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Amgen cycling event appreciated, warts and all

Posted in : Gossips

(added 1 days ago)

SONORA -- The Amgen Tour of California is that flamboyant uncle bound to visit during the holidays.
You're glad to see him because he's lots of fun, and you hope he comes back. But during the visit, your uncle not only makes himself comfortable, he takes over the house. Modesto learned exactly that during its host roles the past four years and still hopes for many happy returns. Wednesday morning, about three hours before the start of Stage 4 of this year's Tour of California, Father Wolfgang Krismanits of St. James Anglican Church was one of the first Sonorans to discover how the tour can rule a host city.

He's in his 24th year at the historic Red Church, but when he tried to park in his usual church parking lot spot, he initially was turned away. Those spots, the rector was told, were reserved for the
riders' support teams. "I first was amazed at the amount of roads they had to close for this," Krismanits said. "It was a hassle just to park at our church. I didn't have my collar on, so I had to tell them I belong here."No, he wasn't complaining. Far from it. The moment was worth a hearty laugh. And if he had registered a gripe, he would have been part of a very small group.

Estimates placed Wednesday's Washington Street crowd upward of 10,000 people, with most of those crowded five- and six-deep on both sides within two blocks of the starting gate. They began arriving by foot, two wheels and shuttle vans about 8:30 a.m. for the 10:35 starter's gun, all to get a good view of the nine seconds the riders passed by. It didn't seem to matter that the race began two miles down the road, because this was a moment to celebrate the big event that came to town.

"We don't have a big- caliber thing like this come through Sonora too often," said Lon Mikita, who shared a tandem bike with his 8-year-old son, Ben. "We've been to Modesto to watch the race, which makes this even more exciting for us. This brings in people from all over the freaking world."Sonora schools had a minimum day Tuesday and closed on race day, and many of those students chose to get out of bed to take in the spectacle, adding a youthful exuberance to the event.

'Excitement in the air'
"It's come together great," said Mayor Bill Canning. "You can feel the excitement in the air. It's been a gradual buildup until today, and the excitement is still spiking. "We had some people come through from Florida. They own a cycling shop and they're here for five days. We had people here from New York who never even knew about Sonora. That's what we need -- to get our name out there so people can come back and visit our beautiful area." The Sonora High Golden Regiment played for nearly an hour from the steps of the Tuolumne County Superior Courthouse, stopping only when the riders began to parade across the stage in the ceremonial race day sign-in.

'This is awesome'
From that spot, the first six blocks of the race were downhill, and a glance in that direction gave the riders all they needed to know about the size and enthusiasm of the crowd. "This is awesome," said three-time Tour of California winner Levi Leipheimer, minutes before climbing on his bike. "It's the beauty of a stage race like this that we can show off the entire state of California. This reminds me a lot of Nevada City -- a nice, quaint little town nestled in the mountains. "I've always wanted this race to come to Sonora. It's great for the Tour of California to be here, but a lot of people, after seeing the area, will want to come back."The tour's visit came through an absurdly busy time for Sonora. The Mother Lode Roundup and parade were last weekend. The Calaveras County Jumping Frog Jubilee up the road in Angels Camp starts hopping today.

The three events have been joined under the motto "Rope, Ride and Ribbit," but there's little doubt which of the three was on the crowd's mind Wednesday. Bee staff writer Brian VanderBeek can be reached at bvanderbeek@modbee.com or (209) 578-2150. Follow him at twitter.com/modestobeek.

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Cycling: Sagan wins second stage in California

Posted in : Gossips, Players

(added 3 days ago)

Cycling: Sagan wins second stage in CaliforniaAPTOS: Slovakia’s Peter Sagan recovered from an early crash to complete back-to-back stage wins in the Tour of California when he won Monday’s second stage in a sprint finish. Sagan surged to the front of the pack coming around the final corner and burst clear to win the 189 kilometre (117 mile) stage from San Francisco to Aptos unchallenged in a time of five hours and two minutes. Sagan now leads the eight-day event, the most prestigious professional cycling race in North America, by eight seconds over Heinrich Haussler of Australia, who crossed the line second for the second day in a row.

