General News Thread

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I assume he'll only cover races which TV2 has the rights for.

Which means probably 2/10 of his workload or something like that? They really do not cover that many races tbh.

In a response today:

"Ja, jeg kommer til at dække både de nævnte løb og mange andre løb. Min umiddelbare plan er at have samme ambitionsniveau i forhold til optakter og livedækning som tidligere, og derfor kommer der meget mere cykelindhold på TV2 end tidligere - også fra løb, der ikke er rettigheder til."

Great news.
 
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Fem van Empel got hit by a car driver whilst she was out on a training ride, nothing broken it seems but her hip is in considerable pain, and shes down to ride the Giro dItalia women which starts this Sunday.

 
In a response today:

"Ja, jeg kommer til at dække både de nævnte løb og mange andre løb. Min umiddelbare plan er at have samme ambitionsniveau i forhold til optakter og livedækning som tidligere, og derfor kommer der meget mere cykelindhold på TV2 end tidligere - også fra løb, der ikke er rettigheder til."

Great news.
Still no Tour of Austria preview. ;)
 
Stjin V ? Lance being his big hero says a lot!:)
https://cyclinguptodate.com/other/belgian-ex-pro-arrested-for-multimilion-cryptocurrencies-fraud
Stijn V. was arrested at the end of June. The 45-year-old Belgian ex-pro is suspected of having led a criminal organization that defrauded their victims of at least 24 million euros by convincing gullible people to invest in cryptocurrencies thtough shady companies.

The money was transferred to bank accounts in Norway, Singapore, and Hong Kong. Stijn V. is said to have collected 10 million euros himself and used it to purchase real estate in Spain. He also lived in Spain and was arrested there on the basis of a European Arrest Warrant.
"In business, I have the mentality of an athlete, the goal is always to win," he said in one of his videos. He also said that Lance Armstrong is his big hero and that 'The Wolf of Wall Street' is his favorite movie. "I like stories where something is built from scratch."

In Belgium, 58 complaints have been filed against the Limburg Wolf of Wall Street. He risks up to 10 years in prison, but denies all allegations. "My client disputes everything," says his lawyer Joris van Cauter. "It really means nothing, so he is not in jail."
Original article at https://www.brusselstimes.com/11250...pain-on-suspicion-of-multi-million-euro-fraud

Ponzi scheme? The 2nd oldest scam in the book ...

Edit add- the only guy I can find on PCS who matches the info is Stijn Vanstraelen. Could have saved myself some work - see https://behindmlm.com/companies/cry...elen-confirmed-as-arrested-nano-club-scammer/
 
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Two very different cycling deaths that I have heard of today:

The tragedy in the Tour of Austria, with the sudden death of André Drege at 25


And the passing, at 99 years of age, of Raphael Geminiani:

There are others here far more versed than I in the history of the sport who might be able to speak to his significance.

May their names be forever honoured.

We used to have a thread for death announcements: I searched by what I thought it had been called (Adieu) but to no avail.
 
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Clásica San Remco with a slightly adjusted route this year, a goat track of a final climb.

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View: https://x.com/Eritropoetina/status/1810297984988414203
 
Condolences to family and friends of André Drege (from Ålesund, where I've been many times) who's been the latest pro-cyclist to fatally crash. A tragic end to a young man's life.
The talk is that it was windy on tge highspeed descent and him having high profile wheels was a fatale mistake on that descent. When the wind suddenly came from the side in one corner he was blown off the road.
At least that's what I've heared regarding the police investigation.
 
I suppose after Visma's Control Room van, the use of A.I. & hiring data analysts should not be a surprise. In the hunt for marginal marginal gains, is this getting more like F1 racing?
https://velo.outsideonline.com/road...ata-and-a-i-is-redefining-the-tour-de-france/
“Properly investing into A.I. could show us the next step forward,” UAE Team Emirates performance coordinator Jeroen Swart told VELO. “We just won’t know what that might be until we see it and experience it.”

Tadej Pogačar’s UAE squad is one of many UCI WorldTour super-teams that’s going big on big data. Lidl-Trek, Ineos Grenadiers, Visma-Lease a Bike and others are also diving into the data dimension in the hunt of any competitive edge. UAE partnered A.I. specialist Presight this past winter as part of its push to put Pogačar back at the top of the podium of the Tour de France.
Of course it's a bit ironic that the UCI will test going back in time with banning radios at Poland & Burgos.
 
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I write this in real sadness.. The year just is one gut punch after another!! Super week which has been reformulated into Tour of the Dairyland, still has great races and locations. The attendance is appalling!! Many of the fields are nowhere near full!!really really a state of decline, and decay!!
For those unfamiliar, Southern California and greater SW have the largest bike racing scene in the country. Premier events like Manhattan Beach Gran Prix , this year was the 61st anniversary!! A dismal shell of it's former self!! Tiny fields , pro race has an @$8000 prize list!! All races, you could of signed up the day of and there was plenty of room!! Barrio Logan, race has been around over 30+ years!! Pro, 1,2 field was about 40 riders..
The federation is just allowing bike racing to die a slow painful death in the United States!! And with nothing offered on the calendar, for anyone wanting to progress, you are better off renting an apartment in France, Italy, Spain or especially Belgium and you can get more race days in @6-8 weeks than an entire year in US and w a tiny fraction of the travel and expenses.. Truly sad state of things, witnessing a collapse
View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=80CcC3elcaw&pp=ygUXYmFycmlvIGxvZ2FuIGdyYW5kIHByaXg%3D

View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GqqmApc8fog&pp=ygUabWFuaGF0dGFuIGJlYWNoIGdyYW5kIHByaXg%3D
 
Cycling photographer Jean-Christian Biville passed at 81. This is his most iconic photo of Wilfried Peeters at Paris-Roubaix. More photos at this link.


f8da1
 
I missed this news when it came out a few weeks ago, but it looks like Collado de Sahún is getting paved for real this time. This will be the second-highest non-dead end paved climb in the Spanish Pyrenees.

