2013 Cycling Thread

Bos takes Criterium International sprint

Theo Bos beat Nacer Bouhanni to win the opening stage of the Criterium International.
The Blanco sprinter prevailed at the end of the 89.5km opening stage around Porto-Vecchio.
Yukiya Arashiro (Europcar), Jérémy Roy (FDJ), Romain Hardy (Cofidis), Arnaud Gérard (Bretagne-Séché Environnement) and Antoine Lavieu (Lampre) were involved in the break of the stage.
But Argos-Shimano and Team FDJ reeled back the escapees inside the final 10km to set up the gallop to the line with
The two-day French stage race which has been won by the likes of Stephen Roche, Laurent Fignon, Miguel Indurain, Abraham Olano and Cadel Evans continues with this afternoon's 7km time trial.
 
Defiant Evans confident he can rekindle former glory

Cadel Evans may seem to be past his prime after a mediocre season last year but the Australian still believes he can win another Tour de France despite Team Sky's domination.
Evans, the first Australian to win the Tour in 2011, could not repeat the feat in 2012 when he finished seventh overall behind BMC team mate and U.S. prospect Tejay van Garderen, who took fifth place.
Sky's Bradley Wiggins took the title but Evans is at pains to point out that his flop was mainly down to illness.
"There is some short-term memory from the media, I had a virus last year and I still was seventh in the Tour de France," the 36-year-old told Reuters at the Criterium International in Corsica.
"Of course on paper Tejay was better than me but people seem to forget what I have done on the Tour de France in the six years preceding 2012."
Evans, who also finished runner-up in 2007 and 2008, is determined to stay number one at BMC and have another tilt at a Tour triumph.
"If I'm not sick and everything goes according to plan, yes (I will be team leader). Like I said there seems to be a short-term memory thing in the media, I did actually win the Tour once before," he said.
"That does sort of prove that I can do it."
So far this season, Evans has taken third place in the Tour of Oman behind Sky's Chris Froome and Spaniard Alberto Contador but he was never in contention at Tirreno-Adriatico, finishing 22nd and almost 10 minutes adrift of Italian Vincenzo Nibali.
"This year, it has been a long build-up after a year being sick and ill and so on, and having a break and recovering from that, he said.
"I have to take each day as it comes and I have to be cautious with my progression and training throughout the year.
"Like last year I did not perform well in Tirreno but I came here (to Corsica) and surprised myself," he said referring to his overall win in 2012's two-day Criterium International.
Evans is well-known as a gritty rider who rarely gives up.
"I had a virus last year and it changes everything at this point compared to 2011," he explained, preferring to compare 2013 to 2011.
"I haven't won any races yet (this year) so in that regard I'm behind but it's a slow and steady progress towards the Tour."
On the Tour, which will start in Corsica on June 29 and will suit pure climbers, Evans is confident he and his team can compete with Sky, whose domination was almost total at times last year and has continued in the first few months of 2013.
"They seem to be very, very well prepared for the early part of the season with two whole teams of strong climbers and in the mountains at least they can dictate their own terms," said Evans.
Sky will go to the Tour looking to retain their title, either through Britain's Froome or compatriot Wiggins, who has though made the Giro d'Italia his main goal this season.
Both will be helped by a small army of pure climbers such as Colombians Rigoberto Uran and Sergio Henao or talented all-rounders such as Australian Richie Porte, the Paris-Nice champion.
"Normally, putting guys at such a high level in the early season means you're going to pay for it later in the year, that would be the normal case - time will tell in that regard," said Evans.
"For now they are going to be hard to beat, they're the guys to beat.
"Going towards the Tour it seems that if Sky are going to ride like in 2012, the more guys you have in the mountains the better you're going to be."
 
