Tag: John Degenkolb

  • Gent-Wevelgem 2014 Preview

    Gent-Wevelgem 2014 Preview

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    A Cobbled Classic for the Fastest Riders in the Pack

    E3 Harelbeke is in the books! Cannondale’s Peter Sagan, facing questions of his form after a disappointing Milano-Sanremo, won a commanding victory over Niki Terpstra and Geraint Thomas, surviving attempts from the peloton to reel in their late attack. Now, it’s on to Gent-Wevelgem, Sunday’s roughly 230 kilometer journey from Deinze to Wevelgem near the Flemish coast. Its trademark Kemmelberg is a steep, challenging obstacle on the way to the finish, but Gent-Wevelgem has been one for the sprinters in recent years (though Peter Sagan used a late attack, and not his elite sprint, to win last year’s edition). As such, the field is full of fast men. Most of the top names are here, and their teams will be focused on bringing them to the line safely.

    Peter Sagan, winner here last year, has the climbing legs to make it over the bumps along the way and the kick to outsprint most of the starters to the line. VeloHuman wasn’t really concerned about his form after Milano-Sanremo, but some observers were; he put those concerns to bed with a masterful performance at E3 Harelbeke. It’s hard to see a select group making the final kilometers without Sagan in it, and he has one of the fastest finishes in the race, fast enough to contend with anyone here. If he feels threatened by some of the bigger sprinters, he also has the ability to power away on his own, as he did in 2013.

    Omega Pharma might have had a strong bid to challenge Sagan here, but health issues are putting their chances in doubt. Tom Boonen has won this race three times. Like Sagan, he can make it over bumps and can get into late moves, or initiate them himself, but he also has the kick to be in the mix in a bunch finish. However, he injured his thumb in E3 Harelbeke, and that injury could keep him from making an impact at Gent-Wevelgem; keep an eye here or at the new VH Twitter account, @VeloHuman, for updates. He’ll be in my Top 10 for now. Zdenek Stybar is another option, but G-W might not be difficult enough for him to be a true contender. Stijn Vandenbergh looked great in E3, but his finishing kick could leave him lacking here. Pure sprinter Mark Cavendish could have been the guy for OPQS (his 5th place in Sanremo shows he’s capable in 2014 of making it to the line in a tough one day race, and with the elite Belgian squad to deliver him, Gent-Wevelgem could have been within his reach), but a fever will sideline him Sunday. Perhaps they will turn to Nikolas Maes in his stead?

    Mark Cavendish’s ever-present sprinting rival Andre Greipel will make the start. The Lotto-Belisol rider mentioned both cramps and a gearing issue as problematic for him in MSR, but whatever the reason, he did not make an impression there. Still, with a strong team to help him overcome the Belgian landscape, he’s a great bet in a sprint finish. Lotto looked very good at E3 Harelbeke, and Gent-Wevelgem could suit their star fast man.

    Katusha’s Alexander Kristoff was not in the least bit troubled by the rigors of Milano-Sanremo, and he showed an impressive kick after a hard-fought day in that race, taking a commanding victory ahead of some top talent. Clearly at the top level right now, Kristoff will look to deliver again in Gent-Wevelgem. He has a knack for winning bunch sprints in the cobbled classics, even if those sprints are contesting 4th place behind the day’s last surviving attackers. This race offers a great opportunity for sprinters like Kristoff to actually contest the victory. Luca Paolini is a fine second. Another rider who has made a career out of a impressive kicks following long days is Giant-Shimano’s John Degenkolb, who was robbed of his chance at Milano-Sanremo glory by an untimely puncture in the closing kilometers. He will take on Gent-Wevelgem looking for some shred of vindication. He managed to make it into the Top 10 of last year’s Tour of Flanders and the 2012 edition of E3, so he has shown at least some ability on cobbled Belgian roads. On the fine form he’s showing this year, with the added fuel of a chip on the shoulder, Degenkolb should challenge for victory here.

