Monday, February 28, 2011

Baw Baw Challenge


Dear Lew

Despite the rain the intrepid team arrived at Mt Baw Baw somewhat in awe of the final 6kms. Very steep as you had advised but overall a spectacular ride. Phil got the King of the Mountain points and despite seeing him in the distance was uncatchable. The hospitality at the Mt Baw Baw Inn was very reminiscent of some other rides where wet garments were shed liberally throughout the establishment.

In fact the rain was so prevalent I was amused to see I was attacked by leeches on the way back. Not every day you lookdown and are surprised to see some blood on the back you leg only to realise it was leech doing what leeches do. AHHH.

Lew, putting aside the weather that was a superb route with quiet roads and spectacular scenery. Thanks for the suggestion.

Rgds Jim

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Hardman Riding


As BIG RING RIDING so eloquently put it: “MASSIVE PROPS TO AZIZULHASNI AWANG – FIRSTLY FOR PUTTING HIS 65KG SELF UP AGAINST RHINOS LIKE HOY IN THE KEIRIN. THEN FOR RIDING ACROSS THE LINE AFTER A CRASH WITH GOD’S TOOTHPICK STUCK THROUGH HIS LEG. BEST WISHES FOR THE RECOVERY.”
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Thanks to Cycling Tips for drawing our attention to one very tough track rider.

24 Hour Megaswim


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Well done and thanks to all who swam, came along for moral support or sponsored us.
Raised over 7G and swam just under 73 km in 24 hours


A herculian effort thanks once again


Sandro



Friday, February 25, 2011

Colnago Saronni







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Anyone who knows me would understand that the bike in the photo's from this blog of the 1981 Colnago Saronni are very close to my heart!
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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Spin Room Enduro




Sarah from Spin Room is having a 24hr fundraiser for the RIDE HARD TO BREATHE EASY foundation for Lung Cancer. This weekend! Raise money, turn the pedals, rock out.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Generalized doping no more?


“I always said that doping was generalized and you could say even democratic up to the time when they developed a test for EPO, then it became elitist. You needed cutting-edge methods to get around the tests from that point on—methods that often only the big riders and teams could access or afford"

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Monday, February 21, 2011

Wants. We all have wants

Taken from Red Kite prayer this morning...

I want to wear less clothing. I don’t want to ride nude (insert your own saddle sore joke here), but about half of what was required this morning would be a delight. Today, there are bib knickers, baselayer, midlayer, windproof jersey, wind tights, under socks, wool oversocks, shoes and toe warmers. Two pairs of gloves. A skull cap and wool over hat. Oh, and a jacket.

I want a lane. It need not be painted. It need only exist, a space between here and there in which to roll. A dry, flat substrate, bereft of ice, sand and salt. An unpocked surface, without the sand traps and water hazards of a PGA golf course.

I want time. Not the half hour I have to dash from kindergarten drop off to early work meeting. I want hours. Multiple. To roll and roll and roll. To purge my weary mind of its weariness. I want to ride up and out of the city, to where the smell of cow shit hangs in the air, to turn around at a coffee shop that also sells shotgun shells.

I want a champion. Not a litany of chemically-enhanced avatars. I want to watch races and forget there are rules. I want to un-know the names of UCI officials and blood-modifying serums. I want to read stories that contain no quotes from lawyers or PR reps.

Wanting is wishing, and wishing is dreaming. My roots, in the hills of mid-Wales and the cities of New England, have taught me not to dream too big. There comes a point where your subconscious sets the bar so high that real world disappointment is the only inevitable result. I want to be a better me, but I have given up on x-ray vision and the ability to fly.

I just want to ride.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Lapthorne reconsiders


It's hard not top be impressed by what Michael Drapac has put into Australian cycling. His 'rescue' of Darren Lapthorne seems to be another great example of this.


From Velonation:


Lapthorne cancels retirement due to contract offer from Drapac Professional cycling team


Having retired last month, disillusioned after the collapse of the Pegasus Sports team, former Australian champion Darren Lapthorne has secured a contract and is returning to racing.


Lapthorne is going back to the Drapac Professional cycling team, with whom he competed in 2006 and 2007, and with whom he won his national title. “I’ve ridden with them before and they were probably my best years on the bike so I thought it’d be a good place to go back to,” he told SBS’s Cycling Central.


