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Don’t you hate that? Even when you are clearly the fastest in the sprint, gaining ground with every pedal stroke and making everyone else look slow, the line comes up too early… and you come anywhere from 2nd backwards. Ouch. How do you fix this, it just isn’t fair!

Now it’s happened to Cavendish: Coming into the final turn, Bennati had already taken the lead with McEwen right behind, and Cavendish was left chasing for the win. He made a strong comeback and thrust his bike at the line, but was just millimetres shy of the win. “The team worked really well, but Bennati had 10 metres on me out of the corner,” stated Cavendish. “A few metres after the line, I had it but that is no use.”

And yes, it’s no use complaining. Bennati must have gone at exactly the right time, and McEwen must have faded just a tad. And Cavo is left 2nd.

Filed under Bennati, Cavendish, Giro, McEwen by Rob.

Don’t you hate that? Even when you are clearly the fastest in the sprint, gaining ground with every pedal stroke and making everyone else look slow, the line comes up too early… and you come anywhere from 2nd backwards. Ouch. How do you fix this, it just isn’t fair!

Now it’s happened to Cavendish: Coming into the final turn, Bennati had already taken the lead with McEwen right behind, and Cavendish was left chasing for the win. He made a strong comeback and thrust his bike at the line, but was just millimetres shy of the win. “The team worked really well, but Bennati had 10 metres on me out of the corner,” stated Cavendish. “A few metres after the line, I had it but that is no use.”

And yes, it’s no use complaining. Bennati must have gone at exactly the right time, and McEwen must have faded just a tad. And Cavo is left 2nd.

Filed under Bennati, Cavendish, Giro, McEwen by Rob.

Not surprisingly it has been a race for the Italians, mostly. A few days pass, the GC is largely unaffected and more Italians fight it out: Daniele Bennati of Liquigas has taken his second stage win in this year’s Giro after a close sprint against compatriot Paolo Bettini, who finished second for the second day in a row. Australian Robbie McEwen of Silence-Lotto is on his way back and finished an impressive third. Milram’s Erik Zabel got fourth, while High Road, which has led the final kilometres, was not rewarded and its sprinter Cavendish could only get into the top ten.

Thank goodness McEwen is getting closer. But can he beat these darned Italian sprinters? I predict an Italian rider will win the ITT tomorrow (thus ensuring a victory by someone else – lord knows who – someone from Astana perhaps?).

Filed under Bennati, Giro by Rob.

Not surprisingly it has been a race for the Italians, mostly. A few days pass, the GC is largely unaffected and more Italians fight it out: Daniele Bennati of Liquigas has taken his second stage win in this year’s Giro after a close sprint against compatriot Paolo Bettini, who finished second for the second day in a row. Australian Robbie McEwen of Silence-Lotto is on his way back and finished an impressive third. Milram’s Erik Zabel got fourth, while High Road, which has led the final kilometres, was not rewarded and its sprinter Cavendish could only get into the top ten.

Thank goodness McEwen is getting closer. But can he beat these darned Italian sprinters? I predict an Italian rider will win the ITT tomorrow (thus ensuring a victory by someone else – lord knows who – someone from Astana perhaps?).

Filed under Bennati, Giro by Rob.

As a cyclist I know that falling is part of the game, but not a good part. I never want to fall and I never want to cause anyone else to fall (yeah, sometimes I have wished the worst on some idiot but not often). I especially hate it when riders are weaving around for no reason other than their own desire to shake people off. OK, fine, that happens, we all want to get a gap and ride alone to glorious victory. But how often does it work? Versus how often it causes a fall? Sometimes – possibly every time – positioning with stealth and cunning beats those stupid pre-sprint desperation weaves.

And then there are just plain accidents. Potholes, punctures, car doors, crossed wheels, too fast into a corner, a nudge here or there and… boom! And in a tight bunch the slightest wrong move in the middle or side can send someone off the road. It happens.

Which brings me to a stage of this year’s Giro I’d rather forget. Stage 3: It was a day characterised by breakaways, crashes and high speeds but, as expected, the third stage of the Giro d’Italia came down to a bunch sprint. Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) did precisely what his team-mate and race leader Franco Pellizotti yesterday suggested he would do, winning in Milazzo and thus making it a double success for the acid green squad. That’s the good bit. Good on Bennati. Good on Pellizotti.

But this is the worst of it:At the start in Catania, there was concern about the stage’s technical finish, but the worst wrecks occurred mid-stage. One massive pile-up took down riders such as stage two winner Riccardo Riccó (Saunier Duval – Scott) and David Millar (Slipstream Chipotle H30) while another put Bradley McGee (CSC) out of the race with a broken collarbone. McGee’s team-mate Stuart O’Grady, who was doing his first Grand Tour since he was seriously injured in last year’s Tour de France also crashed, and while he finished the stage it was later found that he also broke his collarbone.

