Category Archives: Cycling

Taylor Phinney Cracks Top 50 in Paris-Roubaix Race

The one-day, 160-mile, Paris-Roubaix took place on Sunday featuring its remarkable 32.8 miles of cobblestone roads. Three Americans were in the field but two of them Tyler Farrar and Phillip Gaimon were among the 124 riders who did not finish the race. Taylor Phinney on the other hand was able to finish the race in 49th, 14:23 behind the winner Matthew Hamon of Australia. There was quite the finish in the velodrome where the race ends as the top four all finished with the same time and fifth place was just three seconds back.

The next race on the UCI Men’s World Tour is the 248.7km Amstel Gold Race in the Netherlands on Sunday, April 17th.

Brooke Crain Grabs Bronze at BMX Supercross World Cup Event in Manchester

As the BMX Supercross event in Manchester, England turned to the knockout rounds on Sunday three American women were in contention with Alise Post the favorite of the pack. Post made things every so slightly nervous by finishing sixth in the second of three runs but won the other two to advance from her pool in second place. Qualifying to move on a bit easier were Brooke Crain, who was second in all three runs in her pool, and Danielle George who finished second twice and third one to advance. George and Crain would be together in the first heat of the semifinals but only Crain moved on as she won the heat and George did not finish. Crain was joined in the final by Post who won her heat by about three quarters of a second.

The final was full of calamity as Post and four others ended up a full eight seconds behind the winner and thus left a final three to compete for the medals. Caroline Buchanan of Australia ended up first, her second straight win to open the season, while Crain finished third. Post would ultimately finish fourth.

After two events Crain sits on 300 points with Post at 280 as they are fifth and sixth in the total standings. George is in 12th. While Buchanan may be pulling out of reach with two wins to open the year second place is only 50 points ahead of Crain.

On the men’s side of things five Americans were in the motos and three of them would move on. In the second heat both Corben Sharrah and Jeffrey Upshaw were both competing and there quickly became a lot of space between them as Sharrah won the first two runs while Upshaw finished fourth and fifth. With the top four advancing there was a real chance for Upshaw in the final run but he finished sixth, just 0.4 behind Coretin Dubois of France and that margin was enough to advance Dubois instead of Upshaw. Sharrah meanwhile made it a clean sweep of all three runs

Heat four had two Americans as well, Nicholas Long and Thomas Zula. Long went third-second-second to advance without too much pressure while Zula went fourth-sixth to put real pressure on him going into the final run. A top-three finish might have been enough but Zula wound up fifth and was eliminated. Finally David Herman was easily into the quarterfinals with a first-second-second in his heat.

Herman saw his competition come to an end in the quarterfinals after a sixth place finish over three second behind fourth. Long and Sharrah on the other hand both won their heats, Long by about a half a second and Sharrah by a full second. The second semifinal heat was an All-American showdown as Long and Sharrah battled for the top spot . Sharrah was over a half second ahead but both advanced to the final.

A clean final saw all eight riders finish within two seconds but it was Liam Phillips of Germany in first and Long as the top American, in fourth. Sharrah was last, he got a decent start but was last in turn one and never could recover to get back up in the field.

Despite the last place finish Sharrah still leads the overall competition through two of five events. Long is second while Connor Fieldwho broke a bone in his wrist and was not able to compete is still in ninth.

The next event is in Papendal, Netherlands on May 7th and 8th while the final two events are after the Olympics.

Aaron Gwin Opens Season With Gold in Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Event in Lourdes

Aaron Gwin started the 2016 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup the same way he ended the last one: in first place. Gwin, the defending series champion, was tenth in qualifying but was able to post a strong 3:09.131 to nab first place in first event. Top qualifier Loic Bruni was racing even faster and was ahead of Gwin on time before crashing and ended up 14th.

It’s not embedable but here’s a video of Gwin’s ride.

Luca Shaw was the only other American in the top 25 at 21st while Neko Mulally (45th) and Luca Cometti (48th) did notch top 50s.

The next World Cup Downhill event is in Cairns, Australia on April 23rd and 24th. This was the first of seven events on the tour this year.

 

Lawson Craddock Finishes Ninth in Tour of the Basque Country

A fantastic week for Lawson Craddock ended with the American sitting ninth in the overall standings at the Tour of the Basque Country. Craddock was not among the very top finishers in the ten-mile time trial on Saturday but despite finishing 1:58 back in 25th his strong first five days meant he stayed in the top 10. It was an exciting finish for the overall title as well as Alberto Contador of Spain finished 18 seconds ahead of Sergio Luis Henao of Colombia passing him to win the title by 12 seconds.

The 160-man starting field was narrowed to just 97 by the end. Four other Americans finished the event, Peter Stetina in 78th, Joey Rosskpof in 81st, Alex Howes in 91st, and Caleb Fairly in 97th.

Craddock will not be in the field tomorrow as the one-day Paris-Roubaix takes place. This race over 160 miles features 32.8 miles of cobblestone roads. I’m sure that’s as awful to ride on as it sounds like it would be. Americans in the 248-man field are Taylor PhinneyTyler Farrar, and Phillip Gaimon.