He had competed for the past two seasons with the Rapha Contor team but said that he felt it was time to try something new. He jumped at an offer to compete with the new Pegasus Sports team, but it quickly ran into difficulties before the season even started. An inability to sign enough big-name riders meant that it missed out on the ranking points needed to secure the UCI ProTeam licence it was aiming for.


Equally significantly, the Alberto Contador doping case caused planned sponsor Red Bull to walk away from the deal. Further difficulties in raising the necessary budget cost the team its plan B, a Pro Continental licence, and the same issue meant that it missed out on the third option, a Continental licence.


Lapthorne’s morale was low and he walked away from the sport, starting work in a job at a car dealership in Bendigo. However Michael Drapac, owner of the Drapac Professional cycling team, convinced him that it was too soon to hang up his wheels and he was swayed. “It didn’t take long though I sort of got the buzz back,” Lapthorne explained. “It’s not just about riding the bike, it’s the mateship you’ve got with your competitors and teammates and I really missed that.”


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Adios Lance

Today's announcement of the retirement of Lance Armstrong obviously marks the end of an era. That said, one can't help but feel that there is a lot more media coverage still to come concerning the US Postal-Armstrong period of PRO cycling.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Giant Via

A very cute around town bike for less than $400. Hard to beat...but will the daughter actually ride it???

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Surprise, surprise...not!


It comes as no surprise the the Spanish Cycling Federation has been tipped today to find their (current) favourite son should not be penalised for the now proven doping allegations. The credibility of PRO cycling is further undermined by their actions...if that is at all possible.
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Monday, February 14, 2011

Keirin Training...


Taken from Velogogo. Only in Japan.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Greatest cyclists of all time


The top 2010 list of the top 25 cyclists of all time from Virtual Musette:


1. Eddy Merckx
2. Bernard Hinault
3. Fausto Coppi
4. Gino Bartali
5. Jacques Anquetil
6. Rik Van Looy
7. Sean Kelly
8. Roger De Vlaeminck
9. Francesco Moser
10. Lance Armstrong
11. Felice Gimondi
12. Louison Bobet
13. Miguel Indurain
14. Freddy Maertens
15. Ferdi Kubler
16. Joop Zoetemelk
17. Tony Rominger
18. Laurent Jalabert
19. Fiorenzo Magni
20. Giuseppe Saronni
21. Erik Zabel
22. Rik Van Steenbergen
23. Raymond Poulidor
24. Alberto Contador
25. Jan Janssen

Just how far is Eddy head and shoulders above the rest???

See http://www.thevirtualmusette.com/ for the methodology and the top 100 listing

Thursday, February 10, 2011

PRO Cycling does NOT need this man...



From Velonation:


Rider remains in hospital after emergency weekend treatment


Controversial rider Riccardo Riccò looks to be in hot water once again, and could be facing the end of his professional career. According to reports in various Italian media, the rider has admitted to giving himself a blood transfusion. It had been stored in a refrigerator for 25 days and its poor condition is suspected as being a likely cause for his emergency hospitalisation at the weekend.

He became ill after training on Saturday and was taken to hospital in Baggiovara with suspected kidney failure. His condition then worsened and he was transferred to S. Agostino-Este. The hospital later released a statement to say that his condition had been critical but was improving; however it said that it would keep silent on his prognosis for the moment.


It is now reported that the prosecutor of Modena has opened a file for suspected violation of the anti-doping law 376/2000. La Gazzetta dello Sport states that Ricco arrived in critical condition on Sunday morning and that first aid was performed on him. According to a doctor who was present, Riccò admitted that he had done an autotransfusion of blood in the presence of his girlfriend Vania Rossi. It had been kept in the refrigerator for almost a month, and it is feared that the blood had degenerated.
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Riccò previously served a lengthy ban for doping after testing positive for CERA in the 2008 Tour de France, where he took two stages. Rossi herself tested positive for the same substance in January 2010 and the couple briefly separated. She was later cleared when her B sample fell short of the levels required to verify wrongdoing.


Riccò returned to racing last season and swore that he would compete clean; he started working with Mapei Centre chief physiologist Aldo Sassi, who had a reputation as being anti-doping. Sassi had terminal cancer. He said that he put a lot of faith in Riccò to behave properly, choosing him for his last big project.


