There was a 0.6km prologue today in a 2.2 ranked stage race. Is this the shortest ever stage in a professional bike race?
God I might have been able to do a great time in thatThere was a 0.6km prologue today in a 2.2 ranked stage race. Is this the shortest ever stage in a professional bike race?
The Tour de Kumano used to have a 0.7 km prologueThere was a 0.6km prologue today in a 2.2 ranked stage race. Is this the shortest ever stage in a professional bike race?
That's not really unusual in my oponion0.7 km prologue of about 0.7 km
Here’s every prologue of 1k or less PCS has in its database: https://www.procyclingstats.com/rac...200&rt=&filter=Filter&p=uci&s=stages-databaseThere was a 0.6km prologue today in a 2.2 ranked stage race. Is this the shortest ever stage in a professional bike race?
Friede speeds to street sprints win
By Giana Roberge, Team Saturn
The 17th annual Grand Prix Cycliste de Beauce got off to a rousing start in the Old Towne section of Quebec City in the French Province of Canada Monday evening with a 300 meter prologue street sprint event. Riders were paired but rode only once for an overall classification time up a gradual incline finishing very near the Grand Parliament building. Jaromir Friede of the Wustenrot-ZVVZ Squad topped the leader board with a time of 24.42seconds with Canadians Alexandre Cloutier of Volkswagon-Trek and Charles Dionne of 7-up-Nutrafig second and third only hundredths of a second off giving the local crowd something to cheer about. Saturn's Jay Sweet was a 1.25 seconds off which placed him 18th so all in all the times were very close with only nine seconds separating the entire field in the end.
Prologue:
A 350 meter two up sprint with actual times recorded to determine GC. The sprint was mostly uphill, making it more than just a pure sprinters event.
1st: Jaromir Friede- Wusteenrot ZVVZ
2nd: Alexandre Cloutier-Volkswagon Trek
3rd: Charles Dionne-7UP
Beauce Pre-stage Report
Kris Westwood has just called in an update as the GP Cycliste de Beauce has begun with a two-up sprint in Quebec City. Halfway through the start list, Jaromir Friede (Wüstenrot - ZVVZ) has the fatstest time of 24.3 seconds, followed by Charles Dionne (7UP Nutra Fig) with 24.46 seconds. Gord Fraser (Mercury) is currently 7th.
The weather is cold (about 10C) and a light drizzle is falling - not the best conditions. The riders race head to head, in pairs, along a 300 metre strip of Rue St-Jean, finishing under one of the gates to the old city. Kris reports that there is a good crowd (partially since the route is lined with restaurants and bars...). The 'real' race will start tomorrow with the first road stage, which is also the men's Commonwealth Games Trial. The stage, from Levis on the outskirts of Quebec City to Sainte Marie is 153 kilometres.
Other news:
- Mroz has not shown up. No word, nothing. They were at Philly last weekend, but no word or sign of them since. There is some speculation that they accepted transportation money from GP de Beauce to get to Philly and have now skipped back to Europe.
- Navigators had some problems at the USA-Canada border when their two fast men - Vassili Davidenko and Oleg Grishkine - had visa troubles and could not come into canada. It is not expected to be a serious problem, and they should be up in time for the road stage tomorrow. The organizers have agreed to let them start, with the times of the slowest rider tonight.
Kris also spoke with Gord Fraser and Mark Walters.
Fraser - "Obviously, I want to win tomorrow, but I want to do that always. It would be nice to get it (Commonwealth Games selection) out of the way (by winning). Hopefully, some of the other Canadians, like Charles' team will help us keep the bunch together for a sprint."
(Note: Thurlow Rogers, director sportif for Mercury, said that they would be working to help Fraser get the selection, but that "we do have other goals here as well." In other words, they will work for Gord, but not completely ignore other possibilities to put a rider in the leader's jersey)
Walters - "I'm qualified (for Commonwealths), so my main objective is filling in carding criteria. I'm carrying some good form from last week, so we will see how it goes."
