Russian Cyclist Can Spoil Cavendish’s Home Olympics


Russian sprint cyclist Denis Galimzyanov could spoil Mark Cavendish’s home Olympics, six-time Tour de France winner Erik Zabel has warned.
Galimzyanov is the lead sprinter for Russia’s Katusha team, where Zabel works as a consultant, and despite his finish of 11th in last year’s World Championship in Copenhagen, he has the potential to challenge for medals in London, Zabel told RIA Novosti.
“I always say to Dennis that he should think of victory, that anything is possible for him at the Olympics. Maybe Cavendish will make a mistake at the Games? That can happen to anyone,” said the 41-year-old German, who won every Tour de France green jersey between 1996 and 2001.

“If the Russians can ensure a good formation at the finish for their leader – yes, they can get involved in the fight with the Germans, British and Italians. So nothing’s impossible for Denis in this situation.”
Zabel joined Katusha as a consultant in October. “I am now concentrating on Denis above all because the Olympics are ahead,” he said.
“Russia has a total of three cyclists in the road race. We’re already working on plans, preparing, working on some individual points.”
Zabel added that Galimzyanov did not need much improvement to be a medal contender.
“The top ten at the World Championships are cyclists of the highest class and to get there, to be close to them in the results is good in its itself, but if you consider the density of the results, then the difference in the top 20 between the medalists and those outside the prizes is negligible.
“So for a young cyclist it was a good result. Denis has a chance for a medal at the Olympics even with exactly the same lineup of power in the race as there was in Copenhagen.”
Zabel said Russia has other medal hopes.
“I think Denis has great prospects, but it’s not just him. [Alexander] Porsev is an excellent guy – he’s not on the list of the leaders of world cycling now, but it seems to me he can become a real star,” Zabel said.
While 24-year-old Galimzyanov has yet to win a Grand Tour event, he had a strong 2011 season with victory in the Paris-Brussels race, the Tour of Beijing and the Three Days of De Panne.
Porsev, 25, only turned professional in 2011, but is seen as one of Russian cycling brightest prospects.

From: http://ping.fm/oMHDg

Valverde content with comeback victory


Alejandro Valverde’s return to racing wasn’t cheered by everyone this week at the Tour Down Under, because some believe the Spanish star should be more upfront about what he did or didn’t do in relation to the Operación Puerto doping scandal that netted him a two-year ban.

But Valverde proved he could still be a factor on the bike, taking a morale-boosting victory in his first stage race since the Tour de Romandie in the spring of 2010.

Valverde kicked his way to victory with a trademark punch atop the Old Willunga Hill in Saturday’s penultimate stage.

Valverde didn’t hold back the pent-up emotions and called the win “the most special” of his career en route to second overall behind winner Simon Gerrans (GreenEdge).

“It’s been excessive emotions, being able to show off all the fury I was keeping inside,” Valverde said after the win. “I couldn’t resist to tears at the finish. To a sentimental value, I’d say this is the most special victory in my career. It’s been hard months of training at home, taking care of myself with no competition … and you remember all of that.”

The victory bodes well for Valverde, who will race next at the Mallora Challenge ahead of his first major goal of the season at Paris-Nice in early March.

Movistar sport director Jose Luis Arrieta said the team leaves Australia “very satisfied” and said the return of Valverde raises the level of the squad.

“The team was at the same level as last year, but with Valverde, everyone shines a little more,” Arrieta said. “Personally, I had no doubt that Valverde wouldn’t be back at his same level. He has something that only a few riders in the world, and when you do your work, and you stay in your place, it’s rare that things don’t go well. When we got here, everyone was asking if he was going to be the same, and everyone was watching him, and there was even more work to score the win.”

From: http://ping.fm/GgGwo

Freire wins as Kohler reclaims lead


The 35-year-old Spaniard of the Katusha team led a breakaway group of around 50 riders across the line in three hours, eight minutes and 34 seconds at Tanunda in the wine region of Barossa after the 130 kilometre trek from Norwood.
“I was feeling very well, especially during the climbs. At the same time, my team mates were always close to me, helping me a lot,” said Freire, who had not crossed the line in front since taking two stages in the Ruta del Sol last January.