Australian Leigh Howard was third, trailing his compatriot by one bike’s length. He moved to third place overall, 13 seconds behind the leader, in the field of 128 riders, including 16 teams. “I knew the last corner was close to the finish so I decided to take the turn from the first position. “And I won,” said Sagan, who lifted his tally of career stage wins in the Golden State to five. Sagan, who recovered from a flat tyre to win Sunday’s opening stage, was among 10 riders who crashed about two thirds of the way through the second stage. None of the riders were hurt and all quickly got back in the saddle and rejoined the main pack. “With two climbs in the end of the stage today I am really happy to win,” said Sagan. “I was thinking when I was still in the front group on the last climb I would try and win another stage.” Last year’s winner, American Chris Horner, finished safely in the main field for the second straight day. The race, now its seventh year, resumes on Tuesday with the 186 kilometre third stage from San Jose to Livermore. reuters

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Cycling: Sagan retains lead at Tour of California

Posted in : Gossips, Players, Race

(added 4 days ago)

SANTA CRUZ (California): Peter Sagan survived a 10-cyclist crash to retain the overall lead Monday after the second stage of the Amgen Tour of California. All of the fallen riders got up and returned to the race including Slovakia's Sagan who powered his way to the finish to win his second consecutive stage. The crash occurred 73 miles into the stage.

Cycling: Sagan retains lead at Tour of California

The stage took the starting field of 128 along the scenic California coastline. Sagan was timed in the 117.1-mile road race from San Francisco in five hours and two minutes and now leads the eight-day competition by eight seconds over Aussie Heinrich Haussler. Former Tour de France stage winner Haussler was second for the second straight day. He finished a half-dozen bike lengths back of Sagan. Leigh Howard was third.

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Taylor Phinney struggles with injury in Giro time trial

Posted in : Gossips, Players, Race

(added 9 days ago)

VERONA, Italy (AP) — Ramunas Navardauskas of Lithuania took the lead in the Giro d'Italia after his Garmin-Barracuda squad won the team time trial in the fourth stage Wednesday. Previous leader Taylor Phinney visibly struggled with a swollen right ankle following a crash on Monday. The American BMC rider went off the road at one point onto grass and nearly fell into a ditch.

Taylor Phinney struggles with injury in Giro time trial

Garmin clocked 37 minutes, 4 seconds over the mostly flat 33-kilometer (21-mile) route in Verona — the first stage back in Italy following three legs in Denmark. Katusha finished second, 5 seconds behind, and Astana and Saxo Bank were next, both 22 seconds back.

Garmin riders are 1-2-3-4 in the overall standings, with Navardauskas 10 seconds ahead of American sprinter Tyler Farrar and South African veteran Robert Hunter, with overall contender Ryder Hesjedal of Canada fourth.

Alex Rasmussen, who entered third overall, couldn't keep up with his Garmin teammates and dropped in the standings. Phinney, who needed three stitches to close a wound to his right ankle on Monday, dropped to fifth, 13 seconds behind. After going off road, he had to slow for a moment to clean a clump of grass off his shoes, but a weed remained attached to his bike.

"I didn't have anything today," Phinney said. "The team waited for me a couple times. … Luckily I didn't fall today, too. I'm upset, there's not much else to say. I didn't have any power."BMC finished 10th, 31 seconds behind Garmin. "I have to thank the team, because they could have left me behind, but they brought me to the finish," Phinney said. Navardauskas also struggled at times, especially in the final third of the time trial, but he managed to stay with his teammates.

