike fitting experience from company founder and CEO Raymond Vanstraelen. Despite his decades of experience, Vanstraelen was frustrated with his inability to back-up the bike fittings with objective data.

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So, Vanstraelen decided to take the fittings to the next level, enlisting an experienced cycling doctor, a professional cycling coach, a former professional and a software engineer specialising in motion capture.

What Bioracer developed was a performance-focused bike fitting and aerodynamic analysis service that uses a wind tunnel, dynamic pedalling analysis and power measurement, among other things.

Stability and symmetry

As a starting point, Bioracer Motion gives you the report you would expect from a comprehensive bike fit, including seat height, saddle setback, reach, stack and more. But then like Retül or Shimano’s Bikefitting.com, Bioracer Motion uses wireless markers placed on each side of the body to record movement in the feet, ankles, legs, hips, shoulders, elbows and wrists.

Getting aero in the Flanders wind tunnel and at home

Long sleeves are fast

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/bioracer-motion-balancing-wind-and-watts-for-your-ideal-position

Leader Yates wins stage as Froome loses more time

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Britain's Simon Yates wins stage nine of the Giro d'Italia to extend his lead as Chris Froome loses more time.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44101703

Saturday 12 May 2018

Tour of California: 5 riders to watch

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The Amgen Tour of California rolls out of Long Beach on Sunday for seven days of racing in its second year on the WorldTour. Thirteen WorldTour teams and four wild card Pro Continental outfits will battle for the overall crown, with a nod to the best young rider and supremacy in the sprints and mountains.

The 119 riders taking the start line on Sunday include world champions, Tour de France hopefuls and a plethora of top-notch domestiques. Cyclingnews has picked five riders to watch throughout the week. Some are on the rise, some are recovering from injury and one is in the middle of a career second wind. 

Egan Bernal (Team Sky)

One of the most exciting young riders in the pro peloton, Egan Bernal has already proven himself as a top contender in one-week races during his first season with Team Sky. The 21-year-old Colombian raced for Androni-Sidermec before signing a three-year deal with British superteam Sky this year, and it immediately started paying dividends. He has the rare combination of abilities that allows him to climb and time trial with the best.

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Bernal started his season at the Tour Down Under, where he was fifth on the 'queen stage' to Willunga Hill and won the jersey for the best young rider. He then returned to Colombia and won the country's individual time trial championship, before lining up for the first edition of Colombia's new stage race, Oro y Paz. He went into the final stage fourth overall, but a daring attack on the final climb lifted him into the overall lead ahead of Movistar's Nairo Quintana.

Most recently, Bernal won the individual time trial stage at the Tour de Romandie on his way to finishing second overall to Primoz Roglic (LottoNL-Jumbo).

In California, Bernal will be able to unleash his climbing skills on the second day's queen stage to Gibraltar Road. The 34.7km stage 4 time trial looks well suited to his skills, and the monster stage on day 6 to South Lake Tahoe includes six categorised climbs before the uphill finish. In all, the peloton will take on nearly 4,000 metres of climbing at altitude during the stage.

Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data)

Adam Yates (Mitchelton-Scott)

Neilson Powless (LottoNL-Jumbo)

Rob Britton (Rally Cycling)

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/tour-of-california-5-riders-to-watch-2

Yates continues to lead Giro as Carapaz wins stage eight

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Britain's Simon Yates continues to hold the overall lead as Ecuador's Richard Carapaz wins stage eight of the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44095134

Friday 11 May 2018

Giro d'Italia: Ireland's Sam Bennett wins stage seven as Simon Yates retains lead

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Britain's Simon Yates holds on to the overall lead as Ireland's Sam Bennett wins stage seven of the Giro d'Italia.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44086919

Thursday 10 May 2018

Giro d'Italia: Looking back at Mount Etna - Gallery

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Thursday's sixth stage of this 2018 Giro d'Italia once again features a summit finish on the magisterial Mount Etna. It will be the fifth time that the volcanic ascent has featured in the race, adding to the 2017, 2011, 1989 and 1967 editions.

