Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Pure Surly





This came yesterday, and I can't tell you how excited I am about it. A deal I couldn't refuse has landed me a bike I don't know how I've lived without.




She's a Surly Steamroller, run as a fixie. 48x17, Sugoi cranks and Surly flip-flop rear hub.


Simple, beautiful.


I have a feeling this will soon be my favorite bike.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Contador Takes the Overall


All kudos to Alberto Contador, the 24-year-old Spaniard in his first year with Discovery Channel.


At the end of one of the most tumultuous Tours ever, he held on through the mountains and turned in the time trial of his life to defend the yellow jersey he got when Rasmussen was expelled.


That's not to lessen the achievement. Rasmussen was cheating, or so we think, and so did not belong in the lead, should not have changed the race the way he did. Contador earned this jersey through far superior climbing ability and enough tenacity the rest of the time to stay at the front.


Levi took 3rd along with a win in the final time trial. That's a great performance for him--his best ever. And Cadel Evans was the first Aussie on the final podium. This was also the performance of his life. He'll be back.


I'm torn between feeling positive that the cheaters are being caught and being bitter about the cheaters still cheating. I'll look to the future for young riders like Contador to make the difference. Change has to start somewhere and some time. Why not here and now?

Friday, July 27, 2007

Yellow the Hard Way


Not exactly the manner in which Alberto Contador would have hoped to ride into the yellow jersey, what with the bootings and ignominious departures and all, but still. As they said in VeloNews, Someone's gotta win this thing.


Casar won today's stage, narrowly beating out Axel Merckx, and Contador retains yellow.


The times are tight going into tomorrow's time trial--tight enough for Discovery to worry about a stellar performance by Cadel Evans derailing their trip to the top step in Paris. But Contador's been strong. We'll see.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Good News from the Dirt

Let's leave France and head back to the US for some good news from the East Coast.



MTB Nationals were held this past weekend, and from a muddy, rocky, root-strewn course at Mt. Snow in Vermont, Adam Craig and Mary McConneloug emerged victorious to wear the stars and stripes for the coming year.




These are two deserving racers, both wonderfully talented in the tough and technical stuff, both having stuck it out on both NORBAs and World Cups for years now.




Congrats to them both. May all their drug tests come up negative.


The New and Terrible Vino Show

Today's headline:

Vinokourov Tests Positive; Astana Withdraws from Tour

Read it at VeloNews, folks.

This one floored me. I mean, they all hit hard, but some definitely harder than others. Was anyone really surprised that Ullrich was implicated in a doping scandal? Not so much. But Vino? I mean, this is a warrior, a soon-to-be hero, a man who had the full support and sponsorship of his native Kazakhstan behind him.

And in doping, he's shat all over that support, likely forcing the withdrawal of the new 10-year contract signed by Astana for support, and also likely totally screwing the future of many a young Kazakh rider.

Rasmussen, I wouldn't be surprised. If only this were Rasmussen. But it's Vino, and I don't know that this race can recover from this blow.

Just terrible.

Monday, July 23, 2007

The Contador and Vino Show


What a weekend for the Tour.


Saturday's ITT saw a shakeup of the standings, with the biggest surprise being Michael Rasmussen's not giving away tons of time to the other GC guys. Vino won it in powerful fashion.


Sunday was the first day in the Pyrenees, and it did not disappoint. The main guys were whittled away one by one, the worst of it going to Valverde, until it was down to a small group that included Contador, Rasmussen, Evans, Leipheimer, Sastre, and Colombian sensation Mauricio Soler.


Eventually, through a series of accelerations, Contador and Rasmussen were left to go it alone, and neither could pull away from the other. In the end, Contador sprinted Rasmussen for the win, but alleged cheat and all around a-hole Rasmussen (hey, I said alleged) would not be dropped.


Vino lost 28 minutes on the day.


Today, Monday, saw another epic battle in the Pyrenees. This time Vino got into a break and drove it all day to get the stage win. An amazing recovery, that, on par with Floyd's of last year. (Hmm...)


And again, Contador and Rasmussen were left to duke it out, and the skeletal Dane again held on to finish behind but with the young Spaniard.