"I'm so happy to stay with these guys," he said. "I was so tired with 10 kilometers to go."In his second season as a pro, the 24-year-old Navardauskas finished sixth in Saturday's opening individual time trial. He won the Lithuanian road championship last year, and finished second in the time trial. Among pre-race favorites, Joaquin Rodriguez is 30 seconds back, followed by Roman Kreuziger (40 seconds behind), two-time winner Ivan Basso (47 seconds), Frank Schleck (1:09), 2004 winner Damiano Cunego (1:19) and defending champion Michele Scarponi (1:22). Stage 5 on Thursday is a 209-kilometer mostly flat leg from Modena to Fano on the Adriatic coast, before the first hilly stages Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

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Cycling: Sky make flying start to deliver Cavendish win

Posted in : Gossips, Players, Race

(added 12 days ago)

Mark Cavendish proved he is bang on track for his twin main targets of 2012, the Tour de France and the London Olympic road-race, with a stunning win in the first road stage of the Giro d'Italia yesterday.

Cycling Sky make flying start to deliver Cavendish win

Despite the deeply unfamiliar surroundings of central Denmark for the Giro – all part of a three-day visit by the race to Scandinavia – Cavendish seized the eighth Giro win of his career with a trademark acceleration in the last 150 metres. But if the pancake flat 206 kiloemetre run across the plains and coast of Jutland – the highest point being all of 59 metres above sea level – made a bunch sprint a near-inevitability, the Manxman's 26th Grand Tour stage victory of his career was not the most straightforward.

A crash on a sharp righthander in the final kilometre saw several sprinters, including the Netherlands' Theo Bos, go down, and although Cavendish avoided that perfectly, there was then a short but steady uphill finish – not his ideal finale – to contend with. However, after some superb leadout work by Welsh team-mate Geraint Thomas allowed him to pick a safe line through the swirling pack, Cavendish swung out of the bunch with 200 metres to go, at which point only Australia Matt Goss was able to shadow him closely.

In a carbon copy of the sprint on gradually rising terrain which netted the Sky professional the victory in the World Championships in Denmark ahead of Goss last year, Cavendish doggedly stayed ahead for the 80th road victory of his career.

"I'm very pleased, it was windy today and not easy," Cavendish – after giving Thomas a huge hug of thanks – said afterwards, "and there weren't too many teams interested in keeping the bunch together as a unit.

"[Local team] Saxo Bank really wanted to break it up at one point so we had to be careful and really be on our guard. My team-mate Ian Stannard rode his heart out on the front of the bunch for nearly 150 kilometres." It was a performance which will have done the Londoner's chances of joining Cavendish as support rider for Olympic road-race no harm whatsoever. Cavendish added: "But we had a new team that hasn't really ridden together before as a sprint team, so it was great to see how it all worked out perfectly."

Encouragingly for Cavendish, this is his earliest win ever in the Giro. Not since 2009, when the Manxman won the second stage of Tour de France, has he succeeded at winning so swiftly in one of cycling's top three races. There could be lots more victories to come.

Compared with 2last year, when there were only three sprint stages – and Cavendish took two – this year's Giro is a far kinder affair for the fastmen, with six possible bunch sprints. Today in Horsens, should the crosswinds on the flatlands of central Denmark fail to split the pack beforehand, Cavendish will have an excellent chance of taking a back-to-back triumph.

"I'll try to win as many of them as possible, but this is the Giro d'Italia," he said. "It's a very special race for me, but it's one of the biggest races in the world and victories don't come easy."

Overall the race lead remains held by Taylor Phinney, despite a fall eight kilometres from the finish which saw the 21-year-old American come within a whisker of losing his leader's jersey. After yesterday's win, Cavendish, meanwhile, has the red points jersey of the Giro to add to that of world champion.

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Ogden hosts USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships

Posted in : Gossips

(added 15 days ago)

OGDEN -- The Weber State University cycling team is looking forward to a little home-road advantage this weekend, as the Top of Utah hosts the biggest event of the year in collegiate road biking.

About 400 cyclists from more than 100 schools across the nation have descended upon Ogden for the USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships, which begin today with a team time trial race at Antelope Island.

Saturday features a criterium championship race starting at noon in downtown Ogden, in which racers make multiple laps around a course encompassing several blocks in the heart of the city.

