Cafe Roubaix

Despre ciclismul de azi şi cel de altădată

Dan Pearson, guest of the week at Cafe Roubaix

Dan Pearson

Just 21-years-old, Dan Pearson is in his first full season of racing in Italy with Zalf Euromobil Fior, the country’s best amateur team, which he joined after previously riding for Zappi. Coming from Cardiff, his presence in the roster of a foreign team can seem a bit odd, but for the 2011 British Junior champion could turn out to be one of the best decisions he took in his career so far, considering Italy is known as a launchpad for many young cyclists to the pro ranks.

A strong climber, Pearson got to taste some really tough one-day and stage races, that have helped him learn the trade of things and also make significant improvements. This season, the cyclist supported by the Dave Rayner Fund netted a couple of impressive results, such as the third place he got in the Giro delle Pesche Nettarine – where he was Zalf’s best cyclist – the fifth place in the Giro della Valle D’Aosta, arguably the toughest U23 stage race of this season, and the victory he netted in the 65th Coppa Ardigo-Pessina Cremonese, a 140-km long race.

Recently, I got to talk with Dan Pearson – who is gearing up for his next appointments – and ask him a couple of questions about his first years in the sport, his life and results since moving to Italy and the targets he has for the remaining of the season.

– Dan, how did you end up in cycling?

My dad started taking me out mountain biking at the local mountain bike centre, Afan Argoed, when I was 15. Then, one season later, I began my first year racing on the road. I was 16 and it was mostly a case of hanging on for as long as possible.

– In 2011, you became British junior champion. Did that result gave you the confidence you needed?

It probably helped a lot but I’d already decided before that I wanted to pursue cycling as a career.

– I know that you were hoping to join a British Continental team, but it didn’t happen. Why was that?

I applied for the GB U23 Academy too, I knew I wanted to race abroad, but wasn’t sure how to get there. My final season as a junior didn’t go very well, I had some nasty crashes and illness at the wrong times. I found Zappi through a friend, he offered a very promising program, living and racing in Portugal and Italy with races in France and Belgium too.

– Looking behind, how important was this step for your development?

I had a great, but hard two years with Zappi. I learned a lot, it was vital for my development, and there always a lot of support and encouragement.

– Then you moved to Italy and began riding for Zalf.

Italy was my favourite place to live, I enjoy the racing and most of my results were from Italian races. It was an easy decision when I got offered a place at Zalf.

– You changed countries, but also cultures. What differences did you notice between training/racing in the UK and training/racing in Italy?

Training is better with long steady climbs for specific efforts, the weather is warmer and dryer too. There are more races with climbs, the races go uphill faster and there is more strength in depth. Past 26-years-old, if you have not turned pro, Italians stop racing, so the average age is much lower too.

– Are you satisfied with how things went so far for you since joining Zalf?

Yes, it’s been a great year so far. I am heavier and stronger on the flat and better at entering the break. I got up there in the general classification of the Giro della Valle d’Aosta, it’s such a beautiful, yet brutal race. It’s the hardest race I have ridden and my favourite.

– What was the toughest experience or moment encountered while racing in Italy?

I crashed out of a race two days before the Giro della Valle d’Aosta started, my wrist took a big hit and I dislocated a finger. It was ok going uphill, but the rest of the time was pretty uncomfortable, especially descending and bad sections of road.

– What’s next for you this year?

Plenty of hard hilly races in Italy for sure. Racing doesn’t finish until mid October. Also, I’m waiting to hear if I’ll get picked for the Tour de l’Avenir and Tour of Britain or not.

2015 Post-Tour de France Criteriums

Location First Second Third
Aalborg Patrick Clausen Mads Würtz Schmidt Daniel Foder
Aalborg Michael Valgren Alex Rasmussen Simon Dahl
Aalst Peter Sagan Chris Froome Preben Van Hecke
Acht van Chaam Robert Gesink Daniel Teklehaimanot Stef Clement
Antwerp Greg Van Avermaet Zdenek Stybar Sep Vanmarcke
Bavikhove Preben Van Hecke Alberto Contador Marcel Kittel
Boxmeer Wout Poels Robert Gesink Daniel Teklehaimanot
Camors Steven Tronet Julien Simon Warren Barguil
Castillon-la-Bataille Romain Bardet Chris Froome Alexandre Geniez
Dijon Pierre-Luc Perrichon Alexis Vuillermoz Thibaut Pinot
Emmen John Degenkolb Bauke Mollema Robert Gesink
Etten-Leur Chris Froome Alberto Contador Bauke Mollema
Hadsten Søren Kragh Andersen Patrick Clausen Jonas Aaen Jorgensen
Heerlen Simon Geschke Wout Poels Bram Tankink
Herentals Greg Van Avermaet Zdenek Stybar Nairo Quintana
Kolding Mads Würtz Schmidt Michael Valgren Mads Baadgaard Rahbek
Lisieux Warren Barguil Jeremy Roy Thomas Voeckler
Lommel Greg Van Avermaet Peter Sagan Kevin Hulsmans

 