Gerrans sprints to Catalunya stage win

Simon Gerrans made a late surge to win the penultimate stage of the Tour of Catalunya.
The Orica-GreenEdge rider beat Gianni Meersman, winner of the first two stages, by a bike's length at the end of 179km sixth stage from Almacelles to Valls.
Australian Gerrans, winner of the 2012 Milan–San Remo, was only fifth inside the final 100m but produced a devastating burst on the slight uphill finish to record his second win of the year.
Ireland's Daniel Martin retains his overall lead going into the final stage. He is 17 seconds ahead of Joaquim Rodriguez with Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins fourth overall, 54 seconds behind, ahead of a 122km finale that features eight laps of a circuit featuring a climb to Montjuic.
Garmin-Sharp's Martin added three seconds to his GC advantage by winning the intermediate sprint after 30km.
A break then formed and Sylwester Smyd (Movistar), Egor Silin (Astana), Mikel Astarloza (Euskaltel), Alberto Losada (Katusha), Simone Stortoni (Lampre), Jesús Herrada (Movistar), Edmonson (Sky), Chris Sorensen (Saxo) and Daniel Navarro (Cofidis) crossed the category one climb of Alt de Prades ahead.
They had a 1:30 lead with 50km to go but were caught inside the final 8km, shortly after the descent of the category two Alt de Lilla to set up the bunch gallop.
Although there were a few time gaps at the finish with Wiggins losing 15 seconds to the top two on GC.
 
Malori wins Coppi e Bartali ITT

Lampre-Merida's Adriano Malori won the time trial at the Coppi e Bartali.
Malori, second to Dan Martin in the Tirreno-Adriatico ITT, completed the 14.3km circuit around Crevalcore in 16:14.
That put the former Italian time trial champion 14 seconds quicker than Anton Vorobyev (Katusha) with Moreno Moser (Cannondale) third after a time of 16:32.
Malori's team-mate Diego Ulissi finished sixth in 16:53 to extend his lead on GC, going into Sunday's final stage.
He leads stage three winner Damiano Cunego by 1:35 ahead of the route from Monticelli Terme to Fiorano Modenese.
 
Porte wins Criterium International ITT

Team Sky's Richie Porte won the stage two time trial at the Criterium International.
The Tasmanian posted a time of nine minutes and 10 seconds in the 7km stage against the clock around Porto-Vecchio.
Manuele Boaro (Saxo-Tinkoff) and Tejay van Garderen (BMC) were a second further back with Porte's British team-mate Chris Froome fourth, a further second back.
The course was the same as last year when Cadel Evans beat Michael Rogers by a fraction of a second but the 2011 Tour de France champion and defending champion Evans could only post a time of 9:56 this year.
Porte will hold the overall lead going into Sunday's final stage which ends with a 14km climb of the Col de L’Ospedale. But the Paris-Nice champion will be heavily challenged with a cluster of top riders within striking distance.
"It was quite a technical route this afternoon, and not my sort of a course," said Porte after the win.
"But I've done a lot of work on my time trial position, and that's definitely paid dividends.
"We're in a good position with me in the lead and Froomey sitting just a few seconds back. It's going to be quite tight tomorrow because there's a lot of good riders close to us.
"We came in with Froomey as our leader and he's a great friend, so if he's got good legs tomorrow and I don't then I'll be more than happy to ride for him. Obviously, I'd like to finish the job off if I can, but as long as Team Sky win tomorrow it'll be a great day and we'll all be happy.
"Right now I just want to enjoy the moment, and the fact that I have one more lion to add to the collection (laughs). I'm really happy on this team and in a really good place.
"There won't be much celebrating tonight because we're all focused on tomorrow. We've got a great team here to defend and that's what we'll aim to do."
 
Boonen quits Gent-Wevelgem after crash

Belgium's former world champion Tom Boonen crashed during the Gent-Wevelgem classic race on Sunday, one week before he was due to defend his title in the Tour of Flanders.
Boonen hit the deck with some 65 kilometres left and looked to be in some pain. He got back on his bike but a few minutes later quit the race which was won in impressive fashion by Slovak Peter Sagan.
Boonen had hoped to retain his Gent-Wevelgem, Tour of Flanders and Paris-Roubaix titles but his early season has been disrupted after surgery on an infected elbow in January.
Another Tour of Flanders favourite, Swiss Fabian Cancellara, quit at the feed zone, possibly to stay fresh for next weekend.
Sagan, who finished second in Milan-San Remo and the GP E3, attacked a group of breakaway riders with four kilometres left and was never caught.
The race was slashed by 45 km because of snow in the vicinity of Gent.
 
