Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts

Monday, 5 September 2016

Contador Triggers Skyfall at Vuelta

La Vuelta
The Vuelta has this year, and not for the first time, surpassed the Tour de France for pure excitement. With Sunday’s stage a return to the old style cycling with the top riders battling it out mano-a-mano using their own intuition. Making the relatively short stage 119km stage o Sunday to Aramon Formigal in the Spanish Pyrenees the battle ground for those chasing this trophy in 2016. A breakaway at the start of the day triggered by Alberto Contador of Saxo-Tinkoff setting the pace for the day. The former champion anxious to make an impact on home soil after a bad fall early doors, and two similarly unlucky seasons at Le Tour. Keen to reverse a gap of three minutes separating him from the leaders of classification; Movistar’s Nairo Quintana and Chris Froome of Team Sky.

As the day unravelled Contador targeted an early downhill section and executed a plan to devastating effect testing the wherewithal of all those around him. A plan that also suited Quintana who on Saturday had tried – halfheartedly - it has to be said – to shake off the Froome powerhouse and extend his 54 second margin. Knowing the English cyclist is always keen to win a stage at a grand tour event and achieving that on Stage 11 at Pena Cabarga. But also beating Quintana in the process as both engaged in battle in the first weekend. A week later though Froome had dropped three minutes and thirty-seven seconds as the Contador - Quintana breakaway reshaped the general classification. With an unusual sight - it has to be said - of seeing Team Sky in such disarray. So no doubt there was much restless sleep into Monday morning when the true damage may look irreversible.

It was stage which left bizarrely left Froome isolated in a chasing group with only teammate David Lopez for company after his team were stuck in the peloton - tired from yesterday’s exertions perhaps. Any reduction in time loss made better thanks to Orica-Bike Exchange riders - who did him some favours - followed by an Astana trio and then BMC Racing. Without them Froome was marooned and helpless without the usual team Sky reinforcements surrounding him. Rarely ever seen so critical have they become to the Wiggins and Froome victories over the years in France during the summer. Chris Froome never without Richie Porte the year of his first win. Or last year with Geraint Thomas everywhere.

On the steep climb in Northern Navarra all the cyclists were exposed to the real physics of nature and the breakaway saw three of them still racing for the finish line together on the narrowest sections with a kilometre to go. Then as Contador got burned off, Quintana kept the pace to the top with Gianluca Brambilla of Etixx-Quick-Step in his slipstream fighting to grab the stage. An exhausted Contador fourth having consumed much energy driving the initial breakaway and knowing he would struggle for the last sector if there were a handful of riders still left in contention. A result though which leaves him in fourth, by seconds, and now within reach of a possible third place podium. A fight he must take on with Colombian Esteban Chabes. The red Jersey now out of reach for another year. But even a third place seemingly impossible a week ago with his injured legs after a fall.

Nairo Quintana looks back to his best, something which eluded him in France during July. His strength contrasting with a lost looking Froome who almost seemed human such was the exhaustion – and frustration – etched on his face. For that reason, the stage was a classic and the riders wearing their courage, instinct and heart on their sleeves. A segment which left little need for race directors and radio chats as the leaders fought the conditions and heat to the maximum. An excitement that Team Sky have strangled from many of the Tour de France stages many of which have become almost chess like. With race strategy run too much from the car seat rather than the bike saddle. Cyclists bombarded with instructions rather the old way where you raced as you felt and invented your own stage tactics with ore cunning. 

As the Tour at times is monotonous La Vuelta is the opposite and with Team Sky perhaps less focused the race has opened up/ With all the Spanish cyclists also desperate to win stages and catch the eye. Indeed, at different points on Sunday TV viewers saw the strength of Alejandro Valverde, energy of Dani Navarro, and diligence of Jonathan Castroviejo. All of which makes for a vastly more exciting stages and now made even more so by the result of Stage 15 in Northern Spain. Aided by stunning scenery and the abnormal heatwave which saw the riders battling 37C on Sunday. But few will be taking anything for granted going into the 158 km Stage 16 on Monday that heads down to the east coast for the week before arriving in Madrid.

