Spectacular Basque scenery

Friday Feature: Basque Country races photo-journal

The Clasica San Sebastian is Spain’s only one-day WorldTour race and it’s thoughtfully book-ended by two further races: the Prueba Villafranca Ordiziako Klasika, one of Europe’s longest running races (now in its 90th edition) and the Circuito de Getxo/Memorial Ricardo Otxoa. Here is a series of images from the three events. Continue reading

Happy birthday Maxim Iglinskiy: Mullet man

Last year’s winner of Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Astana’s Maxim Iglinskiy is always readily identifiable in the peloton from his mullet!

Birthday boy

Birthday boy (image: Astana)

For the less fashion-conscious amongst you, the mullet is a hairstyle that is short at the front and sides, and long in the back of the neck. It first appeared in the 1960s and 1970s, espoused by music legends such as David Bowie and Paul and Linda McCartney. It didn’t become really popular until the early 1980s – think Duran Duran – and the trend continued until the mid-1990s, as popularised by Laurent Brochard of Ag2r.

Brochard rocking a Michael Bolton

Brochard rocking a Michael Bolton (image: Cycling Archives)

Or did it? It might appear that Max is stuck in a bit of a time warp, along with the scariest man in the peloton Vladimir Karpets (Movistar). Maybe, it’s because they were both born in the early-1980s when said style was enjoying its heyday.

Scariest man in the peloton? Just don't ask him where he gets his hair done!

Scariest man in the peloton? Just don’t ask him where he gets his hair done! (image: Movistar)

But both former Paris-Roubaix winner Johann Vansummeren (Garmin-Sharp) and Sky’s Vasil Kiryienka have recently been seen sporting mullet-like styles.

Is Vasil sporting a mullet?

Is Vasil sporting a mullet? (image: Richard Whatley)

Yes, I do belive that's a mullet

Yes, I do believe that’s a mullet under Vansummeren’s unsightly lid (image: Garmin-Sharp)

Of course, it’s a style that’s popular with more than cyclists. It’s a style beloved of numerous professional sportsmen and, as I’ve recently discovered [so that’s what you get up to in your spare time – Ed], there are forums where the mullet is enthusiastically debated. I give you this from badboyberty on the Cyclingnews Forum after Max’s win last year in L-B-L:

It’s clear that Iglinskiy’s mullet acted as an aero flaring giving him an unfair advantage. The three-to-one rule must be extended to haircuts, otherwise euro-mullets will be used to distort the results of major races.

I’m not necessarily convinced about the aero effect of his hairstyling! I’m not aware that this has been wind-tunnel tested but I’m quite sure that Sky have probably assessed whether there are any marginal gains to be had from such a style, or indeed any other. But, don’t just take badboyberty’s word for it, check out the final kilometres of last year’s race. What do you think? Do bear in mind that the man he beat, current team-mate Vincenzo Nibali, favours a neat, short-back-and-sides.

The hairstyle has even been discussed in those august headquarters of cycling in Aigle where, as reported on A Twisted Spoke, in a wide-ranging interview [Pat] McQuaid singled out mullet abuse as an area of focus:

We also have some suspicions that the hairstyle in question may provide some aerodynamic benefit to the rider. We feel confident that doping is on the decline and now it’s time to set stringent guidelines for hair styling.

What’s happening in April?

With focus shifting from Flanders to the Ardennes via northern France, April promises to be an action-packed month as the Spring Classics season reaches its climax. But with the Giro d’Italia less than five weeks away, the world’s best stage racers and sprinters will also be preparing hard for the year’s opening Grand Tour. Here’s our monthly summary of the key races to watch out for this month, and some of the more notable birthdays being celebrated.

Races

With seven races March was the busiest month of the year in terms of WorldTour events, but April runs it a close second with six more taking place. The month is bookended by a pair of six-day races: the Vuelta al Pais Vasco (Tour of the Basque Country), which starts today and finishes on the 6th, and the Tour de Romandie (23rd-28th).

Tour de Romandie LogoPais Vasco is characterised by large numbers of climbs of modest altitude but frequently steep gradient. Each of the five road stages preceding the concluding individual time trial contains a minimum of five categorised climbs, with the last of these packing a whopping ten into its 166km. Last year Samuel Sanchez and Joaquim Rodriguez shared four stages between them, with the former emerging victorious overall.

As it did last year, Romandie opens and closes with time trial stages, the first of these a short prologue, with the penultimate stage four from Marly to Les Diablerets the sole high mountains test. Bradley Wiggins won here in 2012 as part of his preparation for the Tour de France.

... and the 'Hell of the North'

In between, the Spring Classics season comes to an end. First there is the ‘Hell of the North’, Paris-Roubaix (7th), with its fabled 27 cobbled sectors. Last year Tom Boonen completed the last of his four 2012 Classics victories with a breathtaking 55km solo breakaway. Sadly the Belgian champion will be absent after his crash at the Ronde yesterday.

