Thursday, June 25, 2009

Powers Leads Team Type 1 At Liberty Classic

Philadelphia Alison Powers’ sixth-place finish led Team Type 1 Sunday at the 14th edition of the TD Bank Liberty Classic.

The reigning United States time trial champion was among a group of a dozen riders who slipped the field on the final of four laps around the 14.4-mile course through the streets of Philadelphia. As they rounded the finishing straight onto Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Powers started her sprint from 300 meters out.

“I thought I better go now or else the sprinters will gap me,” she said. “I pretty much led out the people that were on my wheel. I’m a little disappointed that I was thinking too much, but I’ve never been in a situation like that.”

Ina-Yoko Teutenberg (Columbia-Highroad) was first to the finish line of the 56-mile (91 km) race to win it for the third time. Joanne Kiesanowski (Team TIBCO) was second and Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad) was third.

Powers did increase her lead in the National Racing Calendar (NRC) standings by earning 54 points for her top 10 finish. The second and third-place riders in the NRC standings – Katheryn Mattis (Webcor Builders) and third-place Kristin Armstrong (Cervelo-Lifeforce) did not score points. (Armstrong wasn’t in the race, while Mattis finished 41st.)

All five Team Type 1 riders finished the race: Jen McRae was 15th, Veronica Leal 33rd, Kori Seehafer 36th and Jacquelyn Crowell finished 52nd.


Seehafer, who has ridden nearly every edition of the race since 1999, said it was one of the most aggressive that she could recall. At one point, the women’s field passed the men’s race that was traveling on the same course. The men started their 156-mile (250 km) race about 10 minutes ahead of the women.

“There was the potential for a break to go every time we went up the climb (of the Manayunk Wall),” Seehafer said. “I couldn’t accelerate hard today so I blew myself up the last time up the climb to get Allie (Powers) and Jen (McRae) in position.”

Photos: Courtesy of Casey B. Gibson (www.cbgphoto.com)

Teutenberg Lady Liberty, Again; Greipel Completes Columbia-Highroad Sweep


The TD Bank Philadelphia International Cycling Championship celebrated its 25th anniversary earlier this month. The one-day race, and its corresponding women’s Liberty Classic, is widely considered to be one of America’s crown jewels of cycling. But surprisingly, if not for a midnight sponsorship deal, the race that features the festival like atmosphere up Manayunk Wall, crowds swarming over Lemon Hill, and the winding scenery of the Schuylkill River, all juxtaposed against the rich history of City of Brotherly Love, might also have been felled by the troubled economy.

With the men’s and women’s races run simultaneously, Ina Teutenberg would not only lead a Columbia-Highroad and German sweep of the races, with teammate and countryman, Andre Greipel taking out the men’s field sprint, but also the women’s field past the men’s for the first time in any race’s history.

As officials allowed the speeding women to race by a men's field that had to be neutralized, Teutenberg would later tell Velonews, “When we went past the men, I told them they were pussies!”

The victory would be Teutenberg’s 3rd career Liberty Classic win and her 17th of the 2009 season. Team TIBCO’s Joanne Kiesanowski would finish second and Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad) would take third. For Olds, reaching the podium has become somewhat of a norm this season as she had already won five races, including the omnium title and two of the three Tulsa Tough criteriums the week before, on the road prior to starting the Liberty Classic.

Women’s Results
1. Ina Teutenberg (Team Columbia-Highroad)
2. Joanne Kiesanowski (Team TIBCO)
3. Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad)
4. Trixi Worrack (Equipe Nurnberger Versicherung)
5. Catherine Cheatley (Colavita Sutter Homes presented by Cooking Light)
6. Alison Powers (Team Type 1)
7. Ruth Corset (Jazz Apple Cycling Team)
8. Chrissy Ruiter (ValueAct Capital Cycling Team)
9. Amber Neben (Equipe Nurnberger Versicherung)
10. Kim Anderson (Team Columbia-Highroad)

Men’s Results

1. Andre Greipel (Team Columbia – Highroad)
2. Greg Henderson (Team Columbia – Highroad)
3. Kirk O’Bee (Bissell Pro Cycling)
4. Harald Starzengruber (Elk Haus)
5. David Vitoria (Rock Racing)
6. Keven Lacombe (Planet Energy)
7. Alejandro Borrajo (Colavita Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light)
8. Christofer Stevenson (Swedish National Team)
9. Lucas Haedo (Colavita Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light)
10. Andrew Pinfold (OUCH presented by Maxxis)

Photo: Courtesy of Todd Leister (Leister Images). For more images from the race click here.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Return from Hiatus: The Bicycle Blotter

One of the great things about blogging is being your own boss. As such, we gave ourselves an extended leave of absence. Call it the quiet before the July storm that is the Tour de France.

Aside from our Publish2 Newsgroup remaining active, its been roughly three weeks since our last post. In that time, news from the cycling world mirrored the continuous movement of life and had simply strolled on by without much commentary.

Over the next several posts, we'll rely on some of our colleagues to work our way back into the fray before the news peloton leaves us behind.

The Blotter
This past week has seen cycling grab the headlines of the blotter wire with news of the aftermath of stealing Lance's one-off time trial machine and the implosion of The Missile.

As reported by several media outlets, 40-year-old Lee Crider will receive a 3 year prison sentence for stealing Lance Armstong's time trial bicycle the night after the Amgen Tour of California Prologue back in February.

While the debate certainly centers around whether the punishment fits the crime, two items from the story are hard to ignore. First, is the amount for which the stolen bicycle was unloaded.

"A police report says he bought Armstrong's $10,000 bike, a Trek Livestrong 1274, from Crider for $200."

Talk about diminishing returns.

Second, is the fact that Crider even thought he could get away with taking the one-of-a-kind bicycle. Yesterday, the Dan Patrick Show likened it to stealing a precious work of art that couldn't be shown to anyone. If he hasn't already been enshrined, Crider deserves to be in the hall of stupidest criminals ever.



When I first started mountain biking, I was a big fan of Brian Lopes and Missy "The Missile" Giove. In fact, they are the reason I still ride a Cannondale today. So it was especially saddening to hear of Giove's recent exploits.

"Giove, 37, and Eric Canori, 30, of Wilton were charged Tuesday with conspiring to possess and distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijuana."

Giove, who won downhill World Championship in 1994, World Cup season titles in 1997 and 1998, and US National titles from 1999-2001, faces up to "40 years in prison and a $2 million fine."

"The Missile" Living Large

Friday, June 05, 2009

Komen Cruiser Rolls for a Good Cause

Campus Cruisers Produces First Cause-Branded Bicycle


Boulder, Colo. — People who support Susan G. Komen for the Cure®, the world’s largest breast cancer advocacy organization, have a new way to be engaged in the breast cancer movement.

Campus Cruisers is the first company to produce an entirely cause-branded bicycle, the Komen Cruiser, for which a portion from the sale of each bike will be donated to Komen for the Cure to help fund life-saving breast cancer research, education and community outreach projects.

“This is a unique way for people to show their commitment to a special cause and have fun doing it,” said Brian Searchinger, the founder of Campus Cruisers. “Riding is part of an active lifestyle and it’s the ultimate “green” transportation”

For each sale of a Komen Cruiser, Campus Cruisers will donate at least $25 and up to $100 to Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker founded the organization 27 years ago in memory of her sister, and today it is the largest source of nonprofit funds dedicated to finding the cures for breast cancer.

“The Komen Cruiser is the perfect symbol for what our organization does every day as we’re racing to the cures for breast cancer,” said Elizabeth Chandler, a corporate relations manager at Komen for the Cure. “We encourage people to lead healthy lifestyles and be physically active, and this bicycle is a great way to do just that while supporting the breast cancer movement.”

Each feature on the Komen Cruiser was designed to capture the Komen spirit— from the streaming ribbon graphics to the stylized K head badge and the customized pink ribbons on the fenders.

The Komen Cruiser is available in two models. The one-speed, steel bike retails for $299; the three-speed, aluminum edition retails for $499.