Luxembourg Zdenek Stybar Bob Jungels Stephen Cummings
Maarheeze Lieuwe Westra Steven Kruijswijk Wout Poels
Maastricht Wout Poels Steven Kruijswijk Peter Weening
Marcoles Alexandre Geniez Chris Froome Romain Bardet
Mechelen Chris Froome Stephen Cummings Preben Van Hecke
Ninove Greg Van Avermaet Chris Froome Nairo Quintana
Oostvoorne Bauke Mollema Jos van Emden Roy Curvers
Roeselare Nairo Quintana Chris Froome Serge Pauwels
Roosendaal Nairo Quintana Bauke Mollema Wout Poels
Sint-Niklaas Chris Froome Geraint Thomas Preben Van Hecke
Steenwijk Bauke Mollema Albert Timmer Pieter Weening
Surhuisterveen Peter Sagan Robert Gesink Bauke Mollema
Thüngen André Greipel Nils Pollit Marcel Sieberg
Tiel Bauke Mollema Lars Boom Wilco Kelderman
Wateringen Niki Terpstra Dylan van Baarle Robert Gesink
Wilrijk Jurgen Roelandts Preben Van Hecke Sep Vanmarcke
Zevenbergen Steven Kruijswijk Wout Poels Mathieu van der Poel

Rider of the week

Saturday, August 1st, proved to be a memorable day in more ways than one for Adam Yates, who claimed his maiden World Tour victory in the 35th running of Clasica San Sebastian – Spain’s top one-day race – becoming the second youngest rider to win it. The 22-year-old, who is in his second pro year, was tipped for greatness for some time now, ever since finishing on the podium of the 2013 Tour de l’Avenir, a race in which few British riders have shined over the years. Coming at the start of the Classic less than a week after completing his debut Tour de France – where he got three top 10 placings – Yates was ranked among the contenders for the victory, but truth is not many were expecting him to fly on the Bordako Tortorra climb and take a solo win at the end.

That’s exactly what the Orice-GreenEdge rider has done: attacked on the ascent, built a small lead over his rivals and then increased the gap on the same descent he crashed last year, less than five kilometers before the finish. It was a day to remember not only due to his impressive performance, but also because of the confusion that ran in the closing kilometers, a consequence of the fact that there weren’t any live images from the road until the final minutes, when the riders had already crossed the last climb of the course.

This situation, as well as the noise of the crowd that prevented him from getting any info on the situation, led to Adam Yates arriving at the finish line without knowing he’s won, a thing which he found out from his soigneur. As soon as he realized what he has done, the young Brit began celebrating his biggest victory to date, one which confirmed once and for all his huge potential that recommends him at winning a Grand Tour in the following years, when he’s expected to be, alongside his twin brother Simon, the leader of maybe the finest generation of riders Britain has ever had.

2015/2016 Confirmed transfers

AG2R

In: François Bidard, Nico Denz, Cyril Gautier, Jesse Sergent.

Out: Carlos Betancur, Lloyd Mondory (fired after testing positive), Rinaldo Nocentini.

Androni Giocattoli-Sidermec

In: Egan Bernal, Giorgio Cecchinel, Luca Pacioni, Daniele Ratto, Mirko Selvaggi, Rodolfo Torres, Davide Vigano.

Out: Davide Appollonio (fired after testing positive), John Ebsen, Oscar Gatto, Carlos Galviz, František Padous, Emanuele Sella (retired), Simone Stortoni (retired), Fabio Taborre (fired after testing positive), Gianfranco Zilioli, Andrea Zordan.

Astana

In: Eros Capecchi, Dias Omirzakov, Gatis Smukulis, Artyom Zakharov.

Out: Borut Bozic, Alexandr Dyachenko (retired), Mikel Landa, Rein Taaramäe.

Bardiani

In: Giulio Ciccone, Mirco Maestri, Lorenzo Rota, Simone Velasco.

Out: Enrico Battaglin, Andrea Manfredi, Andrea Piechiele (retired).

BMC

In: Tom Bohli, Floris Gerts, Richie Porte, Loïc Vliegen.

Out: Cadel Evans (retired), Campbell Flakemore (retired), Klaas Lodewyck (retired), Peter Stetina.

Bora-Argon 18

In: Silvio Herklotz, Gregor Mühlberger, Lukas Pöstlberger, Rüdiger Selig.

Out: Cristiano Salerno (retired), Daniel Schorn, Björn Thurau.

Caja Rural

In: Alberto Gallego, Domingos Gonçalves, Jonathan Lastra, Jaime Roson, Diego Rubio.

Out: Omar Fraile, Fernando Grijalba, Francesco Lasca, Heiner Parra, Amets Txurruka.

Cannondale-Garmin

In: Patrick Bevin, Matti Breschel, Simon Clarke, Lawson Craddock, Phil Gaimon, Ryan Mullen, Pierre Rolland, Toms Skujiņš, Rigoberto Uran, Wouter Wippert, Michael Woods.

Out: Janier Acevedo, Tom Danielson (fired after testing positive), Lasse Norman Hansen, Nathan Haas, Ryder Hesjedal, Ted King (retired), Daniel Martin, Matej Mohoric.

CCC Sprandi Polokowice

In: Alan Banaszek, Victor De La Parte, Felix Großschartner, Marcin Mrozek, Simone Ponzi.

Out: Grega Bole, Cristian Delle Stelle, Marek Rutkiewicz, Stefan Schumacher.

Cofidis

In: Rayane Bouhanni, Borut Bozic, Jérôme Cousin, Hugo Hofstetter, Arnold Jeannesson, Anthony Perez.

Out: Steve Chainel, Adrien Petit, Dominique Rollin (retired), Louis Verhelst, Romain Zingle (retired).