Liege Bastogne Liege logoThen come the three hill-packed races which constitute Ardennes Week: Amstel Gold (14th), Flèche Wallonne (17th) and Liège-Bastogne-Liège (21st), with signature climbs such as the Cauberg, Mur de Huy and La Redoute holding near mythical status. After Philippe Gilbert had swept all three races in 2011, last year Astana riders claimed the first (Enrico Gasparotto) and last (Maxim Iglinskiy) of these, with Joaquim Rodriguez triumphant at Flèche Wallonne.

Elsewhere in Europe there are plenty of other races in April. The two most notable semi-Classic one-day races are the sprinters’ race Scheldeprijs (3rd) and the more punchy Brabantse Pijl (10th). Meanwhile the most prominent stage races include the Vuelta a Castilla y Leon (12th-14th), the distinctly vertical Giro del Trentino (16th-19th) and the more sprinter-friendly Tour of Turkey (21st-28th).

Birthdays

There is a varied assortment of birthdays this month, but let’s kick off with a couple of names we can expect to see featuring across the remaining Spring Classics races.

Image courtesy of Europcar

Can Turgot go one better in Roubaix this year? (image courtesy of Europcar

Astana’s Maxim Iglinskiy won only one race in 2012 but what a race to choose! The Kazakh rider took victory in Liège-Bastogne-Liège shortly after his birthday and he will presumably be foregoing cake and celebrations until he has attempted to defend his title – he turns 32 on the 18th, three days before L-B-L. Europcar’s Sebastien Turgot turns 29 on the 11th, just four days after Paris-Roubaix, the race in which he finished second last year. The largely unheralded Frenchman is riding steadily improving form, with his eighth place at yesterday’s Ronde van Vlaanderen following (in reverse chronologocal order) 10th, 12th and 15th-place finishes at E3 Harelbeke, Dwars door Vlaanderen and Milan-San Remo.

Three big-name Grand Tour riders all turn 33 this month. Defending Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins (Sky), 2009 Vuelta winner and last year’s runner-up Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) and 2011 Tour podium finisher Frank Schleck (RadioShack-Leopard) will each be blowing out 33 candles on the 28th, 25th and 15th respectively. Almost but not quite in the same boat, Ag2r’s John Gadret, third overall and a stage winner at the 2011 Giro, is 34 on the 22nd.

One GC win already in 2013 for Martin - and possibly a third rainbow jersey? (image courtesy of OPQS)

One GC win already in 2013 for Martin – and possibly a third rainbow jersey? (image courtesy of OPQS)

One multiple world time trial champion (Fabian Cancellara) celebrated his birthday in March – April sees the turn of current back-to-back time trial rainbow jersey Tony Martin (Omega Pharma-Quick Step), who turns 28 on the 23rd. Another rising time-trialist, Movistar’s Jonathan Castroviejo, will be 26 on the 27th, but the Spaniard already holds the distinction of having worn the leader’s red jersey for two days at last year’s Vuelta. Younger still, Orica-GreenEDGE’s neo-pro Luke Durbridge will be just 22 on the 9th, but the cherubic Aussie is already a two-time national time trial champion.

Finally, two riders on French teams. Cofidis’ Rein Taaramae is in his sixth year with the team and yet will be only 26 on the 24th. The Estonian has a string of good results in big races – a stage at the Vuelta, third at the Volta a Catalunya, Criterium International and Tour of Romandie, fourth at Paris-Nice – but has yet to achieve his first big overall victory. Europcar sprinter Bryan Coquard, on the other hand, has made an immediate impact in his first pro season, picking up two wins apiece at both Etoile de Besseges and the Tour de Langkawi. He’s 21 on the 25th.

Happy birthday one and all!

Also on the blog

After brief breaks over the Easter period, our Talking Tactics and AntBanter columns return, with Tim focussing on the reasons behind Fabian Cancellara’s tactical tour de force in Flanders. And you can be sure Kitty will have plenty to say about Her Beloved’s victory at the Ronde van Vlaanderen – where she was close enough to touch the sacred haunches – in our fortnightly podcast next Monday.

Of course, there’ll be plenty more in Tweets of the Week, as well as in our Friday Features and our newly-launched Saturday recipe column The Musette.

We’ll keep you in the loop and fully informed with our previews and reviews of all the month’s biggest races. And then we’ll gear up for the start of the Giro d’Italia with a week of comprehensive previews to bring you the low-down on the teams, the riders and the stages behind the year’s first Grand Tour.

Plus there will be much, much more on both our Facebook page and Twitter.

Whether serious or light-hearted, VeloVoices is the place to come for all the latest cycling news and views! Pro cycling for fans, by fans.