Stage success for Caruso as Ulissi wins Coppi e Bartali

Damiano Caruso won the final stage as Diego Ulissi took the overall in the 28th Settimana Internazionale Coppi e Bartali.
The Cannondale rider won the 120km stage in Fiorano Modenese.
He was part of a 10-man escape group along with Simone Ponzi (Astana), Sergei Chernetski (Katusha), Marco Coledan (Bardiani-CSF), Diego Rosa (Androni-Venezuela), Carlos Quintero (Colombia) Alessandro Mazzi (Utensilnord Ora24.eu), Simon Pavlin (Adria Mobil) and Boris Shpilevsky (Lokosphinx) that formed early in the stage.
They built up a maximum lead of 4:40 before Caruso and Mazzi attacked on the first ascent of the Montecchio. Then Caruso went alone on the second time up the climb and came home 13 seconds clear.
Ulissi finished one minute 35 seconds ahead of Lampre-Merida team-mate Damiano Cunego on GC.
 
Sensational Sagan wins Gent-Wevelgem

The prolific Peter Sagan won the 75th edition of the Belgian classic Gent-Wevelgem.
The Slovakian added the World Tour event to his already illustrious CV that includes six Grand Tour stage wins and the green jersey at the Tour de France at the tender age of 23.
The Cannondale rider attacked out of an 11-man escape group with 3km remaining of the weather-shortened 183km race.
Slovenian Borut Bozic (Astana) and Greg Van Avermaet (BMC) followed Sagan over the line.
There was disappointment for Tom Boonen whose bid to become the only four-time winner of the race ended with a crash while Fabian Cancellara, who was looking to add the second leg of the Flemish cobblestone quadruple after winning Friday's E3 Harelbeke, also abandoned.
And Mark Cavendish's quest to add the race to a one-day Classic palmarès that only includes the 2009 Milan–San Remo was foiled after he failed to make the decisive break.
Things looked promising for the Omega Pharma-Quick Step duo of Boonen and Cavendish as they, and Sagan, were part of a 25-man lead group that formed almost immediately from the start at the coastal town of Gistel after 45km was taken off the route due to snow in the area around the traditional start in Deinze.
Freezing crosswinds caused consternation in a hectic opening hour that saw an average speed of 53km/h but eventually the lead group was caught by 28 chasers.
The peloton regrouped midway through the race only for Juan Antonio Flecha to ******. He was joined by Assan Bazayev (Astana) and Matthieu Ladagnous (FDJ) and they opened up a two minute advantage over the first three of the nine climbs on the parcours.
Boonen crashed after riding on the kerb on the approach to the pivotal Kemmelberg climb before Heinrich Haussler attacked ahead of the second ascent of the Baneberg, the seventh of the nine 'hellingen'.
Sagan was able to bridge the gap to Haussler, the Slovak able to make splits that the likes of Cavendish and Andre Greipel - who lead the peloton over the line in 11th - cannot and a 13-man lead group formed.
Stijn Vandenbergh (OPQS), Sagan's team-mate Maciej Bodnar, Andrey Amador (Movistar), Yaroslav Popovch (Radiosack) and Jens Debusschere (Lotto) were also in the escape and they worked well to build up a 50 second lead.
Bazayev was dropped from the lead group on the second ascent of the Kemmelberg and Cavendish was left frustrated by a lack of team-mates unable to form a coherent chase.
Debusschere then had a mechanical issue to see the lead group down to 11 and the peloton made a steady impression on the flat 42km run to the line after the Monteberg.
Bodnar was dropped from the front group with 5km to go to leave Sagan isolated without a team-mate and with the bunch within 30 seconds, the Slovak made his move.
After finishing second in this race last year and also runner-up in Milan–San Remo and E3 Harelbeke this term, the Terminator would not be denied as he held a 16 second lead going under the Flamme Rouge.
He even had time to do a wheelie as he crossed the line, 28 seconds clear of Bozic and best home rider Van Avermaet, to extend his lead at the top of the World Tour rankings.
Haussler, Flecha, Ladagnous, Eisel, Vandenbergh, Popovych and Amador completed the top 10 with Greipel leading the main bunch over the line, 14 seconds later.
 