Komen Cruisers are available at select bicycle dealers and by ordering directly through the Campus Cruisers website, www.campuscruisers.com, or by calling (303) 442-0280.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

McRae Third At Tulsa; Hanley Injury Update

Tulsa, Okla.Jen McRae scored Team Type 1’s third podium finish of the Tulsa Tough omnium criterium series with a third-place finish Sunday while teammate Monique Hanley continued to assess the extent of injuries she sustained in a crash Saturday.

McRae’s placing behind winner Shelley Olds (Proman Hit Squad) and runner-up Carmen McNellis (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light) earned Team Type 1 valuable points toward maintaining its lead in the National Racing Calendar (NRC) team standings. McRae also finished third in the omnium competition.

Team Type 1’s Alison Powers, the NRC individual leader, also figured prominently in Sunday’s race before finishing fifth. The reigning national time trial champion soloed for about 10 laps, never gaining more than a dozen seconds’ lead. But the efforts by other teams to chase her down certainly took their toll.

“Basically that destroyed the whole field,” Team Type 1 Team Director Jack Seehafer said. “There were about 25 riders left by the time they caught her. Coming out of the last corner, she was second wheel behind Shelley Olds. Had Alison not done all that work early on, she might have even won.”

While her teammates were racing, Hanley was checking out of the hospital in anticipation of a return to her U.S. home in Philadelphia. The Australian broke three of her four thoracic vertebrae (T2, T3 and T4) in a massive pile-up Saturday that also separated her shoulder and left her with extensive bruising and road rash.

“It’s been really, really painful for me,” Hanley said. “The shoulder seems like no issue compared to my back.”

Shoulder surgery will be required while the spinous process fractures will have to heal on their own.

“It’s really a question of pain management and not doing anything that makes it worse when it comes to my back,” Hanley said. “As for my shoulder, I won’t be able to even get on the bike for six weeks or so after the surgery.”

Managing her Type 1 diabetes will also be a challenge, she said, since she only has the use of one hand to test her blood sugar.

“I’m grateful to have great tools, including the FreeStyle Navigator (continuous glucose monitor) and the OmniPod to make my life easier," she said. “Extra insulin will be required, and I'll be using Apidra to help me out with this."

Hanley wasn’t the only one hurt in Tulsa. Teammate Kori Seehafer, the sprint classification leader of the Women’s Prestige Cycling Series, did not compete after she was struck by a trailer being pulled by a truck. The incident happened Wednesday while the team was stopped at a traffic light during a training ride. Injuries to her left leg and knee make her questionable for Sunday’s Liberty Cup race in Philadelphia.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Soldier Field Development Criterium Series

Criterium series for juniors taking place on Chicago's lakefront begins on June 17th and will run through August 26th


Spanglish Ideas LLC will role out its new cycling event named, Soldier Field Cycling Series. The series will take place in the South Lot of the Lakefront stadium. The Soldier Field Cycling Series is a 6-day, competitive cycling series that will take place on alternating Wednesdays, starting on June 17th, 2009 through August 26th, 2009. The series differentiates itself by allowing junior riders, ages 10 through 18 years, to race FREE of charge. Also all Jr riders will receive a FREE burrito provided by Chipotle. The Lakefront setting will provide spectators with access to America's most popular style of bicycle racing, the criterium. To register and obtain additional information, please visit www.soldierfieldcycling.com

Photo: Chicago Bike Racing

Team Type 1 Soars With Milne’s Win At Air Force Cycling Classic


Crystal City, Va. – In a race that Shawn Milne said he simply hoped to finish, the fifth-year pro from Beverly, Mass., delivered much more in Sunday’s Air Force Cycling Classic.

Milne pulled off one of the most high profile victories in the two-year history of the Team Type 1 men’s professional program by out-sprinting four breakaway companions at the end of the 109.2-mile (175 km) USA Cycling Professional Tour series event in Crystal City, Va.

It was the 20th win of the season for the Team Type 1 men and the third in just one week’s time.

“I didn’t feel good all day,” an overjoyed Milne said. “In fact, I felt miserable. With two laps to go, I was supposed to be ready to lead out Ken (Hanson) and I told him I didn’t think I had it in me.”

Despite the inclination to pack it in, Milne forged on and soon found himself and teammate Matt Wilson riding in the decisive break. But once again, he wasn’t thinking about his own chances.

“Matt was feeling well, so I was taking more pulls, trying to keep everyone working together,” Milne said.

When a further split reduced the lead group to just five with a little more than one 7.7-mile (12.5 km) lap of the course remaining, Milne said he started sizing up his chances of earning his first victory since the Exeter (N.H.) Criterium last July.

“I was a little worried because I didn’t know everyone I was riding with,” the 27-year-old said. “I knew Davide Frattini of Colavita and Jeremy Vennell of Bissell. But I didn’t recognize Charles Dionne (Fly V Australia) and for some reason, I thought Kelly Benefits’ Scott Zwizanski was Zach Bell. So I thought I had to watch out for him for sure.”

Zwizanski twice tried to jump the group inside the final mile and Vennell made what looked like the winning move with 800 meters to go. But both attacks were brought back, allowing Milne to bide his time before beginning his own sprint from the 200-meter mark.

Dionne finished second, Zwizanski was third, Frattini fourth and Vennell came in a further two seconds back for fifth. A group of eight chasers rolled through a further 13 seconds back.

Milne’s win – the first for Team Type 1 in an International Cycling Union-classified race on U.S. soil – continues a week-long string of success that includes Wilson’s victory May 24 at the Bound Brook Criterium at the Lantus Tour of Somerville, Aldo Ino Ilesic’s win on Wednesday at the Ricola Twilight Grand Prix in Basking Ridge, N.J., and Hanson’s runner-up finish Saturday at the U.S. Air Force Cycling Classic Clarendon Cup in Arlington, Va.

Team Type 1 Director Sportif Vassili Davidenko said the results bode well heading into the most prestigious single-day event on the U.S. racing scene, Sunday’s TD Bank International Championship in Philadelphia.

“I see our guys getting stronger and stronger, but that’s a longer race (156 miles) than any that we have done this year,” Davidenko said. “But Wednesday, we will do a group training ride together behind the car as a final preparation ride and then we’ll be ready to go.”

Materials used for this post, courtesy of TT1

Photos: Mark Blacknell (top); Casey B. Gibson (bottom)

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Olds Wins, Team Type 1’s Hanley Seriously Injured In Tulsa Pile-Up

Tulsa, Okla.Monique Hanley fractured three vertebrae and dislocated her shoulder Saturday during the Brady Village Criterium on the second day of the Tulsa Tough cycling series in Tulsa, Okla.

The Team Type 1 rider was one of at least three dozen riders who were involved a crash early on in the women’s professional race.

“I had nowhere to go but to be catapulted,” Hanley said.

The Australian has full range of movement in her arms and legs, Team Type 1 Team Director Jack Seehafer said.

“That’s the good news,” he said. “But her dislocated shoulder will require surgery,”

In addition to her broken bones, Hanley also has scrapes on her back, a bloody knee, swollen wrist and sore neck.

Even eventual race winner Shelley Olds (PROMAN Women's Cycling Team) was caught up in the crash.


“I’ve never been in that big of a pile up,” Olds told the Tulsa World newspaper.

Hanley is one of two women with Type 1 diabetes on the Team Type 1 professional women’s squad. The 31-year-old was diagnosed with the disease at the age of 19 but quickly took up cycling as a way to stay active. She twice was a part of Team Type 1’s eight-rider squad for the Race Across America and last year won a bronze medal at the Australian National Track Championships.

Konovalovas Takes Rome, Menchov Italy - Stage 21 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

With their landmark destination, the Colosseum, in the background of the time trial start house, the remaining gladiators of the 100th Giro d'Italia set out on a 14.4km sojourn around the Eternal City to determine a champion.

What many expected to be one final shootout, similar to the finish of the 1989 Tour de France that saw Greg Lemond counting down the seconds as a fatiguing Lauren Fignon barreled toward the line, turned out to be more like water pistol fight as only one of the General Classification contenders finished in the top ten.

Ignatas Konovalovas (Cervelo Test Team) wearing the colors of the Lithuanian Time Trial Champion, would edge out Bradley Wiggins (Garmin - Slipstream) by 1 second and Edvald Boasson Hagen (Team Columbia - Highroad) by 7 seconds for victory on the final stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.