Colombia-Coldeportes

Out: Edwin Avila, Alex Cano, Camilo Castiblanco, Edward Diaz, Fabio Duarte, Leonardo Duque, Daniel Martinez, Sebastian Molano, Darwin Pantoja, Jonathan Paredes, Walter Pedraza, Carlos Quintero, Carlos Mario Ramirez, Brayan Ramirez, Miguel Angel Rubiano, Cayetano Sarmiento, Rodolfo Torres, Juan Pablo Valencia.

Delko Marseille-Provence KTM

In: Asbjørn Kragh Andersen, Mikel Aristi, Romain Combaud, Daniel Diaz, Leonardo Duque, Delio Fernandez, Fredrik Strand Galta, Thierry Hupond, Christophe Laborie, Martin Laas, Yannick Martinez, Quentin Pacher.

Out: Alexandre Blain, Ignatas Konovalovas, Julien Loubet, Yoann Paillot, Clement Penven, Clement Saint-Martin, Gregoire Tarride.

Dimension Data

In: Igor Anton, Mark Cavendish, Mekseb Debesay, Bernhard Eisel, Omar Fraile, Nathan Haas, Cameron Meyer, Mark Renshaw, Kanstantsin Siutsou.

Out: Gerald Ciolek, Matthew Goss, Louis Meintjes, Andreas Stauff.

Direct Energie

In: Ryan Anderson, Lilian Calmejane, Romain Cardis, Sylvain Chavanel, Jeremy Cornu, Fabien Grellier, Adrien Petit.

Out: Yukiya Arashiro, Giovanni Bernaudeau (retired), Jérôme Cousin, Dan Craven, Jimmy Engoulvent (retired), Cyril Gautier, Vincent Jérôme (retired), Morgan Lamoisson, Yannick Martinez, Maxime Mederel (retired), Pierre Rolland.

Drapac Cycling

In: Brendan Canty, Nathan Earle, Jason Lowndes, Gavin Mannion, Jens Mouris, Thomas Scully.

Out: Dylan Girdlestone, Robbie Hucker, Martin Kohler, Darren Lapthorne (retired), Cameron Petersen, Malcolm Rudolph, Wouter Wippert.

Etixx-Quick Step

In: Rodrigo Contreras, Laurens De Plus, Fernando Gaviria, Marcel Kittel, Bob Jungels, Daniel Martin, Davide Martinelli, Maximiliano Richeze.

Out: Mark Cavendish, Michal Golas, Michal Kwiatkowski, Mark Renshaw, Rigoberto Uran.

FDJ

In: Odd Christian Eiking, Marc Fournier, Daniel Hoelgaard, Ignatas Konovalovas, Jeremy Maison, Sebastien Reichenbach.

Out: David Boucher, Mickaël Delage, Anthony Geslin (retired), Arnold Jeannesson, Francis Mourey, Jussi Veikkanen (retired).

Fortuneo-Vital Concept

In: Franck Bonnamour, Vegard Breen, Julien Loubet, Francis Mourey, Chris Anker Sørensen, Steven Tronet, Boris Vallée.

Out: Matthieu Boulo, Romain Feillu, Florian Guillou (retired), Christophe Laborie.

Funvic Soul Cycles & Carrefour

In: Ottavio Bulgarelli, Joao Gaspar, Nathan Mahler, Pedro Nicacio, Antonio Piedra, Rodrigo Dos Santos Quirino, Pablo Urtasun.

Out: Murilo Affonso, Jose Braga, Daniel Diaz, Antonio Garnero, Lucas Pereira, Alan Santos, Douglas Santos.

Gazprom-RusVelo

In: Aleksey Rybalkin, Ivan Savitskiy, Evgeniy Shalunov, Kirill Sveshnikov, Aydar Zakarin.

Out: Ivan Balykin, Petr Ignatenko (fired after testing positive), Aleksandr Komin, Alexander Rybakov, Kirill Pozdnyakov.

Giant-Alpecin

In: Søren Kragh Andersen, Sindre Lunke, Sam Oomen, Laurens ten Dam, Max Walscheid.

Out: Lawson Craddock, Thierry Hupond, Marcel Kittel, Luka Mezgec, Daan Olivier (retired).

IAM Cycling

In: Leigh Howard, Oliver Naesen, Vegard Stake Laengen, Oliver Zaugg.

Out: Sylvain Chavanel, Thomas Degand, Jerome Pineau (retired), Sebastien Reichenbach, Patrick Schelling.

Katusha

In: Matvey Mamykin, Michael Mørkøv, Nils Politt, Jhonatan Restrepo, Rein Taaramäe, Jurgen Van Den Broeck.

Out: Giampaolo Caruso (fired after testing positive), Alexander Kolobnev (retired), Daniel Moreno, Luca Paolini (fired after testing positive), Rüdiger Selig, Gatis Smukulis, Yuri Trofimov.

Lampre-Merida

In: Yukiya Arashiro, Marko Kump, Matej Mohoric, Louis Meintjes, Simone Petilli, Federico Zurlo.

Out: Niccolo Bonifazio, Nelson Oliveira, Ruben Plaza, Filippo Pozzato, Maximiliano Richeze, Jose Serpa, Rafael Valls.

LottoNL-Jumbo

In: Enrico Battaglin, Koen Bouwman, Victor Campenaerts, Twan Castelijns, Dylan Groenewegen, Steven Lammertink, Primoz Roglic, Alexey Vermeulen, Dennis van Winden.

