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Jayco Bay Classic
Photo ©: Rick Robson

Wednesday, January 7

Vuelta al Tachira
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A field sprint decides stage 2 while GC supremacy tightens to one second.

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.

 


13th Vattenfall Cyclassics - ProT

Germany, September 7, 2008

Preview

One for the sprinters?

By Susan Westemeyer

Gerald Ciolek is looking for another great win this season
Photo ©: Bjorn Haake
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The Vattenfalls Cyclassics is traditionally one for the sprinters, and this year looks to be no exception. The race is being held nearly a month later than usual, due to the Olympics, but as usual, it is following directly on the heels of the Deutschland Tour. A large number of riders will transfer directly from the last stage in Bremen to Hamburg to take on the ProTour one-day race.

Because of the September date, the race overlaps with the Vuelta a España and many recent Hamburg winners are in Spain. Erik Zabel, Filippo Pozzato, Oscar Freire and Paolo Bettini will all be missing, as will last year's winner, Alessandro Ballan. However, this merely opens things up to what race organisers call a "generation change".

Team Columbia sprinter Gerald Ciolek, fresh from a strong Deutschland Tour, will look to take his first ProTour one-day win, and his team-mate Linus Gerdemann has to be considered another top favourite. Rabobank's Graeme Brown will expect to be in at a sprint finish, as will Lotto's Robbie McEwen. Caisse d'Epargne is sending a strong team, including Vladimir Karpets, José Rujano, Luis León Sánchez and Rigoberto Uran.

CSC may have the best chances to wrest the win out of German hands, sending Fabian Cancellara and Jens Voigt. It would be a mistake to count either of them out.

The 2008 version of the race features a slightly different course. It has been reduced to 213.7km long, and starts with the usual 90km long loop to the south and back, after the neutralised start through the city of Hamburg. This is followed by a 60km loop westwards, which ends with three laps of a 12km circuit, each lap of which includes the day's climb.

This is the flattest part of Germany, so the climb is the Waseberg, one of "the seven hills of Hamburg". It is a very short climb, only 700 meters, but boasts an average gradient of 10%, with the steepest sections up to 15%. The last time up the Waseberg is only 15km before the finish, so it may be too much for the sprinters – or just right for a strong climbing sprinter like Ciolek.