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Katusha
Photo ©: Bettini

Wednesday, January 7

Australian Open Road Championships
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The women's race was very close - a single second decided gold.

An interview with Steve Johnson

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The first of a two-part interview on the state of the federation.

Rotterdam Six Days
Men, women, youngsters and sprinters headed into the next to last night.

Australian Open Road Championships
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The fastest espoir in Australia took the U23 men's time trial.

Jayco Bay Cycling Classic
The women's race in Australia also finished today.

Vuelta al Tachira
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It's summer in Venezuela and the racing is hot! Stage 1 is a battle for bonus seconds.

Tuesday, January 6

Jayco Bay Cycling Classic
The showdown in Australia, as the men headed into the final stage.

Trent Wilson diary
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It is a busy end of the year for Willo.

6-Daagse van Rotterdam
A lead change after night four sees the local boys gasping for breath.

Fitness Q&A
There's a nasty case of foot pain plus questions about protein supplements, blood tests, saddle position and the 'lower core' of the body.

Jayco Bay Classic
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The women also fought out the Portarlington criterium.

Veldrit Sint Michielsgestel
Once a Superprestige race, the fight was still hard, even as only a C1 race.

Monday, January 5

2008 Reader Poll
The final categories are awarded – Best Moment and Rider of the Year

Jayco Bay Classic
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The Portarlington criterium was the next-to-last stop in the men's race.

Tasmanian Christmas Carnivals
Hobart's carnival proved a happy hunting ground for a local favourite.

Feature - Team Columbia
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Bob Stapleton and Allan Peiper talk about the diversity of Team Columbia.

Tech - On test
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Paul Verkyulen gets his hands on Easton's EC90 Equipe SLX3.

MTB - North Island Cross Country Cup #1
Cross country and downhill mountain bike racing kicks off for 2009 in Rotorua New Zealand.

Cyclo-cross - Vlaamse Witloof Veldrit
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More photos added from the Belgian race.

Cyclo-cross - Flüüger Quer
Brief results posted for this Swiss race

Cyclo-cross - Vlaamse Witloof Veldrit
Racers tune up with one week to go until Belgian nationals. Photos and full results added.

 


10th Women's Flèche Wallonne - CDM

Belgium, April 25, 2007

The Queens of the Mur de Huy

By Laura Weislo

Cooke won Ronde van Vlaanderen
Photo ©: AFP
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The women's Flèche Wallonne celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, and for the Aluminium edition the ladies will once again follow the same roads as the men, although starting in Huy rather than Charleroi, eliminating the first 97 kilometres of the men's parcours. This leaves the women with the most challenging 104 kilometres of the route - a decidedly lumpy affair with eight named climbs including the decisive and brutal finishing climb - the Mur de Huy.

Some courses simply suit a riders' style, and the jagged profile of the women's Flèche Wallone seems to be tailor-made for two: World Cup leader Nicole Cooke (Raleigh Lifeforce Creation) and Italian Champion Fabiana Luperini (Menikini-Gysko) each have three wins atop the Mur de Huy, and each rider has their own strategy for conquering the vicious final climb.

The scrappy Brit won her three editions with patience - fighting her way onto the wheels of her attackers on the lower slopes, then outlasting the likes of Oenone Wood (2005), Judith Arndt (2006) and Sue Palmer-Komar (2003). Cooke is showing spectacular form this season, winning the first two World Cup races in Geelong and Flanders, the Geelong Tour, the GP Costa Etrusca and Trofeo Alfredo Binda.

Luperini's modus operandi is a ferocious attack further down the hill and the ability to hold the effort through the steepest section with 400m to go and all the way to the line. She used this to unseat Pia Sundstedt (1998) in the inaugural edition of the race, current T-mobile director Anna (Milward) Wilson (2001) and Lyne Bessette (2002). At 33 years of age, Luperini might be in the twilight of her career, but has shown that she still has the desire to win and the ability to go head-to-head with Cooke at the GP Costa Etrusca, where she finished second to Cooke.

While both Luperini and Cooke have strong teams riding in their support, they will have their work cut out for them from the Dutch team of World Champion Marianne Vos. Team DSB Bank showed in the Ronde van Drenthe World Cup that they have the firepower to attack, and the savvy to use team tactics to win, when Vos and team-mate Adrie Visser both made the winning break. Visser attacked and won, and Cooke, unwilling to bring Vos to the line, was left to fight for scraps. Vos is certainly a threat for the win, and has shown that she can attack on the bergs as well as sprint against the best when she got her own win in the Ronde van Gelderland, where she out-sprinted T-mobile powerhouse Ina Teutenberg.

Teutenberg's T-mobile team started out the year well with a few stage wins down-under, but have been shut out in the European races so far. They'll be looking for revenge, and the Mur de Huy could be the perfect place for someone like Judith Arndt or Oenone Wood to get it. They'll be fighting it out with Cooke's Raleigh Lifeforce team, Menikini-Gysko, Team Flexpoint, Equipe Nürnberger, the Bilga team and others to make the front group over the penultimate climb, the Côte de Ahin.

The climbs

Km 16.5, Côte de Pailhe (1.0 km, 4.3%)
Km 38.5, Côte de Peu d'Eau (2.5 km, 4.2%)
Km 44, Côte de Haut-Bois (1.4 km, 5.4%)
Km 54, Côte de Thon (1.2 km, 7.1%)
Km 62, Côte de Bonneville (1.1 km, 7.9%)
Km 74, Côte de Bohissau (3.4 km, 4%)
Km 89.5, Côte de Ahin (2.5 km, 6%)
Km 104, Mur de Huy (1.3 km, 9.3%)