Martin wins Tour of Catalunya as De Gendt takes final stage

After two runners-up spots and a fourth place, Ireland's Daniel Martin finally netted the overall classification of the Tour of Catalunya, Spain's second biggest bike race.
The 26-year-old Garmin-Sharp rider finished safely in 42nd spot in the main pack on Sunday after a fast seventh stage featuring eight hilly circuits of the Montjuic park in Barcelona.
"Winning here in Catalunya is very special, it's my home" Martin, who has lived in the Catalan town of Girona for the last five years, told reporters.
"This is my most special victory ever and I think I'm going stronger than ever before. The key to the win has been (Giro 2012 winner and team mate) Ryder Hesjedal for his hard work in the break to Port Aine and in fact the whole team has done a lot of great work on each stage."
Second overall was Spain's Joaquim Rodríguez, 17 seconds behind. Italian Michele Scarponi was third and 2012 Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins fifth.
The final stage was won by Belgium's Thomas De Gendt ahead of Spain's David Lopez and Croatian Robert Kiserlovski after a four-man break sheered away with four laps remaining.
After early race leader Alejandro Valverde of Spain crashed out on stage three, Martin seized the top spot overall after he concluded a day long 150 kilometre break of 25 riders on Thursday's stage four with a spectacular lone victory at Port Aine in the Pyrenees.
Just 10 seconds ahead of Rodriguez overall, Martin then widened his gap to almost twice that by taking bonus seconds on offer in mid-race sprints on stages five and six.
The Spaniard made dangerous attacks on stage seven's multiple ascents of Montjuic, but Martin stayed glued to Rodríguez's back wheel to claim his biggest stage race win since the Tour of Poland in 2010.
Among his rivals, Martin highlighted Rodriguez as the most tenacious.
"We've had to defend ourselves from a lot of different attacks. Right up until the last lap we had to suffer and Rodriguez made several really difficult moves," the Irishman said.
Asked what his next objective will be, Martin joked: "To go out this night to celebrate it all. No seriously, it's the Ardennes Classics (in Belgium in April) where I want to make the most of my good form."

GENERAL CLASSIFICATION

1. Daniel Martin (Ireland / Garmin) 29:02:25"

2. Joaquim Rodriguez (Spain / Katusha) +17"

3. Michele Scarponi (Italy / Lampre) +34"

4. Nairo Quintana (Colombia / Movistar) +45"

5. Bradley Wiggins (Britain / Team Sky) +54"

6. Robert Gesink (Netherlands / Blanco) +1:07"

7. Przemyslaw Niemiec (Poland / Lampre) +1:18"

8. Thibaut Pinot (France / FDJ) +1:26"

9. Jurgen Van den Broeck (Belgium / Lotto) +1:28"

10. Tom Danielson (U.S. / Garmin) +1:41"
 
Froome claims stage three to top Criterium International

Britain's Chris Froome claimed the third and final stage of the Criterium International to snatch the overall win from Team Sky stable-mate Richie Porte.
The Tour de France runner-up attacked with 5.5 kilometres remaining on the climb to the Col de l'Ospedale, leaving team mate and then race leader Porte trailing in his ****.
Sky, who have been criticised for their defensive tactics, did not just sit and wait this time as Froome and Porte attacked one after another on the 14.1-km ascent.
Paris-Nice champion Porte, who had snatched the yellow jersey after his victory in Saturday's 7-km time trial, counter attacked and managed to take second place on the day, 30 seconds behind Froome. Dutch Bauke Mollema was third, 45 seconds off the pace.
Porte finished second overall, 32 seconds adrift of Froome.
"It was more or less what we had planned," Froome said.
"The idea was to control the race all day. It was a huge task and we really put the pressure on the others. I did not plan to ****** in the climb but there was a gap between Richie and me and I felt I could go, so I went.
"This race helped me see how I could trust my team with the Tour de France in mind."
Froome has made the Tour his main objective after playing second fiddle to Bradley Wiggins in 2012.
He has shown that he has what it takes to lead the British outfit by winning the Tour of Oman as well as finishing second in the Tirreno-Adriatico.
Porte, who won Saturday's individual time trial to hold the race lead, said he had made an agreement with his team mate before the stage.
"The deal between Chris and I this morning was 'if you've got good legs, you go and if I have good legs, I'm the one who goes'.
"Then when we were in the final climb there was a small gap and nobody seemed to react so he was in the situation in which he had to continue."
Last year's winner Cadel Evans was dropped on the final climb with 10 km remaining and finished 14:56 off the pace.
American Tejay van Garderen, his BMC team mate, also struggled to respond to Team Sky's pace and was third overall, 54 seconds adrift.
Luxembourg's Andy Schleck, who has been in terrible form since crashing out of the Criterium du Dauphine last June, was part of an early break but was reined in by the peloton before the final ascent and crossed the line 21:57 behind Froome.
The peloton returns to Corsica in three months for the start of the Tour de France on June 29 from Porto Vecchio.
 
