Lesser Known Race Results 2016

Page 8 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
Jun 3, 2012
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Re: Re:

skidmark said:
TMP402 said:
Marc Fournier wins Stage 1 of the Circuit de la Sarthe by 2.15mins. Coquard won the bunch sprint ahead of Holst Enger.

Okay, so I follow cycling rather closely, and I have absolutely no clue who Marc Fournier is. Looking through his results in procyclingstats isn't much more helpful - aside from a 2.2 stage win last year, he's been pretty anonymous. Anyone know anything about this kid? Did the peloton just kind of let him go today? Either way, I can't see how he loses 2:15 on the Sarthe parcours.

Well, he has DNF'ed 4/6 race days this season so far so I wouldn't be too sure he will make past stage 4 with the gc lead
 
May 28, 2012
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Re: Re:

skidmark said:
TMP402 said:
Marc Fournier wins Stage 1 of the Circuit de la Sarthe by 2.15mins. Coquard won the bunch sprint ahead of Holst Enger.

Okay, so I follow cycling rather closely, and I have absolutely no clue who Marc Fournier is. Looking through his results in procyclingstats isn't much more helpful - aside from a 2.2 stage win last year, he's been pretty anonymous. Anyone know anything about this kid? Did the peloton just kind of let him go today? Either way, I can't see how he loses 2:15 on the Sarthe parcours.
According to his twitter he was an EU individual pursuit champ. He can turn a huge gear, apparantly he also found some endurance today.
 
Jun 10, 2009
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Fournier is a real baroudeur! A fighter who always try to leave his mark on the races he enters. He really goes on the attack often.

He is from Normandy and I read he dreams of a solid showing in Paris-Roubaix someday. Last year he had 5 victories and finished second at the French U23 TTs as well. FDJ are planning on integrating him into Arnaud Démares lead-out train, were he with his power properly can be a good asset.

He is in fact, a little similar to fellow Norman, Alexis Gougeard... Break-away artist, with good TT skills who dreams of excelling on the pavé... Potential wise I would go with Gougeard all day, though, not to belittle Fournier however. He seems like a real warrior!
 
Jun 24, 2013
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Dec 27, 2015
3,869
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Re: Re:

skidmark said:
TMP402 said:
Marc Fournier wins Stage 1 of the Circuit de la Sarthe by 2.15mins. Coquard won the bunch sprint ahead of Holst Enger.

Okay, so I follow cycling rather closely, and I have absolutely no clue who Marc Fournier is. Looking through his results in procyclingstats isn't much more helpful - aside from a 2.2 stage win last year, he's been pretty anonymous. Anyone know anything about this kid? Did the peloton just kind of let him go today? Either way, I can't see how he loses 2:15 on the Sarthe parcours.

The fact that teams only have 6 riders helped out aswell I guess.
 
Mar 13, 2015
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Stage 2a in Sarthe was won by Coquard in a sprint finish, Stage 2b, a 6.8km ITT, was won by Vorobyev 1 second ahead of Coppel and Braendle - and Fournier was only 9 seconds back, so he retains the lead comfortably.
 
Mar 13, 2015
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Mads Wurtz did win Triptyque des Monts et Châteaux overall, in case that wasn't said already.
 
Jun 3, 2012
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TMP402 said:
Mads Wurtz did win Triptyque des Monts et Châteaux overall, in case that wasn't said already.

Yup, even by winning the bunch sprint on the last stage. That was kinda unexpected.
 
Mar 13, 2015
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Vorobyev wins Stage 3, Fournier retains the jersey. Tomorrow is a pan flat day so Fournier should be winning this race.
 
Nov 1, 2015
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TMP402 said:
Vorobyev wins Stage 3, Fournier retains the jersey. Tomorrow is a pan flat day so Fournier should be winning this race.

Rather amazed by him, he did not seem FDJ's greatest prospect but he's certainly showing himself here!
 
May 17, 2013
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Re:

Alexandre B. said:
Marc Fournier was part of the successful team at the last U23 Worlds.
What a great story. He has overcome a lot of bad luck. The FDJ website showed tweets from FDJ guys laughing about the other riders letting Marc take such a gap on the breakaway. Fournier is no marquis name, but he's no slouch either. And young. I wanna sing "c'est bon pour le moral". :D
 
Mar 13, 2015
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Lobato wins Stage 4 in Sarthe, Fournier takes the overall, 1.50 ahead of Coppel.
 
Feb 20, 2012
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Re:

TMP402 said:
Lobato wins Stage 4 in Sarthe, Fournier takes the overall, 1.50 ahead of Coppel.
And Lobato with the win and presumably 10s time bonus gets 3rd overall on same time with 4th Voeckler.

That does not seem right to me. Lobato already got an advantage from his first place on the stage - time bonus, so why is he advantaged through his placement another time over Voeckler? It would seem more fair, if two riders achieve the same time, to compare times excluding time bonuses...
 
Dec 27, 2015
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Re: Re:

PeterB said:
TMP402 said:
Lobato wins Stage 4 in Sarthe, Fournier takes the overall, 1.50 ahead of Coppel.
And Lobato with the win and presumably 10s time bonus gets 3rd overall on same time with 4th Voeckler.

That does not seem right to me. Lobato already got an advantage from his first place on the stage - time bonus, so why is he advantaged through his placement another time over Voeckler? It would seem more fair, if two riders achieve the same time, to compare times excluding time bonuses...

What I'll remeber is seeing Benfatto get second place! Does someone know more about him?
 
Feb 20, 2012
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GenericBoonenFan said:
What I'll remeber is seeing Benfatto get second place! Does someone know more about him?
In fact, I had him in one of my CQ teams (2013 I think). He rode as a stagaire with Liquigas at the end of 2012 and looked as a promising sprinter cheap for the game so I picked him for 2013 expecting he would continue with them. But then he suddenly appeared in Conti team Astana for 2013 season... He scored some ok results in lower level races over the next two years with them and then stepped up to Pro-conti with Androni, but struggled to do anything meaningful so far that I know.
 
