Archive for the ‘road’ Category

Tour of Somerville 2010 Men Pro 1 Results

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Tour of Somerville 2010 Men Pro 1 Results

VeloNews.com – Collegiate riders chosen for Nature Valley All-Stars team

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

VeloNews.com – Collegiate riders chosen for Nature Valley All-Stars team.

Jen Purcell stayed with us this week in Trexlertown, PA for the Somerville race weekend.  Super talented rider and we think she’ll really excel at this race.  Good luck Jen!

Six collegiate women cyclists are headed to the Nature Valley Grand Prix next month to race in the pro race for the Fiber One Collegiate Women’s All-Stars team.

The women were chosen based on their performance at the collegiate national championships in Wisconsin this month. Collegiate women who were not already on a pro team were eligible for selection based on their performance in the Omnium at collegiate nationals.

The team:

  • Jennifer Purcell, Midwestern State University
  • Elle Anderson, Dartmouth College
  • Rita Klofta, DePauw University
  • Flora Duffy, University of Colorado-Boulder
  • Leia Tyrrell, Oregon State University
  • Kimberley Turner, Seattle Pacific University

Turner said qualifying for the team was a goal at collegiate nationals.

“As a full-time student, it’s definitely hard to balance academics and training,” Turner said, “but it’s amazing to see all the hard work paying off. I am so excited to have the opportunity to race with some of the top women in North America.”

Several alumni of the Nature Valley collegiate all-star team are racing for professional cycling teams, including: Erica Allar and Carla Swart (Team Vera Bradley); Devon Haskell and Amanda Miller (Team TIBCO/To the Top); and Kristin McGrath and Sinead Miller (Peanut Butter & Co-Twenty-12).

Team members receive free entry into the Nature Valley Grand Prix plus host housing, a support staff, an operating budget, clothing and a travel stipend.



Read more: http://velonews.competitor.com/2010/05/news/collegiate-riders-chosen-for-nature-valley-all-stars-team_119381#ixzz0pcEJur00

Breaking out the carbon wheels… « eightplustwo.com

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Breaking out the carbon wheels… « eightplustwo.com.

Well it was back to Worlds last night. I picked up my carbon wheels from Gabe on Wed evening and had been debating all day yesterday whether or not to use them last night. You know the rule; you get one ride on them at a training ride/race to break them in. I got home and decided why not – I plan on racing them Sun so better to get a ride in on them. I switched out the brake pads, threw a cassette on, and put them on.

The Ridley looks so boss with them on:

Blue stickers add 10watts each.

I did a short warm-up on the way over to the crit, left a little later than normal on account of getting the wheels set-up. I ran into Bill and Gui just as I got to the parking lot. Bill did a quick adjustment on my shifting…cause I’m horrible at it…and got it pretty dialed in.

Read more at eightplustwo.com…

Gear Test | Indoor Bicycle Trainers – The New York Times > Fashion & Style > Slide Show > Slide 1 of 6

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Gear Test | Indoor Bicycle Trainers – The New York Times > Fashion & Style > Slide Show > Slide 1 of 6.

Caroline testing trainers for the NY Times.

Our CRCA/Echappe Equipment team manager Caroline Gaynor just reviewed some trainers for the NY Times.  Check out the article and check out the team page here.

World Cycling Industry Group News | LinkedIn

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

World Cycling Industry Group News | LinkedIn.

Shimano Launches 11-Speed Internal Hub Gear

NUNSPEET, the Netherlands – Shimano is currently on Tour in Europe meeting their OE customers for the new product presentation (NPP). Among the 2011 products, the component maker announced the next step in internal hub gear technology. One of the remarkable new components is the Alfine 11-speed internal hub gear.

The new 11-speed internally geared hub technology is part of the Alfine group positioned for sport use. This hub gear will offer three more gears, at a lighter weight than the current 8-speed version. Upgrading this group will further encourage the use of internal hub gear bicycles in the sports market.

Besides more gears and smaller steps in between the gears, the new Alfine SG-S700 offers also a wider gear ratio of 409%. The 8-speed version has a gear ratio of 306%. According to Shimano this internal gear hub has less rolling resistance

The new Alfine Rapidfire Plus shifters SL-S700, available in silver feature the same technologies and operate in the same way as Shimano’s high-end MTB shifters. The new hub as well as the shifters can be used in combination with the current Alfine components and will be available by September this year.


