Archive for October, 2006

Sven Nys screensaver contest

Sven Nys is holding a screensaver/wallpaper competition on his website for creative fans. “winner will be rewarded with an original Sven Nys surprise.”

Nys wins superprestige #2

Sven Nys won this year’s second edition of the Superprestige series by a commanding 26 seconds. While Nys hasn’t been winning every single race like last year, he is still the man to beat, and he reminded everyone of that yesterday. Of particular note is Richard Groenendaal’s 3rd place podium finish. Groenendaal has been around for years, is a former world champion, and is often battling it out in the top ten or early teens. When I think about cyclocross, an image of Richard Groenendaal appears in my mind, so I’m happy to see him up in the big mix again.

Ed Racket uploaded some highlights:

Results and report at cyclingnews.

Dave Haygarth 3pcx video diary

Dave Haygarth left a pointer to his video diary of the three peaks cyclocross race. He has raced the three peaks ten times, and maintains a comprehensive blog about the event. Thanks for the video Dave!

CykelCity cyclocross

Slattner has a raphaesque photo set of the CykelCity cyclocross.

French Featherweight

0001.JPGor… These wheels were made for racin’

You may be more familiar with Lapierre bikes from the Tour de France. Their bikes are found under the haunches of the best dressed team in the peleton, Francaise Des Jeux. FDJ also has a cyclocross team and had the only rider to break the Belgian’s stranglehold on the top 5 spots at the world championships in 2006. Well here’s the bike that 4th place Francis Mourey was riding last year with a sweet new paint scheme for 2007.

I have been diagnosed with a pretty bad case of weight weeniedom. My excuse: I am only a scant 130lbs myself and hefting 20+lb bikes over barricades, up hills, and through the pack takes a larger percentage of my scrawny leg power than those endowed with more “normal” proportions. Fortunately, all of my prayers have been answered with this sweet little package from France. My 51cm frame weighed in at just 1190g! The frame is made of oversized scandium, a lighter, stronger aluminum alloy, and comes stock with a Ritchey WCS full carbon fork. This fork is a real deal pro level fork unlike the squirmy, heavy, part carbon forks that are coming on most stock bikes these days. It is also the lightest one on the market that I know of weighing in at 480g uncut and with the compression plug. As I started transfering parts from my old bike over, I noticed how truly purpose built the frame is. The top tube cable routing is smart, keeping your cables safe from harm when shouldering and out of the mud on nasty days. The non-integrated headtube allowed me to properly face the frame and install my favorite Chris King headset. My days of throwing away integrated bearings after every couple of muddy races are over. There are absolutely no uneccesary braze-ons, no rack or fender mounts could be found. It doesn’t even have water bottle bosses! Lapierre’s definition of a cyclocross bike is obviously straightforward: A bicycle made for 60 minutes of brutal competition at a time without compromise.

0019.JPG“Sounds cool but how’s it ride?” Well, I recently got to test it at a local Cross Crusade race just outside of Portland. This race was set on a very hilly course with sharp off camber turns, steep power sections, and a jungle-cross section with a log barrier. The conditions were exceptional with sunshine on Sunday and enough rain the week before to make the dirt really tacky. The steering initially felt very sharp and took a second to get used to. It goes where you point it and exactly when you point it. The fork did a great job absorbing vibrations in the trail and could only be made to chatter with a very stiff handful of front brake. Then came the log…Holy high bottom bracket Batman! Did I mention that the BB on this thing is a full inch higher than my previous bike! I found myself riding this section when 90% of the other riders were dismounting. The only foot dabbing was due to my own foibles and inability to maintain speed while fully oxygen deprived. Around the 45 minute mark in a race is a perfect point to evaluate a bikes individual ride characteristics. The Lapierre was noticeably stiffer than steel bikes I’ve owned, both in pedaling and shock absorption, but slightly easier on the back than lower end aluminum bikes I’ve had. The pedaling efficiency along with the 16.5lb race weight was a god send on the steeper sections of the course. It felt like going uphill became easier as it got steeper.

0011.JPGThe bottom line: Recreational riders need not apply. If you like cyclocross bikes because they have room for fenders and you can load them up for touring, then keep looking.

If you have a stable full of bikes and want the edge when it comes to competitive cyclocross, if you ride your rollers while watching glitchy videos of cross races narrated in a language you can’t understand, if a perfect Saturday night for you involves going to bed early so you can “visualise” yourself going head to head with Sven Nys before race day. This could be the bike for you. It is the lightest, fastest, and euro-est bike I have ever owned.

Veloshop has Lapierre bikes in stock locally.
Link to geometry in excel format.

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Granogue video quickie.

Granogue video quickie.

Damn, Trebon is fast.

Jeremy Powers’ Lesson in Barrier Hopping

Jeremy PowersLesson in Barrier Hopping

Not a cross video

… but maybe this is what Wicks had in mind? Cyclists enter after a minute or so.

Granogue Quickie

Trebon, and Compton win at Granogue.
Men: Trebon, Powers, Wicks. Women: Compton, Bessette, Gould. Full results.

Separated Shoulder

OR…Will having a shoulder injury make me any more like Jonathon Page?

Two weeks ago today I was doing some light riding to loosen up my legs for Sunday’s race. I wasn’t really focused or even thinking about riding and decided to ride some twisty singletrack anyways. Coming around a very slow right hander my front wheel hit something in the trail sending me over the right side and square onto my shoulder. I think I still had my hands on the bars when I stopped. “I did it” I thought, “I broke my collar bone.” Thankfully that wasn’t the case but unfortunately ligaments take longer to heal than bones. A shoulder separation is a partial tear of the ligaments that attach the collar bone to the scapula and it hurts like a @!*#. Luckily my injury is pretty minor and after two weeks I can again move my arm in almost every direction. Lifting my bike is another story though and sleeping in almost any position causes different aches and pains. I’m gonna give racing a shot tomorrow and just see how it goes. I may end up cheering from the sidelines after a couple of minutes but with a brand new euro cross rig in my stable, I can’t help but try. Review of new bike coming soon…