Out: Brian Bulgac, Kevin De Weert (retired), Rick Flens, Barry Markus, Laurens ten Dam, Nick van der Lijke.

Lotto-Soudal

In: Frederik Frison, Tomasz Marczynski, Rafael Valls, Jelle Wallays.

Out: Vegard Breen, Kenny Dehaes, Jurgen Van Den Broeck, Boris Vallée.

Movistar

In: Jorge Arcas, Carlos Betancur, Daniel Moreno, Nelson Oliveira, Antonio Pedrero.

Out: Igor Anton, Eros Capecchi, John Gadret (retired), Beñat Intxausti, Pablo Lastras (retired), Enrique Sanz.

Nippo-Vini Fantini

In: Grega Bole, Yuma Koishi, Kazushige Kuboki, Gianfranco Zilioli.

Out: Didier Chaparro, Mattia Pozzo (retired).

Novo Nordisk

In: Mehdi Benhamouda, Brian Kamstra.

Out: Thomas Raeymaekers (retired), Simon Strobel (retired).

ONE Pro Cycling

In: Karol Domagalski, John Ebsen, Matthew Goss, Richard Handley, Kristian House, Sebastian Lander, Hayden McCormick, Martin Mortensen, Glenn O’Shea, James Oram, Dion Smith, Steele Von Hoff.

Out: George Atkins, Jonathan Bellis (retired), Dexter Gardias, Marc Hester, Ian Mould.

Orica-GreenEdge

In: Alex Edmondson, Jack Haig, Christopher Juul-Jensen, Luka Mezgec, Ruben Plaza, Robert Power, Amets Txurruka.

Out: Adam Blythe, Simon Clarke, Leigh Howard, Brett Lancaster (retired), Cameron Meyer, Jens Mouris, Ivan Santaromita, Pieter Weening.

Roompot Oranje

In: Barry Markus, Antwan Tolhoek, Nick van der Lijke, Pieter Weening.

Out: Dylan Groenewegen, Mike Terpstra.

Roth-Skoda

In: Valentin Baillifard, Nicolas Baldo, David Belda, Dimitri Bussard, Marco D’Urbano, Lucas Manuel Gaday, Grischa Janorschke, Matthias Krizek, Martin Kohler, Frank Pasche, Bruno Pires, Nicola Toffali, Rino Zampilli, Andrea Zordan.

Out: Milos Borisavljevic, Alessio Botura, Michael Bresciani, Ricardo Tomas Creel, Silvan Dieterich, Yannick Eckmann, Gianluca Ocanha, Temesgen Teklehaymanot.

Sky

In: Michal Golas, Beñat Intxausti, Michal Kwiatkowski, Mikel Landa, Gianni Moscon, Alex Peters, Danny van Poppel.

Out: Nathan Earle, Bernhard Eisel, Danny Pate, Richie Porte, Kanstantsin Siutsou, Chris Sutton, Bradley Wiggins.

Southeast-Venezuela

In: Julen Amezqueta, Matteo Draperi, Gilbert Ducornau, Tomas Gil, Daniel Martinez, Filippo Pozzato, Cristian Rodriguez, Enrique Sanz, Mirko Trosino.

Out: Rafael Andriatto, Ramon Carretero (fired after testing positive), Giorgio Cecchinel, Andrea Dal Col, Elia Favilli, Mauro Finetto, Francesco Gavazzi, Yonathan Monsalve, Alessandro Petacchi (retired), Simone Ponzi, Luca Wackermann.

Stölting Service Group

In: Michael Carbel, Gerald Ciolek, Linus Gerdemann, Rasmus Guldhammer, Lasse Norman Hansen, Alexander Kamp, Lennard Kämna, Alex Kirsch, Thomas Koep, Romain Lemarchand, Christian Mager, Mads Pedersen, Rasmus Quaade, Michael Reihs, Sven Reutter, Jonas Tenbrock, Fabian Wegmann.

Out: Lars Becker, Russell Downing, James Early, Arne Egner, Nako Georgiev, Aaron Grosser, Silvio Herklotz, Karel Hnik, Martin Mortensen, Jan Oelerich, Manuel Porzner, Ole Quast, Til Schuster, Maximilian Werda, Troels Vinther, Joel Zangerle.

Tinkoff Team

In: Erik Baška, Adam Blythe, Oscar Gatto, Michael Gogl, Yuri Trofimov.

Out: Ivan Basso (retired), Edward Beltran, Matti Breschel, Christopher Juul-Jensen, Michael Mørkøv, Bruno Pires, Chris Anker Sørensen, Oliver Zaugg.

Topsport Vlaanderen

In: Aimé De Gendt, Maxime Farazijn, Ruben Pols, Dries Van Gestel, Kenneth Van Rooy.

Out: Victor Campenaerts, Pieter Jacobs, Oliver Naesen, Edward Theuns, Arthur Vanoverberghe (retired), Jelle Wallays.

Trek-Segafredo

In: Julien Bernard, Jack Bobridge, Niccolo Bonifazio, Ryder Hesjedal, Kiel Reijnen, Peter Stetina, Edward Theuns.

Out: Matthew Busche, Bob Jungels, Hayden Roulston (retired), Jesse Sergent, Fabio Silvestre, Gert Steegmans (retired), Danny van Poppel, Kristof Vandewalle (retired), Calvin Watson.

UnitedHealthcare

In: Matthew Busche, Daniel Eaton, Daniel Jaramillo, Ty Magner.