Travel Picks: Top 10 bicycle-friendly cities – Reuters -

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Travel Picks: Top 10 bicycle-friendly cities – Reuters -.

With fuel costs soaring and environmental conservation in vogue, the bicycle is making a comeback in many cities, becoming a major part of urban transportation plans.

Men’s website AskMen.com (http://www.askmen.com) has come up with a list of the world’s top most bicycle-friendly cities. Reuters has not endorsed this list:

1. Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Amsterdam’s comes top when it comes to bicycle-friendly cities and nearly 40% of all commutes in Amsterdam are done by bicycle.Public bikes are available to rent and plans to construct a massive bike parking structure at the city’s main train station are underway.

2. Copenhagen, Denmark

About 32 percent of Copenhagen residents are biking to work on a regular basis. The city’s pro-bike culture allows you to rent a public bike for free for just a deposit.

3. Bogota, Colombia

While government programs for bike riding aren’t as robust as those in Europe or America, Bogota has a demographic advantage that makes it a bicycle-friendly city — only 13 percent of residents own cars, which makes bicycles a necessity. In fact, once a week, the city closes over 70 miles of streets to vehicle traffic in favour of bicycle riders, joggers, skaters and others.

4. Curitiba, Brazil

Bicycle integration is at the core of the well-planned Curitiba. The city has been pushing cycling as the go-to mode of transportation for more than 40 years and the result has been the ubiquity of bike lanes. A vibrant bike-oriented activist community exists to promote bicycle riding as an alternative to auto congestion.

5. Montreal, Canada

Two years ago, Montreal embarked on a $134 million plan to revamp the city’s bike trails and create a more bicycle-friendly atmosphere. The plan included incorporating bicycle-friendly lock points into standard parking meters. The city currently boasts 2,400 miles of trails with plans to expand. Montreal also has the first urban bike-share infrastructure in North America, the Bixi program.

6. Portland, Oregon, United States

Portland has created bicycle paths that connect the urban neighborhoods so a rider can bypass auto commuting altogether. The city also offers low-cost commuter bicycles to the city’s less wealthy residents which come complete with a helmet, lock, pump, maps, and rain gear. With over 260 miles of trails and paths, Portland achieves a commuter rate of nearly 9 percent.

7. Basel, Switzerland

Basel features street lanes specifically geared toward bicycle riders and include left-hand turn lanes that are unique to riders. Basel also supports a robust network of bike-rental programs that allow tourists and residents alike to ride.

8. Barcelona, Spain

Among the now-standard bike lanes, signals and maps that are ubiquitous in major European cities, Barcelona also has created a green ring that runs the perimeter of the urban core. This bike path is peppered with 100 different bike stations as part of Barcelona’s bike-sharing program, allowing riders to rent and drop off at different locations.

9. Beijing, China

As in most developing countries, the car is on the rise, but biking is still the best way to get around Beijing as car traffic is so slow and congested. Air quality has been a major issue with the promotion of bicycle riding as a prominent policy push.

10. Trondheim, Norway

One of the biggest drawbacks to riding a bicycle has to be pedalling uphill so Trondheim has come up with a novel solution to riding uphill — bicycle lifts that act like ski tows and allow the rider to glide up a hill without having to pedal.

Saxo Bank will not continue 2010 sponsorship

Friday, January 8th, 2010

From Test Rider:

The Danish internet based banking company, Saxo Bank has announced they will pull out of sponsoring Bjarne Riis Pro Tour squad one year earlier than the initial contract period.

On Friday Saxo Banks CEO Seier Christensen said the relationship had been “fantastic” for the general branding of the company but “had not been optimal to reach the bank’s narrow target group.”

This news falls on the heals of another announcement that the failure to replace IT Factory as a supporting sponsor would force the team to run a slightly reduced schedule in 2010. In addition the team has seen an exodus of some key players, Alexandr Kolobnev, Lars Bak, Kurt-Asle Arvesen and Karsten Kroon.

With the teams amazing track record of success and an entire year to search, securing a new title sponsor would seem almost a formality, but the failure to replace IT factory late in 2009 foreshadows some doubt.

In the Danish paper, Jyllands-Posten, Bjarne Riis said, “I am not worried, I think there’s a little too much focus our on finances and who we have lost; I do not think there is any reason to be concerned.”

Although Saxo Bank DS Kim Anderson told the same paper, “It is clear that we can not go and get quite as many victories,”

Despite the reduced schedule and departing talent the teams focus on the Classic and Tour de France are unchanged. If Andy Schleck is to become a Tour champion 2010 would be very good year to do it.

