Of course, what had escaped me is that the Giro Rosa is WWT, which means they must have invited Orica, only for them to decide not to ride. Presumably Aussie Olympic plans play a large role in that, although iirc they had a really good time of it in the Thüringen Rundfahrt last year, Gracie Elvin won the Meerane stage with a long distance solo, dying a thousand deaths on the final time up the Steiler Wand but just holding on. It was glorious.
Anyways - Zhoushan Island finished off, the main result was settled by stage 2 around Shengsi, when a three woman break of Kuchinskaya, Zabelinskaya and Brändli (so a comeback trio!) put three minutes on a group of 15 who in turn put seven minutes on the field. The main names from Chongming lost colossal time, with Fournier and Jip in the 14 minute group, and Ting Ying Huang in the last group of all, nearly 20 minutes back. Fournier had her revenge in the sprint on stage 3, defeating Fidanza and Hoeksma to take the win. BTC City-Ljubljana hoovered up bonus seconds with some choice breakaway moves in order to continue their strong run of results by moving riders up the GC.
Overall:
1 Elena Kuchinskaya (Russia National) RUS 7'01'41
2 Olga Zabelinskaya (BePink-La Classica) RUS +4"
3 Nicole Brändli (Servetto-Footon) SUI +7"
4 Olena Pavlukhina (BTC City-Ljubljana) AZE +3'23"
5 Anna Plichta (BTC City-Ljubljana) POL +3'25"
6 Natalia Boyarskaya (Russia National) RUS +3'27"
7 Pu Yixian (China Chongming-Liv-Champion System) CHN +3'28"
8 Jermaine Post (Parkhotel Valkenburg Continental) NED +3'28"
9 Eugénie Duval (Poitou Charentes-Futuroscope '86) FRA +3'29"
10 Wing Yee Leung (Hong Kong National) HKG +3'30"
Following on from this we had three UCI one-day races in Venezuela, which are the fabled "pop-up" races criticized as late additions to the calendar when the majority of the big teams have already set their plans for the season, to enable nations to fulfil points criteria for sending riders to the Olympics. The first, the Copa Federación Ciclismo de Venezuela, was won by the experienced Brazilian Janildes Fernandes Silva, ahead of Astana's Ingrid Drexel, this time in a Mexican national team, with the local Wilmarys Moreno making up the podium. In the second, the Clásico Corre por la VIDA, a three-woman breakaway took a four minute advantage to the line, with Venezuelan Danielys García beating US-based Mexican Sofia Arreola and Ecuador's Miryan Núñez. Finally, a group of 12 contested the sprint at the GP de Venezuela, with Xirayas' Chilean Paolo Múñoz taking the win ahead of the other Fernandes Silva sister, Clemilda, and Jennifer César - a successful week for the Venezuelans, with three different riders making the podium.
Back in Europe, the three-day National Race of Finland (abbreviated for reasons I don't know to NEA - the Finnish language is not the most intuitive to Indo-European language speakers) took place and even had some online coverage you can see
here. Unusual péloton with the Finnish local péloton (no Lotta) supplemented by some national teams including some pretty well-known names (the Spanish one including Ane Santesteban and Anna Sanchis, for example) and some ringers (have race licence will travel - Vita Heine of Hitec and Flavia Oliveira of Lensworld both appeared on local teams). With such a small péloton (only around 50 starters) the race consisted of two ITTs and two road races, with a prologue ITT, a split stage and then a full length rolling circuit to finish. 35-year-old Finn Sari Saareläinen won the prologue fresh off the plane from the Tour of the Gila; her main employers are SC Michela Fanini, but she was entering as a guest just as she did in the States. She narrowly squeezed out similarly experienced compatriot Pia Pensaari and even more experienced (37yo) Israeli Shani Bloch. Ane Santesteban and Vita Heine in 4th and 5th were the first immediately obvious names, 7" back. In the second stage TT of 10km, close to Vantaa airport, Heine took the lead by putting in a stronger showing ahead of Saareläinen and Bloch, with Liisi Rist of the Estonian team (formerly of INPA) behind and with Santesteban, Oliveira and Sanchis all losing close to a minute. The first road stage was comparatively short and ended in a sprint (unsurprisingly given the terrain in much of Finland) with Pensaari beating Heine, who was able to stretch her advantage using the bonus seconds, with the Finnish contingent giving way from the 30+year olds that had made up most of their main contingent to the much younger (21 and 22) Maija Syrjä and Laura Vainionpää. This time the best of the Spaniards was Alicia González, who normally rides for the Basque team Lointek. In the final stage (the one with the full video above), a more rolling course with some slopes to serve as platforms for an attack led to a more broken up race, although race leader Vita Heine (usually of Hitec Products of course, and originally Latvian but now on a Norwegian licence) was able to mark all the moves and take the win ahead of Oliveira and Sanchis, arguably the best riders in the race, with a few seconds over Pensaari, Bloch and then at 9" a group including Santesteban, Rist and Saareläinen, with Waowdeals' Dorleta Eskamendi (formerly of Bizkaia-Durango) stuck in a helplessly lonely position between the splintered lead group and the rest of the bunch at over 6 minutes back. Of course it didn't help that some of the strongest ringers were placed in the same team, although it doesn't sound like there was all that much team spirit given the lack of a common goal.
Eventual GC:
1 Vita Heine (Let's Go Finland) NOR 5'18'58
2 Sari Saareläinen (Let's Go Finland) FIN +29"
3 Shani Bloch (Israel National) ISR +30"
4 Pia Pensaari (Team VeloCycling) FIN +40"
5 Liisi Rist (Estonia National) EST +59"
6 Ane Santesteban González (Spain National) ESP +1'07"
7 Minna-Maria Kangas (Focus Ladies) FIN +1'11"
8 Anna Sanchis Chafer (Spain National) ESP +1'15"
9 Flavia Oliveira (Let's Go Finland) BRA +1'17"
10 Lucía González Blanco (Spain National) ESP +1'44"