Despite a crash in the final kilometers, Denis Menchov (Rabobank) would take tenth on the day and the final maglia rosa as the 2009 Giro d'Italia Champion. It is the Russian's third Grand Tour title, having won the Vuelta a Espana in 2005 and 2007.

Results
1. Ignatas Konovalovas (Ltu) Cervelo Test Team
2. Bradley Wiggins (GBr) Garmin - Slipstream
3. Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor) Team Columbia - Highroad


Final General Classification Standings
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Other Notables
12 Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana
19 Damiano Cunego (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
24 Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
63 Jason McCartney (USA) Team Saxo Bank
78 Thomas Danielson (USA) Garmin - Slipstream
111 Ted King (USA) Cervelo Test Team
144 Danny Pate (USA) Garmin - Slipstream
152 David Zabriskie (USA) Garmin - Slipstream

Other Jersey Winners
maglia ciclamino (points) - Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
maglia verde (KOM) - Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
maglia bianca (best young rider) - Kevin Seeldraeyers (Bel) Quick Step

Classic Finish, Gilbert Triumphs – Stage 20 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

With a showdown at the Colosseum to follow, Stage 20 was any ones to take.

In the end, Philippe Gilbert (Silence-Lotto) found the parcours suited to his Classics style and claimed the stage over Thomas Voeckler (BBox Bouygues Telecom) and Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo.

Results
1. Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Silence-Lotto
2. Thomas Voeckler (Fra) BBox Bouygues Telecom
3. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo

The General Classification stayed as is, which can only mean one thing headed into the finale; this is Denis Menchov's (Rabobank) title to lose.

General Classification After Stage 20
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 21 - Individual Time Trial, Roma, 14.4km
A quick trip around the Eternal City ends where gladiators once did battle, at the Colosseum.

Sprightly Sastre Nimble Up Vesuvius – Stage 19 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

After his proclamation to fight for the title, the reigning Tour de France Champion's legs misfired on Stage 17 up Blockhaus. But Carlos Sastre (Cervelo Test Team) would once again show his mettle as a climber on the final mountain stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.

With only a transition stage and the final time trial to go, Stage 19 would be the final attempt for the climber/contenders to state their case for the overall. As such, the attacks came quickly once the riders reached the slopes of the infamous Mt. Vesuvius.

Ivan Basso
(Liquigas) and Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo) were the first to have a go. But neither could maintain their torrid pace. The expected battle for the General Classification also fell short as the top three contenders marked each other all the way up the dormant volcano.

Sastre would be first to summit the historic climb, which had only been used two other times in the race's history. Franco Pellizotti (Liquigas) would take second, and Danilo Di Luca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini) third.

Results
1. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
2. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

For his efforts, Sastre would move up a spot to fourth overall.

General Classification After Stage 19
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 20 - Napoli - Anagni, 203km
Dare I say it...the penultimate stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Scarponi Back for Seconds - Stage 18 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Like a starving man who is set down in front of a table full of food, Michele Scarponi (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli ) did not need an excuse to come back for seconds. Scarponi proved to be the strongest of the remnants of a break that numbered as many as twenty-five at one point to take Stage 18 of the 100th Giro d’Italia. Felix Carendas (Barloworld) and Danny Pate (Team Garmin-Slipstream) would finish in second and third, respectively.

As I had mentioned previously after his victory on Stage 6, it has proved difficult to cheer for Scarponi, but I certainly wasn’t rooting against him either. Scarponi’s genuine joy after winning another Giro d’Italia stage perhaps speaks volumes over any of his past indiscretions. Repentance and redemption are, after all, part of the human condition.

Results
1. Michele Scarponi (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
2. Félix Cardenas (Col) Barloworld
3. Danny Pate (USA) Garmin - Slipstream

General Classification After Stage 18
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 19 - Avellino - Vesuvio, 164km
The third to last stage may well be the decider. After a stroll along the Amalfi Coast, the race heads up the infamous Mt. Vesuvius.

Franco Reigns – Stage 17 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

Any consternation emanating from the Liquigas camp leading up to Stage 17 of the 100th Giro d’Italia was put to rest as Franco Pellizotti led an Italian sweep of the day’s podium and literally climbed his way into third place on the General Classification (GC). Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo) would finish in second and Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini) in third.

On a day where the attacks came fast and furious on the final climb, Blockhaus, Pellizotti’s stamina and skill proved unmatched. Whether by design or in an attempt to grab the reigns of team leadership, Pellizotti’s victory served to momentarily soothe the boisterous tifosi whose grumblings over team tactics and leadership only grew louder as the race wore on; with many believing Liquigas was squandering any opportunity it had to win the race by not pulling for one man.

With both Pellizotti and Ivan Basso, the designated team leader of Liquigas heading into the race, now sitting third and fourth, respectively on the General Classification it may prove a tough pill to swallow for any Liquigas fan when imagining what might have been.

Results
1. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
2. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

A late attack by “the killer” garnered him some valuable seconds over Denis Menchov (Rabobank) who looked every part of the stoic champion shadowing his closest competitor.

General Classification After Stage 17
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 18 - Sulmona - Benevento, 182km
A stage that sets up for the sprinters turned out to be a breakaway's delight.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Heart of a Champion - Stage 16 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Carlos Sastre (Cervelo Test Team) was listed as one of the pre-race favorites, but it seemed more out of respect for his past accomplishments, which of course includes winning the 2008 Tour de France, rather than for his desire to win the 100th Giro d’Italia. After all, bigger fish, namely countryman Alberto Contador (Astana) and the Tour de France, are up the road.

But with the racing mindset that was fostered during his days riding under Bjarne Riis firmly entrenched, Sastre refused to bypass the opportunity to take another grand tour title. On the final climb of Stage 16 from Pergola to Monte Petrano, Sastre fully made his intentions known and put forth a vicious attack reminiscent of his Tour winning ride.

He would put time into the current leader on the General Classification, Denis Menchov (Rabobank), and pull himself up to third at the expense of Levi Leipheimer (Astana) who could not keep up with the accelerations on the climb. Menchov would take second on the stage, with his shadow, Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini) taking third.

Results
1. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
2. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

General Classification After Stage 16
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne
10. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale

Next: Stage 17 - Chieti - Blockhaus, 83km
It may only be 83km, but most of it is up hill.

Ilesic Caps Big Weekend For Team Type 1

Somerville, N.J. – Aldo Ino Ilesic’s third-place finish at Monday’s Lantus Tour of Somerville put the finishing touches on a successful weekend of bicycle racing for Team Type 1.

During four days of competition in and around Somerville, N.J., Team Type 1 scored three victories – including two by Development team rider Adam Driscoll – while earning six podium finishes.

The impressive results were particularly satisfying for sanofi-aventis, the team’s primary sponsor. Its U.S. headquarters are in nearby Bridgewater, N.J., and its long-acting insulin, Lantus, was branded as the title of the event that has been part of the American cycling scene for 66 years.


Ilesic led Team Type 1 to the finish line of the Kugler-Anderson Memorial, the 50-mile (80 km) men’s race that was won by Lucas Sebastian Haedo (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light). Haedo scored his second straight victory at Somerville ahead of Jake Keough (Kelly Benefit Strategies) and a hard-charging Ilesic.

“With 300 meters to go, Colavita still had three guys up in front,” Ilesic said. “I started to sprint, but Haedo was just too fast today.

“I’m happy for the team and our sponsor, sanofi-aventis. They made a great event. We’re still a new team with new riders. We need to get a little more experience, but I’m confident for the upcoming races that we’ll get it to come together.”

Team Type 1 set up its sprint train by putting five riders at the head of the race on the penultimate lap, bringing loud cheers from the partisan crowd of sanofi-aventis employees and their families who were lining the 1.35-mile rectangular course in Downtown Somerville.

“We knew it was probably going to come down to a bunch sprint in the end,” Team Type 1 Director Sportif Vassili Davidenko said. “We may have gone a little too early in the sprint, but overall our guys did a great job. There were some really fast guys here and some very good teams.”

In addition to Ilesic’s third place finish – his second straight podium placing at a National Racing Calendar event – Team Type 1’s Ken Hanson finished sixth.