Out: Alessandro Bazzana, Isaac Bolivar, Hilton Clarke (retired), Lucas Euser, Robert Förster (retired), Davide Frattini (retired), Ken Hanson (retired), Daniele Ratto, Kiel Reijnen, Federico Zurlo.

Verva ActiveJet

In: Stanislaw Aniolkowski, Adrian Banaszek, Norbert Banaszek, Pawel Charucki, Pawel Cieslik, Karel Hnik, Jonas Koch, Jiri Polnicky, Jordi Simon, Adam Stachowiak, Daniel Staniszewski.

Out: Pawel Brylowski, Konrad Dabkowski, Mario Gonzales, Tomasz Mickiewicz, Jesus Muela, David Muntaner, Arkadiusz Owsian.

Wanty-Groupe Gobert

In: Gaetan Bille, Dimitry Claeys, Thomas Degand, Kenny Dehaes, Antoine Demoitié, Guillaume Martin, Marc McNally, Robin Stenuit, Björn Thurau.

Out: Francis De Greef (retired), Tim De Troyer, Yannick Eijssen, Jan Ghyselinck, Bjorn Leukemans (retired), Frederique Robert, Mirko Selvaggi, James Vanlandschoot (retired).

Keegan Swirbul: “Winning the Nationals was the best moment of my life”

Three years ago, a lanky teenager defeated Lance Armstrong at the Power of Four 36-mile long mountain bike race that took place in Aspen, Colorado. Surprised, but also impressed by what he’s seen and the potential of that kid, the 1993 world champion gave Axel Merckx – Bontrager-Livestrong’s sports director – a call and told him to keep an eye on the 16-year-old. Just one and a half year later, Merckx offered the young rider a place in his team and so Keegan Swirbul embarked in a new adventure, with one of the best development teams in the world.

Stoked, but at the same time nervous about being a newcomer to road racing, Keegan Swirbul took each thing at a time, his first races providing him a massive learning experience. Once things began to fall into place, the Colorado native began to show his talent by finishing second at the National Championships, in 2014, following a great ride. One season later, he won the title after an excellent race, taking his biggest result to date and thus confirming his huge talent, which makes him one of the most interesting prospects of the U23 scene.

Despite this success, Keegan Swirbul – who is a natural born climber – remains with his feet on the ground, as he knows he’s just started the road leading towards a pro career in the years to come. That’s why now he’s focusing on improving and making sure he’ll add other big wins to the victory he notched in June. Before the first big appointment he has in the second half of the season – the Tour of Utah – Axeon’s cyclist sat down and talked for Cafe Roubaix about his results so far and his future goals

– Keegan, what do you feel you’ve improved since coming to Axeon?

I’ve improved in every aspect as I was starting from scratch, but I’d say my biggest improvement would be my general strength power wise. I am now able to ride harder, longer and recover quicker than I expected. When I was first offered the place on Axeon in the fall of 2013, I wouldn’t have even been able to complete even the lower level American races, so I actually made pretty crazy progress that winter and similar percentage gains during the 2014 off-season. I have also made some progress with my pack skills, but I’m still working on that aspect.

– Last month you won the U23 national title. Were you expecting such a great result?

Nationals was a good memory for me. Going in, I was confident as I had been feeling consistently good during training the weeks before. I am more happy with the long climbs, and the final one at the Nationals was under two minutes, so I wasn’t thinking of myself as the top favorite at all. But, I attacked hard in the finale a few times and no one was able to follow.

– What did it mean for you to take the victory?

I was seriously stoked on that win. Probably the single best moment of my life, if I’m honest. I have dreamed of that jersey for years.

– When it comes to stage races, which was your highlight so far?

Stage race wise, my favorite moment was probably the fourth stage of the Tour of Utah in 2014. The first few days of the race I was hanging for dear life and I was questioning my place at this level of the sport, so to have a decent ride that day really helped my moral.

– Besides road cycling, you’re also into mountain bike and cross country from time to time. How do these three get along?

I had been into mountain biking and building trails and all that jazz for a long time. It was good fun, and honestly I didn’t take it too seriously really. I was interested in a lot of other summer time activities that made being a top rider impossible. During high school, I quit freestyle skiing and began XC skiing. My junior year, I stopped screwing around and set the goal of winning the Nationals and I ended up doing it. I stopped skiing after that.

– Giro della Valle d’Aosta was your first European race. With what thoughts did you go there?

Heading into Aosta, I was pretty stoked. It was the first time that I would do a true mountain race. I trained pretty dang hard for a good while before the race, and I was feeling way good. Numbers were way higher than I had ever seen, so I was very confident. When I arrived to Europe, something was missing though. I felt bad in the training the week before and couldn’t produce the same numbers at sea level that I was producing at altitude a week earlier. I went terribly the first days of the race and I was very upset with myself. The last few days I somewhat found my legs, but still not the level I know I’m capable of. Not the best way to start in Europe, but I certainly am incredibly motivated to try and do everything perfectly this winter to hopefully avoid these bouts of inconsistent form next year.

– And what’s next for you?

Next up for me is Tour of Utah. I’m heading into Utah with questionable form. Utah has always been a big target for me, and I hope to be going well. But after the bad sensations in training and a bad performance at Aosta, I’m not sure what kind of shape I will arrive with. Regardless, I’m sure Axeon will have some riders up there on GC, so hopefully I’ll be going well enough to help them do a good ride.

– I know it’s still early, but did you give a thought what races would you like to win?