    FDJ’s Arnaud Demare was unable to hang on in Milano-Sanremo but this race should be more manageable, and he looks good this year. Lampre’s Sacha Modolo was a well-placed finisher in MSR and might be an even better bet here, with Filippo Pozzato (who has notched a few top 10s here) another strong option for the team, especially if some of the top sprinters are weeded out. Orica-Greenedge sends Matt Goss, desperate to show he still has what it takes. Garmin-Sharp’s Tyler Farrar looked great in Dwars door Vlaanderen and E3 Harelbeke, and he has a very strong supporting cast to deliver him here. Belkin’s Moreno Hofland has looked great in several races this year, and he, too, has a very strong supporting cast. Other contenders looking for a sprint finish, reduced or otherwise, include Astana’s Borut Bozic and Francesco Gavazzi, MTN’s Gerald Ciolek, Europcar’s Bryan Coquard, Tinkoff-Saxo’s triple option of Matti BreschelDaniele Bennati, and Michael Morkov, Movistar’s JJ Lobato, IAM’s Matteo Pelucchi and Heinrich Haussler, Sky’s Edvald Boasson Hagen (winner in 2009) and Bernie Eisel (winner in 2010), NetApp’s Sam Bennett, WGG’s Jean-Pierre Drucker, AG2R’s Davide Appolonio, and BMC’s Thor Hushovd.

    Trek’s Fabian Cancellara could try to animate the race with a solo move. A crash with around 40 km to go in E3 made it all the more difficult for Cancellara to get to the front of affairs, but his 8th place there showed good cobbled form. Unfortunately for Cancellara, the G-W parcours favors him less. Still, he’s shown a good finishing kick so far in 2014 should he need to use it. Belkin’s Sep Vanmarcke, also on blazing form this spring (hampered in that race by a number of mechanical issues, he still nabbed 5th at E3 Harelbeke), will look for getaway opportunities as well. Teammate Lars Boom is sure to do the same; watch out for fireworks from Belkin. The parcours will make victory from a late attack difficult, but Sky’s Ian Stannard and Geraint Thomas (looking great right now), Garmin’s Sebastian Langeveld, BMC’s Greg van Avermaet and Taylor Phinney, Lotto Belisol’s Jurgen Roelandts and Tony Gallopin, IAM’s Sylvain Chavanel, Omega Pharma’s Zdenek Stybar, OGE’s Jens Keukeleire, and WGG’s Bjorn Leukemans are other candidates to go for a long one.

    VeloHuman Top 10 Favorites

    Winner: Peter Sagan
    Podium: Alexander Kristoff, Andre Greipel
    Other Top Contenders: John Degenkolb, Arnaud Demare, Borut Bozic, Sacha Modolo, Fabian Cancellara, Tom Boonen, Tyler Farrar

    VeloHuman has just joined the Twitterverse! Follow @VeloHuman for more news and views on the pro peloton.

    -Dane Cash

    Photo by Vlaam.

  • Milano-Sanremo 2014 Preview

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    Getting Back to Basics in La Classicissima di Primavera 2014

    2014’s Milano-Sanremo harkens back to a past age, in which La Primavera was a marquee goal for the tougher sprinters in the peloton. The race was supposed to finish with a climb of the Pompeiana, making it even more climber-oriented than it has been in recent years, but damaged roads forced a route change. The climb of Le Manie had already been taken out to make way for the new ascent up the Pompeiana, and it has not been returned to the route, meaning the sprinters suddenly have a chance to contend again. Still, there are some lumps to overcome, and it’s a 294 kilometer race, and as might be expected of the already grueling spring Monument, rain is in the forecast for Sunday; suffice it to say, there are enough variables to leave this race wide open for the taking.

    VeloHuman will be live tweeting analysis of Sunday’s action, so be sure you’re following @VeloHuman on Twitter. And if you’re looking for straight predictions, as usual, my top 10 contenders are at the end of the post.

    The Contenders

    The flat-enough parcours is drawing some of the peloton’s fastest finishers to Milano-Sanremo, and with so little data to draw on in the early season, it’s hard to name a favorite for the race. The most obvious candidate is last year’s runner-up Peter Sagan. If a bunch sprint arrives, Sagan has shown an ability to hang with the best on a good day, especially after a few tough climbs. If an attack goes, Sagan will be sure to follow. In either eventuality, Sagan can nab a victory, and that’s what makes him the most likely winner here. Working against him is the simple fact that he is not the fastest sprinter in this race, and in the event of a mass gallop, he may be facing Andre Greipel and Mark Cavendish, with their elite leadouts. He’ll look to keep a brutal pace over the few climbs that remain in this race, the Poggio and Cipressa, in an effort to whittle down his opponents.

    MSR Profile

    2008’s winner Fabian Cancellara will be sure to join in on the fight to drop the likes of Cavendish and Greipel, as he’d be even less likely than Sagan to win if they were to make it to the line. The 5.6 km, 4.1% average grade Cipressa and the 3.7 km, 3.7% average grade Poggio are not the most challenging summits on Earth, but after 250 kilometers, they’ll hurt a lot more than you might think. Cancellara, like Sagan, will look for a winning move, and a chance to divebomb a rainy descent on the way to the finish line.