In the women’s 20-mile (32 km) Kugler Open, Kori Seehafer (not pictured) led Team Type 1 with a seventh-place finish as Tina Pic (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light) scored her fourth victory (and second straight) in the event that is popularly referred to as the “Kentucky Derby of Cycling.”


Driscoll’s wins came in Friday night’s Category III-IV Manville Madness criterium, the opening race of the Lantus Tour of Somerville series, and Sunday’s Bound Brook criterium. Matt Wilson earned the men’s professional team’s 18th win of the year the same afternoon by soloing away from a pair of breakaway companions late in the 40-mile (64 km) race.

Materials used for this post, courtesy of Team Type 1

Photo: Marco Quezada Photography

Wilson Solos To Win Bound Brook Criterium


Bound Brook, N.J.Matt Wilson of Team Type 1 slipped a pair of breakaway companions with two laps to go en route to a solo victory in Sunday’s Bound Brook Criterium.

Wilson’s win in the second-to-last event of the Lantus Tour of Somerville series was Team Type 1’s third victory of the Memorial Day weekend. Adam Driscoll, who has Type 1 diabetes, won the Category III-IV race Sunday, as well as Friday night’s Manville Madness criterium.

Lantus is a long-acting insulin manufactured by sanofi-aventis, Team Type 1’s primary sponsor that has its U.S. headquarters in nearby Bridgewater, N.J.

As rain began to fall in Bound Brook, N.J., Sunday afternoon, Wilson made his escape from the field with Nathaniel Ward (Spooky/NCC/Kenda) and Vincent Quirion (Garneau Club Chaussures). Fourteen laps remained in the 40-mile (64 km) race.

“As soon as it started raining, I decided I didn’t want to be in the bunch,” Wilson said. “It helps a breakaway a lot on a wet circuit in a criterium because you can pedal through the corners and get a good rhythm through the corners. The bunch is a bit more sketchy and erratic in the rain.”

As the trio increased its lead from a handful of seconds to half a minute, Wilson began sizing up his options to go after the win – his first since capturing the second stage of the Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic last July.

“I didn’t know the other two guys but I was feeling pretty strong out there,” the 2004 Australian national road champion said. “I was pretty confident I could do it.”

Team Type 1’s Aldo Ino Ilesic won the field sprint for fourth and teammate Ken Hanson, the 2008 U.S. elite criterium national champion, was fifth.

Both the Team Type 1 men’s and women’s professional teams will be in action Monday in the final event of the Lantus Tour of Somerville. The afternoon of races culminates with the 50-mile (80 km) Kugler-Anderson Memorial criterium, more popularly referred to as the “Kentucky Derby of Cycling.” The 20-mile (32 km) Women's Kugler Open precedes the men’s race.

The 1.35-mile (2.1 km), four-corner criterium has been a fixture on the U.S. racing scene for more than 60 years. More than 20,000 people are expected to turn out to watch the event, which is part of the National Racing Calendar.

Materials used for this post, courtesy of Team Type 1

Photo: Iri Greco (BrakeThrough Media)

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Leonardo's Work of Art - Stage 15 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Another day, another breakaway. On a day which featured temperatures suitable for mid-summer rather than late spring, and a route with multiple climbs and a flat finish, a healthy group of 16 would survive until the final climb before being pared down to seven strong.

At the end of a long, hot, and grueling day, Leonardo Bertagnolli (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli) would prove to be the most earnest and strongest. Serge Pauwels (Cervelo Test Team), who on the year has yet to see a break he doesn't like would slot into second, while Marco Pinotti (Team Columbia-Highroad) would come in third.

Results
1. Leonardo Bertagnolli (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
2. Serge Pauwels (Bel) Cervelo Test Team
3. Marco Pinotti (Ita) Team Columbia - Highroad

Mulitple attacks by a pair of former champions, Ivan Basso (Liquigas) and Stefan Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone) on the final slopes failed to produce the desired result as the gruppo maglia rosa would evntually work their way back and finish with the same time.

General Classification After Stage 15
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
9. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 16 - Pergola - Monte Petrano, 237km
Another mountain-top finish would reveal the true contenders for the General Classification.

Galloping Gerrans - Stage 14 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

It seems a bit ludicrous on my part, standing at 5' 6", to refer to Simon Gerrans (Cervelo Test Team) as diminutive, but at 5' 7" Gerrans is one of the smaller riders in the professional peloton. But what the 29-year old Australian has lacked in stature, he has more than made up for in riding skill.

To date, Gerrans' most significant victory was on Stage 15 in the 2008 Tour de France, which he won after out-sprinting his breakaway partners. Gerrans would once again repeat the feat and add to his grand tour victory total by bagging the 172km Stage 14 from Campi Bisenzio to Bologna of the 100th Giro d'Italia. Rubens Bertogliati (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli) would finish second and Francesco Gavazzi (Lampre - N.G.C.) would round out the podium.

Results
1. Simon Gerrans (Aus) Cervelo Test Team
2. Rubens Bertogliati (Swi) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
3. Francesco Gavazzi (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Although he remained in third, Levi Leipheimer (Astana) would lose time to both Denis Menchov (Rabobank) and Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini).

General Classification After Stage 14
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne

Next: Stage 15 - May 24: Forlì - Faenza, 161km
A flat finish after several climbs sets up for another breakaway.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Cavendish-ing It Out – Stage 13 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

After a grueling 60.6km Individual Time Trial on Thursday afternoon, the peloton used every bit of the 176km Stage 13 from Lido di Camaiore to Firenze as a reprieve.

The sprinters took full advantage of the relatively flat course as their relegation to the back of the peloton is more than a certainty with more big mountains on the horizon. The two dominant sprinters, Mark Cavendish (Team Columbia-Highroad) and Alessandro Petacchi (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini), of the race renewed their burgeoning rivalry. Having learned from his mistake on Stage 2, the rider from the Isle of Man took out the sprint earlier and was never seriously challenged at the line, winning by about a bike length. Petacchi would hold on for second from the hard charging Allan Davis (Quick Step).

Results
1. Mark Cavendish (GBr) Team Columbia - Highroad
2. Alessandro Petacchi (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Allan Davis (Aus) Quick Step

General Classification After Stage 13
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
7. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 14 - Campi Bisenzio - Bologna (San Luca), 172km
A return to the mountains and an uphill finish can only mean one thing, another opportunity for “the killer.”

Mechov Unrelenting - Stage 12 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

There was a reason Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini) had looked so dominant during the early going of the 100th Giro d'Italia, he had to be.

The Individual Time Trial, often referred to as the "Race of Truth," is the proverbial mirror that reveals any and all of a contender's flaws. There is no escaping it during a three week stage race. Those contenders who excel at the discipline are never out of running for the General Classification, while those who under perform in it often have to employ creative means to stay in contention.

Yesterday, Denis Menchov validated his role as Rabobank’s stage race leader and as a serious contender to wear the rose-colored tunic in Rome. He was the veritable picture of effort and concentration for an endurance athlete in covering the undulating 60.6Km distance in a time of 1.34.29.

Another one of the pre-race favorites, Levi Leipheimer, on the other hand, laid the foundation to become the first American since Andy Hampsten in 1988 to win the Tour of Italy. Perhaps Leipheimer’s greatest strength is the knowledge of who he is and who he isn’t as a rider. As such, he has let the race come to him rather than forcing the issue. With an ITT on the final day, the remainder of the course sets up beautifully for his skill set.

Results
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
3. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo

A reshuffling of the General Classification sees Denis Menchov (Rabobank) in the maglia rosa with DiLuca slipping only one place because of the lead he built up in the mountains.

General Classification After Stage 12
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
7. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 13 - Lido di Camaiore - Firenze, 176Km
A relatively flat transition stage provides the perfect respite after today's time trial and a return to the mountains on Stage 14.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Powers Leads Team Type 1 At Liberty Classic

Philadelphia Alison Powers’ sixth-place finish led Team Type 1 Sunday at the 14th edition of the TD Bank Liberty Classic.

The reigning United States time trial champion was among a group of a dozen riders who slipped the field on the final of four laps around the 14.4-mile course through the streets of Philadelphia. As they rounded the finishing straight onto Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Powers started her sprint from 300 meters out.

