Showing posts with label Geraint Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geraint Thomas. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

Cummings Win Stage in Pais Vasco

Steve Cummings
Steve Cummings
Steve Cummings took a tightly bunched leading pack by surprise with a powerful sprint in the last kilometre to win the third stage of the Vuelta al País Vasco.

The British rider finished in 5hrs 1min 57sec and lies 39th place overall. The 35-year-old, riding for the Dimension Data team, timed his final surge perfectly, outsprinting Simon Gerrans of Australia and Italy’s Fabio Fellinem, who were second and third respectively. 

Both were given the same time as Cummings.

Spain’s Mikel Landa, riding for Team Sky, finished 37th in the same time but retained the leader’s jersey on the mountainous 193km ride from Vitoria to Lesaka that contained three category two climbs. The Dutchman Wilco Kelderman (Team LottoNl-Jumbo) lies second overall, while Landa’s Sky team-mate Sergio Henao is third.

“I’m happy with the way the race is going so far,” said Landa, who acknowledged Cummings had caught him off-guard.

Landa’s compatriot Alberto Contador, riding for Tinkoff, is fifth after a 16th-place finish on stage three, while Movistar’s Nairo Quintana is eighth after placing 26th, one behind Astana’s Fabio Aru, the winner of last year’s Vuelta a España. The Italian is down in 15th going into Thursday’s stage – the fourth of six – which is a 165km ride from Lesaka to Orio.




Monday, 7 December 2015

Cavendish Starts Season Downunder


British cycling ace Mark Cavendish will start his season at next month’s Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road race. Event organisers have confirmed the 30-year-old sprinter will compete at the 31 January event, when he will make his debut with Team Dimension Data.

Cavendish is the third-most prolific Tour de France stage winner with 26 and he won the 2011 world road race championship. His last Australian race was the 2011 Tour Down Under.

He is the first big overseas rider to confirm he will start at next year’s Cadel Evans race and he joins Australian pair Simon Gerrans and Rohan Dennis as the headline names in the field.

He is also the second big overseas cycling name to announce he will race this summer in Australia, but not at the Tour Down Under. The Adelaide event is Australia’s only top-level WorldTour race.

Last month, two-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome announced he will compete at the February Herald Sun Tour in Victoria.

The confirmations of Froome and Cavendish are a massive boost for the profile of the Victorian events. It also continues a trend where big names accept lucrative contracts to race early in the season at non-WorldTour events.

World champion Peter Sagan, last year’s Tour de France winner Vincenzo Nibali and this year’s Tour runner-up Nairo Quintana will all compete next month at the Tour de San Luis in Argentina.

“We wanted cycling’s biggest names in Victoria and that’s exactly what we’ve got,” Victorian tourism minister John Eren said. “The top names belong in the state that does the big events best.

“We want the big sporting events in Victoria, because they mean jobs for locals and a stronger economy.”


Sunday, 27 September 2015

Kwiatkowski Joins Team Sky


Team Sky have named 2014 world road race champion Michal Kwiatkowski as their seventh and final signing for the new season.

The 25-year-old Pole will join the British squad from Etixx - Quick-Step on January 1.

Kwiatkowski is one of the most highly rated young talents in the sport, specialising in hilly one-day classics and week-long stage races.

As well as the claiming the rainbow jersey last year, he has also won the Amstel Gold Race, Strade Bianche and the Volta ao Algarve in his six-year professional career.

Kwiatkowski told teamsky.com: "Team Sky aim for the highest goals in cycling so I'm very happy that this move has become a reality.

"Sir Dave Brailsford believes in my ability, which gives me great confidence for next season, and I know that this team can help me raise my performance levels and win big races.

"The team's marginal gains philosophy really fits my approach to cycling and I have great respect for what this team has achieved in such a short time. I am excited and motivated to race for Team Sky next year."

Team Sky principal Sir Dave Brailsford said: "Michal has performed fantastically well over the past couple of years. We have been following Michal's career for a long time. We tried to sign him four years ago, we tried to sign him two years ago, so this time we weren't going to miss out.

"We would like to think that we could add value to his career and offer him an opportunity to develop with Team Sky in both his one-day racing and stage racing.

"He is a future talent and he can keep getting better. His progression is what we are interested in and being part of that development."

Team Sky have not revealed the length of contract Kwiatkowski has signed.

They previously announced the signatures of Alex Peters, Gianni Moscon, Michal Golas, Danny van Poppel, Benat Intxausti and Mikel Landa.


Thursday, 3 September 2015

Froome in Vuelta Trouble


Chris Froome’s hopes of winning the Vuelta a Espana are all but over after he sustained heavy losses on a brutally mountainous 11th stage won by breakaway rider Mikel Landa.

Froome (Team Sky) crashed early in the stage and was then dropped on the fourth of the day's six climbs, eventually crossing the line 7min 19sec behind Fabio Aru (Astana), who took the race lead by finishing second.

It leaves Froome 7min 30sec adrift of the red jersey and means he will almost certainly be unsuccessful in his bid to become only the third rider in history to complete the Tour de France-Vuelta a Espana double.

The 30-year-old Briton was limping heavily when he dismounted his bike at the end of the stage and was later taken to hospital for X-rays.

Aru, meanwhile, attacked twice on the final climb to Cortals d'Encamp to finish 1min 22sec down on team-mate Landa and, crucially, 1min 37sec ahead of previous race leader Tom Dumoulin (Giant-Alpecin). 