According to La Gazzetta dello Sport, Sassi concluded his meeting with Riccò by telling him, “I have a life expectancy that goes as far as July: you’re my last gamble.” Sadly, Sassi passed away suddenly in December. Last month, Riccò promised that he would continue on in the right way. “Aldo has sadly died,” he told La Derniere Heure. "But his spirit still exists at the Mapei centre. I now work with people who worked with him these past fifteen years and using its methods. Working with Sassi has done a lot of good for my image, it’s true, but I especially want it to bear fruit."If Riccò’s doping is confirmed, it would appear that he cynically exploited Sassi’s final weeks and his memory in order to pass himself off as a reformed rider.


Team Liquigas Promo 2011



Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Time to go back to basics?


Not all Team Directors can watch TV, talk on the radio, direct the team and drive simultaneously
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A little piece from Bike Race Info about the current race radio debate:




At the first race of the Challenge Illes Balears, the riders and teams were looking to provoke a confrontation with the UCI and refused to remove their race radios. The teams said they were just looking for a little respect, that the race-radio ban should not have been imposed without deeper consultation with the riders and teams. In addition, they trotted the same baloney they have been spouting for some time, that the radios are needed for rider safety. I won't waste your time refuting this stupid argument, which has been statistically demolished over and over again. This reasoning should have long ago been tossed in the garbage along with, "I passed every dope test, proving I was riding clean". Or worse, one rider said, "This is progress, we can't go back." Yes you can and you should.


Of course the team managers want to keep control of the race with their radios and many pros seem to like letting someone else do their thinking for them.


But they don't have to watch the sorry thing pro racing has become. They don't care about the quality of the product they are producing, they want to win today's race.

We spectators know bicycle racing is getting more conservative and more predictable. Breaks during flat stages are usually caught just before the finish. Riders are told by their managers to wait until the final climb before attacking. Racing is formulaic and boring. Toss in doping (remember also that the riders were at the forefront of the fight AGAINST controlling drugs in cycling. The code of omerta regarding drugs was a rider invention) and you have a sport that just lost an entire nation's TV audience. The German networks will not be carrying the 2011 Tour de France. If pro racing were really compelling, the German public wouldn 't stand for the loss of coverage.


The change in racing was really brought home to me as I wrote my history of the Giro d'Italia (should be published late this month or early next month). Bicycle racing used to be filled with exciting breaks, often with some of the greatest champions racing together to escape the pack. Fiorenzo Magni and Fausto Coppi (on different teams) took off late in the 1955 Giro and crushed the peloton, winning the Giro for Magni. Jacques Anquetil escaped with Italo Zilioli more than once, or how about a break of Vito Taccone, Enzo Moser and Zilioli? You won't see that stuff today, but it used to happed regularly and you would probably do almost anything to see it today if you could. Racing was better before radios, when there was the "fog of war".

It's impossible to defend the status quo when you know what racing used to be like. Get rid of the radios. Please UCI, don't listen to the riders and managers because they do not have racing's best interests at heart. They are like any other business entities, they are working for themselves. For once, the UCI is right.

Monday, February 7, 2011

More Jens...


Todays Velonation carries a fantastis interview with everyone's favourite PRO Rider:


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39 and still going strong.

Friday, February 4, 2011

L'eroica


Bookings have just opened for this years edition of the the Tuscan Classic of yesteryear...both bikes and riders:

http://www.eroica-ciclismo.it/italiano/home.asp

Or if you want the more user friendly English version:

http://www.eroicacicli.com/blog/dont-forget/

One day soon....

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Some events for 2011...


As a new cycling year dawns it seems to me it's always better to have something to aim for...a bit like standing at the urinal.

With that in mind I've tried to put together a list of upcoming events that may be of interest. It is not meant to be a exhaustive list...just ones that seem of interest to me.


Feb 26 Marysville Lake Mountain Ride http://www.challengeseries.com.au/?ID=38360

March 13 Three Peaks. Why would you do this?? Web link...doesn't matter.

March 26 Otways Classic http://www.supersprint.com.au/events/2xu-great-ocean--otway-classic-ride-2011.aspx

April 10 MAD Ride http://www.bv.com.au/findshow/5/5907/

April 17 Five Dams Ride A long way to go for a one day event, but I know some who fly halfway around the world for less cycling. http://www.bwa.org.au/

May 28 Whittlesea Challenge http://www.vic.cycling.org.au/

June 7- 29 TdL Grand European Tour with mine hosts Jim & Joerg

Oct 16 Around the Bay The Full Monty. 250Km.