“I thought I better go now or else the sprinters will gap me,” she said. “I pretty much led out the people that were on my wheel. I’m a little disappointed that I was thinking too much, but I’ve never been in a situation like that.”

Ina-Yoko Teutenberg (Columbia-Highroad) was first to the finish line of the 56-mile (91 km) race to win it for the third time. Joanne Kiesanowski (Team TIBCO) was second and Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad) was third.

Powers did increase her lead in the National Racing Calendar (NRC) standings by earning 54 points for her top 10 finish. The second and third-place riders in the NRC standings – Katheryn Mattis (Webcor Builders) and third-place Kristin Armstrong (Cervelo-Lifeforce) did not score points. (Armstrong wasn’t in the race, while Mattis finished 41st.)

All five Team Type 1 riders finished the race: Jen McRae was 15th, Veronica Leal 33rd, Kori Seehafer 36th and Jacquelyn Crowell finished 52nd.


Seehafer, who has ridden nearly every edition of the race since 1999, said it was one of the most aggressive that she could recall. At one point, the women’s field passed the men’s race that was traveling on the same course. The men started their 156-mile (250 km) race about 10 minutes ahead of the women.

“There was the potential for a break to go every time we went up the climb (of the Manayunk Wall),” Seehafer said. “I couldn’t accelerate hard today so I blew myself up the last time up the climb to get Allie (Powers) and Jen (McRae) in position.”

Photos: Courtesy of Casey B. Gibson (www.cbgphoto.com)

Teutenberg Lady Liberty, Again; Greipel Completes Columbia-Highroad Sweep


The TD Bank Philadelphia International Cycling Championship celebrated its 25th anniversary earlier this month. The one-day race, and its corresponding women’s Liberty Classic, is widely considered to be one of America’s crown jewels of cycling. But surprisingly, if not for a midnight sponsorship deal, the race that features the festival like atmosphere up Manayunk Wall, crowds swarming over Lemon Hill, and the winding scenery of the Schuylkill River, all juxtaposed against the rich history of City of Brotherly Love, might also have been felled by the troubled economy.

With the men’s and women’s races run simultaneously, Ina Teutenberg would not only lead a Columbia-Highroad and German sweep of the races, with teammate and countryman, Andre Greipel taking out the men’s field sprint, but also the women’s field past the men’s for the first time in any race’s history.

As officials allowed the speeding women to race by a men's field that had to be neutralized, Teutenberg would later tell Velonews, “When we went past the men, I told them they were pussies!”

The victory would be Teutenberg’s 3rd career Liberty Classic win and her 17th of the 2009 season. Team TIBCO’s Joanne Kiesanowski would finish second and Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad) would take third. For Olds, reaching the podium has become somewhat of a norm this season as she had already won five races, including the omnium title and two of the three Tulsa Tough criteriums the week before, on the road prior to starting the Liberty Classic.

Women’s Results
1. Ina Teutenberg (Team Columbia-Highroad)
2. Joanne Kiesanowski (Team TIBCO)
3. Shelley Olds (PROMAN Hit Squad)
4. Trixi Worrack (Equipe Nurnberger Versicherung)
5. Catherine Cheatley (Colavita Sutter Homes presented by Cooking Light)
6. Alison Powers (Team Type 1)
7. Ruth Corset (Jazz Apple Cycling Team)
8. Chrissy Ruiter (ValueAct Capital Cycling Team)
9. Amber Neben (Equipe Nurnberger Versicherung)
10. Kim Anderson (Team Columbia-Highroad)

Men’s Results

1. Andre Greipel (Team Columbia – Highroad)
2. Greg Henderson (Team Columbia – Highroad)
3. Kirk O’Bee (Bissell Pro Cycling)
4. Harald Starzengruber (Elk Haus)
5. David Vitoria (Rock Racing)
6. Keven Lacombe (Planet Energy)
7. Alejandro Borrajo (Colavita Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light)
8. Christofer Stevenson (Swedish National Team)
9. Lucas Haedo (Colavita Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light)
10. Andrew Pinfold (OUCH presented by Maxxis)

Photo: Courtesy of Todd Leister (Leister Images). For more images from the race click here.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Return from Hiatus: The Bicycle Blotter

One of the great things about blogging is being your own boss. As such, we gave ourselves an extended leave of absence. Call it the quiet before the July storm that is the Tour de France.

Aside from our Publish2 Newsgroup remaining active, its been roughly three weeks since our last post. In that time, news from the cycling world mirrored the continuous movement of life and had simply strolled on by without much commentary.

Over the next several posts, we'll rely on some of our colleagues to work our way back into the fray before the news peloton leaves us behind.

The Blotter
This past week has seen cycling grab the headlines of the blotter wire with news of the aftermath of stealing Lance's one-off time trial machine and the implosion of The Missile.

As reported by several media outlets, 40-year-old Lee Crider will receive a 3 year prison sentence for stealing Lance Armstong's time trial bicycle the night after the Amgen Tour of California Prologue back in February.

While the debate certainly centers around whether the punishment fits the crime, two items from the story are hard to ignore. First, is the amount for which the stolen bicycle was unloaded.

"A police report says he bought Armstrong's $10,000 bike, a Trek Livestrong 1274, from Crider for $200."

Talk about diminishing returns.

Second, is the fact that Crider even thought he could get away with taking the one-of-a-kind bicycle. Yesterday, the Dan Patrick Show likened it to stealing a precious work of art that couldn't be shown to anyone. If he hasn't already been enshrined, Crider deserves to be in the hall of stupidest criminals ever.



When I first started mountain biking, I was a big fan of Brian Lopes and Missy "The Missile" Giove. In fact, they are the reason I still ride a Cannondale today. So it was especially saddening to hear of Giove's recent exploits.

"Giove, 37, and Eric Canori, 30, of Wilton were charged Tuesday with conspiring to possess and distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijuana."

Giove, who won downhill World Championship in 1994, World Cup season titles in 1997 and 1998, and US National titles from 1999-2001, faces up to "40 years in prison and a $2 million fine."

"The Missile" Living Large

Friday, June 05, 2009

Komen Cruiser Rolls for a Good Cause

Campus Cruisers Produces First Cause-Branded Bicycle


Boulder, Colo. — People who support Susan G. Komen for the Cure®, the world’s largest breast cancer advocacy organization, have a new way to be engaged in the breast cancer movement.

Campus Cruisers is the first company to produce an entirely cause-branded bicycle, the Komen Cruiser, for which a portion from the sale of each bike will be donated to Komen for the Cure to help fund life-saving breast cancer research, education and community outreach projects.

“This is a unique way for people to show their commitment to a special cause and have fun doing it,” said Brian Searchinger, the founder of Campus Cruisers. “Riding is part of an active lifestyle and it’s the ultimate “green” transportation”

For each sale of a Komen Cruiser, Campus Cruisers will donate at least $25 and up to $100 to Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker founded the organization 27 years ago in memory of her sister, and today it is the largest source of nonprofit funds dedicated to finding the cures for breast cancer.

“The Komen Cruiser is the perfect symbol for what our organization does every day as we’re racing to the cures for breast cancer,” said Elizabeth Chandler, a corporate relations manager at Komen for the Cure. “We encourage people to lead healthy lifestyles and be physically active, and this bicycle is a great way to do just that while supporting the breast cancer movement.”

Each feature on the Komen Cruiser was designed to capture the Komen spirit— from the streaming ribbon graphics to the stylized K head badge and the customized pink ribbons on the fenders.

The Komen Cruiser is available in two models. The one-speed, steel bike retails for $299; the three-speed, aluminum edition retails for $499.

Komen Cruisers are available at select bicycle dealers and by ordering directly through the Campus Cruisers website, www.campuscruisers.com, or by calling (303) 442-0280.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

McRae Third At Tulsa; Hanley Injury Update

Tulsa, Okla.Jen McRae scored Team Type 1’s third podium finish of the Tulsa Tough omnium criterium series with a third-place finish Sunday while teammate Monique Hanley continued to assess the extent of injuries she sustained in a crash Saturday.

McRae’s placing behind winner Shelley Olds (Proman Hit Squad) and runner-up Carmen McNellis (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light) earned Team Type 1 valuable points toward maintaining its lead in the National Racing Calendar (NRC) team standings. McRae also finished third in the omnium competition.