Last Sunday Froome spoke to no media straight after the stage and will no doubt do his talking on the bike over the coming days. Perhaps after Tuesday’s rest day and ahead of the time trial as the Vuelta makes it way down from the mountains of Aragon and down to a flat stage finish on Monday, after a one point 3rd category climb – the long downhill descent to Vinaroz offering a chance for escapees to make their mark. All the leader’s intent on recovery from yesterday when some rest might be the order of the day. Contador and Quintana happy with their efforts having rearranged the leaderboard more favourably. With Quintana now in sight of a Vuelta title unless Team Sky can reverse matters

Team Sky principal Dave Brailsford also spoke with ITV Sport after the stage, explaining that Movistar and Tinkoff had played their cards to perfection and reaped the benefits.

"Sometimes you have to take your hat off to people and just say, 'well done,'" Brailsford added. "That was a great move and it paid off for Nairo and Alberto.

"We just have to sit down and look at it and keep on going. Sometimes in sport you take a punch in the face, turn around sit yourself down and say right, there six days of racing left, we're still in the same position as we were this morning and we'll just keep on going," added Brailsford.


La Vuelta - General Classification


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Monday, 5 October 2015

Kittel Takes Giant Quick Step


Marcel Kittel is joining Etixx-Quick Step for the 2016 and 2017 seasons after being released from his Giant-Alpecin contract.

“I want to thank the team for the faith they’ve put in me and that they will support me in this new chapter of my career,” the German sprinter said. “I am looking forward to the new challenges of Etixx-Quick Step, a team I consider to be one of the best in the world.

“I am also happy I have a few friends on this team already, including Tony Martin. Tony is one of my best friends in cycling. We rode together when we were younger and I can’t wait to do it again at the professional level.”

The 27-year-old Kittel has won eight stages of the Tour de France but missed most of this season because of a virus and was left out of the Tour, as well as the Vuelta a España and Germany’s world championship team.

“We are thrilled about the arrival of Marcel,” the Etixx-Quick Step team manager, Patrick Lefevere, said. “He has shown incredible pure speed which makes him one of the best sprinters in the history of the sport. As a team we will do our best to put him in the right condition, building a group of riders around him.”

Kittel’s move was made possible after another top sprinter, Mark Cavendish, left to join the African team MTN-Qhubeka who will be renamed Dimension Data next season.



Friday, 2 October 2015

Froome Blood to be Saved


Chris Froome’s blood and urine samples from the 2015 Tour de France along with those from the other top five finishers will be kept for 10 years in case retrospective analysis is required, cycling’s world governing body has announced.

The 30-year-old Kenya-born Briton’s performance in winning a second Tour title was subject to innuendo and allegation, all unsubstantiated.

The sport has a troubled history and the authorities are keen to guard against drug cheats if technology develops with the UCI, the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation (CADF) and French Anti-Doping Agency (AFLD) announcing on Friday that samples from the top five finishers at Grand Tours will be stored for a decade.

“The UCI, the CADF and the AFLD have agreed to keep the samples for potential retrospective analyses in the future,” a statement read.

“As for all Grands Tours, all the collected samples concerning the best five riders in the general classification will be kept for 10 years for potential retrospective analyses.”

A total of 656 anti-doping controls - 482 were blood tests and 174 urine tests - were carried out during the race, which began in Utrecht on 4 July and finished in Paris on 26 July, with Team Sky’s Froome in the race winner’s yellow jersey ahead of Colombia’s Nairo Quintana and Spain’s Alejandro Valverde.

The blood tests were analysed in relation to the biological passport, which may indicate use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Froome’s critics pointed to power data as evidence of malpractice, but he was tested repeatedly while in the race leader’s yellow jersey and targeted testing was in place. Froome and Team Sky have repeatedly and vehemently denied any wrongdoing.