Now it's down to tomorrow for Contador to get away. He needs to drop Rasmussen and put time into him before the mountain stages end. One last chance. For the record, I'm hoping Rasmussen blows up and loses big time. We'll see.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Oh Yeah, the Race



Tom Boonen won the sprint into Castres today.

No further news on the Rasmussen ordeal at this time. No response as of yet from the Rasmussen camp. No word from Tour brass. Tomorrow should be an interesting day, and I'm not just talking about the individual time trial.

But tomorrow's ITT does promise to be a hell of a day of bike racing.

Add to that the Twilight Criterium here in Boise tomorrow night and a cooler full of beer and I'm about as happy as I can be.

Oh, for F*!k's Sake

Today's lead story on VeloNews will fuel the fires of cynicism around this sport.

"VeloNews Exclusive: Ex-cyclist levels doping charges at Rasmussen"

The second graf says it all:

"Whitney Richards, 31, a one-time Colorado-based cross-country racer, told VeloNews that in March of 2002, Rasmussen asked him to transport a box containing cycling shoes. But the shoebox, according to Richards, actually contained bags of an American-made human blood substitute. None of the information Richards provided VeloNews involves allegations of current doping."

My first response: What a dick. Not "How terrible for cycling" or "The Tour didn't need this now" or even "Yup, must be true that all pro cyclists dope." No, what a dick to ask someone to transport your illegal shit across international lines into a country like Italy where doping is not just against the rules, it's against the law, a jailable offense.

Of course, nothing has been proven yet. Who knows if it even can be. I've not heard Rasmussen's side of the story, and he could very well have a perfectly reasonable explanation for this. It certainly came at an interesting time, and whenever I see David Walsh's name I grow a bit skeptical.

But somehow, I feel I could believe it.

If this is true, even if he's not doping now, what a total tool this guy is. If this is true, not only does he deserve to be punished for the doping offense, he deserves to be called out for setting up a fellow cyclist like that.

Where does this leave the Tour leader? I don't know. There is a statute of limitations on stuff like this, and I believe they'll need to show he's doping now to do anything about it now. But who knows. In the current climate, proof of current evildoing is not necessarily necessary to boot someone from a race.

Stay tuned. This'll get interesting.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Catching Up to the Tour


Man, it's been a busy week. And not just for me.


The biggest bike race in the world has been blown open, to smithereens even, and as the dust has settled, faithful viewers have realized that they're witnessing one of the most exciting and dramatic Tours in years.


I'm a Lance fan, let me just say that. But it's been an absolute thrill to tune in to a Tour stage and not know--I mean really not know--how the day would go. Who would attack, who would control, who would be able to follow if a dangerous rider jumped out of the group.


GC threats are many and changing. And that's the joy of it. The guy you're rooting for may actually have a chance to pull off something huge.


A recap, for those of you who need it:


  • Tom Boonen won stage 6, but Fabian Cancellara held the lead.

  • Linus Gerdemann won stage 7 and took the yellow jersey. This was a heroic effort by the 24-year-old German.

  • Michael Rasmussen went on one of his signature fliers and won stage 8, taking the yellow jersey in the process. He intends to keep it.

  • Last night, Juan Soler, a 24-year-old Tour rookie from Colombia with the South African Barloworld team, won the final Alps stage in convincing fashion, soloing away up the Galibier and holding off all the GC guys to the line. Very impressive.

  • This morning, in his last Tour, Frenchman Cedric Vasseur outsprinted his break-away companions including Jens Voigt to win the stage. Rasmussen hangs on to yellow.