The events conclude Sunday with a road race that starts in Ogden Valley, loops around Pineview Reservoir, heads down Ogden Canyon, then goes up and over the North Ogden Divide and back to the original starting point at Valley Elementary School in Eden. The women will start at 8 a.m., while the men's race begins at 12:30 p.m.

Winners of the men's and women's races will be crowned national champions for 2012 among Division I and Division II schools. Weber State, which competes as a Division II school, has high hopes of taking the top spots. WSU is on track for its third consecutive championship in the Inter-Mountain Collegiate Cycling Conference, and three cyclists from the school -- two men and one woman -- are all in the running this weekend.

Team leader Dustin Bashaw, who will participate in today's time trial but not in the weekend events, said all three are legitimate threats to win both the criterium and road races. The team placed second earlier this year in races at the University of Utah, Utah Valley University, and most recently in Morgan.

"We've gone up against some really good competition this year, and I think they (all three team members) have a good chance to win," Bashaw said.

IMCCC Director Kimberly Garvie said Weber State's Toby Nishikawa is the hometown favorite among the Division II women. "She has time management down to a science," Garvie said. "She works full time, goes to school full time, and is a mom -- and she somehow still finds the time to train, because she's pretty fast on her bike."

Bashaw agrees that Nishikawa has an excellent chance of winning, especially in the criterium race. "She just rides away from everybody else," he said. "We're looking for her to do some really good things this weekend."

Weber State's hopes don't end there, however. Racer Clint Mortley was the conference champion in both the criterium and road race categories this year, and figures to be at or near the head of the pack Saturday and Sunday.

Mortley, a native of Rexburg, Idaho, will get a special call-out Saturday to join the other conference champions at the front of the line at the start of the criterium race. Bashaw likes Mortley's chances in Sunday's road race as well. "As long as he can stay with the group up the climb, Clint should do really well in this race," Bashaw said.

Rounding out the Weber State team is Tyler Matson, a local rider who finished fourth out of 38 racers in last year's Tour of Depot in Tooele. Weber State didn't travel to last year's championships in Wisconsin because of cost constraints, but Bashaw said competing against Division I schools and strong Division II teams from Salt Lake Community College and Southern Utah University this season has helped prepare the team for this weekend.

Spectators are welcome at all of the events, but the courses will be closed to vehicle traffic to accommodate the racers. The downtown section of Ogden between 25th and 27th streets, and from Grant to Ogden avenues, will be closed from 8 a.m. until about 6:30 Saturday. On Sunday, there will be rolling closures along the road course throughout the day. Traffic will be allowed to cross the course during the race under the direction of race marshals at intersections.

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Cyclists accuse Toronto mayor Ford of 'war on bikes'

Posted in : Gossips

(added 15 days ago)

Rob Ford cruised to victory as city mayor a year-and-a-half ago pledging to end what he dubbed "the war on the car". He argued that bike lanes were taking away space for cars. "And what I compare bike lanes to is swimming with the sharks. Sooner or later you're going to get bitten," said Ford speaking in 2010 as a Toronto city council-member.

"And every year we have dozens of people that get hit by cars or trucks. Well, no wonder: roads are built for buses, cars, and trucks, not for people on bikes. "My heart bleeds for them when I hear someone gets killed, but it's their own fault at the end of the day."

Since Ford came into office, Toronto hasn't just stopped putting in bike lanes; it has started removing some of them. Last year, the Toronto city council voted to remove three bike lanes. The city council did, however, also agree to upgrade existing bike lanes to physically separated traffic lanes, which are safer for cyclists.

Ford's office didn't respond to repeated interview requests. But cyclists on the streets of Toronto were happy to share their thoughts on the mayor. "To have the war against bikes, or in his case, what he believed is the war against cars, is insane and ludicrous as far as I'm concerned," said cyclist Sean Siford.

Christine Montgomery added: "He's completely awful."John Barber is also no fan of the mayor and his car-friendly policies. He writes a column for the Globe and Mail newspaper about life in Toronto. He's also been cycling in the city for 50 years.

