Sunday,
April 30 2006, Cortina d'Ampezzo
Hello from snowy Italy, yes, we woke up this morning to a snow
covered view, not really what
we want when we were planning to go over climbs that are over
2,000 meters high, it should
be an interesting day.
I am down here in Italy with Tom Danielson looking at all the
climbs that come in the last week
of this year's Giro, it's been a lot of work, because there are
a lot of them, in fact its nigh on crazy.
Yesterday we went to look at the finish on Plan de Corones.You
can see from the pictures that
they are still building the road, if that's what you could call
it, it is really bad, we are going to
use 33-28. It will be interesting to see how they manage to get
up it, not so much the leaders,
it's the rest of the peloton that I am worried about. The stage
is only 130 kms long, it also climbs
the 30km long Passo di Erbe, that means that the non climbers
are really going to suffer big time
if they want to get to the finish inside the time limit. Mind
you the Giro is not the Tour, and pushing
riders is rife, plus hanging on cars, motorbikes, in fact anything
that is going faster than themselves.
Tom is really excited by all this, and is looking forward to it
all going off in that last week. He can
climb fast, really fast, it's amazing to watch him when I am following
in the car. I will give you an
example, stage 16 finishes just outside Trento on top of an 17.6
km climb, the Monte Bondone.
The average gradient for the climb is 7.7%. There is an altitude
gain of around 1,300 meters. In
training riding at around 170 beats per minute which for him is
a medium tempo he got up it in
one hour dead. I rode it early in the morning, using the 39x27
virtually the whole way and did the
climb in one hour and eighteen minutes. That was with an average
power output of 294 watts.
OK, I am not the world's best climber as David Duffield would
say but it does give you an idea of
what these climbers are capable of.
Before I left I had a couple of races, the East Sussex CA 10 where
I recorded a personal worst
of 22.03 for 4th place, not good let me tell you. The truth is
I was still really suffering from the
injury I got while playing football the week before, in fact I
am still suffering a bit, plus I had a cold
which is still also hanging around. You see, I am human after
all. On the Sunday me and my brother
rode the Sydenham Wheelers '25' on a tandem that we had put together.
The frame was lent to
us by Vic Haines, ex tandem maestro, I broke the tandem 30 record
with him on the same bike in
1998. Anyway it turned out to be quite fun, even though the course
was not ideal for tandems, a
bit lumpy, and we managed to drop the chain which meant we lost
a bit of time because we had
to stop. We did a long 51, the winner of the solo event did a
54 so I think we did ok.
The 64 ring is now on order ready for some fast rides, in fact
I think I am going to persuade The
Hutch to get on the back so we can have a go at that 25 record.
OK, I had better get down the shop to buy some snow chains then.
I will let you know how we get on.
One last thing - I'm afraid I'm fully booked this summer for day
rides and as this is the first year that
I've tried anything like this I'm not sure how far into the autumn
we can go. If you want to ride with
me this year by all means drop me a line but you might need to
be flexible re the ride format as we
go into the shorter days and dodgier weather.
21
April, Forest Row
I had a great
time on Good Friday up at Herne Hill for the annual track
meeting, although when we turned up it looked as if the meeting
would be
called off, the one day when it was not supposed to rain it was,
and we have
a hose pipe ban in the South East, typical.
But, mid afternoon it cleared up, which was good news for all
concerned, and
on to the track we went.
It was a couple of years ago that I last rode the track, it is
something
that I love doing, but although Herne Hill is not that far away
for me with
the traffic we have these days it is just too much aggro to get
up there on
a regular basis, the problem is that when you don't ride once
in a while you
really feel it, and I certainly did, because although I consider
myself to
be reasonably fit, when it comes to pedalling what I would call
those small
gears I have real problems.
However, it did not stop me from enjoying myself.
I also had a chance to meet up with a few old friends, including
Malcom
Elliott, now there is a fit guy, he looked the picture of health,
and was
riding really well, winning the last event, the Golden Wheel,
amazing. I
knew that he had been training hard because Tom Danielson had
emailed me
from Majorca to say that he had been riding with Malcom, and that
he was
flying. Tom himself is not doing too bad either, yesterday he
finished
second in the TT at the Tour of Georgia, just four seconds behind
Floyd
Landis and in front of Dave Z, that is the ride of his life so
far I think.
I will have plenty of chances to quiz him on it next week when
I spend eight
days training with him down in Italy, in preparation for the Giro.
I will
send my next report from there.
Oh, I forgot about the rest of the weekend. On the Saturday we
had a crunch
match, the we being Nutley FC 2nds. We had to win if we wanted
to stay up in
division four.
For the first time in two seasons it was actually raining for
the match,
that gives you an indication of what the weather has been like
here in the
South East, where we have a hose pipe ban, normally I am cursing
the sun as
it gets in my eyes. Anyway, to cut a long story short we lost,
5-3,
disaster, plus, I got injured, it was a 50-50 ball and I got it,
but not
without taking the full weight of the opposing team's attacker
in my side.
My arm is now a strange colour, a mix between blue and yellow,
and my ribs
took a bit of a caning to. Consequently I was not in a fit state
to ride the
Brighton mitre hilly 25 on the Bank Holiday Monday, or the match
which I was
down to play directly afterwards, this one they lost 8-1. Division
five it
is then. I am fed up with this losing lark and have requested
a free
transfer to the Gunners.
Tomorrow I am riding a 10, and on Sunday I am riding a Tandem
with my
brother Chris, we went for a try-out today, bit wobbly, see how
we go.
Watch this space.