GP de Beauce - Stage 1
Jaromir Friede (Wüstenrot - ZVVZ), the early leader during the two-up sprint opener to the 2002 Grand Prix Cycliste de Beauce, has hung on to take the leader's jersey. Friede, the Czech national road champion, finished just ahead of Canadian track rider Alexandre Cloutier (VW-Trek), who was a last minute addition to the team, and Charles Dionne (7UP Nutra Fig). Another Canadian, Pierre Olivier Boilly (Équipe du Québec) was fourth, and Alex Candelario (Prime Alliance) rounded out the top 5.
Friede is attending his first Beauce, but has heard about how hard it is from his teammates. He calls himself a "sprinter and a time trialist". At this year's event he will be going for stage victories.
That's not really unusual in my oponion
The Tour de Kumano used to have a 0.7 km prologueof about 0.7 kmwhich only took about 50 seconds for the winners to complete. Before that it was 0.8 km for a few editions, but I guess the riders complained about having to ride for more than a minute on the first day.
I suppose the unusual thing was that it was only about 0.7 KM, as opposed to exactly 0.7 KM.
I wonder what the shortest a prologue could be before it would start getting silly. 100 metres? Shorter?
You know that 0.6 is shorter than 0.7, right? Or has RhD infected you with her math skills?
I know, but it took less time to ride than the Linz prologue.You know that 0.6 is shorter than 0.7, right? Or has RhD infected you with her math skills?
Statistically some must be, if even by accident.No stage ever is exactly the official distance.
Statistically some must be, if even by accident.
And yet many sites still try to give average speed to 3 decimal places.No stage ever is exactly the official distance.
It's a bit more than 0, but it's indeed so low that it has probably never happened. Unless we have billions of planets in this universe that are doing bike races.Statistically, the probability for a stage to have exactly the correct distance is 0, so I don't agree. That is of course taking the most literal meaning of the word exact.
Mark Cavendish won a prologue once. A 3.5km prologue of about 3.5km at the Tour of Britain.
Can anyone else remember where he won his only other time trial?
And yet many sites still try to give average speed to 3 decimal places.
It's a bit more than 0, but it's indeed so low that it has probably never happened. Unless we have billions of planets in this universe that are doing bike races.
I suppose the shorter a race is, the easier/more important it is to get at least somewhat exact.
If a race is 250 KM, a metres variation either way isn't gonna make much of a difference.(0.0004%, since you didn't ask) A 100 metres variation probably isn't gonna make much of a difference. (0.04%, so no. Like if someone told you they would call at the same time tomorrow, but called 34 1/2 seconds later)
However, if a race is below 1 KM, a metres variation either way could make a difference. A 100 metres variation could make a huge difference. (C'mon, even you could work that one out: 10%)
(CM, though, nobody's gonna bother.)
Riders aren't riding in a straight line, so the difference in actual length will always be larger in a 250 km race.I suppose the shorter a race is, the easier/more important it is to get at least somewhat exact.
If a race is 250 KM, a metres variation either way isn't gonna make much of a difference. A 100 metres variation probably isn't gonna make much of a difference.
However, if a race is below 1 KM, a metres variation either way could make a difference. A 100 metres variation could make a huge difference.
(CM, though, nobody's gonna bother.)
There was probably over 100 years where Slovenia and Denmark didn't win 6 between them in total.Here's a quick overview of the winning countries of 1 week WT races this year:
Slovenia:
3. P-N, T-A, and Catalunya.
Denmark:
3. Basque, Dauphine, and Suisse.
Australia:
1. TDU.
Belgium:
1. UAE.
UK:
1. Romandie.
Bearing in mind there is over 100 years of recorded bicycle racing where Slovenia did not exist as an independent nation, certainly their side of the bargain is being kept. Denmark has a proud tradition however, even when they were peripheral in pro cycling they have had some prominence in amateur cycling, such as when they dominated the Peace Race in the early 50s or won back to back amateur Worlds titles in the late 60s.There was probably over 100 years where Slovenia and Denmark didn't win 6 between them in total.