Tour de France - Blooming Talansky nursed towards first Tour

Andrew Talansky is a changed man in a changed sport and that is enough for the young American to aim for the top 10 of the Tour de France in his first appearance in the race.
The 24-year-old prospect finished seventh overall in last year's Vuelta without a team designed around him, and he has been showing he is a ***** to be reckoned with in the early season stage races.
A cocky youngster has been modelled into a focused rider by his Garmin-Sharp team's old guard ready to be part of the new generation gradually taking command of cycling as the sport deals with the remnants of the Lance Armstrong era.
"If you ask David Millar about two years ago, I guarantee he's going to tell you what I was like and I know what I was like," Talansky told Reuters in an interview.
"I showed up at the team, I was arguably one of the best Under-23 riders in the world and I came to the team thinking that I was really good, that I was going to show up and really just be good immediately.
"I learned that wasn't true but I still acted like it was true at times. I was always trying to prove something and guys like David and Christian (Vande Velde) have helped me learn to stay calm at races.
"They've helped me grow not just as a bike racer but as a person. They've helped me grow towards a leadership role where I can be somebody my team mates are excited to race with and help," he said after finishing sixth overall at the Criterium International two-day race.
Talansky also had a team working for him at Paris-Nice, where he finished second overall earlier this month having worn the yellow jersey following a stage win.
One of several U.S. prospects who have grown up watching Armstrong cheat his way to Tour de France glory, Talansky believes it is now safe to be enthusiastic about cycling.
"The first thing I point out to people who want to say 'why can we believe in cycling now?' is that now you have guys like (Frenchman) Thibaut Pinot who on his first year on the Tour is top 10," Talansky explained.
Pinot, 22, a member of the FDJ team at the forefront of the MPCC (Movement for Credible Cycling), won a mountain stage and took 10th place overall in his first appearance on the Tour last year.
"You also have (American) Tejay (van Garderen) getting fifth and best young rider in his second Tour," said Talansky, who will be a protected rider within Garmin-Sharp in this year's Tour.
"It should give a lot of hope to young riders," he said. "You never saw that before, you never saw somebody coming in their first, second or even third year and be top 10 in grand Tours.
"It gives me a lot of confidence. You can get to the Tour and race to the top 10 of the Tour, there is no reason why you can't now."
Talansky, a 1.75 metres tall climber with good time-trialing skills, will continue his season at the April 1-6 Tour of the Basque country, where he will aim for a top five overall finish before setting his sights on the Tour de Romandie from April 23-28.
He will then take part in the Criterium du Dauphine (June 2-9) as a final warm-up for the Tour, which starts from Porto Vecchio, Corsica, on June 29.
"We will go to the Tour with (Giro champion) Ryder (Hesjedal) having been top 10 of the Tour, Christian (Vande Velde) having been top five on the Tour and David (Millar) has done countless Tours and won stages," said Talansky.
"He's been there for Christian, for Bradley (Wiggins when the Briton was at Garmin)... I just trust them, I know they'll guide me though my first Tour."
Faith is the key for Talansky, who has earned the trust of his team.
"I'm showing that when they send a team to support me, I can deliver a good result," he said.
 