Italian Franco Bitossi holds the honour of being the first rider to win atop Etna. He had pedigree, too: as the winner of the Giro's mountains jersey at the three previous editions of the race, his win on stage 7 from Catania to Etna was no great surprise. Bitossi had already won Tirreno-Adriatico that season, and would win the Tour of Lombardy later in the year.

But in 1967, his Etna stage victory was as good as it got, as he faded to finish 15th overall in Milan, some 35 minutes in arrears of winner Felice Gimondi. In the green mountains jersey competition, dominated by Spain's Aurelio Gonzalez, Bitossi was a disappointing third, on equal points with Gimondi and a 21-year-old Eddy Merckx.

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Portugal's Acacio Da Silva would take the stage win at Etna at the 1989 Giro. It was the race's second stage, again starting in Catania, and Da Silva out-sprinted Luis Herrera and Tony Rominger for the victory – and with it, due to the stage coming so early on in the race, the pink leader's jersey, which he'd lose to Italy's Silvano Contini after the team time trial the next day.

The Giro's 2011 climb up Mount Etna was arguably the most exciting of them all so far. Alberto Contador took the race by the scruff of the neck on stage 9, and only Venezuela's José Rujano, having attacked lower down the slope, could stay with him. And he, too, would be shaken loose with 1.5km to go.

For arguably the first time, the climb was key to the final GC: Contador took the pink jersey there, and held it all the way to Milan. He was then disqualified nine months' later, having tested positive for clenbuterol at the 2010 Tour de France. Michele Scarponi was handed the 2011 Giro title, and Rujano was awarded the stage win for his efforts.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/giro-ditalia-looking-back-at-mount-etna-gallery

Giro d'Italia: Simon Yates takes overall lead as Esteban Chaves wins stage six

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Britain's Simon Yates takes the overall lead in the Giro d'Italia as team-mate Esteban Chaves wins stage six.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44073881

Wednesday 9 May 2018

Battaglin wins stage five of Giro as Yates stays third in GC

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Enrico Battaglin produces a perfectly timed sprint to win stage five of the Giro d'Italia, with Britain's Simon Yates fifth.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44058240

Alberto Contador: It’s time to enjoy life 100 per cent

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It's a cliché of cycling that when top riders retire, it's always low-key, or a let-down, few go out at the top. To name just a few other multiple Grand Tour winners, think of Eddy Merckx's last race in a kermesse in Belgium, Jacques Anquetil's career petering to a dead end in a criterium in Antwerp, or Miguel Indurain's still-controversial abandon from the 1996 Vuelta a España.

Not so Alberto Contador, who rampaged through the 2017 Vuelta firing off a salvo of attacks, before saving his last big day for his final mountain assault on Spain's hardest single climb, the Angliru. Even though he was on the point of winning the Vuelta himself, it was notable immediately after the Angliru that Chris Froome paid tribute to Contador going out in a blaze of glory, the Briton saying that whenever he retired, he hoped it would be in the same way.

There was another knock-on effect of the Angliru triumph, besides impressing Froome. Such an adrenaline-fuelled and unusual exit path from cycling made it harder, too, to predict Contador's life as a retiree. Put it another way: here was a rider who had made a fine art - perhaps the finest of any modern-day rider - of seemingly spontaneous, impulsive racing. How on earth was someone like that going to adapt to a more normal, planned-out existence? And was he even going to try?

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The answer was that, rather than head for far-flung climes and new sporting challenges for thirty-somethings, Contador and his wife Macarena have come back to Spain from Switzerland, where they lived in the last part of his career, to settle permanently in their home town of Pinto.

The Plaza de España in Pinto

Pinto offers what you might call normal Spanish urban existence cranked up to the power of 10. That's because it's one of the multiple semi-industrial small cities on the flatlands just south of Madrid consisting mainly of modern high rise tower blocks, broad tree-lined avenues, and busy, unpretentious bars and restaurants with none of the plush opulence you might find in Lugano, Contador's former Swiss residence.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/alberto-contador-its-time-to-enjoy-life-100-per-cent

Monday 7 May 2018

Fabio Aru's Giro d'Italia Colnago C64 - Gallery

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Fabio Aru (UAE Team Emirates) flies the flag for Italy at the Giro d'Italia, with the home nation hoping he can somehow defeat Chris Froome (Team Sky) and Tom Dumoulin (Team Sunweb) and so pull the maglia rosa over his Italian national champion's tricolore stripes.