Team Type 1’s Alison Powers, the NRC individual leader, also figured prominently in Sunday’s race before finishing fifth. The reigning national time trial champion soloed for about 10 laps, never gaining more than a dozen seconds’ lead. But the efforts by other teams to chase her down certainly took their toll.

“Basically that destroyed the whole field,” Team Type 1 Team Director Jack Seehafer said. “There were about 25 riders left by the time they caught her. Coming out of the last corner, she was second wheel behind Shelley Olds. Had Alison not done all that work early on, she might have even won.”

While her teammates were racing, Hanley was checking out of the hospital in anticipation of a return to her U.S. home in Philadelphia. The Australian broke three of her four thoracic vertebrae (T2, T3 and T4) in a massive pile-up Saturday that also separated her shoulder and left her with extensive bruising and road rash.

“It’s been really, really painful for me,” Hanley said. “The shoulder seems like no issue compared to my back.”

Shoulder surgery will be required while the spinous process fractures will have to heal on their own.

“It’s really a question of pain management and not doing anything that makes it worse when it comes to my back,” Hanley said. “As for my shoulder, I won’t be able to even get on the bike for six weeks or so after the surgery.”

Managing her Type 1 diabetes will also be a challenge, she said, since she only has the use of one hand to test her blood sugar.

“I’m grateful to have great tools, including the FreeStyle Navigator (continuous glucose monitor) and the OmniPod to make my life easier," she said. “Extra insulin will be required, and I'll be using Apidra to help me out with this."

Hanley wasn’t the only one hurt in Tulsa. Teammate Kori Seehafer, the sprint classification leader of the Women’s Prestige Cycling Series, did not compete after she was struck by a trailer being pulled by a truck. The incident happened Wednesday while the team was stopped at a traffic light during a training ride. Injuries to her left leg and knee make her questionable for Sunday’s Liberty Cup race in Philadelphia.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Soldier Field Development Criterium Series

Criterium series for juniors taking place on Chicago's lakefront begins on June 17th and will run through August 26th


Spanglish Ideas LLC will role out its new cycling event named, Soldier Field Cycling Series. The series will take place in the South Lot of the Lakefront stadium. The Soldier Field Cycling Series is a 6-day, competitive cycling series that will take place on alternating Wednesdays, starting on June 17th, 2009 through August 26th, 2009. The series differentiates itself by allowing junior riders, ages 10 through 18 years, to race FREE of charge. Also all Jr riders will receive a FREE burrito provided by Chipotle. The Lakefront setting will provide spectators with access to America's most popular style of bicycle racing, the criterium. To register and obtain additional information, please visit www.soldierfieldcycling.com

Photo: Chicago Bike Racing

Team Type 1 Soars With Milne’s Win At Air Force Cycling Classic


Crystal City, Va. – In a race that Shawn Milne said he simply hoped to finish, the fifth-year pro from Beverly, Mass., delivered much more in Sunday’s Air Force Cycling Classic.

Milne pulled off one of the most high profile victories in the two-year history of the Team Type 1 men’s professional program by out-sprinting four breakaway companions at the end of the 109.2-mile (175 km) USA Cycling Professional Tour series event in Crystal City, Va.

It was the 20th win of the season for the Team Type 1 men and the third in just one week’s time.

“I didn’t feel good all day,” an overjoyed Milne said. “In fact, I felt miserable. With two laps to go, I was supposed to be ready to lead out Ken (Hanson) and I told him I didn’t think I had it in me.”

Despite the inclination to pack it in, Milne forged on and soon found himself and teammate Matt Wilson riding in the decisive break. But once again, he wasn’t thinking about his own chances.

“Matt was feeling well, so I was taking more pulls, trying to keep everyone working together,” Milne said.

When a further split reduced the lead group to just five with a little more than one 7.7-mile (12.5 km) lap of the course remaining, Milne said he started sizing up his chances of earning his first victory since the Exeter (N.H.) Criterium last July.

“I was a little worried because I didn’t know everyone I was riding with,” the 27-year-old said. “I knew Davide Frattini of Colavita and Jeremy Vennell of Bissell. But I didn’t recognize Charles Dionne (Fly V Australia) and for some reason, I thought Kelly Benefits’ Scott Zwizanski was Zach Bell. So I thought I had to watch out for him for sure.”

Zwizanski twice tried to jump the group inside the final mile and Vennell made what looked like the winning move with 800 meters to go. But both attacks were brought back, allowing Milne to bide his time before beginning his own sprint from the 200-meter mark.

Dionne finished second, Zwizanski was third, Frattini fourth and Vennell came in a further two seconds back for fifth. A group of eight chasers rolled through a further 13 seconds back.

Milne’s win – the first for Team Type 1 in an International Cycling Union-classified race on U.S. soil – continues a week-long string of success that includes Wilson’s victory May 24 at the Bound Brook Criterium at the Lantus Tour of Somerville, Aldo Ino Ilesic’s win on Wednesday at the Ricola Twilight Grand Prix in Basking Ridge, N.J., and Hanson’s runner-up finish Saturday at the U.S. Air Force Cycling Classic Clarendon Cup in Arlington, Va.

Team Type 1 Director Sportif Vassili Davidenko said the results bode well heading into the most prestigious single-day event on the U.S. racing scene, Sunday’s TD Bank International Championship in Philadelphia.

“I see our guys getting stronger and stronger, but that’s a longer race (156 miles) than any that we have done this year,” Davidenko said. “But Wednesday, we will do a group training ride together behind the car as a final preparation ride and then we’ll be ready to go.”

Materials used for this post, courtesy of TT1

Photos: Mark Blacknell (top); Casey B. Gibson (bottom)

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Olds Wins, Team Type 1’s Hanley Seriously Injured In Tulsa Pile-Up

Tulsa, Okla.Monique Hanley fractured three vertebrae and dislocated her shoulder Saturday during the Brady Village Criterium on the second day of the Tulsa Tough cycling series in Tulsa, Okla.

The Team Type 1 rider was one of at least three dozen riders who were involved a crash early on in the women’s professional race.

“I had nowhere to go but to be catapulted,” Hanley said.

The Australian has full range of movement in her arms and legs, Team Type 1 Team Director Jack Seehafer said.

“That’s the good news,” he said. “But her dislocated shoulder will require surgery,”

In addition to her broken bones, Hanley also has scrapes on her back, a bloody knee, swollen wrist and sore neck.

Even eventual race winner Shelley Olds (PROMAN Women's Cycling Team) was caught up in the crash.


“I’ve never been in that big of a pile up,” Olds told the Tulsa World newspaper.

Hanley is one of two women with Type 1 diabetes on the Team Type 1 professional women’s squad. The 31-year-old was diagnosed with the disease at the age of 19 but quickly took up cycling as a way to stay active. She twice was a part of Team Type 1’s eight-rider squad for the Race Across America and last year won a bronze medal at the Australian National Track Championships.

Konovalovas Takes Rome, Menchov Italy - Stage 21 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

With their landmark destination, the Colosseum, in the background of the time trial start house, the remaining gladiators of the 100th Giro d'Italia set out on a 14.4km sojourn around the Eternal City to determine a champion.

What many expected to be one final shootout, similar to the finish of the 1989 Tour de France that saw Greg Lemond counting down the seconds as a fatiguing Lauren Fignon barreled toward the line, turned out to be more like water pistol fight as only one of the General Classification contenders finished in the top ten.

Ignatas Konovalovas (Cervelo Test Team) wearing the colors of the Lithuanian Time Trial Champion, would edge out Bradley Wiggins (Garmin - Slipstream) by 1 second and Edvald Boasson Hagen (Team Columbia - Highroad) by 7 seconds for victory on the final stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.


Despite a crash in the final kilometers, Denis Menchov (Rabobank) would take tenth on the day and the final maglia rosa as the 2009 Giro d'Italia Champion. It is the Russian's third Grand Tour title, having won the Vuelta a Espana in 2005 and 2007.