Libertine's discussion of the climb (from 2014):
11. Collado de Sahún (Aragón)
The vision from the future

5Puerto%2Bde%2BSahun.jpg


Here we are once more pushing the boundaries of what's acceptable, at least at present, but it shouldn't be long before the Vuelta has the chance to tackle these slopes. Though the Collado de Sahún is currently only partially paved, the project to fill it with shiny new tarmac as the Vuelta seeks to appease it's sworn enemy, Bavarianrider, continues apace. This will be excellent, because right here we have a climb that hits all the buttons to be a classic.

Collado%2BSahun.jpg


This epic pass, which links the town of Castejón de Sos to the Valle de Gistaín, can be approached from either side, because neither one is easy. The official Puerto de Sahún is at 1999m and overlooks the spectacular Barranco Llisat, but the actual highest point on the road is a little above that, at 2020m. As the Vuelta doesn't go over 2000m often, this kind of altitude is always worth considering for its impact even before we get to the gradients.

From Castejón de Sos, the ascent to the Collado de Sahún is 16,1km @ 7,0%. At present, this is perhaps the only realistic way to put a finish at the Collado de Sahún; there is a widening out at the summit, and the final kilometre would be on hormigón, so it would not be totally impossible to finish on such a climb. The climb starts off with difficulty immediately, the second kilometre averaging over 10%, before we give way to some more typical climbing terrain with difficult lacets heading into the village of Chía. After passing the Puente Santa Julià, 5km into the climb, the tarmac stops and the vistas change from hidden away in the valley lacets to broad, beautiful brushstrokes of sky and mountain.

81816076.jpg


Now the road starts turning to Finestre-like, coarse sterrato. The riders will have to force themselves forwards, with the surface not helping them one iota, as after a kilometre or so to warm themselves up we then get 5km averaging nearly 9%, with the steepest kilometre being at 9,4% and slopes getting to 16%, on a surface which is not quite the pristine tarmac it is expected to be in the future.

7049195.jpg


As the road starts to ease up, we get some more reliable surface at the approach to the summit, which the riders will no doubt be thankful for as the final kilometre from this southeastern side is easy compared to the prior torment.

From the west, though, the climb is a different beast. In total it is 25,2km @ 4,9%, although this is in two distinct climbs linked by false flat. The first part of the climb is false flat on the valley roads before 2km at 8%; there are then six more kilometres of false flat leading into the picturesque village of Plan; after that, the riders turn left off of the A-2609, cross a river, and then the real climb comes; 12,2km @ 7,5% follows, of which the stretch from 9km out to just under 1km from the summit alternates between unpaved stretches and hormigón. A stretch such as this one is one of the more desirable stretches, however towards the top we do once more get perfectly good tarmac. Nevertheless, as the Valle de Benasque and Valle de Gistaín seek to improve communications and access between one another the repaving of the road should hopefully provide us with a usable cycling road before long, and then it really ought to be nothing more than a matter of time before the Vuelta comes calling.

The paving of the Collado de Sahún will also add possibilities for the Vuelta's visits to France. The connection to the never-used Puerto de Bielsa, with its lengthy tunnel summit, opens up options. Climbing the southeast side of Sahún, one could descent to Plan, climb the Spanish side of Bielsa (21,2km @ 4,8%, but the last 9km at 6,7% and including a stretch of 2km at 9,7%) then finish at Piau-Engaly, or descend to Saint-Laury-Soulan and finish at Pla d'Adet. Alternatively, my preferred option, there could be Azet or something similar to begin with, then the north (French) side of Bielsa (19,2km @ 5,2%, cat.1) before then climbing the Collado de Sahún via Plan, descending into Castejón de Sos and then (jens_attacks, you can thank me later) passing the Cascada de Aigualluts and entering Benasque, where the riders can finish the stage in the traditional Vuelta hunting ground of Cerler-Ampriu, for a final climb of 11,8km @ 6,1%. If we were to do this, the summit of the Collado de Sahún would be around 45km from the finish. The other option would be Baños de Panticosa, but this doesn't bring Sahún any closer to the finish, and Cerler has more money and more interest in hosting La Vuelta...

Not coming from France, the preceding climbs are harder to find; the most logical would be Fanlo, from the West, 11km @ 4,7%, probably cat.2. Approaching via Castejón de Sos, so climbing the southeast side of the Collado de Sahún, the toughest lead-in climb is probably Laspaúles (8,3km, 5,4%, cat.2) which leads into the either cat.3 or uncategorised Coll de Fadas (3,9km @ 3,7%), then 11km descent straight into the base of our 16km semi-paved hellbeast. At the moment it is only realistic to imagine a finish at Sahún, from Castejón, probably in a stage similar to those that went to Cerler.

However, for the future, the most realistic options are perhaps Cerler-Ampriu after Sahún west, or a finish either in Bielsa or, perhaps better, after a period of uphill false flat à la Aprica, at the Parador del Valle de la Pineta-Monte Perdido.

The León side of Farrapona is also being paved, although that doesn't really open up that many options.