Valverde takes aim at Olympic title
November 22, 2024
Login
Home
News
Ride Maps
Blogs
Forums
Gear
Resource
VeloTV
Photos
Current Articles
|
Archives
|
RSS Feeds
|
Search
Friday, August 1, 2008
Valverde takes aim at Olympic title
by Agence France-Presse at 7:07 PM EST
comments
Categories:
Pro Cycling
A combination of tactical nous and sheer leg power on a climb that will be raced seven times during the men's Olympic road race is a must for any cyclist aiming for gold in Beijing.
But the climbers in the peloton will do better if they can also finish with a winning sprint.
The men's Olympic road race will finish near the Great Wall on August 9 and Spaniard Alejandro Valverde will be hoping to live up to his childhood nickname of 'El Imbatido' (the unbeaten one) when he challenges Italy's formidable reigning champion Paolo Bettini.
Valverde's rate of success since his prolific teenage years, when he is alleged to have claimed 50 consecutive wins between the ages of 11 and 13, may have slowed down considerably. But going into Beijing the reigning Spanish champion has more than one reason to believe he can finally land a major international crown.
First off, Valverde can climb. His first big climbing demonstration of the season came at the prestigious Belgian one-day classic, Liege-Bastogne-Liege, in April. Sandwiched in between Luxembourg's Frank Schleck and Italian Davide Rebellin on the 12th and final climb of the 261km race Valverde timed a winning sprint leading to the finish line to perfection.
Valverde's second career victory in Liege looked promising ahead of the Tour de France where, after a sixth place finish in 2007, he was tipped for a podium place or even better. The curly-haired Spaniard did not achieve that aim. But a lightning start to July's three-week epic showed why Valverde can't be given an inch. With the finish line of the first stage placed strategically atop the Cadoudal climb, last gasp drama was always guaranteed.
Luxemburger Kim Kirchen launched a late bid for victory that looked full of promise until the camera panned to a small group in his wake and from which Valverde shot out like a bullet. In a matter of seconds the Spaniard closed a 100-metre gap, raced past the tiring Kirchen and on towards the stage win and the yellow jersey. "At the end it was a case of calculating the distance and the timing, and I got it right," said Valverde rather modestly.
The 248.5km Olympic road race course is predominantly hilly, with little opportunity for rest. A race of attrition - on what has been described as one of the toughest ever Olympic cycling courses - is likely.
Crucially, the finish line is on an uphill section meaning that those who want to counter the likes of Valverde will have to surprise him and attack. Otherwise, being able to climb fast and put in a 'punch' of acceleration at the crucial moment will be the key.
Valverde has twice come close to being crowned world road race champion, only to be beaten by a surprise attack from compatriot Igor Astarloa, in 2003, then by Belgian sprinter Tom Boonen, in 2005.
After three weeks on the roads of France, he is in prime condition to aim for a first major crown. Ahead of his flight out with the Spanish delegation this Sunday, he said: "I have an appointment to fulfil a dream - to be in the Olympics." Each team in the road race is composed of five riders. Valverde will have the support, among others, of new Tour de France champion Carlos Sastre, as well as last year's winner Alberto Contador.
comments
Follow @Pro_Cycling
Tweet
Subscribe via RSS or daily email
Contact the editor about this article
WHAT'S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
RECENT
READ
Darach McQuaid acknowledges June deadline for plans to restart Tour of Ireland in 2015
Third climbing stage to feature on Presidential Tour of Turkey route, GC battle will be more intense
Philip Lavery interview: Walking away from the sport, then getting a second chance
Stetina wants rethink on dossards: ‘Cycling is still an amateur sport in so many ways’
Walker undergoes heart operation, retires; Philip Lavery to take his place on Synergy Baku team
McQuaid ends his part in legal action against Kimmage, Verbruggen persists
Planned new finale to Milan Sanremo in doubt after La Pompeiana climb and descent deemed too dangerous
Degenkolb beats Hushovd in bunch sprint to make it three from three in the Tour of the Mediterranean
Froome set to begin season in Tour of Oman, gunning for strong overall result
Past winner Gesink feeling on course for strong result in Tour of Oman
Wiggins admits pressure got to him in 2013, speaks about difficulty of being defending Tour champion
Démare swoops to victory on concluding stage of Tour of Qatar, Terpstra takes overall
Degenkolb notches up first win of his 2014 season on stage one of Tour of the Mediterranean
NetApp Endura still perfecting sprint train for Bennett
Greipel fastest in battle for Tour of Qatar’s fifth stage
No articles match criteria.
Terms and Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
Copyright 2008-2013 by VeloNation LLC
About
Advertising
Mission
Contact
Jobs
Content
Pro Cycling News
General Cycling Articles
Training and Health
Gear Reviews
Community
Directory
Blogs
Photos
Forums
Groups
VeloTV