Both McGee and O’Grady are coming back, either from obvious or more hidden maladies, and it’s a shame to see them go out of the race. There were others hurt, too: Other riders caught up in Stage 3′s mass crash included Saunier Duval-Scott’s Riccardo Riccò and Eros Capecchi. Both riders have undergone X-rays and been cleared to ride, with Riccò dislocating a finger on his left hand while Capecchi’s suspected broken collarbone turned out to be muscle injury.

I’d like to say we can fix this sort of thing, but how? Bike racers draft in packs. It’s the sport. Proximity is both a danger and a blessing – the convivial bunch rolling along is a great thing that no other sport shares. Perhaps we need full-body armour (ventilated of course) and/or crash detection and prevention radar.

Filed under Bennati, Giro, McGee, O'Grady, Pellizotti by Rob.

As a cyclist I know that falling is part of the game, but not a good part. I never want to fall and I never want to cause anyone else to fall (yeah, sometimes I have wished the worst on some idiot but not often). I especially hate it when riders are weaving around for no reason other than their own desire to shake people off. OK, fine, that happens, we all want to get a gap and ride alone to glorious victory. But how often does it work? Versus how often it causes a fall? Sometimes – possibly every time – positioning with stealth and cunning beats those stupid pre-sprint desperation weaves.

And then there are just plain accidents. Potholes, punctures, car doors, crossed wheels, too fast into a corner, a nudge here or there and… boom! And in a tight bunch the slightest wrong move in the middle or side can send someone off the road. It happens.

Which brings me to a stage of this year’s Giro I’d rather forget. Stage 3: It was a day characterised by breakaways, crashes and high speeds but, as expected, the third stage of the Giro d’Italia came down to a bunch sprint. Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) did precisely what his team-mate and race leader Franco Pellizotti yesterday suggested he would do, winning in Milazzo and thus making it a double success for the acid green squad. That’s the good bit. Good on Bennati. Good on Pellizotti.

But this is the worst of it:At the start in Catania, there was concern about the stage’s technical finish, but the worst wrecks occurred mid-stage. One massive pile-up took down riders such as stage two winner Riccardo Riccó (Saunier Duval – Scott) and David Millar (Slipstream Chipotle H30) while another put Bradley McGee (CSC) out of the race with a broken collarbone. McGee’s team-mate Stuart O’Grady, who was doing his first Grand Tour since he was seriously injured in last year’s Tour de France also crashed, and while he finished the stage it was later found that he also broke his collarbone.

Both McGee and O’Grady are coming back, either from obvious or more hidden maladies, and it’s a shame to see them go out of the race. There were others hurt, too: Other riders caught up in Stage 3′s mass crash included Saunier Duval-Scott’s Riccardo Riccò and Eros Capecchi. Both riders have undergone X-rays and been cleared to ride, with Riccò dislocating a finger on his left hand while Capecchi’s suspected broken collarbone turned out to be muscle injury.

I’d like to say we can fix this sort of thing, but how? Bike racers draft in packs. It’s the sport. Proximity is both a danger and a blessing – the convivial bunch rolling along is a great thing that no other sport shares. Perhaps we need full-body armour (ventilated of course) and/or crash detection and prevention radar.

Filed under Bennati, Giro, McGee, O'Grady, Pellizotti by Rob.

Stung by non-selection for the Worlds or not, Daniele Bennati proved up to the task of beating fellow countrymen Bettini and Petacchi to the line…

From CN: “It is not very easy to win, especially in the Vuelta, which is a great tour,” explained Bennati after the win. “This is the third week; I did the whole Tour de France recently. I am so very happy because my condition is very good. I am really happy.”

Filed under Bennati, Vuelta a Espana by Rob.

Stung by non-selection for the Worlds or not, Daniele Bennati proved up to the task of beating fellow countrymen Bettini and Petacchi to the line…

From CN: “It is not very easy to win, especially in the Vuelta, which is a great tour,” explained Bennati after the win. “This is the third week; I did the whole Tour de France recently. I am so very happy because my condition is very good. I am really happy.”

Filed under Bennati, Vuelta a Espana by Rob.

Italian ace Bennati takes the first prize of this last Grand Tour of 2007, besting Spaniard Freire, Italian Petacchi, Aussie Davis and Belgian Boonen… nice to see so many sprinters from so many countries in the mix. Bennati of course won teh last stage of Le Tour, so he’s very much picking up where he left off. CN report here.

Filed under 2007, Bennati, Vuelta a Espana by Rob.

Italian ace Bennati takes the first prize of this last Grand Tour of 2007, besting Spaniard Freire, Italian Petacchi, Aussie Davis and Belgian Boonen… nice to see so many sprinters from so many countries in the mix. Bennati of course won teh last stage of Le Tour, so he’s very much picking up where he left off. CN report here.