Sagan wins thrilling Driedaagse opener

Peter Sagan won an incredible sprint finish decided by a photo on the line in the opening stage of the Driedaagse De Panne from Middelkerke to Zottegem.
The Slovakian rider had gone on the ****** in the final 20km, leaving the peloton trailing far behind but taking with him nine other riders in a breakaway.
It was Cannondale's Sagan who claimed the victory his break deserved, however, with Sagan edging Arnaud Demare (FDJ) and Alexander Kristoff (Katusha) in a breathtaking sprint to the line which saw a just a few centimetres between the first three riders.
There was some suggestion that Sagan had veered across Demare, but race officials deemed that his move across the road had been just part of his normal sprinting.
The main peloton - which included Mark Cavendish and Tom Boonen - eventually finished 19 seconds behind Sagan.
The winner claimed that he hadn't even intended to win - just to avoid getting into difficulties.
"Today’s win is more by chance than an objective,” said Sagan. “The strategy for the stage was to let my team-mates find a good break and make their own race.
"My personal goal was to be in the front and avoid risks. The group didn’t let any riders go so in the final I tried to escape and see what could happen.
"When the advantage was enough, I gave the responsibility to lead to the other riders.
"Of course I like to win and if there’s the chance to take one, I’ll do it. The
"final sprint? The last bend turned to the left and it’s normal to move a little to the right. I didn’t change my direction on purpose to close off Demare.
“The stage was also good as I look ahead to the Tour of Flanders. We’ll see tomorrow how the stage will be. I hope for an easy day to don’t want to spend too much energy.
"I still feel good and my intention is to round off my form to be at the top on Sunday. The only thing I can’t train is luck!"

Results

1 Peter Sagan (Svk) Cannondale Pro Cycling 5:00:27

2 Arnaud Demare (Fra) FDJ

3 Alexander Kristoff (Nor) Katusha

4 Sylvain Chavanel (Fra) Omega Pharma-Quick Step

5 Oscar Gatto (Ita) Vini Fantini-Selle Italia

6 Niki Terpstra (Ned) Omega Pharma-Quick Step

7 Maxime Vantomme (Bel) Crelan-Euphony

8 Jerome ****** (Fra) Team Europcar

9 Davide Cimolai (Ita) Lampre-Merida

10 Johan Le Bon (Fra) FDJ
 
Cavendish grabs victory in De Panne

Mark Cavendish won stage two of the Three Days of De Panne-Koksijde.
The British star prevailed in a bunch sprint at the end of a 204.2km stage from Oudenaarde to Koksijde.
The Omega Pharma-QuickStep train hit the front over five kilometres from home but a strong headwind saw their numbers dwindle, prompting the Manx missile go from a long way out.
The 27-year-old former world champion had the raw strength to hold off the fast finishing Elia Viviani (Cannondale) and Francesco Chicchi (Vini Fantini) for his seventh stage win of the year.
Mattia Pozzo (Vini Fantini-Selle Italia), Gregor Gazvoda (Champion System), Tim Mertens (Topsport Vlaanderen-Baloise), Kevin Claeys (Crelan-Euphony) and Niko Eeckhout (An Post-Chainreaction) were involved in the break of the day.
They went away early and had built a maximum lead of 8:25 after 86km.
But a split in the peloton behind caused the pace to soar and with 60km remaining, the escapees had been caught and the race was all back together.
Alessandro Bazzana (UnitedHealthcare), Dmitriy Gruzdev (Astana) and Koen Barbe (Crelan-Euphony) then launched a counter-****** and gained a lead of over two minutes but the stage concluded with a short circuit and the trio were reeled back inside the final 10 kilometres to set up the inevitable gallop to the line.
And Arnaud Demare (FDJ) took fourth place in the sprint to claim the overall race lead from Peter Sagan. The insatiable Slovak finally paying the price of his recent exertions, which included victory in Sunday's Gent-Wevelgem and Tuesday's opening stage, by being dropped in the final stages.
The four-stage Europe Tour event concludes on Thursday with a 112.6km road stage in the morning before the GC will be decided by an individual time trial of 14.75km in the afternoon.
 
Kristoff sprints to stage three win in De Panne

Alexander Kristoff sprinted to victory on stage 3a of the Driedaagse De Panne in De Panne to edge out Sacha Modolo.
Katusha rider Kristoff was first across the line at the end of the 112.6km stage, with Modolo (Bardiani Valvole-CSF Inox) second and Elia Viviani (Cannondale Pro Cycling) third.
Kristoff's victory brought with it enough bonus seconds to give him the overall lead in the race, with previous leader Arnaud Demare (FDJ) four second back and Mark Cavendish (Omega Pharma QuickStep) third a further five seconds behind.
A five-rider breakaway had built up a 40 second lead with 25km to go, but FDJ led the effort to reel them in with 4km left and set up the sprinters to finish off the stage.
“I know the last corner was really important and my teammates did an amazing job putting me in the right position. I then managed to keep the other guys off,” Kristoff said at the finish.
The event concludes on Thursday afternoon with a 14.75km time trial in De Panne.
 