Results
1. Ignatas Konovalovas (Ltu) Cervelo Test Team
2. Bradley Wiggins (GBr) Garmin - Slipstream
3. Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor) Team Columbia - Highroad


Final General Classification Standings
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Other Notables
12 Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana
19 Damiano Cunego (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
24 Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
63 Jason McCartney (USA) Team Saxo Bank
78 Thomas Danielson (USA) Garmin - Slipstream
111 Ted King (USA) Cervelo Test Team
144 Danny Pate (USA) Garmin - Slipstream
152 David Zabriskie (USA) Garmin - Slipstream

Other Jersey Winners
maglia ciclamino (points) - Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
maglia verde (KOM) - Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
maglia bianca (best young rider) - Kevin Seeldraeyers (Bel) Quick Step

Classic Finish, Gilbert Triumphs – Stage 20 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

With a showdown at the Colosseum to follow, Stage 20 was any ones to take.

In the end, Philippe Gilbert (Silence-Lotto) found the parcours suited to his Classics style and claimed the stage over Thomas Voeckler (BBox Bouygues Telecom) and Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo.

Results
1. Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Silence-Lotto
2. Thomas Voeckler (Fra) BBox Bouygues Telecom
3. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo

The General Classification stayed as is, which can only mean one thing headed into the finale; this is Denis Menchov's (Rabobank) title to lose.

General Classification After Stage 20
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 21 - Individual Time Trial, Roma, 14.4km
A quick trip around the Eternal City ends where gladiators once did battle, at the Colosseum.

Sprightly Sastre Nimble Up Vesuvius – Stage 19 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

After his proclamation to fight for the title, the reigning Tour de France Champion's legs misfired on Stage 17 up Blockhaus. But Carlos Sastre (Cervelo Test Team) would once again show his mettle as a climber on the final mountain stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.

With only a transition stage and the final time trial to go, Stage 19 would be the final attempt for the climber/contenders to state their case for the overall. As such, the attacks came quickly once the riders reached the slopes of the infamous Mt. Vesuvius.

Ivan Basso
(Liquigas) and Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo) were the first to have a go. But neither could maintain their torrid pace. The expected battle for the General Classification also fell short as the top three contenders marked each other all the way up the dormant volcano.

Sastre would be first to summit the historic climb, which had only been used two other times in the race's history. Franco Pellizotti (Liquigas) would take second, and Danilo Di Luca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini) third.

Results
1. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
2. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

For his efforts, Sastre would move up a spot to fourth overall.

General Classification After Stage 19
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
8. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 20 - Napoli - Anagni, 203km
Dare I say it...the penultimate stage of the 100th Giro d'Italia.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Scarponi Back for Seconds - Stage 18 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Like a starving man who is set down in front of a table full of food, Michele Scarponi (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli ) did not need an excuse to come back for seconds. Scarponi proved to be the strongest of the remnants of a break that numbered as many as twenty-five at one point to take Stage 18 of the 100th Giro d’Italia. Felix Carendas (Barloworld) and Danny Pate (Team Garmin-Slipstream) would finish in second and third, respectively.

As I had mentioned previously after his victory on Stage 6, it has proved difficult to cheer for Scarponi, but I certainly wasn’t rooting against him either. Scarponi’s genuine joy after winning another Giro d’Italia stage perhaps speaks volumes over any of his past indiscretions. Repentance and redemption are, after all, part of the human condition.

Results
1. Michele Scarponi (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
2. Félix Cardenas (Col) Barloworld
3. Danny Pate (USA) Garmin - Slipstream

General Classification After Stage 18
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 19 - Avellino - Vesuvio, 164km
The third to last stage may well be the decider. After a stroll along the Amalfi Coast, the race heads up the infamous Mt. Vesuvius.

Franco Reigns – Stage 17 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

Any consternation emanating from the Liquigas camp leading up to Stage 17 of the 100th Giro d’Italia was put to rest as Franco Pellizotti led an Italian sweep of the day’s podium and literally climbed his way into third place on the General Classification (GC). Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo) would finish in second and Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini) in third.

On a day where the attacks came fast and furious on the final climb, Blockhaus, Pellizotti’s stamina and skill proved unmatched. Whether by design or in an attempt to grab the reigns of team leadership, Pellizotti’s victory served to momentarily soothe the boisterous tifosi whose grumblings over team tactics and leadership only grew louder as the race wore on; with many believing Liquigas was squandering any opportunity it had to win the race by not pulling for one man.

With both Pellizotti and Ivan Basso, the designated team leader of Liquigas heading into the race, now sitting third and fourth, respectively on the General Classification it may prove a tough pill to swallow for any Liquigas fan when imagining what might have been.

Results
1. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
2. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

A late attack by “the killer” garnered him some valuable seconds over Denis Menchov (Rabobank) who looked every part of the stoic champion shadowing his closest competitor.

General Classification After Stage 17
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
4. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale
10. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Next: Stage 18 - Sulmona - Benevento, 182km
A stage that sets up for the sprinters turned out to be a breakaway's delight.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Heart of a Champion - Stage 16 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Carlos Sastre (Cervelo Test Team) was listed as one of the pre-race favorites, but it seemed more out of respect for his past accomplishments, which of course includes winning the 2008 Tour de France, rather than for his desire to win the 100th Giro d’Italia. After all, bigger fish, namely countryman Alberto Contador (Astana) and the Tour de France, are up the road.

But with the racing mindset that was fostered during his days riding under Bjarne Riis firmly entrenched, Sastre refused to bypass the opportunity to take another grand tour title. On the final climb of Stage 16 from Pergola to Monte Petrano, Sastre fully made his intentions known and put forth a vicious attack reminiscent of his Tour winning ride.

He would put time into the current leader on the General Classification, Denis Menchov (Rabobank), and pull himself up to third at the expense of Levi Leipheimer (Astana) who could not keep up with the accelerations on the climb. Menchov would take second on the stage, with his shadow, Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini) taking third.

Results
1. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
2. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
3. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini

General Classification After Stage 16
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
6. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo
9. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne
10. Tadej Valjavec (Slo) AG2R La Mondiale

Next: Stage 17 - Chieti - Blockhaus, 83km
It may only be 83km, but most of it is up hill.

Ilesic Caps Big Weekend For Team Type 1

Somerville, N.J. – Aldo Ino Ilesic’s third-place finish at Monday’s Lantus Tour of Somerville put the finishing touches on a successful weekend of bicycle racing for Team Type 1.

During four days of competition in and around Somerville, N.J., Team Type 1 scored three victories – including two by Development team rider Adam Driscoll – while earning six podium finishes.

The impressive results were particularly satisfying for sanofi-aventis, the team’s primary sponsor. Its U.S. headquarters are in nearby Bridgewater, N.J., and its long-acting insulin, Lantus, was branded as the title of the event that has been part of the American cycling scene for 66 years.


Ilesic led Team Type 1 to the finish line of the Kugler-Anderson Memorial, the 50-mile (80 km) men’s race that was won by Lucas Sebastian Haedo (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light). Haedo scored his second straight victory at Somerville ahead of Jake Keough (Kelly Benefit Strategies) and a hard-charging Ilesic.

“With 300 meters to go, Colavita still had three guys up in front,” Ilesic said. “I started to sprint, but Haedo was just too fast today.

“I’m happy for the team and our sponsor, sanofi-aventis. They made a great event. We’re still a new team with new riders. We need to get a little more experience, but I’m confident for the upcoming races that we’ll get it to come together.”

Team Type 1 set up its sprint train by putting five riders at the head of the race on the penultimate lap, bringing loud cheers from the partisan crowd of sanofi-aventis employees and their families who were lining the 1.35-mile rectangular course in Downtown Somerville.

“We knew it was probably going to come down to a bunch sprint in the end,” Team Type 1 Director Sportif Vassili Davidenko said. “We may have gone a little too early in the sprint, but overall our guys did a great job. There were some really fast guys here and some very good teams.”

In addition to Ilesic’s third place finish – his second straight podium placing at a National Racing Calendar event – Team Type 1’s Ken Hanson finished sixth.

In the women’s 20-mile (32 km) Kugler Open, Kori Seehafer (not pictured) led Team Type 1 with a seventh-place finish as Tina Pic (Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light) scored her fourth victory (and second straight) in the event that is popularly referred to as the “Kentucky Derby of Cycling.”