I really have no idea what races I’d like to win. Winning any race is massive for me. But certainly, I would love to win any race in the mountains. Hopefully, next season I can try to target as many European mountain races as I can. Also, I’d really like to try and get in some races that aren’t my speciality, in order to learn the ways, but in the end of the day, my program is not designed by me, so who knows. If I were to say one country in which I dream of taking a big win, that would be Italy, because I really love the races there. The mountains of Italy are the most spectacular I have ever seen, and the roads are very appealing to my characteristics as a rider.

2015 Tour de France Conclusions

Chris Froome did a textbook race and although he didn’t look as strong as two year ago, when he scored his maiden Tour de France victory, his second victory is much more impressive, as the Brit overcame all the obstacles of the first week and gave proof of solid and flawless tactics, something which he looked to be lacking until this season. No one can argue that Froome – who also took the polka dot jersey – was the strongest cyclist out there, a man on a mission who took time out of his opponents on every type of terrain: flat, time trial and mountain. Once he did that, the 30-year-old Sky rider made his life much easier and could afford to lose a big chunk of his advantage on the last two mountain stages, before arriving in Paris with a second Tour de France trophy in the bag, which makes him one of the most successful riders in the race’s history since the end of World War ll.

This triumph was not just one of Froome’s, but of the whole Sky team, who made its homework before the race and played it perfectly during July, helping its leader gain time in a tough first week and in the end delivering a win expected since 2013. Sky came at the start with arguably its best and most powerful Tour de France line-up since the inception of the team and every single cyclist had a contribution to Froome’s overall victory, with the likes of Richie Porte, Geraint Thomas – who was one of the race’s revelations – and Wout Poels deserving an extra mention for their job on the mountains and for how they closed almost all the attacks. Precisely for this reason, it will be interesting to see what the three of them will do next year, when Porte and Thomas are poised to be Grand Tour leaders, while Poels will have to fill in the shoes of the Tasmanian, who’s leaving Sky on a high note at the end of this season.

Nairo Quintana – one of the most gifted climbers the world has ever seen – was sad at the end of the race, as he arrived at the conclusion that he has lost the overall victory in the first week, when he missed the split caused by the crosswinds in the Zelande stage and finished 1:28 behind Chris Froome. At a closer look, he’s half-right, because after that moment he had many opportunities to turn the tables on his favourite terrain, the mountains, but failed to deliver until the last two Alpine stages, which was too little, too late. Besides that, the Colombian paid dearly for having Alejandro Valverde in the team, the Spanish champion being more interested in securing his place on the podium, than helping his leader. If he’s to win the race in 2016, Quintana needs to be sure that he’ll be the sole captain of Movistar next year, although it will be difficult, considering the long and special relationship between Valverde and Eusebio Unzue, the general manager of the team.

Peter Sagan was the nearly-man of the race, finishing five times in second place and missing a stage win for the second season in a row. It was a major disappointment for the Slovak champion, who partially made up for it by taking the green jersey for the fourth time since 2012. Not even the change of regulation in the points standings made by the organizers could stop Sagan from winning the maillot verte with an incredible ease, a nice reward for one of the most consistent and talented riders in the Tour de France. More than sure, July left the 25-year-old Slovak hungry for more, so look out for him in this second half of the season, as he’ll try to add some important victories to his already impressive palmares.

Only the sixth rider in history to win all three Grand Tours, Vincenzo Nibali hoped to repeat his 2014 feat and take another overall victory in Le Tour, but it looked to be an almost impossible mission since the beginning of the race, as the Italian champion wasn’t on the top of his form and struggled in the first half of the competition, all these adding to the time he has lost in the second stage and to the failed attempt of clawing back some precious seconds on the northern cobbles. Despite falling short in his attempt of defending last year’s trophy, Nibali can still find reasons to be happy for his ride, as he put on the same aggressive spirit for which he’s known and appreciated, and surged away to take an epic win on La Toussuire, that eventually propelled him to fourth overall.

Alberto Contador was hoping at the start of the race to deliver that Giro-Tour double that is obsessing him for a couple of years now, but the Tinkoff-Saxo leader failed once again, the main reason being that he left too much energy on Italy’s roads in May, when he took his second Trofeo Senza Fine. Winning the Grande Boucle after a hard ride in the Corsa Rosa was a daring attempt from the 32-year-old Spaniard, who fought more with his heart than his legs, which couldn’t respond when Froome or Quintana attacked. To his credit, Contador tried to lit up the race and put pressure on his rivals, but it was obvious he can’t be a major protagonist. Still, people shouldn’t rush in writing him off, despite his below par performance, as 2016 we’ll see “El Pistolero” returning for one final shot at glory in the race that made him a star, almost a decade ago.

With Marcel Kittel out of the race, many were expecting a Mark Cavendish show in the sprints, but it wasn’t to be for the Manxman, who took only one stage, for the most part of the race staying in André Greipel’s shadow. A rider who made his Tour de France debut late in his career, when he was 29-years-old, the German cyclist of Lotto-Soudal proved to be the most powerful sprinter in the peloton, and helped by an excellent form, a perfect timing and a great team, he catapulted himself to four stage wins, making the 2015 edition of the race his best ever, which is even more impressive considering he’s now 33. It was an outstanding run for a rider of whom people began to think that his best sprint years were behind him, at least in Grand Tours.