May 23, 2015
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Re: Re:

PeterB said:
That does not seem right to me. Lobato already got an advantage from his first place on the stage - time bonus, so why is he advantaged through his placement another time over Voeckler? It would seem more fair, if two riders achieve the same time, to compare times excluding time bonuses...

Isn't the tie breaker the hundreths of a second in the time trial if there is one? Lobato had .32 and Voeckler .38.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Klasika Primavera Amorebieta today, traditional post-País Vasco one-dayer around Beñat Intxausti's hometown. It's been running since the 40s, and continuously since 1955. List of past winners includes Miguel Poblet, Antonio Karmany, Francisco Gabica, Txomin Perurena, Andrés Oliva, Vicente López Carril, Federico Echave, Laurent Jalabert, Roberto Heras, Alejandro Valverde, Carlos Sastre (!).

The field has suffered in recent years as with much of the Spanish calendar; there are only a few ProConti teams along with Movistar in town, the fact that it's literally the day after País Vasco finishes seems to count more against it, whereas a better field takes on the pre-Itzulia races.

José Herrada won last year but isn't racing; Valverde therefore wears bib number 1. Movistar have much of their País Vasco team in, but with the Izagirre brothers recovered from their bout of gastroenteritis. Caja Rural are led by 2014 winner Pello Bilbao, although they also have Carlos Barbero for a fast finish. Catalunya breakout Hugh Carthy is back in action as well. ONE are around with their lineup who seem to be hoping it will stay together a bit more than anticipated around Steele von Hoff, although Karol Domagalski is ex-of Caja Rural so will know these roads well. The Portuguese teams are there in numbers; de la Fuente will lead Sporting, W52 have attack king Antonio Carvalho, former Euskaltel rider Ricardo Mestre and Rafa Reis; Boavista probably have Frederico Figueiredo as their best option (no Sousa, neither do W52 bring César although in fairness one-day racing is not his thing) and Louletano have Vicente García de Mateos and Sandro Pinto. No LA, frustratingly, after being the only Portuguese team to do anything at Algarve. The Spanish Continental teams also provide some names, but since David Belda left Burgos-BH not as much chance of upsetting the apple cart. Jesús del Pino and Pablo Torres perhaps their best bets while the local team of Euskadi-Murias will obviously be active, even if only Garikoitz Bravo is a likely threat. Beñat Txoperena, Aritz Bagües and Mikel Bizkarra are all reasonably good riders who can do something though, while I really hope for Aitor González (but not THAT Aitor González) to have some decent showings in the coming stage races. Then you have the not-Spanish Continental teams, the ones like Inteja-MMR and Dare, which are either Spanish based foreign registered teams like the former, or half-and-half teams like the latter who have a bunch of Serbian riders that do Serbian races and a bunch of Spanish riders that do Spanish races. Adopted Republic-of-Dominican Diego Millán probably the only rider of real note from these. Then there's Massi-Kuwait and God only knows what their team is like; then the true extranjeros, Lokosphinx (Shilov and the Vdovin brothers) and Manzana-Postobon to bring some Colombian flavour.

There are three laps of a climby circuit at the end with two decent mountains.

The break of the day featured Javier Aramendia among others, but now we have a strange situation after the first ascent of Montecalvo where the pace pushed on the descent has meant that Alejandro Valverde, Giovanni Visconti, Gorka Izagirre and Sergio Pardilla have now pulled a gap.

Sounds like the quartet made it to the finish, obviously Pardilla either cut a deal or, given they outnumbered him 3 to 1 and he's the weakest sprinter in the group, Movistar just tripled up on the TTT and unsurprisingly given they're the biggest and best team in the race that was enough as the climbs aren't long enough to drop Gorka who was meant to be in form for his home race before getting sick, and Visconti and Valverde are former winners of the race. Given the results, it does seem like a deal was cut for Pardilla to get a podium place, with Valverde coming in 4th who would beat him 100% of the time in a head to head sprint and would do it more if it was mathematically possible, and a photo from the Caja Rural twitter of the two of them arm-in-arm post-race. Visconti won the sprint, because of course he did. As reigning GPM winner at the Giro and a B-threat in the Ardennes he'll be wanting to build up form here and was looking pretty strong yesterday in the Itzulia as well. Caja Rural's sprint options got in each other's way in the chase so it's another of Shilov's annual placement races.

1 Giovanni Visconti (Movistar) ITA 3'56'44
2 Gorka Izagirre Insausti (Movistar) ESP +st
3 Sérgio Pardilla Bellón (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) ESP +st
4 Alejandro Valverde Belmonte (Movistar) ESP +st
5 Sergey Shilov (Lokosphinx) RUS +1'33
6 Carlos Barbero Cuesta (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) ESP +1'33
7 Pello Bilbao López de Armentia (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) ESP +1'33
8 Karol Andrzej Domagalski (ONE Pro Cycling) POL +1'33
9 Dmitry Sokolov (Lokosphinx) RUS +1'33
10 César Fonte (Radio Popular-Boavista) POR +1'33
 
Feb 16, 2010
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GP de Denain 2016

Today we have GP de Denain
with a lot of namesakes:

BOUHANNI Rayane
DUMOULIN Samuel
CHAVANEL Sébastien
DE GENDT Aimé
ALAPHILIPPE Bryan

but there are also these guys:
POZZATO Filippo
FEILLU Brice
COLBRELLI Sonny
TURGOT Sébastien

And Live TV is meant to start 14:30 CET

Parcours_zpsh67urnyk.jpg
 

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