As I said...just something to think about.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Tough conditions


Six weeks away mostly in the cold climes of northern Europe give a great appreciation for exactly how hard so many recreational road cyclists have to do it in other parts of the world.
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We moan and complain about 'tough' conditions when the mercury drops anywhere near single figures, or climbs anywhere above the mid twenties. The idea that the ground may be covered in snow and ice for half the year is unthinkable to most of us. And there's only so much time you can spend on a wind trainer.
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It is understandable why some Canadians laugh at us when they pictures of us riding in full winter gear -leg/arm warmers/heavy jackets/booties/winter gloves riding through the lush, green and dry roads of the Dandenong's in winter. Where's the snow buddy?
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As I said, I have new found respect and admiration. I will never complain again about our 'tough' conditions.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Who has the power in Pro Cycling?


As always Red Kite Prayer offers some thoughtful insight into the never ending damage done by doping to Pro cycling:

Who really has the power in pro cycling? It’s an imprecise question. It yields some obtuse answer about the various parties involved, the UCI, the state federations, the Pro and Pro Continental teams, the sponsors and the race organizers. Assign percentages. Divide and debate.

A more precise question is: Where’s the money?


It is true that the UCI, federations, teams and sponsors all have an interest in clean racing, but it is also true that each of those stake holders has some motive for winning, regardless of the methods. The UCI needs champions in order to grow the sport. More than that, they need spectacle and drama. They need superhumanity. Obviously, doping scandals hurt their brand, but what weapons have they got? We’ve already talked about how ineffective their current approach has been, suspend and litigate.

The federations also want champions, riders from their countries standing atop podiums. They want clean athletes, but they only really need their athletes to be cleaner than the others. They also have no real power, just a smaller player in the suspend and litigate system.

The teams are the most compromised. They need to appear to be clean, but if they don’t win races, it doesn’t matter much whether they’re clean or dirty as a dormant coal mine. They lose sponsorship either way.

The sponsors have money, it’s true, but they’re in the same boat with the teams. They want the publicity that comes from winning races. They want a spot in the Tour caravan. Doping scandals may or may not hurt them. Festina reported selling more watches in the year following their team’s expulsion from the 1998 Tour.

That brings us to the race organizers. It brings us to the Amaury Sports Organization (ASO).

As most folks know, the ASO runs the Tour de France, the biggest cash cow in the sport. What they may not know is that they also own and/or operate the Tour of Qatar, Tour of Oman, Paris-Nice, Critérium International, Paris-Roubaix, Flèche Wallonne, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, the Vuelta España, Tour de l’Avenir and Paris-Tours. In short, ASO is the gatekeeper. More than anyone else, they have the power.

So what if the ASO implemented its own anti-doping policy, some more clearly stated variation on what they do now. Yes, Tour director Christian Prudhomme has been sending the teams messages for years. Embarrass the Tour and you become persona non grata in France, in July. But the rules aren’t written, and they’re not hard or fast.

If the ASO made the simple policy of barring riders who had tested positive from competing in any other of their races, it would send a shock wave through the peloton. Gone would be David Millar, Ivan Basso, Alexandre Vinokourov, et. al. It would be a loss, but it would be a tolerable one to get our sport back from middle pages of scandal-addicted newspapers.

Not being able to race in ASO races would decrease even the most talented rider’s value so significantly as to virtually end their careers. Am I really going to pay Vinokourov’s salary only to have him compete in the Giro and some subsection of the rest of the season? And what if Giro director Angelo Zomegnan buys into this approach? To borrow and phrase from another sport, game, set, match. Over.

I am sure that the deal hammered-out between the UCI and race organizers to guarantee selection to the biggest races for the entire list of ProTeams contains some provision for teams who harbor convicted dopers. I would argue that there is almost no way, under law, for the ASO to be compelled to allow the participation of riders whose presence might devalue their primary assets.

The ASO could make this happen. But will they?

Over the last decade, the ASO has acquired a number of big races, expanding their cycling portfolio to its current size, and glancing down the list you will see three of the seven spring classics, two of the three grand tours, the most prestigious one week stage race (Paris-Nice) and one of the big fall classics (Paris-Tours). How many more races would they need before they could effectively take cycling private, marginalize the UCI, and run their own show? It seems outlandish, but … outlandish is what cycling does, isn’t it? Perhaps it will take a paradigm shift like this, a breakaway if you will, to win the race against doping. Perhaps this is our last, best hope.