Chavanel bosses De Panne time trial, seals overall title

Sylvain Chavanel won the time trial of the Driedaagse De Panne to seal the title for the second straight year.
The French time trial champion was irrepressible, 19 seconds clear of the rest of the field over the 14.75km distance.
It was a case of history repeating itself - just as in 2012 Alexander Kristoff had won the morning's penultimate stage, a short sprint, and wore the leader's jersey going into the TT.
But his 10-second lead was not nearly enough to keep Chavanel at bay - although he was able to keep second place overall, 21 seconds behind. Niki Terpstra, Chavanel's Omega Pharma-QuickStep team-mate, bagged third.
"I like to race, it doesn't matter which race," Chavanel said, already looking ahead to his next race, the Ronde van Vlaanderen.
"I like this race a lot, however. Now I have 48 hours to recover after this double victory and be ready for the race on Sunday. Last year I had a few little problems with my health during Paris-Nice. This year everything went good and normal so far. I'm in good condition. My objective is to maintain this form until Paris-Roubaix.
"As for the Ronde, I'm not one of the favourites. Sagan is strong and also Cancellara, but we have a strong, united team. We are experienced in these kind of races and also with great specialists such as Tom and Niki. The strategy will also be important. Maybe there are also a few underdogs for the race on Sunday that can surprise everyone."
Katusha rider Kristoff had been first across the line at the end of the 112.6km stage, with Modolo (Bardiani Valvole-CSF Inox) second and Elia Viviani (Cannondale Pro Cycling) third.
A five-rider breakaway had built up a 40 second lead with 25km to go, but FDJ led the effort to reel them in with 4km left and set up the sprinters to finish off the stage.
“I know the last corner was really important and my team-mates did an amazing job putting me in the right position. I then managed to keep the other guys off,” Kristoff said at the finish.
"I am very happy – all the best sprinters are here, so it is a huge satisfaction."
 
German officials welcome Schumacher doping admission

Rider Stefan Schumacher's admission that he had used ****** substances was welcomed by the German Olympic Sports Confederation (DOSB) and national cycling federation (BDR) on Friday.
Schumacher, who failed two **** tests in 2008, said in an interview with German magazine Der Spiegel that doping was part of his training just like eating a "plate of pasta".
"The admission ... comes too late. He could have spared himself and his sport some things if he had told the truth earlier," DOSB general director Michael Vesper and BDR chief Rudolf Scharping said in a joint statement.
"But his admission comes early enough to draw consequences for the fight against doping. This is why we welcome that Schumacher is ready to process the past. We expect that through his statements the people behind it will be caught and punished."
Schumacher tested positive for the *****-boosting **** EPO-CERA at the 2008 Tour de France and the Beijing Olympic Games but had always previously denied cheating. He was given a two-year ban which was later reduced.
"I have taken EPO, growth hormone and corticosteroids," the 31-year-old, who has ridden with the Christina Watches team since 2012, told Der Spiegel.
"Doping was like the plates of pasta after training," added Schumacher as he explained that he started to cheat in his early 20s.
"I went along with the system. It does not make me proud but it's the way it was."
Schumacher is one of several riders to have admitted doping since disgraced American Lance Armstrong was last year ****** for life and later confessed to cheating his way to seven Tour de France victories from 1999-2005.
The German rode with the Gerolsteiner team from 2006. He won the Amstel Gold one-day classic a year later and two stages of the 2008 Tour de France.
Two of Schumacher's team mates, Italian Davide Rebellin and Austrian Bernhard Kohl, also failed tests for EPO-CERA in 2008.
 
Malaguti triumphs in Route Adelie

Alessandro Malaguti held off the challenge of Yauheni Hutarovich and Justin Jules to win the Route Adelie.
The 34th staging of the race was won by an Androni Giocattoli rider for the second year in succession, Malaguti following on from last year’s champion Roberto Ferrari.
The 197.8km race concluded with a sprint, albeit in a whittled down peloton. With 13km to go there were four remaining riders of an eight-man breakaway left, 15 seconds ahead, with a chasing pack of 26 in the main bunch.
The breakaway had made their move about 40km out, with Europcar's Pierre Rolland particularly attacking. He was joined by Anthony Geslin, Fabrice Jeandesboz, Florian Vachon, Marco Frapporti, Julien Antomarchi and Malaguti, but none of them could hold off the group behind, leading to a showdown for the line.
The 25-year-old Malaguti proved he had something left in the tank, scoring his first victory for his new team.
 