    For the first time in years, Cancellara and Sagan face the possbility of the high-powered sprinters making it to the finish. Milano-Sanremo is still the longest race on the calendar, and there are still some climbs to manage, and it’s going to be raining, so nothing will come easy to the sprint teams, but a battle royale among the gallopers is more than just a possibility. Giant-Shimano’s John Degenkolb has the form and the versatility to be in contention to the very end. Of the riders not named Sagan with the firepower to beat Cavendish and Greipel in a straight up sprint, he is probably the least likely to be dropped on the climbs, or whittled down by the pace to a point of overwhelming late fatigue. He’s had success in the classics in recent years and he looks good so far this year, with his Paris-Nice stage win and points jersey serving as ample evidence of form. Moreover, he’ll be able to take advantage of the well-marshalled GSH leadout that so often pulls Marcel Kittel to the line. Unfortunately for Degenkolb, some of Kittel’s main rivals might make it to the finish as well. In the event that no late attack stays away, all eyes will be on Omega Pharma-Quick Step’s Mark Cavendish and Lotto-Belisol’s Andre Greipel. Tom Boonen withdrew from the race after a family tragedy, but OPQS still has a typically elite squad to support Cavendish here with a world-class leadout, which includes former winner Alessandro Petacchi and Mark Renshaw (who, in the event that Mark Cavendish misses out on the bunch sprint for whatever reason, suddenly become contenders themselves). Meanwhile, Andre Greipel has a great chance to take his first big one-day win. He has shown improving ability to get over harder ascents in recent years and he showed blazing form early on in 2014. The past few weeks, he has quieted down somewhat, but Milano-Sanremo is sure to elicit a high octane effort from the German and his top-flight leadout squad.

    In a potential bunch sprint finish, other names we could see matched up against these blue bloods include last year’s winner Gerald Ciolek of MTN-Qhubeka, Katusha’s Alexander Kristoff (who top 10ed in MSR, Flanders, AND Paris-Roubaix last year), Lampre’s Sacha Modolo (who is coming off of brilliant performances in a number of early season races), FDJ’s Arnaud Demare (who is focuing hard on the classics and can handle a climb or two), Movistar’s JJ Rojas, Michael Matthews of Orica-GreenEdge (a rider who has shown Degenkolb-style versatility in his first few years in the peloton, and who looked quite capable of managing tougher hills in the recent Paris-Nice), and Sky’s Edvald Boasson Hagen (who was one of the strongest riders in March’s Omloop Het Niewsblad). Outsiders in a heads-up sprint, reduced or otherwise, include Europcar’s Bryan Coquard (a bit disappointing in Paris-Nice, but a candidate to surprise everyone with his elite top speed), BMC’s Thor Hushovd, Tinkoff-Saxo’s Daniele Bennati and Michael Morkov, and Bardiani-CSF’s Filippo Fortin, Sonny Colbrelli, and Enrico Battaglin (hard to say who gets the nod among the young Italians), IAM Cycling’s Heinrich Haussler (2nd in 2009) and up-and-coming Matteo Pelucchi, and AG2R’s Davide Appolonio.

    A number of teams come to Milano-Sanremo packed with riders hoping to get separation and avoid a bunch sprint. Astana’s roster seems built purely for this goal. Vincenzo Nibali had hoped this year would give him a chance to nab a victory in the Italian monument, but without the big climbs, his bid for glory took a serious hit. Still, he’ll be sure to put pressure on the fast men and he’ll appreciate the bad weather making it harder to follow him on the descents. Enrico Gasparotto, Borut Bozic, Francesco Gavazzi, and Maxim Iglinskiy are all legitimate options for a win from a small group of escapees. BMC’s Philippe Gilbert is guaranteed to be looking for the same opportunities. Had the route planned for 2014 remained unchanged, Gilbert would be in a great position to nab an MSR win, but as it stands, he’ll have to up the aggression to drop the faster finishers. Greg van Avermaet and Taylor Phinney are also likely to fire off attacks to keep the tension high. Belkin’s Bauke Mollema, Garmin-Sharp’s very hot Tom-Jelte Slagter and wily Ramunas Navardauskas, IAM Cycling’s Sylvain Chavanel, Tinkoff-Saxo’s Roman Kreuziger, and Neri Sottoli’s Simone Ponzi are likely looking to double down on late attacks as well. Orica-GreenEdge’s Simon Gerrans is an interesting case; he’s a former winner of this race who looked very strong early in 2014, but, like Gilbert, he would probably have favored a tougher course. As it stands, he’s likely to attack, but OGE might suspect that Michael Matthews presents a better opportunity to win the race. Lampre’s Diego Ulissi and Filippo Pozzato (a former winner), OPQS’s Jan Bakelants, Michal Kwiatkowski, and Zdenek Stybar, Movistar’s Fran Ventoso, Sky’s Geraint Thomas, Katusha’s Luca Paolini, FDJ’s Arthur Vichot (hot off of Paris-Nice) and Lotto-Belisol’s Tony Gallopin may look for similar opportunities to get involved in late attacks, even if their teams may see their bunch sprinters as the first option.