Filed under 2007, Bennati, Vuelta a Espana by Rob.

Daniele Bennati took his 2nd Tour win just days after his first, and in the best place, too: Paris. Lampre deserved the win today after attacking and chasing so hard for Ballan, so it was somehow fitting that Quickstep, having done little to motivate the stage should accidentally lead Bennati out to the win. Boonen didn’t seem to have the legs today, or was playing safe with the green jersey, just doing enough to keep it on his shoulders. Either way he didn’t get to grips with his lead-out man and slipped away to 5th. Unless of course it was a cunning plan to allow Bennati the win, robbing his closer rivals of the opportunity to take maximum points…

Overall no-one threatened Contador for the win, and he took that an the best young rider. Cadel Evans took 2nd, as expected, and Leipheimer was content to stand on the podium in 3rd. It could all have been so very different had there not been several key casualties, both via accident and doping scandal. Still, this is a long race at high speed in difficult circumstances, and it wouldn’t be special if winning it was straightforward, would it?

Filed under Bennati, Boonen, Contador Evans, Le Tour, Leipheimer by Rob.

Daniele Bennati took his 2nd Tour win just days after his first, and in the best place, too: Paris. Lampre deserved the win today after attacking and chasing so hard for Ballan, so it was somehow fitting that Quickstep, having done little to motivate the stage should accidentally lead Bennati out to the win. Boonen didn’t seem to have the legs today, or was playing safe with the green jersey, just doing enough to keep it on his shoulders. Either way he didn’t get to grips with his lead-out man and slipped away to 5th. Unless of course it was a cunning plan to allow Bennati the win, robbing his closer rivals of the opportunity to take maximum points…

Overall no-one threatened Contador for the win, and he took that an the best young rider. Cadel Evans took 2nd, as expected, and Leipheimer was content to stand on the podium in 3rd. It could all have been so very different had there not been several key casualties, both via accident and doping scandal. Still, this is a long race at high speed in difficult circumstances, and it wouldn’t be special if winning it was straightforward, would it?

Filed under Bennati, Boonen, Contador Evans, Le Tour, Leipheimer by Rob.

Daniele Bennati won easily, as you’d expect from a fast-twitch guy in a break laden with more your enduro-power guys. Voigt did his usual instigation and control act, forcing the pace when it needed forcing, leaving gaps that slackers had to fill and attacking when the odds needed improving. The only thing he couldn’t do was get away from Benna, who knew what was on Voigt’s seemingly transparent mind at every step. Voigt needed to gap Bennati enough that he couldn’t close, but the sprinter of course knew this as well and fast-twitched his way back onto the wheel every time. It didn’t help that the final selection included guys who were pretty similar in style and power to Voigt himself, making the match a bit too even. Even picking the weakest link and attacking up that hill at 4km didn’t work… although it was close and a few cramps in the right legs would have sealed the escape. Alas, these guys don’t cramp, or hide it well.

Which means one down, one to go. Before the all-resolving TT, I mean. Can Cadel make up 1m 53secs on Contador? I doubt it. The course is flat, which doesn’t suit either of them, although Evans may have a little more gas left than Alberto. Leaping Levi could do better than both at this course and will be fired up to close the 53sec gap on Cadel. It’s looking like a close thing all round. Perhaps Contador loses a minute to Cadel and Levi gains 30 secs, or more. Or variations on that theme, anyway. They’ll end up soooo close together it’ll come down to freshest legs and most luck on the day.

Filed under Bennati, Le Tour by Rob.

Daniele Bennati won easily, as you’d expect from a fast-twitch guy in a break laden with more your enduro-power guys. Voigt did his usual instigation and control act, forcing the pace when it needed forcing, leaving gaps that slackers had to fill and attacking when the odds needed improving. The only thing he couldn’t do was get away from Benna, who knew what was on Voigt’s seemingly transparent mind at every step. Voigt needed to gap Bennati enough that he couldn’t close, but the sprinter of course knew this as well and fast-twitched his way back onto the wheel every time. It didn’t help that the final selection included guys who were pretty similar in style and power to Voigt himself, making the match a bit too even. Even picking the weakest link and attacking up that hill at 4km didn’t work… although it was close and a few cramps in the right legs would have sealed the escape. Alas, these guys don’t cramp, or hide it well.

Which means one down, one to go. Before the all-resolving TT, I mean. Can Cadel make up 1m 53secs on Contador? I doubt it. The course is flat, which doesn’t suit either of them, although Evans may have a little more gas left than Alberto. Leaping Levi could do better than both at this course and will be fired up to close the 53sec gap on Cadel. It’s looking like a close thing all round. Perhaps Contador loses a minute to Cadel and Levi gains 30 secs, or more. Or variations on that theme, anyway. They’ll end up soooo close together it’ll come down to freshest legs and most luck on the day.

Filed under Bennati, Le Tour by Rob.

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