The CADF director Dr Francesca Rossi said “the targeted control strategy was discussed daily taking into account the performance of riders and other data”.

Rossi added: “We strengthened our strategy of targeted controls thanks to the use of information provided by numerous sources and to the support of an intelligence coordinator.”

The UCI president Brian Cookson said: “We can be confident of the robustness of our programme.”

Katusha’s Italian rider Luca Paolini was expelled from the race after testing positive for cocaine, a recreational drug.


Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Stage 16 - Schleck Wins Climb


Frank Schleck dug deep to win a brutally mountainous 16th stage of the Vuelta a España on Monday while Joaquim Rodríguez leapfrogged Fabio Aru at the top of the overall standings.

However, it was arguably the Dutchman Tom Dumoulin, who is not recognised for his climbing prowess, who put in the most impressive performance on the third of three consecutive summit finishes as he again avoided losing too much time on his main rivals and is now the clear favourite.

Dumoulin (Giant-Alpecin) is just under two minutes behind Rodríguez in fourth heading into Tuesday’s rest day and is expected to surge into the lead after Wednesday’s time trial in Burgos, a discipline he excels in.

“That was much better than expected,” Dumoulin said. “I didn’t feel so good on the first [category] climb. It went really fast but I was never really in trouble and I thought, ‘Ah, we’ll give it a go on the last climb.’ I had really good legs. To lose [only] 28 seconds is really, really good. Still everything is open.”

Rodríguez (Katusha), who won Sunday’s 15th stage to close to within one second of Aru, finished almost nine minutes behind in ninth, trying desperately to put some distance between himself and Aru, who hung on desperately. Rodríguez finished two seconds ahead of Aru to claim the leader’s red jersey.

The Trek rider Schleck, whose impressive victory came 45 years after his father Johny won a Vuelta stage in Madrid, was part of a small group that broke away near the start of the 185km slog from Luarca to Ermita de Alba, which included seven punishing climbs and some eye-watering gradients.

By the time the 35-year-old reached the final ascent after nearly six hours in the saddle he had dropped all his rivals except Rodolfo Torres (Team Colombia) and he surged away to cross the line one minute and 10 seconds ahead of the Colombian.

“I was very nervous, Torres was tough,” said Schleck, who missed the Tour de France with a knee injury. “I didn’t really know much about Torres or what he could do.”

Poland’s Rafal Majka (Tinkoff-Saxo) is in third overall, just over one and half minutes behind Rodríguez and Aru. The three-week race ends on Sunday in central Madrid.


Monday, 7 July 2014

Alfredo Stefano di Stefano 1926 -2014


Alfredo Di Stéfano, probably the greatest player in Real Madrid’s history, has died at the age of 88.

The former Argentina, Colombia and Spain international suffered a heart attack in the street near Real Madrid’s Bernabéu stadium on Saturday – the day after his birthday – and had been in an induced coma in intensive care at Gregorio Marañon hospital in the centre of Madrid. 

Di Stéfano – who is Real Madrid’s honorary president – was attended to by emergency medical services before being transferred to hospital. The cardiac arrest lasted 18 minutes, according to the emergency services.

Di Stéfano has had several health scares in recent years and underwent a quadruple aorta-coronary bypass with a pacemaker implanted in December 2005 after suffering a myocardial infarction. After joining Real in 1953, he helped turn them into one of the world’s leading sides, winning five straight European Cups and scoring in each final between 1956 and 1960.

The Argentina-born forward also won eight Spanish league titles and was voted European player of the year in 1957 and 1959. 

He left Real in 1964 at the age of 38 having scored more than 300 goals across 11 seasons. Di Stéfano played at international level for three countries but never appeared at the World Cup.

He won six caps for Argentina and played four times for Colombia during a spell in that country’s league. However, his Colombia caps are not officially recognised by Fifa. Fifa said in 1954 he could not play for Spain but reversed that decision in 1957 after he gained citizenship and he went on to win 31 caps, scoring 23 goals.

#QEPD #RIP