Alise Post Tops in Time Trial as Three US Women, Five US Men Make BMX Supercross Final in Manchester, England

The top performing American on Saturday in qualifying at the BMX Supercross event was Alise Post. The 25-year old posted the top time in the women’s time trial at 31.844. Post and Brooke Crain, who also was in the time trial, are joined by Danielle George in the 32-woman field for the knockout rounds tomorrow. George managed to win all three rounds to earn her spot on Sunday.

On the men’s side of things Corben Sharrah was second in the time trial with Nicholas Long 13th and Jeffrey Upshaw not finishing. All three will be joined in the final by David Herman and Thomas Zula. Herman qualified fairly easily with two firsts and a second in his three rounds while Zula two thirds and a fourth were just enough to grab one of the final 13 slots.

The action in Manchester beings at 10:15 AM ET and will feature multiple knockout rounds as the field is narrowed to a final eight on each side with the finals beginning at 1:10 PM ET. BMXLive.TV is supposed to have a free live stream of some of the event.

Four US Men Reach Final in Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Event in Lourdes

At the first stage of the 2016 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is this weekend in Lourdes, France the qualifying round was the end of the road for three Americans while four more advanced to Sunday’s final. On the positive side of things defending champion Aaron Gwin advanced to the final, though he did finish 10th in qualifying and 12 seconds off the top time. The other Americans to reach the final were Neko Mulally (22nd), Luca Shaw (42nd), and Luca Cometti (74th). Shane Leslie, Dakota Norton, and Elliot Jackson did not advance.

The final is on Sunday starting at 8 AM ET.

13 From US Compete in BMX Supercross Event in Manchester, England Saturday and Sunday

The people of Manchester, England will be treated to the always exciting BMX Supercross this weekend as the second of five events on this year’s world cup takes place. The first event two weeks ago in Argentina saw Americans Corben Sharrah and Connor Fields go 1-2 on the men’s side. Sharrah is in the start list for this week’s event while Fields is not after breaking a bone in his hand in preparations for this event. The injury will be a big challenge for Fields as he fights to get healthy and in form to compete for a gold medal in Rio. Nicholas Long, who was in the final in Argentina, is another one of the US competitors.

On the women’s side two of the four competitors were finalists in Argentina, though neither Brooke Crain or Alise Post were able to medal. Most competitors go through three rounds of qualifying on Saturday to try and reach the top 48 for men and the top 24 for the women to advance to Sunday’s elimination rounds. The top 16 men and the top 8 women are exempted from this qualification process and will run a time trial on Saturday night to get their seeding for Sunday’s elimination rounds. Qualification begins at 12 PM ET with the time trials at 3:10 PM ET.

Seven US Men to Compete in Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill Event in Lourdes

The first stage of the 2016 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup is this weekend in Lourdes, France. Seven American men are in the field for this downhill competition. Qualification will take place on Saturday with the final on Sunday. The clear favorite among the Americans and probably the entire field is defending champion Aaron Gwin. Gwin won four events on the tour last season and added a second place finish en route to winning the entire series. Gwin won the Lourdes event last year by almost four seconds.

Things begin at 8 AM ET on Saturday with the start of qualifying for the men.

Lawson Craddock In Position For Top Ten Finish in Tour of the Basque Country

We knew that day five would provide some separation in the Tour of the Basque Country and it lived up to expectations. The overall winner was Diego Rosa of Italy who managed to dominate the field by a whopping 3:13 with a time of 4:19:19. With just a ten-mile time trial you might think Rosa has locked up the event, but he was so far back going into today that he is still 11 minutes off the lead and will not be a factor. Lawson Craddock of the US finished in eighth, 3:56 back of Rosa but only 43 seconds behind second place. While Craddock probably won’t have a chance to catch Sergio Luis Henao of Colombia, who he trails by a minute, he sits in seventh place and with a strong time trials he can grab a top ten finish.

Three other Americans snuck into the top 100 on the day. Peter Stetina in 90th, Caleb Fairly in 95th, and Alex Howes in 97th. All three were 22:25 back of the winner. Stetina moved up to 83rd in the overall standings while Joey Rosskpof is 89th and Howes is 98th.

All that’s left is a ten-mile time trial on Saturday. With less than a half hour to go Craddock is set for a fantastic finish.

Lawson Craddock Finishes 9th on Day Four of Tour of the Basque Country

The best day of the Tour of the Basque Country so far for Lawson Craddock saw him finish in 9th place among a group of 17 riders that finished with a leading time of 4:13:12. Today’s winner was Samuel Sanchez of Spain while Wilco Kelderman of the Netherlands now holds the overall lead by four seconds. Craddock jumped from 14th to 13th and is 21 seconds behind the leader.

Peter Stetina finished 61st , 7:26 back, while Joey Rosskopf was 11:10 back in 81st. Stetina is back in the top 100 for the overall event as he finds himself 31:57 behind the leaders in 96th.

With all that’s left a 99-mile mountain stage tomorrow and a ten-mile time trial on Saturday separation is sure to occur soon. It will be interesting to see how Craddock fares over the final couple days.