Evans adds Giro to schedule as he seeks form

Cadel Evans will compete in the Giro d'Italia in May, adding a second Grand Tour to his racing schedule for the 2013 season.
Evans will compete in the Giro for the first time since 2010 when he held the Maglia Rosa for a day.
"I could stick with my normal programme that I do every year or try this different approach – which may be too much, but certainly enough," he said.
"I have always wanted to race again at the Giro, but after I raced it in 2010, I didn't get to the Tour fresh. I'm not saying that the Giro and the Tour together is too much. The illness and injury I had in 2010 made it impossible to judge."
The 36-year-old may seem to be past his prime after a mediocre season last year but the Australian still believes he can win another Tour de France despite Team Sky's domination.
Evans, the first Australian to win the Tour in 2011, could not repeat the feat in 2012 when he finished seventh overall behind BMC team mate and US prospect Tejay van Garderen, who took fifth place.
Evans, who also finished runner-up in 2007 and 2008, is determined to stay number one at BMC and have another tilt at a Tour triumph.
He said. "My situation is a bit strange because there are not many riders who perform better with two Grand Tours than one in their legs. In my situation, with the racing I missed last year, I need and I feel comfortable with this programme."
His objective for the Giro d'Italia, which runs from May 4-26, is simple: "To get back to my best," he said.
"Since the virus I had last year, I have had to change my approach to my work. It's difficult when you struggle to get to your best even though you are doing everything correctly. I am not coming to the Giro just for training. I don't know where I will be with my form, but for sure, I will give it everything."
This year Evans has taken third place in the Tour of Oman behind Sky's Chris Froome and Spaniard Alberto Contador but he was never in contention at Tirreno-Adriatico, finishing 22nd and almost 10 minutes adrift of Italian Vincenzo Nibali, and was outside the top 50 in his defence of the Criterium International last weekend.
 
Selig claims Volta Limburg

Katusha's Rudiger Selig won the Volta Limburg Classic in the Netherlands.
The young German claimed a comfortable victory in a small group sprint at the end of the 40th edition of the Hell of the Mergelland ahead of Sonny Colbrelli (Bardiani - CSF) and Paul Martens (Blanco)
An 18-man escape group formed on the 196 kilometre route that began in Eijsden, a suburb of Maastricht, but they were caught with 76km remaining as the riders crossed many of the same climbs that feature in the Amstel Gold Race.
Bram Tankink (Blanco), Maurits Lammertink (Vacansoleil-DCM), Marco Canola (Bardiani-CSF), Timofey Kritskiy (Katusha) and Luc Hagenaars (Metec-TKH) then formed a new front group.
And after crossing the last of the 22 hellingen on the testing parcours with 25km remaining, Tankink and Lammertink had gone ahead and led by 25 seconds.
But the lead duo were caught with 8km remaining, mainly due to the hard work of Selig's Katusha team-mates, and the 24-year-old prevailed in the sprint to claim only his second professional victory after his maiden success in the 2011 Binche-Tournai-Binche as a Leopard-Trek stagiaire.
 
Spilak solos to GP Miguel Indurain success

Simon Spilak won the Grand Prix Miguel Indurain after a solo ******.
The Slovenian came home 92 seconds ahead of Igor Anton as Katusha enjoyed a UCI Europe Tour double on Saturday following Rudiger Selig's victory in the Volta Limburg Classic.
Spilak was part of an early 12-man escape group which led by over eight minutes after 67km of the race which loops through the city of Estella-Lizarra, in the Spanish region of Navarre.
The race includes several challenging climbs and inside the final 70km, Spilak along with Benat Intxausti (Movistar) and Rohan Dennis (Garmin-Sharp) went ahead.
Spilak then attacked inside the final 40km and came home comfortably clear for his first victory since winning the 2010 Tour of Romandie.
Anton was a distant second ahead of Peter Stetina and Alejandro Valverde.
 
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