Friday
April 14, Forest Row
Its been a
while. The last time I wrote I was down in the Basque country
for
their Tour, I remember on my report I said that Contador of Liberty
had the
jersey after the second stage. Not sure why I said that, it was
in fact
Samuel Sanchez of the Euskaltel team that took the jersey. He
in fact won
the next stage as well, which finished on top of a wickedly steep
little climb.
His team controlled the race for the next two days so that he
held on to the
lead. The last day was a tough TT were everything was turned upside
down.
The favourite in everybody's eyes was Contador, an excellent TT
rider. But
it was not to be his day, maybe Sainz screaming in his ear did
not agree
with him.
The winner was Gomez Marchante from the Saunier Duval team, he
had shown
his strength on several occasions during the week by attacking
on the climbs,
but no one expected him to turn in such a great TT. To be fair
I think the
wind did get up a fair bit for the last riders which I think played
a part.
Although I know that Marchante was in San Diego with Dave Millar
and Simoni
at the wind tunnel, maybe that's the answer.
The Discovery boys did OK, with Jose the 'Ace' Azevedo scraping
into the top
ten overall despite feeling pretty ill on the last day. Janez
Brajkovic was
our best in the TT with a sixth place finish.
So, another race down, on to the next. Paris-Roubaix, 1,000 km
away. Me and
Craig the mechanic hopped into the car and away we went. Eight
hours or so
later we rolled into Compiegne. We did have an extra passenger,
that was
Johan the Boss, he joined us at Bilboa, after a mix up on the
ticket front
meant he had to settle for second best, a ride chez Yates.
Four hours sleep and we were ready for the Big one. As we all
know the signs
were good coming into the race, second and third at Flanders,
winning the 3
Days of De Panne etc. So naturally everybody is fired up. Me and
Craig were
set to just cover six sections of pave, with other members of
the team
covering the rest, we also aimed to hand up a few bidons. All
that went
smoothly, as did the race up until a certain point, I can't remember
exactly. it was on a section just after one that we had been on.
There were
three from out team in the first group, Boonen was on his own,
when George's
fork steerer broke, and that was it, over and out, we were gutted.
Boonen immediately put the hammer down, not exactly sporting,
but that's
life. This split the group with our remaining two in the second
half, they
had hesitated a second when George had come down and had been
caught out.
But they made it back. Da Goose as I call him was on a good ride,
and after
a bit of a spill took off. Only to be caught by Cancellara who
was on one of
those days. He had already shown that he was on song by pulling
virtually
the whole length of the Arenburg Forest.
With just one bad section to go it looked like it would be a two-up
sprint
at the velodrome at Roubaix, But Cancellara had other ideas and
blasted
Goose away, too bad.
That was it. Hoste was free to attack behind which he did, dropping
Boonen,
and the result was there for all to see. Cancellara was clearly
the
strongest on the day and deserved the win, whether it would have
been like
that if George had not had his problem we shall never know. As
for what
happened after the race finished, the less said about that the
better.
The day was not over though, coming back home at three am I was
caught up in
a snowstorm, it was unreal, nobody about, just five inches of
snow and a
Discovery car.
As you can imagine I was in need of a few hours sleep after that
episode.
Because on Tuesday I was off down to Basingstoke to meet Alastair
Jack for a
day ride.
The legs were a bit ropey to say the least, but I survived and
we had a good
day, the weather just about being kind to us.
I will have ridden the Good Friday meeting by the time you read
this. I
first rode there in 1979, and I always try and make the trip,
it always
brings out the faces of the past.
Got a couple of footie matches as well as a TT on Monday, busy.
I will let you know the results, will it be Division 5 next year?
Fingers crossed.
April
3, Tour of the Basque Country
Hi all. I am writing
today's entry down in sunny Spain. I am here at the
Vuelta al Pais Vasco, today was the second stage, it was a day
when I was
really glad that I was not a pro bike rider any more, not one
metre of flat,
up down left right, nightmare. The stage was won by Samuel Sanchez
from the
local Euskaltel-Euskadi team, who after a rough couple of years
seem to be
back on track, although Iban Mayo is still just a shadow of his
former self.
Sanchez and Alberto Contador from Liberty just held off the remnants
of the
bunch and a flying Valverde after having made a very late attack.
Valverde
was the winner of yesterday's stage which was a bunch gallop,
so with the
bonuses he is still the race leader.
The weather has been great, 28 degrees today, although the forecast
for the
upcoming days is pretty bad, which is about par for this race.
The Discovery
boys are hanging in there, with Jose Acevedo our best rider at
the moment in
11th place overall.
I arrived here yesterday morning after an all night drive from
England,
where on Sunday morning I rode a three-up TT on the A3 with my
brother Chris
and former multiple 25 mile champ Eddy Atkins. As I said in my
last entry
Eddy used to be my hero, he was the King when I first started
racing, and I
had pictures of him on my wall.
At 57 years of age he is still in fantastic shape, and his class
really
showed on the day. He did not miss one turn - awesome as the yanks
would
say. My brother also rode really well. Together we knocked out
a 51.33 on a
far from ideal day, that was enough to take the top prize, fastest
on the
day, and the handicap prize, with a plus of 18 minutes something.
I felt
pretty good, and my power metre confirmed that, so things are
looking up. I
know I need to improve my top end, and am intending to do more
specific
training from now on.
That result and the boys' ride in Flanders made for a good weekend.
Boonen
once again showed that he is a class above everybody else, and
that unless
he falls off it is going to be pretty tough to beat him next weekend
in
Paris-Roubaix, but we will try, that's for sure.
OK, till next time.
Sean
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