Trek Madone 6 Series (Shimano Ultegra 6700) Review – BikeRadar

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Trek Madone 6 Series (Shimano Ultegra 6700) Review – BikeRadar.

Our MetLife team bikes for 2010.  Check out the awesomeness coming past you in black and white:

Trek’s latest Madone addresses some of the criticisms hurled at the previous version – namely that while it was a superb handler, very comfortable and reasonably rigid, it wasn’t quite stiff enough for hardcore racing duties, especially under bigger and stronger riders or in particularly violent events like criteriums.

(In the UK, the Madone 6 Series is only available with Shimano’s top-end Dura-Ace groupset, with prices starting at £3,099.99)

The 2010 bike is edgier, more eager in its motions and lighter, but loses out to its predecessor in terms of smoothness, liveliness and character. Left with the choice between old Madone and new, it’s hard to decide. Conveniently, though, none of us actually has to make that decision.

Trek are retaining the previous version as the 5 Series, so feel free to pick your poison – they’re equally tasty but with different flavours to suit your palette. Unless you have to have more brand cachet or something more unique, it’s hard to go wrong with either one. There’s a reason why these things are so popular and it’s not just because a certain Mr Armstrong rides one.

Ride & handling: The Madone has pumped iron and hardened up

Far and away, the biggest improvement on the road with the new Madone 6 Series can be felt in the front triangle, especially when out of the saddle and really wrenching the bars. Compared to Madones past, a greater percentage of your upper body efforts are translated into useful forward motion and there’s now a more direct and connected feel between the front and rear ends.

Handling precision expectedly benefits from the reduced out-of-plane twisting, too. There’s less wandering off-line during those same intense bursts and it’s also a touch easier to adjust your line during especially hard and fast corners. The effects are less obvious when just cruising along but even casual riders are still apt to notice that the head tube is now more rigidly attached to the seat tube.

The non-driveside chain stay's trick pocket readily accepts trek's duotrap wireless speed and cadence sensor for a neat and integrated appearance: the non-driveside chain stay's trick pocket readily accepts trek's duotrap wireless speed and cadence sensor for a neat and integrated appearance

Furthermore, Trek have thankfully carried over the classic do-everything Madone geometry, which is still among the best in the industry for its overall versatility and impeccable high-speed manners – there’s no nervousness even while rocketing down Colorado’s majestic Peak to Peak highway at 80km/h (50mph). Though not quite as quick to initiate a turn as some, it settles in nicely and carves an arc with such fluidity and grace that it’s hard not to attack winding alpine descents and slingshot out the other side with a silly grin plastered on your face.

As is seemingly always the case with a new-and-improved frame, drivetrain rigidity creeps up as well but here the additional reinforcement isn’t quite as obvious – better than before, yes, but not in as dramatic a fashion as up front. Given that the old version was already pretty good in this realm we’re not about to complain though. Ultimate stiffness devotees will still find some of the usual suspects higher up on the totem pole but the gap is definitely narrowing – quickly.

That extra stiffness comes at a price, however, as some of the buttery smoothness and springy liveliness we’ve come to love about the previous Madone’s ride quality has hardened up some in spite of Trek’s assertion of a 10 percent improvement in that arena – but critically, without introducing any harshness. The still-excellent but firmer ride ably mutes road buzz like before but now ‘communicates’ more to the rider, bigger jolts aren’t as well tempered, and the general feel is a little more wooden.

Overall, the new bike has become more of a pure race machine with a sharper, quicker and edgier personality but it’s also a little less comfortable over the long haul as a result.

Frame: Lighter and cleaner looking, too

Even with the stiffer carbon chassis, Trek’s engineers have managed to cleave off an appreciable amount of weight from the new Madone to the tune of about 150g.  Actual weight of our bare 52cm test frame was 948g (without seat mast cap) and the matching fork just barely tipped the 300g mark.

The bottom bracket is a full 90mm wide (22mm wider than standard), allowing for a fatter down tube and more widely spaced chainstays.  bearings press directly into the shell with no separate cups required: the bottom bracket is a full 90mm wide (22mm wider than standard), allowing for a fatter down tube and more widely spaced chainstays.  bearings press directly into the shell with no separate cups required

Before you write the frame off as being comparatively heavy relative to current superbikes, though, keep in mind that the high level of integration eliminates a number of redundant parts so the system weight is much more competitive (yes, Cannondale, you were right all along).