    The late climbs are likely to bring out some of these opportunists, but they will have to work very hard to leave the fast men in the dust (or mud, as it were, given the likelihood of rain). Whoever wins this race, after 294 kilometers of riding, he will have truly earned the Monumental honor.

    VeloHuman Favorites

    Winner: Peter Sagan

    Podium: John Degenkolb, Andre Greipel

    Top 10: Mark Cavendish, Alexander Kristoff, Fabian Cancellara, Arnaud Demare, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Michael Matthews, Sacha Modolo

    Don’t forget to follow @VeloHuman on Twitter, and check back soon for the Volta a Catalunya preview!

    -Dane Cash

    Photo by Marianne de Wit.

  • GP Ouest France 2013 Preview

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    An Open Field

    A circuit race comprising nine laps around a 27km loop, GP Ouest France provides just enough tough climbs to keep you guessing until the very end: recent races have come down to late attacks battling a hard-charging peloton full of sprinters to the line. The 2013 startlist reflects this trend, with a number of powerful sprinters and aggressive attackers making the trip to Brittany. Last year saw Edvald Boasson Hagen launch a last minute assault over the final climb of Ty Marrec to catch and pass soloist Rui Costa, while the bunch finished just behind them. 2011 offered a similar result, with Grega Bole striking out with 2 kilometers remaining and just managing to beat a Simon Gerrans-led pack to the finish. With the same route as the 2012 edition, this year’s GP Ouest France is likely to offer a similar script (though neither Gerrans or Bole are here to see it through): each lap around the town of Plouay will drop more competitors, as attackers try to get ahead and stay ahead and the chasers give dogged pursuit. Perhaps a late break will stay clear, or perhaps the peloton will reel all attackers in and give the day to a sprinter, as happened in 2010, when Matt Goss took the victory. The two biggest questions will be: will the pack catch everyone who breaks for glory, and if so, who will be the fastest man left?

    GPOF2013Profile

    There will be no shortage of elite tough sprinter types making the trip, and many of the names that featured heavily in the Vattenfall Cyclassics will do so again here. A few stand out to me. Chief among them is Alexander Kristoff, who took third in the Cyclassics behind John Degenkolb and Andre Greipel. He’s had a phenomenal year with top 10s in so many big, grueling one-day races, including all three Monument Classics he’s taken on so far. In his favor, GP Ouest France is a much harder race than Vattenfall (Andre Greipel isn’t racing, as the parcours is too challenging for a rider like him), and Kristoff is a high endurance sprinter who relishes the sorts of difficulties that could wear down even the others in that class of rider. John Degenkolb has a reputation for a similar skill set, and he is sure to be a threat here, but the inclines here will certainly push him to the limit. It’s been hard to predict Degenkolb’s performance this year, as he has peppered two beautiful wins in with a bunch of duds, and he has a tendency to disappear when you expect him to make a statement. Still, he obviously has the talent and the form, and with so many contenders, a good leadout will be all-important, and Argos-Shimano knows how to lead out its stars. Giacomo Nizzolo has been in the top 10 here in back-to-back years, and he’ll be extra motivated after a very frustrating Vattenfall Cyclassics, in which Lotto’s Marcel Sieberg swerved in front of him in the final moments, causing him to brake and miss out on the last push for the line. He’s looking extremely fast right now. Elia Viviani and Arnaud Demare are also great candidates for a bunch sprint victory. Viviani managed a nice 5th place in that race and has had good results this year, and showing a lot of versatility in the Giro. Demare couldn’t find an opening in Hamburg and came across a disappointing 10th, but he’s shown elite speed very recently and is a decent enough climber that he should be able to hang on.  Thor Hushovd leads a very strong BMC team and will look to pick up more results to continue something of a resurgence. Lotto-Belisol’s Jurgen Roelandts loves this sort of terrain. AG2R’s Samuel Dumoulin, Movistar’s JJ Rojas and Francisco Ventoso, Steele von Hoff of Garmin-Sharp, Hushovd’s teammate Adam Blythe, and Saxo-Tinkoff’s Matti Breschel and Daniele Bennati are other names to watch in a sprint. 2010 winner Matt Goss gets an obligatory mention, and if he manages to stay with the pack he would be, if at his best, one of the fastest men here, but that’s a lot of ifs.