"There's this weird culture war," said Barber. "You know in one of the newspapers, they're calling bicyclists 'helmet heads.' You're in part of some kind of tribe, and they impute all kinds of motives to you. "And it's this war between people who... somebody is trying to trump a war between bicyclists and cars. It never existed in the past."

Fifteen years ago, Bicycling Magazine named Toronto North America's best city for cycling. Now, Toronto is the bike collision capital of Canada, with more accidents per capita than any other major Canadian city.

Yet many Toronto motorists are up in arms when there's talk of narrowing roads to add bike lanes, said Barber. "Nobody says, 'Well, hey we're killing people at twice the rate of Vancouver. Shouldn't we try to think of making these streets a little bit safer?'"

Many motorists feel that cyclists are the ones making the streets unsafe, and there's been plenty of online discussion on this topic. Some say reckless bikers pose a threat to pedestrians and other cyclists. Others complain about an "idiot on a bike" who veered in and out of traffic, ignoring the rules of the road. Barber would like to see police enforce those rules for cyclists.

But he says in the end, bikes need their own space, and the city needs more bike lanes. He calls the mayor's stance "completely crazy.""People want bicycles lanes everywhere in North America," said Barber. "There's a demand among the constituents for bicycle infrastructure. And nothing could be cheaper; it's a matter of painting lines, right?"

Painting some lines on the road may be cheap. But there's another cost. "If you put in a bike lane, you have to take something out: it's either a traffic lane, or parking," explained Nancy Smith Lea, director of the Toronto Center for Active Transportation. "And for the most part, when the parking is removed, that's the most contentious issue."

One big problem bikers face, almost everywhere, is what cyclists in Toronto call "the door prize" - when somebody getting out of their car hits you with their door. Smith Lea advocates getting rid of some on-street parking to create a few bike corridors. She says many people don't react so well to this.

"People go bananas. But I think it's what needs to happen."Here's the counter argument: adding bike lanes will help some cyclists, but will have a negative effect on many more drivers.

Cycling safety became front page news in Toronto last fall when a young mother, who was also five months pregnant, was killed on her bike. She was crushed under the wheels of a truck. In a separate incident, an enraged driver chased a cyclist onto a sidewalk in his car.

Add it all up, and it may sound like Toronto's streets have turned into some kind of a roller derby. Not so, says Ron Buliung, a professor of transportation geography at the University of Toronto and a bike commuter. He went back and looked at police reports over the past decade. "And we're not seeing dramatic increases in fatalities or injuries of any kind, or much change in the frequency of injury on our major arterials," said Buliung.

He says what's happening is that other North American cities are becoming much safer for cyclists, much faster. Meanwhile, progress in Toronto has stalled. Toronto has been averaging more than 1,100 reported cycling collisions over the past five years.

Add one more to this year's tally. "I've not had a collision with a motor vehicle, except for today actually, the day I'm coming to speak to you about cycling in Toronto," said Buliung. Builing was sideswiped by a car. He was not injured. Listen to Jason Margolis' full report atPRI's The World, a co-production of the BBC World Service, Public Radio International, and WGBH in Boston.

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Cycling: Geraint Thomas blasts Olympic rule changes

Posted in : Gossips, Players

(added 16 days ago)

OLYMPIC champion Geraint Thomas has hit out at the rule changes that mean British Cycling must choose between Sir Chris Hoy and Jason Kenny for the Games in London. Hoy beat Kenny to the sprint gold medal in Beijing four years ago, but this time around each country is only allowed one rider per event.

Hoy had been a clear favourite to land the place until he was beaten by his compatriot in the semi-finals at the World Championships in Melbourne last month, meaning an unenviable decision for the selectors.

Thomas said: “I think it’s crazy they’ve brought that rule in. Can you imagine them doing that in swimming, or the 100 metres final? I guess they’re the rules and there’s nothing we bike riders can do about it. “You look at the 200s (the 200m flying laps that decide the qualifiers in the sprint) and I think five countries filled the top 10 in Melbourne.

“So come the Olympics somebody 11th in the worlds could end up sixth. It dilutes the field, which is disappointing because you want to see the best riders. “If the best riders are both French or both British, you still want them to be there winning medals. But what we can do? We’re just the puppets in that race.”