“They did their best for today’s victory, which is not only mine but my team mates’ too.”
Freire, 35, joined Russian-back Katusha from Rabobank this season after nine years with the Dutch outfit.
Overnight leader Andre Greipel of Lotto-Belisol finished eight minutes adrift, allowing Switzerland’s Martin Kohler, who was in the lead group, to regain the Ochre jersey he had held after the second stage.
BMC rider Kohler holds a two-second advantage over Australian Michael Matthews, who is riding for Rabobank, and Freire, who is in his first race for Russian team Katusha, with the race likely to be decided in Saturday’s fifth stage.
“I didn’t expect to be back in the lead but we dropped Andre Greipel on the climb and then we were riding hard to make the gap bigger,” Kohler said.
“Tomorrow, there will be 10 or 15 riders contesting the win at the top of Willunga Hill. It’s going to be very hard and I don’t know if I can keep this lead or not but I’m already happy with what I’m doing here.”

Overall standings

1. Martin Kohler (Switzerland/BMC Racing) 15hrs 3 mins 34 secs
2. Michael Matthews (Australia/Rabobank) +2 secs
3. Oscar Freire (Spain/Katusha)
4. Gerald Ciolek (Germany/Omega Pharma – Quick-Step) +6″
5. Simon Gerrans (Australia/GreenEdge) +8″
6. Daniele Bennati (Italy/RadioShack)
7. Edvald Boasson Hagen (Norway/Team Sky)
8. Jan Bakelants (Belgium/RadioShack)
9. Eduard Vorganov (Russia/Katusha)
10. Rohan Dennis (Australia/Australia) +9″

From: http://ping.fm/HaQMc

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Video Stage-1 Australia Tour Down-Under


Exiting cycling video of the first stage of the Santos Tour Down Under 2012, with crashes and adrenaline. Enjoy.

Santos Tour Down Under 2012 Stage 1


German Andre Greipel (Lotto-Belisol) has taken his second straight win at the Tour Down Under, and his first on the road for the season, with a photo finish sprint over Italian rider Alessandro Petacchi (Lampre-ISD) in Clare. Greipel will wear the ochre jersey tomorrow courtesy of the 10 second time bonus he earned on the finish.

“I’m lucky that I won today,” said Greipel. “There was a massive crash with 800 metres to go. My pedal got touched and I lost positions from about 5th to 20th. But I managed to bridge the gap.

“[Then] Petacchi went from left to right, he didn’t care about the crash. He’s a big star but he shouldn’t do this. Two of my team-mates crashed as a result. All I care about after winning this stage is how they are.”

Petacchi denied any wrongdoing, a fact commissaires agreed with after reviewing footage of the final kilometre.

“I moved over slightly, but I gave him all the space he needed. In fact, he passed me,” said the Italian who benefited from a perfect launch from teammates Davide Vigano and Danilo Hondo.

The crash happened before Petacchi’s controversial manoeuvring, and seemed to be caused by two Vacansoleil riders tangling, with more than 20 riders including key Greipel teammate Jurgen Roelandts (Lotto-Belisol) and Frederic Guesdon (FDJ-BigMat) going down. Guesdon and Roelandts were both taken to Royal Adelaide Hosptial, Guesdon with a suspected broken hip that is potentially career ending, and Roelandts having scans on his neck.

Stuart O’Grady said the crash was “always going to happen” considering the fatigue in the peloton.

“There were a lot of tired guys out there. It really does have have a lot of effect on guys, the heat and it causes slow reactions and you can see a crash is always going to happen.”

Yauheni Hutarovich (FDJ – BigMat) took third with pre-stage favourites Mark Renshaw (Rabobank) and Chris Sutton (Sky) off the pace apparently caught behind in the carnage that ensued from the crash. Both still finished inside the top 10.

Rohan Dennis (UniSA) took the young rider’s jersey courtesy of the bonus seconds he picked up in the intermediate sprints on the road. Martin Kohler (BMC) took out the sprint competition, whilst Marcello Pavarin (Vacasoliel-DCM) will wear the King of the Mountains jersey.

“It was probably the toughest day on the bike I’ve had in a race,” said an exhaused Rohan Dennis in Clare. “Considering there was no hills. The headwind meant we were going around 20 kilometres an hour at some points – it was tough.”

From: http://ping.fm/AdRic

Cyclist breaks neck in Tour Down Under


 Jurgen Roelandts fractured a vertebra in the crash that marred the opening stage of the Tour Down Under.

The Belgian Lotto-Belisol rider was involved in a mass pile-up in the closing kilometre, hitting the tarmac at 45mph and breaking the sixth cervical vertebra, located at the base of the neck.
Thankfully the fracture was undisplaced, meaning that Roelandts should not suffer any lasting damage.
“He is in pain, but he can speak and move,” said the team’s sporting director Herman Frison.
Roelandts – whose team-mate Andre Greipel won the opening stage of the race – was well enough to Tweet a picture of himself from the Royal Adelaide Hospital, where he is awaiting further tests.
Matteo Montaguti sustained a suspected fractured collarbone in the same crash while Frederic Guesdon broke his hip, an accident that will almost certainly end the 40-year-old veteran’s 17-year professional career.