    I see Daryl Impey as a potentially better option for Orica-GreenEdge: he’s one of a number of in-betweener type riders who will hope the inevitable cat and mouse game over the hilly profile drops the Degenkolbs and Vivianis, leaving the survivors to fight it out in a very reduced sprint or with late attacks of their own. Impey’s form in the Eneco Tour was impressive: he was at his best on the very trying final two stages of that race, and should be able to hang on if his teammate fails. Greg Van Avermaet also has a fast finish and is coming off of a successful trip to the USA, where he showed off some capable climbing legs; if things don’t work out for Hushovd, Van Avermaet has a chance, as does Taylor Phinney, who has a great combination of straight line speed and endurance, though he doesn’t have much of a climber’s physique. Tony Gallopin’s all-rounder package makes him a candidate to win in either a bunch gallop or an aggressive strike over the Ty Marrec. Michal Kwiatkowksi has not done much since the Tour, but he is an even more complete rider than Gallopin, and should he be on form, he’ll be dangerous. Astana sends a trio of all-round threats in Francesco Gavazzi, Borut Bozic, and Simone Ponzi, who had a very successful Vuelta a Burgos, and can finish hard after a long day in the saddle: keep an eye on him. Cannondale’s inconsistent but talented Moreno Moser, Belkin’s Lars Boom, Sky’s Geraint Thomas, and Lampre’s Filippo Pozzato also fit the bill of versatile fast-finishers.

    Edvald Boasson Hagen won last year by bridging the gap between the bunch and a soloing Rui Costa. Costa returns to the start list, and he is one of the best among a third bevy of riders, those who will need to launch up the inclines ahead of the peloton to give themselves a chance at victory. Alberto Contador is also in attendance, and he’s unlikely to pass up a shot at victory if he sees it. Sylvain Chavanel leads a strong Omega Pharma-Quick Step squad in his home country, and with time trialing talents this big, a long distance strike from one of them seems likely. Michael Albasini of Orica-GreenEdge will see this as a perfect opportunity for his style of riding. With so many combative riders on the start list, it would be impossible to name everyone with a shot at breaking away, but I’ll give a few names I think could jump ahead: Ramunas Navardauskas, Katusha’s Alexandr Kolobnev and Simon Spilak, almost anyone from Euskaltel, Rein Taaramae, Wilco Kelderman, and any number of strong Frenchmen, including Julien Simon, Pierrick Fedrigo and the Europcar duo of Rolland and Voeckler. Voeckler looked pretty uninspiring in the Tour de France, but he just won a smaller French stage race (the Tour du Poitou Charentes) and he won here all the way back in 2007. Regardless of the result this year, he’s sure to at least earn some screen time with his signature grimace-heavy attacks.

    While many of the same fast men from the Vattenfall Cyclassics are in attendance, the outcome of the GP Ouest France will be far harder to predict, given the aggressive nature of the riding and the varied outcomes of the recent past. All things considered, I’d probably take Kristoff, Nizzolo, and Demare to hang on and lead the pack over the line, but whether they’ll be fighting for second or third behind someone like Greg Van Avermaet or Sylvain Chavanel is tough to say. As usual, I will name the guys I think are most likely to contend for Top 10 placings, but naming Degenkolb, for instance, as an outside top 10 contender doesn’t mean I think he’s going to come in 8th behind a bunch of other sprinters on my list: he’s likely to either be right near the top of the leaderboard, or nowhere to be seen; the same goes for the solo attacker types, as it is just too hard to predict who will get into the right break, and whether they will hang on or get swallowed up and finish well outside the top 50. No matter what happens, it will certainly be an awesome show.

    VeloHuman Predictions

    Winner

    Alexander Kristoff

    Podium

    Giacomo Nizzolo, Arnaud Demare

    Top 10

    Thor Hushovd, John Degenkolb, Greg Van Avermaet, Sylvain Chavanel, Daryl Impey, Elia Viviani, Michal Kwiatkowski

    Under the Radar Challenger

    Simone Ponzi

    -Dane Cash

    Photo by kaveman743.