Thomas’ hopes for gold this summer rest on the team pursuit. The Welshman was part of the quartet that won in Beijing and last month broke the world record in reclaiming the world title from Australia. The 25-year-old has made big sacrifices to ensure the team have the best possible chance, including deciding not to race in the Tour de France.

Thomas, who is promoting September’s Etape Cymru closed road sportive, is considered one of the brightest talents on the road, and he confirmed the London Games is likely to be his last track competition.

But the Tour will not be his main target, with the one-day Classics like Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix an initial priority. Thomas said: “I’ll definitely concentrate on the road for the two years afterwards. Never say never, things can change, they might bring back certain events or whatever, but definitely the road will be my focus.”

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Cycling: Geraint Thomas disappointed with Olympics drugs ban ruling

Posted in : Gossips

(added 18 days ago)

Welsh cyclist Geraint Thomas has admitted he has mixed feelings that former drugs cheat David Millar can compete at London 2012. Cyclist Millar will be eligible after the British Olympic Association's policy of lifetime bans was overturned. The BOA has lost its battle with the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas).

"It will improve their [GB's] chances of winning. At the same time I would have liked to have kept the ruling and kept that lifetime ban," said Thomas, part of the GB team track pursuit gold medallists in 2008 in Beijing

Cas is expected to announce its decision at 3pm on Monday. It means the likes of sprinter Dwain Chambers, 34, and Millar, 35, can try to qualify for Team GB.

Millar was given a two-year ban in 2004 for after admitting taking the blood-boosting agent EPO, while Chambers tested positive for the designer drug THG a year earlier. Both have since worked closely with the anti-doping authorities to help them crack down on drug cheats. "I've got no issue with Millar," Thomas insisted. "I rode the worlds alongside Dave last year and raced week-in, week-out with him.

"It's good for Mark Cavendish and the GB road team for sure. "I've got no issue with him personally. He does a lot of good for the sport, but at the same time that ruling was great for Britain. It was a real hard stance on doping. "It was a good thing. It's sad that that is lost now. "It's not our decision - it's for the guys in the suits who have decided the rules."

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London 2012: Ben Swift to pursue place in Britain's road race team

Posted in : Players, Race

(added 23 days ago)

Ben Swift has revised his Olympic dream and is set to turn his back on the track to focus on supporting Mark Cavendish in the road race on the opening day of the London 2012 Games. Swift was part of a six-strong Great Britain team pursuit squad which travelled to the track cycling world championships earlier this month, only to miss out on selection in Melbourne.

London 2012 Ben Swift to pursue place in Britain's road race team

The 24-year-old from Rotherham responded to the disappointment by competing in three non-Olympic events, winning gold in the scratch race and silver medals in the points race and the Madison, the latter with Geraint Thomas.

After this week consulting British Cycling's head coach, Shane Sutton, the men's endurance coach, Dan Hunt, and the road coach, Rod Ellingworth, Swift has opted against continuing to be in the mix for the four-man 4km team pursuit and instead will challenge for the five-man team for the 250km road race on 28 July, which Cavendish will begin as favourite.

"I think I'm going to step away from the track and try to pursue a place in the road team," Swift said. "I had a talk with my coaches and made the call. That's going to be my goal to get into that road team."

Swift watched on as Britain won the team pursuit world title in a world record of 3min 53.295sec in Australia and by opting out of the track team it means he has given up his own bid for Olympic gold in a selfless pursuit of success for Cavendish.

Swift, who now lives on the Isle of Man, faces a difficult challenge to make the road squad, with three of the five places already determined – one for Cavendish and two for the riders who will be participating in the Olympic time-trial.  "It makes it a little bit harder to get selected," added Swift, who next month rides with Cavendish for Team Sky in the Giro d'Italia.

Swift had suggested previously London would be his last major track competition, but he has not ruled out riding in future world championships in the velodrome. "Never say never, but at the minute it's the road," he said.

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