Aru rides for UAE Team Emirates, funded by the Middle Eastern nation and its brands, but will ride the Giro d'Italia on a very Italian bike made by Colnago, equipped with Campagnolo components.

Chris Froome tested his Giro d'Italia bikes at the Tour of the Alps and Aru did the same with his Colnago C64. Compared to the team issue Colnago C64, Aru's bike is close to 200g lighter due to the limited colours. The logos and decals are all simple white paint, with just a touch of white behind the head tube and on the forks to highlight the new tube shapes of the C64.

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The C64 is built in the Colnago factory in Cambiago, northeast of Milan. Its chunkier carbon fibre tube shapes and carbon fibre lugs follow the successful Colnago designs that began with the C40 in the nineties. It's maybe a little heavier and perhaps lacks the curvy aesthetics of many other carbon fibre frames but it remains distinctive.

For the C64, the lugs around the seat cluster have been integrated into the seat tube, resulting in a unique seat tube for each size variant of the model. Another update to the new model is a D-profile seat post, which is the same component used in the aerodynamic Concept model frameset from Colnago and a popular design for a variety of carbon frames from a number of manufacturers. The forks are also chunkier and wider than the predecessor, allowing for up to 28mm tyres.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/fabio-arus-giro-ditalia-colnago-c64-gallery

Millions watch Tour de Yorkshire 2018

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The 2018 race was bathed in sunshine with huge crowds along the four-day route.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-44004351

Para-cycling Road World Cup: Crystal Lane-Wright completes double for Great Britain

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Britain's Crystal Lane-Wright completes a golden double at the UCI Para-cycling Road World Cup in Belgium.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/disability-sport/44028553

Astana apologise after near miss for Tour de Yorkshire volunteer

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Astana apologise after a support car almost hits a volunteer and then crashes through a traffic island during the Tour de Yorkshire.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44028217

'They want to do it, we want to do it' - Yorkshire in talks to host Vuelta

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Yorkshire cycling chiefs are in talks to host the start of the Vuelta a Espana after the success of the Tour de Yorkshire.

via BBC Sport - Cycling http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44027869

Sunday 6 May 2018

Barbero wins finale at Vuelta Ciclista Comunidad de Madrid

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You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Race Results http://www.cyclingnews.com/races/vuelta-ciclista-comunidad-de-madrid-2018/stage-3/results

Van Avermaet wins Tour de Yorkshire

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Greg Van Avermaet (BMC) took overall victory at the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire, as Stephane Rossetto (Cofidis) scored a sensational solo victory on the final stage of the race. It was 34 seconds later that Van Avermaet won the sprint for second, while Ian Bibby (JLT Condor) rounded off the podium.

Already having been in the break on stage 2, Rossetto was out front on his own for almost 120km of the 189.5km queen stage. The 31-year-old was part of the day's initial break, attacking after 40km and then shedding his final break-mate on the hardest climb of the race before embarking on his lonely quest.

Van Avermaet's victory came after Eddie Dunbar (Aqua Blue Sport) had blown up the race up on the final climb of the day, 18km from the line. With race leader Magnus Cort Nielsen (Astana) dropped and four BMC riders in the lead group, all that remained was for the American squad to fend off any attacks before the Belgian completed the job in the sprint.

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Rossetto, who also won the mountains classification, compared the "amazing" race to the Tour de France after finishing, and cited Sylvain Chavanel and Vincenzo Nibali as inspirations for his fighting style.

"It's one of the most beautiful victories of my career," he said. "I'm very moved. It's a huge win and a real life lesson - it shows if you work hard it pays off. I'm a bit of an old-fashioned rider, never over-calculating or over-analysing things. I like to get out there and take it on."

The overall victory marks Van Avermaet's second victory of the year, and his first since the Tour of Oman in February. Eduard Prades (Euskadi-Murias) took second overall, nine seconds down, while Serge Pauwels (Dimension Data) was third at 14 seconds.

How it happened

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Race Results http://www.cyclingnews.com/races/tour-de-yorkshire-2018/stage-4/results
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