MTN-Qhubeka made its debut in the Tour de France and had three excellent weeks, during which the team got itself noticed on the big scene every single time it had the opportunity. Best climber of the Criterium du Dauphiné, Daniel Teklehaimanot fought hard in the first days of the event and got to wear the polka dot jersey, a beautiful reward for a rider who loves cycling and is commited to working hard in order to succeed in this sport. Norwegian champion Edvald Boasson Hagen got himself involved in breakaways and some sprints, Serge Pauwels finished in 13th place, while the cherry on the cake was brought by Stephen Cumming, with a cunning and extraordinry win in stage 14, at Mende, on Mandela Day. On top of all these, the main news is that MTN-Qhubeka is here to stay and this means we can expect many great exploits from the South African team in the years to come, regardless of the structure going World Tour or not.

The home nation had two riders on the podium of the previous edition, but not even the most optimistic French supporters thought this scenario will repeat in 2015. Despite not finishing with a cyclist in the top three, France can be satisfied with the Tour its riders have had this year: Alexis Vuillermoz (Mur-de-Bretagne), Romain Bardet (Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne) and Thibaut Pinot each took a stage win, the latter of the three conquering the mythical Alpe d’Huez after a brave action, which showed that persistence does pay off. Besides these wins, Bardet and Pierre Rolland finished in the top 10 overall, while Warren Barguil – a debutant – made waves until the races hit the Alps and came home 14th, proving he has what it takes (grith, determination, tactics and enough room for improvement) in order to be a contender in the years to come.

Besides Geraint Thomas and Warren Barguil, there were also other cyclists to make a name for themselves in July. One of these was Bob Jungels, the Luxembourg champion who worked hard for Bauke Mollema, went into escapes and still managed to finish in 27th place, a great result for a cyclist who hasn’t raced the Tour de France until this year, and even more important, a result which gives him the confidence he can be back one day to make a bigger impact on the race. Two other young cyclists, Adam and Simon Yates, kept the flag high for Orica-GreenEdge, performing at a level well beyond their years, going in breakaways and scoring a couple of impressive top 10 finishes. Finally, a special mention deserves also Emanuel Buchmann, the German champion from Bora-Argon 18, who was third in Cauterets, after a long escape, and thus confirmed the potential he already highlighted last year, in the U23 ranks.

World Tour standings after the Tour de France

Individual

1 – Alejandro Valverde – 482 points

2 – Chris Froome – 422 points

3 – Alberto Contador – 407 points

4 – Nairo Quintana – 365 points

5 – Richie Porte – 314 points

6 – Joaquim Rodriguez – 292 points

7 – Geraint Thomas – 283 points

8 – Rui Costa – 274 points

9 – Simon Spilak – 259 points

10 – John Degenkolb – 265 points

Teams

1 – Sky – 1219 points

2 – Movistar – 1092 points

3 – Katusha – 1038 points

4 – Etixx-Quick Step – 891 points

5 – Tinkoff-Saxo – 777 points

6 – Astana – 663 points

7 – BMC – 568 points

8 – Giant-Alpecin – 482 points

9 – AG2R – 479 points

10 – Orica-GreenEdge – 456 points

Nations

1 – Spain – 1410 points

2 – Great Britain – 903 points

3 – Colombia – 785 points

4 – France – 742 points

5 – Australia – 696 points

6 – Italy – 694 points

7 – Netherlands – 670 points

8 – Germany – 455 points

9 – Belgium – 410 points

10 – Czech Republic – 306 points

2015 Tour de France – Third week stats

– Chris Froome became the 20th rider to win the race at least twice

– He’s also the first cyclist since Eddy Merckx (1970) to win the GC and the mountains classification at the same edition

– Chris Froome now has 30 yellow jerseys, making him the rider with the most days in the lead

– The 30-year-old Brit became the second cyclist to win the Criterium du Dauphiné and Tour de France in the same year twice, following Bernard Hinault (1979, 1981)

– Chris Froome is the first rider to win the polka dot jersey having not actually worn it during the race

– Chris Froome is the sixth cyclist to win the overall and the mountains classification, following Sylvère Maes, Gino Bartali, Fausto Coppi, Federico Bahamontes and Eddy Merckx

– The 72 seconds separating Chris Froome and Nairo Quintana is the tenth smallest gap between first and second

– Nairo Quintana is the first Colombian rider to finish in the top three of the Tour de France twice

– The South American has a total of 21 days in the white jersey; only Jan Ullrich (54), Phil Anderson (37) and Andy Schleck (30) are ahead of him

– Alejandro Valverde finished for the first time on the podium of the Tour de France

– 2015 is the first year ever when the top five in the Tour de France are all Grand Tour winners

– For the first time since 1989, two Dutch cyclists finished in the top 7 of the Tour de France

– Mathias Frank is the first Swiss cyclist in the past 16 years to notch a top 10 overall

– Only 16 riders finished within an hour of the Tour de France winner, fewest since 1997

– Peter Sagan became the first cyclist to finish second in five Tour de France stages in one year since Alex Zülle, in 1999

– Same Sagan came ten times in the top five. He is first rider to achieve this feat in a single Tour de France since Sean Kelly (1985)

– The Slovak equalled Charles Pélissier on sixth place for most second places in Tour de France stages (16)

– Peter Sagan jumped to second in an all-time standings of the most days spent in the green jersey, 71

– Sagan is only the third cyclist to win the green jersey at least four times

– Ruben Plaza brought Lampre-Merida its first stage win in the race since 2010

– In Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, Romain Bardet became the first rider from Auvergne to win a stage in the past 54 years