The standings are enough to bring a glint to your eye:

Overall, after Stage 10

1. Michael Rasmussen (Dk), RABOBANK, 49:23:48

2. Alejandro Valverde (Sp), CAISSE D'EPARGNE, 2:35

3. Iban Mayo (Sp), SAUNIER DUVAL - PRODIR, 2:39

4. Cadel Evans (Aus), PREDICTOR - LOTTO, 2:41

5. Alberto Contador (Sp), DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM, 3:08

6. Christophe Moreau (F), AG2R PREVOYANCE, 3:18

7. Carlos Sastre (Sp), TEAM CSC, 3:39

8. Andréas Kloden (G), ASTANA, 3:50

9. Levi Leipheimer (USA), DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM, 3:53

10. Kim Kirchen (Lux), T-MOBILE TEAM, 5:09

18. Denis Menchov (Rus), RABOBANK, 7:10

21. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kz), ASTANA, 8:05

22. Yaroslav Popovych (Ukr), DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM, 8:16

23. Vladimir Karpets (Rus), CAISSE D'EPARGNE, 8:51

25. Christopher Horner (USA), PREDICTOR - LOTTO, 9:11


Our man Chris Horner is having the race of his life, finishing toward the front consistently and putting in great efforts in the Tour's highest mountains. Dude's ripe for a stage victory.


Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Cancellara = Bad Ass


The typical script for a loooong, dull sprinters' stage was today turned on its ear by the yellow-jersey holder, Swiss rider Fabian Cancellara, proving that dude is tough as nails.


All was going per form--early break, slow pace in the peloton, sprinter teams picking up speed late in the stage to reel in the break at the last moments and deliver their big men to the line--when within the final kilometer, Cancellara timed his jump perfectly, springing out of the field and redlining it to the finish. He overtook the break with a mere 700 meters to go, and none of the sprinters, in frantic hot pursuit, could catch the Swiss time-trial specialist.


This was a brilliant ride, exciting tactics that paid off big. Now CSC and their man Cancellara get the yellow for at least another day. They've said they wouldn't kill themselves to defend it, but after today's effort, you have to wonder if they've changed their minds.

Monday, July 09, 2007

A Bumpy Start


After squashing all comers in the prologue, held this year in London, Swiss powerhouse Fabian Cancellara went to the tarmac in stage 2 in a pile-up involving 20-some riders. He crossed the line, not losing any time due to the crash coming at the end of the stage, but he didn't look good.

And yesterday, after kissing pavement in a smaller pile-up, Aussie a-hole but remarkably strong and fast mini-man Robbie McEwen passed EVERYONE to take the win in stage 1.

There's been lots of action early on as the typical nerviness infects the opening of the Tour. The big GC guns are all sitting tight, waiting for the early show to end so that they can get down to the business of working each other over.

Levi will come around, as will Vino. I still say Valverde's the one to watch in this Tour.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Levi's Ready


Levi Leipheimer will start this year's Tour de France as the undisputed team leader of Discovery Channel. That's a hell of a jump up for the man who has co-led the Gerolsteiner and Rabobank teams in the last few Tours.


Not only does he have one of the most all-around powerful teams at his disposal, but he's also got big gun distractions and antagonizers in the form of Hincapie, Popovich, and Gusev, not to mention Spanish sensation Alberto Contador.


Disco will go into this year's race with a different game plan than in years past, but the new plan could suit their talent quite well.


So Levi gets my support on the GC this year, though he is by no means the only one. I'm excited for this race as, in the absence of Lance, Floyd, Ivan Jan, Paco, and other typically strong finishers, the GC is as wide open as it's been in recent memory. I look for big things from Vino, of course, but I'm still not convinced he can hold on throughout the whole tour. I just don't know if he's a smart enough rider.


Valverede could make some excitement on the road, as could Zabriskie. And it doesn't end there. Pereiro looks strong, as does Moreau. And so on.


The whole thing starts this weekend. I just hope I can find a place to watch.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Summer's Here


Me and Cathy spent the last week in Austin, visiting friends and attending the wedding of John and Kimberly. We had a fantastic time. The flooding afflicting that part of the country avoided Austin proper during our stay, keeping its fury confined to perimeter spots like Marble Falls (16" in 1 day!!!).


So, we left unseasonably pleasant Austin weather to return to unseasonable dismal Boise weather. Yesterday saw us pass 100F easily, today we'll see 105F, and Saturday should bring temps of about 107F. That's ridiculous. It's terrible.


So, yes, summer is here in all its grass-baking fire-spawning glory. But hey, it's a dry heat, right?