Driscoll’s wins came in Friday night’s Category III-IV Manville Madness criterium, the opening race of the Lantus Tour of Somerville series, and Sunday’s Bound Brook criterium. Matt Wilson earned the men’s professional team’s 18th win of the year the same afternoon by soloing away from a pair of breakaway companions late in the 40-mile (64 km) race.

Materials used for this post, courtesy of Team Type 1

Photo: Marco Quezada Photography

Wilson Solos To Win Bound Brook Criterium


Bound Brook, N.J.Matt Wilson of Team Type 1 slipped a pair of breakaway companions with two laps to go en route to a solo victory in Sunday’s Bound Brook Criterium.

Wilson’s win in the second-to-last event of the Lantus Tour of Somerville series was Team Type 1’s third victory of the Memorial Day weekend. Adam Driscoll, who has Type 1 diabetes, won the Category III-IV race Sunday, as well as Friday night’s Manville Madness criterium.

Lantus is a long-acting insulin manufactured by sanofi-aventis, Team Type 1’s primary sponsor that has its U.S. headquarters in nearby Bridgewater, N.J.

As rain began to fall in Bound Brook, N.J., Sunday afternoon, Wilson made his escape from the field with Nathaniel Ward (Spooky/NCC/Kenda) and Vincent Quirion (Garneau Club Chaussures). Fourteen laps remained in the 40-mile (64 km) race.

“As soon as it started raining, I decided I didn’t want to be in the bunch,” Wilson said. “It helps a breakaway a lot on a wet circuit in a criterium because you can pedal through the corners and get a good rhythm through the corners. The bunch is a bit more sketchy and erratic in the rain.”

As the trio increased its lead from a handful of seconds to half a minute, Wilson began sizing up his options to go after the win – his first since capturing the second stage of the Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic last July.

“I didn’t know the other two guys but I was feeling pretty strong out there,” the 2004 Australian national road champion said. “I was pretty confident I could do it.”

Team Type 1’s Aldo Ino Ilesic won the field sprint for fourth and teammate Ken Hanson, the 2008 U.S. elite criterium national champion, was fifth.

Both the Team Type 1 men’s and women’s professional teams will be in action Monday in the final event of the Lantus Tour of Somerville. The afternoon of races culminates with the 50-mile (80 km) Kugler-Anderson Memorial criterium, more popularly referred to as the “Kentucky Derby of Cycling.” The 20-mile (32 km) Women's Kugler Open precedes the men’s race.

The 1.35-mile (2.1 km), four-corner criterium has been a fixture on the U.S. racing scene for more than 60 years. More than 20,000 people are expected to turn out to watch the event, which is part of the National Racing Calendar.

Materials used for this post, courtesy of Team Type 1

Photo: Iri Greco (BrakeThrough Media)

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Leonardo's Work of Art - Stage 15 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

Another day, another breakaway. On a day which featured temperatures suitable for mid-summer rather than late spring, and a route with multiple climbs and a flat finish, a healthy group of 16 would survive until the final climb before being pared down to seven strong.

At the end of a long, hot, and grueling day, Leonardo Bertagnolli (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli) would prove to be the most earnest and strongest. Serge Pauwels (Cervelo Test Team), who on the year has yet to see a break he doesn't like would slot into second, while Marco Pinotti (Team Columbia-Highroad) would come in third.

Results
1. Leonardo Bertagnolli (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
2. Serge Pauwels (Bel) Cervelo Test Team
3. Marco Pinotti (Ita) Team Columbia - Highroad

Mulitple attacks by a pair of former champions, Ivan Basso (Liquigas) and Stefan Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone) on the final slopes failed to produce the desired result as the gruppo maglia rosa would evntually work their way back and finish with the same time.

General Classification After Stage 15
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
9. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 16 - Pergola - Monte Petrano, 237km
Another mountain-top finish would reveal the true contenders for the General Classification.

Galloping Gerrans - Stage 14 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

It seems a bit ludicrous on my part, standing at 5' 6", to refer to Simon Gerrans (Cervelo Test Team) as diminutive, but at 5' 7" Gerrans is one of the smaller riders in the professional peloton. But what the 29-year old Australian has lacked in stature, he has more than made up for in riding skill.

To date, Gerrans' most significant victory was on Stage 15 in the 2008 Tour de France, which he won after out-sprinting his breakaway partners. Gerrans would once again repeat the feat and add to his grand tour victory total by bagging the 172km Stage 14 from Campi Bisenzio to Bologna of the 100th Giro d'Italia. Rubens Bertogliati (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli) would finish second and Francesco Gavazzi (Lampre - N.G.C.) would round out the podium.

Results
1. Simon Gerrans (Aus) Cervelo Test Team
2. Rubens Bertogliati (Swi) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
3. Francesco Gavazzi (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.

Although he remained in third, Levi Leipheimer (Astana) would lose time to both Denis Menchov (Rabobank) and Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini).

General Classification After Stage 14
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
7. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. David Arroyo (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne

Next: Stage 15 - May 24: Forlì - Faenza, 161km
A flat finish after several climbs sets up for another breakaway.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Cavendish-ing It Out – Stage 13 Giro d’Italia Centoanni

After a grueling 60.6km Individual Time Trial on Thursday afternoon, the peloton used every bit of the 176km Stage 13 from Lido di Camaiore to Firenze as a reprieve.

The sprinters took full advantage of the relatively flat course as their relegation to the back of the peloton is more than a certainty with more big mountains on the horizon. The two dominant sprinters, Mark Cavendish (Team Columbia-Highroad) and Alessandro Petacchi (LPR Brakes – Farnese Vini), of the race renewed their burgeoning rivalry. Having learned from his mistake on Stage 2, the rider from the Isle of Man took out the sprint earlier and was never seriously challenged at the line, winning by about a bike length. Petacchi would hold on for second from the hard charging Allan Davis (Quick Step).

Results
1. Mark Cavendish (GBr) Team Columbia - Highroad
2. Alessandro Petacchi (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Allan Davis (Aus) Quick Step

General Classification After Stage 13
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
7. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 14 - Campi Bisenzio - Bologna (San Luca), 172km
A return to the mountains and an uphill finish can only mean one thing, another opportunity for “the killer.”

Mechov Unrelenting - Stage 12 Giro d'Italia Centoanni

There was a reason Danilo DiLuca (LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini) had looked so dominant during the early going of the 100th Giro d'Italia, he had to be.

The Individual Time Trial, often referred to as the "Race of Truth," is the proverbial mirror that reveals any and all of a contender's flaws. There is no escaping it during a three week stage race. Those contenders who excel at the discipline are never out of running for the General Classification, while those who under perform in it often have to employ creative means to stay in contention.

Yesterday, Denis Menchov validated his role as Rabobank’s stage race leader and as a serious contender to wear the rose-colored tunic in Rome. He was the veritable picture of effort and concentration for an endurance athlete in covering the undulating 60.6Km distance in a time of 1.34.29.

Another one of the pre-race favorites, Levi Leipheimer, on the other hand, laid the foundation to become the first American since Andy Hampsten in 1988 to win the Tour of Italy. Perhaps Leipheimer’s greatest strength is the knowledge of who he is and who he isn’t as a rider. As such, he has let the race come to him rather than forcing the issue. With an ITT on the final day, the remainder of the course sets up beautifully for his skill set.

Results
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
3. Stefano Garzelli (Ita) Acqua & Sapone - Caffe Mokambo

A reshuffling of the General Classification sees Denis Menchov (Rabobank) in the maglia rosa with DiLuca slipping only one place because of the lead he built up in the mountains.

General Classification After Stage 12
1. Denis Menchov (Rus) Rabobank
2. Danilo Di Luca (Ita) LPR Brakes - Farnese Vini
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana
4. Franco Pellizotti (Ita) Liquigas
5. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo Test Team
6. Michael Rogers (Aus) Team Columbia - Highroad
7. Ivan Basso (Ita) Liquigas
8. Gilberto Simoni (Ita) Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoli
9. Marzio Bruseghin (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.
10. Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Team Columbia - Highroad

Next: Stage 13 - Lido di Camaiore - Firenze, 176Km
A relatively flat transition stage provides the perfect respite after today's time trial and a return to the mountains on Stage 14.