Even with a rather modest Shimano Ultegra 6700 build kit with an aluminium Bontrager cockpit and Bontrager Race X Lite alloy clinchers, our complete tester was still just 6.79lb (15lb) without pedals – hardly a boat anchor.

Several key features carry over from the previous Madone. Bearings press directly into the 90mm-wide all-carbon bottom bracket shell, the seatmast cap is a feathery carbon fibre bit, and the 1 1/8in-to-1 1/2in tapered headset bearings drop right in, too. That ultra-wide bottom bracket still affords an enormous 80mm-wide down tube plus chainstays that are widely spaced compared to bikes with more conventional 68mm shells.

Tube shape changes are modest yet comprehensive with few, if any, surfaces left untouched. The down tube now adopts a more polygonal trapezoid profile, the seat tube is heavily ovalised – and now slightly offset to the non-driveside – the top tube is wider and now straight from end-to-end, and the chainstays are bigger in diameter and even more asymmetrical than before. The arcing seatstays are now straight, too, and the no-cut seatmast is now round instead of last year’s more aero profile.

The new Madone 6 Series features more integration in the form of the internal cable routing and trick wireless speed/cadence sensor pocket inside the non-driveside chainstay. Unlike most internally routed setups, Trek have gained the cleaner appearance and weather protection but admirably retained external routing’s characteristically low friction: the derailleur cable paths are almost exactly identical to conventional external routing – with no additional internal hoses or guides – and the rear brake cable takes a straight shot inside the top tube.

Cable routing is internal for a clean appearance and protection from the elements but the actual cable paths are almost exactly identical to traditional down tube routing for minimal friction: cable routing is internal for a clean appearance and protection from the elements but the actual cable paths are almost exactly identical to traditional down tube routing for minimal friction

Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 fans will note that the frame entry/exit points are sized for the group’s electrical connectors and there’s even a dedicated – and very clean looking – add-on battery mount. Mechanics will invariably find that the new routing still takes more time to set up than external layouts but as far as internal configurations go, this one is very well done.

Equipment: Customisable build

We built our test chassis up with a complete Shimano Ultegra 6700 group (which we’ve reviewed separately so we won’t go into details here) and an assortment of workhorse bits from Trek’s component arm Bontrager. Familiar pieces include the excellent forged aluminium Race X Lite stem, comfy and versatile Race Lite VR bar, new multiple-width inForm RXL saddle, and revamped Race X Lite alloy clincher wheels – all of which did their job quietly and competently with little fanfare.

Potential buyers should note, however, that the new Madone 6 Series is fully customisable with no additional charge through Trek’s Project One model. In addition to the usual component group, drivetrain ratios and cockpit variables, you can also now choose from one of five eye-catching stock paint schemes, any Bontrager wheelset (and 10 decal colors), and even housing, brake hood and bar tape colour.

More expensive ‘Signature Series’ paint treatments are available, too, though our in-your-face Kawasaki green option suited us just fine. Moreover, the available size range is impressive with two distinct fits (‘Pro’ with a shorter head tube and ‘Performance/WSD’ with a taller head tube) for 15 total possibilities.

NOTE: The bike tested is a US model. In the UK, the Madone 6 Series is only available with Shimano’s top-end Dura-Ace groupset. Prices start at £3,099.99.

The new ultegra crankset is a near-copy of dura-ace with similarly superb outer chainring stiffness and shifting precision.: the new ultegra crankset is a near-copy of dura-ace with similarly superb outer chainring stiffness and shifting precision.

road race organiser vs. marshall

Friday, November 13th, 2009

YouTube - road race organiser vs. marshall .

French Launch Doping Investigation of Tour Teams – NYTimes.com

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

French Launch Doping Investigation of Tour Teams – NYTimes.com.

While I appreciate what Lance has done for the sport (and myself – had it not been for Lance I never would have known about competitive cycling), his performance at the Tour was pretty astonishing.  After looking at guys like Basso and Floyd, who had to take years off for doping, yet kept training, we see Armstrong flying again.  We know he wasn’t training at all up until a year ago (he did the marathon, but that was a relatively short period).  I will be sorely disappointed if Lance and Co are found guilty of anything suspicious, though I can say that I know many who will love to see the giant fall.

What do you guys think?  Is Lance guilty of suspicious activities during the 09 Tour?  Or has he done this training and eaten his Wheaties?