From: http://ping.fm/PzKsB

Cycling champ Stuart O’Grady accused of assault


ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 20: Lance Armstr...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

A CHAUFFEUR has accused champion cyclist Stuart O’Grady of attacking him during a journey from a Hills winery days before the start of the Tour Down Under.

The Advertiser understands that the driver has made a statement to police alleging that O’Grady, 38, grabbed him by the neck and head while he was driving on the South Eastern Freeway.

Police are treating the incident as a “minor physical assault” claim and it is being assessed by Adelaide CIB.

O’Grady is one of the key riders of Australia’s first pro team, GreenEDGE, which was launched at the weekend ahead of the start of the Tour Down Under.

A GreenEDGE spokesman said: “Stuey is the victim here. We find the timing of this to be quite strange.

“He’s a family man and a proud local. He had witnesses and he’s here to race.”

It is understood the driver, Ralf Hadzic, from Life is a Cabernet chauffeur service, made the statement to police at the weekend, after he had spoken to a TV current affairs program.

He told police that he picked up O’Grady, his wife and two other people from the The Lane Vineyard at 11pm on January 10.

Shortly after the journey began, O’Grady allegedly argued with the driver over wearing a seatbelt. The driver alleged that O’Grady, who was in the back seat, then attacked him.

He also alleged that O’Grady threw a glass in the vehicle. He has asked for assault charges to be laid.

O’Grady, a thirteen time veteran of the Tour De France, was the guest speaker at a $140-a-head Tour Down Under Dinner at the winery on January 10.

From: http://ping.fm/ea9nP

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Farrar talks Wouter, Olympics


LIVERMORE, CA - MAY 18:  Cyclists observe a mo...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Tyler Farrar is preparing for his ninth professional season and he’s certainly hoping the 2012 season will not be the emotional roller coaster that he endured last year.

The Garmin sprinter enjoyed some of his best results ever, capped by a breakthrough stage win at the Tour de France, but suffered a horrible crash at the Vuelta a España that derailed his hopes for a shot at the rainbow jersey in Copenhagen.

That’s nothing compared to the gut-wrenching experience of losing his close friend and training partner Wouter Weylandt in a horrific crash during the Giro d’Italia.

Speaking to VeloNews, Farrar talks about Weylandt, how much it meant to him to dedicate his Tour victory to his best friend, and how he views his chances in the London Olympic Games. Here are excerpts from an interview conducted with Farrar last fall:

VeloNews.com: You had an emotional roller coaster during 2011. How do you take stock of the season?
Tyler Farrar: I can’t see that the season’s been a failure. Winning a stage in the Tour and the TTT in the Tour was huge and I had a good run through the classics. It’s certainly not a failure, but it’s a year that I will gladly put behind me. What happened in the Giro with Wouter, that was absolutely horrible. There are not even words to describe that. Crashing out of the Vuelta after a week, that certainly wasn’t good before the worlds. So there have been some pretty big highs and some pretty big lows this year. I will happily close the book on 2011.

VN: The crash involving Wouter, how bad was that to deal with?
TF: I’ve never had to deal with something like that before, losing a friend, it’s fairly traumatic. That’s life sometimes, because some things are out of your control. Bad things do happen to good people. You just have to try to deal with it and try to move on. I’ve certainly not forgotten, but I am trying to move forward.

VN: That was such an emotional ending of the next day’s stage, when you crossed the line with the Leopard-Trek team. What did that mean to you?
TF: It was just surreal. We were out there for a long time. That was a long time to be with your thoughts. It’s something I remember as a kid watching what they did in the Tour after Casartelli died. I could never imagine that I would be a part of that some day. It was something that I will never forget. I owe a huge thank you to the Leopard-Trek riders for allowing me to be a part of it at that finish, to ride across the line like that with them. That meant so much to me.

VN: You decided not to continue and attended the funeral in Belgium, how did you cope later with the loss?
TF: It’s not as if there is any one moment that comes and everything is OK. I am still dealing with the loss. Every day it gets a little bit better. It takes time. I was a big mess after it happened. I went to the funeral. I actually flew back to the States to escape a little bit. Ghent is not a village, it’s not a big city, either. There were a lot of memories and in the immediate aftermath, it was hard to be there. I went back to the States.