The result was enough to elevate him into the race leader's red jersey and open up gaps of 27 seconds over second-placed Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) and 30 seconds over Dumoulin, who is now third.

Froome was not the only big-name rider to suffer on one of the hardest grand tour stages ever devised, as Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) and Nairo Quintana (Movistar) lost 1min 42sec and 2min 57sec to Aru respectively.

Valverde is now 1min 52sec off the lead in sixth, while Quintana's chances of overall victory look remote after he fell to 3min 7sec down in ninth. Froome was relegated to 15th.

After the stage, Geraint Thomas (Team Sky), who stayed with Froome, toldEurosport: "He obviously had a heavy crash and he said his foot was quite bad. He said his legs were OK, but on that especial-category climb, the fourth climb, he started to suffer and when Astana really lit it up, he got dropped.

Froome was taken for X-rays after the stage

"I was about to get dropped myself anyway, so I sat up and waited for him. He seemed to come around on the last climb but we just had to keep going. He always keeps fighting and that's what we did. Not the ideal day.

"Froomey keeps fighting and he is still in the race, so he can go for stages or whatever. Obviously it's disappointing to be out of the GC now. Not a good day for Froomey."

Landa formed part of the day's 19-man breakaway but attacked at the foot of the final climb and never looked in danger of being denied a Vuelta win to go with the two stage victories he took at May's Giro d'Italia.

Back down the road, and with Froome out of the picture, all of the remaining race favourites started up the final climb together, but then Aru attacked with about 8.5km to go and only Rodriguez and Daniel Moreno (Katusha) could follow.

Aru dropped the pair with a second attack 2km later and continued to set a fierce pace as he looked to overhaul his 1min 13sec deficit to Dumoulin at the start of the day.

Dumoulin was initially dropped by a chase group containing all of the other race favourites, but he later caught back up to them and then even distanced both Valverde and Quintana as his remarkable climbing form at the Vuelta continued.

The race continues on Thursday with a 173km 12th stage from Escaldes-Engordany to Lleida, which should end in a sprint.

Stage 11 result
1 Mikel Landa (Esp) Astana, 4:34:54
2 Fabio Aru (Ita) Astana, +1:22
3 Ian Boswell (USA) Team Sky, +1:40
4 Daniel Moreno (Esp) Katusha, +1:57
5 Joaquim Rodriguez (Esp) Katusha, +1:59
6 Rafal Majka (Pol) Tinkoff-Saxo, +2:10
7 Mikel Nieve (Esp) Team Sky, +2:10
8 Esteban Chaves (Col) Orica-GreenEdge, +2:59
9 Tom Dumoulin (Ned) Giant-Alpecin, +2:59
10 Diego Rosa (Ita) Astana, +3:02

General classification
1 Fabio Aru (Ita) Astana, 43:12:19
2 Joaquim Rodriguez (Esp) Katusha, +27
3 Tom Dumoulin (Ned) Giant-Alpecin, +30
4 Rafal Majka (Pol) Tinkoff-Saxo, +1:28
5 Esteban Chaves (Col) Orica-GreenEdge, +1:29
6 Alejandro Valverde (Esp) Movistar, +1:52
7 Daniel Moreno (Esp) Katusha, +1:54
8 Mikel Nieve (Esp) Team Sky, +1:58
9 Nairo Quintana (Col) Movistar, +3:07
10 Louis Meintjes (RSA) MTN-Qhubeka, +4:15


Saturday, 18 April 2015

Sir Dave Hails Sir Bradley


Sir Dave Brailsford described Sir Bradley Wiggins as one of the best athletes in British sporting history after the 2012 Tour de France winner drew his Team Sky career to a close at Paris-Roubaix on Sunday.

Wiggins attacked twice in the one-day cobbled classic but could not make it into the seven-man group that contested the sprint finish and eventually finished 31 seconds behind winner John Degenkolb in 18th.

The 34-year-old will now leave the British squad to join up with his new team, WIGGINS, and begin preparing for riding on the track at next summer’s Olympic Games in Rio.

It ends a professional relationship with Brailsford stretching back to 1998, during which time Wiggins has won four Olympic gold medals and became the first British winner of the Tour de France win 2012.

"We have been through a lot together and he has done an awful lot for British cycling and the whole of sport," Brailsford said. "When you consider his versatility, he has got to be right up there with one of the best athletes that the country has ever produced."

Wiggins attacked out of an elite group of favourites 32km from the finish of Paris-Roubaix and briefly built up a healthy lead, but he was then joined by three other attackers and the breakaway subsequently fell apart.

Brailsford admitted that when Wiggins accelerated, he believed it had the potential to be a winning move.

He added: "If you take a step back, the guy has won the Tour and won the Olympics and done everything he can, and there he was with 30km to go attacking on his own, and you think, 'Jesus, he might ride away from everybody'.

"That takes some doing and he should hold his head up high. He gave it a good old crack, like he always does."

Brailsford will now look to take Team Sky forward without Wiggins and believes Luke Rowe, who finished eighth, is a potential Paris-Roubaix winner who is ready to fill Wiggins' shoes. However, he admitted losing his talismanic team leader was a sad moment.

"It's emotional," he said. "These things comes to an end and you try to think of a nice way to end a sporting career. Do you step out at the top or do you become a fading light and drift away? We thought long and hard about it and decided this was a good way of doing it. It feels like a nice way to end."

Of Rowe, he added: "He is a very exciting prospect for the future. He has run eighth here so why can’t he come back and win it in the future one day? I’m sure he has got the capability."