– Simon Geschke became the second German to win a stage with a mountain top finish, following Jan Ullrich in 1997 (Ordino-Arcalis)

– After abandoning in stage 17, Michal Kwiatkowski became the 14th reigning world champion to retire from the Tour de France

– Of the riders who made their Tour de France debut, Warren Barguil got the best GC result: 14th

– For the first time since 2012, French riders have won at least three stages in one edition

– Thibaut Pinot became the fourth French rider to win on Alpe d’Huez, following Bernard Hinault (1986), Pierre Rolland (2011) and Christophe Riblon (2013)

– 12 teams have scored at least one stage victory: AG2R, Astana, BMC, Etixx-Quick Step, FDJ, Giant-Alpecin, Katusha, Lampre-Merida, LottoNL-Jumbo, MTN-Qhubeka, Sky and Tinkoff-Saxo

– Lotto-Soudal was the team with the most stage wins: 4

– Seven out of the 19 stages in line were won from a breakaway

– Adam Hansen completed a record-equalling 12 straight Grand Tour

– Nine riders have retired during the third week, making it for a total of 38 abandons

– Thomas De Gendt is the cyclist with the most kilometers spent in a breakaway: 679

– Europcar and LottoNL-Jumbo are the only teams to complete the race with all nine riders

– Romain Bardet was voted the most combative cyclist of the race, becoming the 30th Frenchman to receive this prize

– Robert Gesink is the first rider since Sean Kelly (1983) to finish in the top 36 of every Tour de France stage

– Germany was the nations with the most stage wins at this edition: 6 – Sébastien Chavanel was the lanterne rouge of the race, after coming last in the general classsification

– Pinarello is now the most successful brand in Tour de France history, with 11 overall wins

– After Rohan Dennis and Tony Martin got to lead the race, there are now 280 cyclists who wore the yellow jersey since 1919

– Sky topped the money classification, with a total of 556 630 euro; Orica-GreenEdge was the last team in the standings, with just 10 940 euros

– In the individual money classification, Chris Froome leads, with a total of 503 530 euros

– The average speed of the race was of 39,567 km/h

 

Rider of the week

On July 26th, Chris Froome joined Gino Bartali, Ottavo Bottecchia, Alberto Contador, Fausto Coppi, Laurent Fignon, Nicolas Frantz, Firmin Lambot, André Leducq, Sylvère Maes, Antonin Magne, Lucien Petit-Breton, Bernard Thevenet as a two-time winner of the Tour de France, taking Great Britain’s tally of wins to three, just as many as the US has.

It wasn’t an easy task for Froome, who had to overcome the crosswinds, the cobbles, the unruly crowds and the doping insinuations, as well as as two spirited attacks of Nairo Quintana on La Toussuire and Alpe d’Huez, thanks to which the pint-sized Colombian managed to cut two thirds of the huge deficit he had in the overall classification before the Alps.

As he did in 2013, the 30-year-old Brit has build his triumph in the first half of the week, surprising everyone with his performance in the flat, tricky stages, before powering away from all his rivals on La Pierre-Saint-Martin, the first summit finish of this year. With that impressive display in the Pyrenees and the cushion he had over all his rivals, Froome had the luxury of staying in the defensive in the days to come, with an eye of Nairo Quintana, Alejandro Valverde, Alberto Contador and Vincenzo Nibali, who were still posing a threat in the GC.

It wasn’t a one-man job, but a team one, as the Sky leader had an incredible squad as his disposal, with the likes of Geraint Thomas, Richie Porte, Wout Poels or Ian Stannard doing a tremendous work during the three weeks of the Tour de France, controlling the race and making sure of helping Chris Froome in the key moments of the race, as well as in the (rare) occasions in which he showed some weaknesses during the final stages, where the Kenya-born cyclist began to fade after three tough weeks.

Now, Chris Froome is a two-time Tour de France winner and is widely considered as one of the best riders in the race’s history. It remains to be seen how his legacy and victories will be regarded in the years to come.

2015/2016 Transfer rumours

AG2R

Romain Campistrous

Astana

Nikitin Matvey

Bora-Argon 18

Alex Kirsch

Caja Rural

Rinaldo Nocentini

Cannondale-Garmin

Jose Serpa, Cameron Wurf

CCC Sprandi Polkowice

Maximilian Schachmann

Dimension Data

Adil Barbari, Jayde Julius

Etixx-Quick Step

Warren Barguil, Angelo Tulik

Gazprom-RusVelo

Sergey Nikolaev

IAM Cycling

Rinaldo Nocentini

Lampre-Merida

Marcin Bialoblocki, Eduardo Estrada, Filippo Ganna, Andrea Guardini, Rinaldo Nocentini, Stefano Pirazzi

LottoNL-Jumbo

Chad Haga, Thomas Sprengers, Kenneth Vanbilsen

Lotto-Soudal

Pawel Bernas

Movistar

Merhawi Kudus

Nippo-Vini Fantini

Cesare Benedetti, Emanuele Onesti

ONE Pro Cycling

Jonathan Tiernan-Locke

Roth-Skoda

Alessandro Ballan, Franco Pellizotti, Martijn Tusveld

Southeast-Venezuela

Alessandro Ballan

Trek-Segafredo

Philip Deignan, Preben Van Hecke

Wanty-Groupe Gobert

Kevin Callebaut, Romain Feillu

Navigare în articole