VN: Did you ever consider not racing again last season?
TF: Cycling is my life, it has been my life since I was 12. It’s how I make a living. I never really thought of hanging it up for the season. I wasn’t sure at first of when I could get back to racing. The team was quite supportive of me and let me call the shots in terms of when I was ready to come back. They didn’t pressure me. As I started to get back on my bike again, it was a bit of a struggle for a few days, but then it almost became therapeutic, just to get out and be alone with my thoughts. At least to start the process of working my way through it all. I started training pretty hard and I started to get the idea to do something to make a gesture or tribute for Wouter in the Tour. That became my big goal that I was working toward. I had to train to get good enough to win a stage in the Tour to make a tribute for him.

VN: You did win that stage at the Tour, so it must have meant even more to finally get that monkey off your back and also be able to dedicate the win to Wouter?
TF: That’s what I was trying to do for three years and to finally knock it off, so in that sense, it was a huge relief to finally get a stage win in the Tour. It was also one of those things that I had this idea that I could win a stage in the Tour and make a salute to Wouter. OK, it’s a great idea, but it’s easier said than done. To actually to be able to do it made me very happy. I know that it’s not so easy to win a stage in the Tour. I wasn’t sure it was going to happen.

VN: Looking back at last season, from the outside, it seemed as if there was some polemic between you and Thor (Hushovd) on the team. How do you feel now that he’s going to race at BMC?
TF: I don’t think Thor and I had a problem this year. We got along pretty well. We worked together very well. It did require a few adjustments in races we were targeting. I think we worked it out and it was pretty beneficial to both of us in the end. To be honest, I am going to miss having Thor on the team this year. I got along really well with him. It was fun having him at the races. He was a pretty good teammate. In that sense, I will miss him.

VN: Looking ahead to 2012, another big year, with the Tour and the Olympics stacked up, what are your priorities?
TF: For the classics, nothing will change. You know the races, you know the dates. At this point, I’ve done enough races to know what races I can do for prep, what works well, what doesn’t. So not much is going to change as far as spring goes. After that, it will be a rest and rebuild for the Tour. The Olympics are so close in at the back of the Tour, it’s going to be tricky. It’s a balancing act of what you do in those four or five days after the Tour, on how you can recover, but not let your body shut entirely down. That’s the risk after a three-week race. If you finish the Tour and rest too much, you’re going to be in trouble the next week in London.

VN: What happened in the test event in August, you were not there for the sprint finish when Cavendish won?
TF: There was a big pile-up with 3km to go. I ended up behind the pileup. They fell in front of me and there was nowhere to go except into them.

VN: What’s your impression of the London Olympic course? People are saying Box Hill is harder than it looks on paper …
TF: It’s an interesting course. The run out to the circuit and run back in are really easy.; fairly straight, flat roads, it’s 50km each way. The circuit itself is a lot harder than people have been giving it credit for. It’s pretty nasty, that circuit. In the test event, we only did two laps. When you have to do nine laps in the Olympics, that’s really going to wear on people. The climb is longer than I was led to believe before I saw it. There’s no recovery on the circuit, left-right, up-down, small roads. If it was a regular ProTour race, with eight-rider teams with race radio, it would be one thing, but with five-man team in the Olympics and no race radio, I think it’s going to break up a lot on the circuit. It will be hard to reorganize things, with only five riders and a lack of communication. I don’t know what’s going to happen. I think it will break up, so the question is whether it will come back together on that 50km run back into London.

From: http://ping.fm/Hfnnb

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Wildcard teams awarded Giro places


Androni Giacolatti, Colago – CSF Inox, Farnese Vini and Team NetApp join a host of teams who are invited to the event by right.
This year’s Giro d’Italia runs from May 5th to 27th.
The committee reviewing wild cards also took the decision to increase the wildcard entrants for the Tirreno – Adriatico in March from two to four teams.
Colnago – CSF Inox and Farnese Vini are again invited, and joined by Acqua & Sapone and Colombia – Coldeportes.

From: http://ping.fm/UCnqd

French Cyclo-cross National Championships


1 Aurélien Duval (UV Aube) 1:00:31
2 Steve Chainel (FDJ-Big Mat) 0:00:03
3 Francis Mourey (FDJ-Big Mat)
4 Clément Bourgoin (Charvieu Chavagneux) 0:00:05
5 Matthieu Boulo (Roubaix LM) 0:00:07
6 Arnold Jeannesson (FDJ-Big Mat) 0:00:28
7 Guillaume Perrot (EC Saint-Etienne Loire) 0:00:34
8 John Gadret (AG2R La Mondiale) 0:00:57
9 Laurent Colombatto (AC Besançon) 0:01:15
10 Julien Roussel (VC Rouen 76) 0:01:27

From: http://ping.fm/EIWX7

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