- Mar 12, 2009
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Ryo Hazuki said:uran in colombia was the biggest tracktalent they ever had. he was national champion on every discipline in novices and juniors except the sprinting ones of course, you may think that's nothing but colombia has many track specialists and track culture in cycling. he was champion in individual pursuit, madison, scratch and points race. he was on his way to becoming world champion itt with juniors until he got a flat tire in 2005, this was
when he become pro in italy at age 18 he started to neglect his itt, which is usual since in italy you don't find itt's in races normally. with unibet he still won an incredible itt in euskal bizkleta against guys like isidro nozal and santoz gonzalez (clinic 101) at age 20!! but with caisse his itt's became really worse.
let's hope with sky's track background that indeed they can restore this talent in itt and also in sprinting, he used to be very fast!
Ya, it's interesting how diffrent cycling cultures shape the riders. I guess that's true, that we don't really see that many italian ITT specialists. Marco Velo and Marco Pinotti are perhaps the ones that first come to mind (I guess you need to be named Marco to ITT in Italy). Then there are a few GT riders with good motors he also needs to be good at ITT but none of them are really specialists.
As a flipside to that you very rarely see italian riders that are terrible at climbing. Even their sprinters are generally better climbers than some of the stereotypical sprinters out there who almost finds the grupetto in the neutral zone on though stages.
