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Giro d’Italia Week 1 Review

Giro d'Italia 2013 route[dc]T[/dc]he first (and perhaps most beautiful) grand tour of the year arrived and has wound it's way around Italy for a week now.  As always, the Giro has been surprise after surprise, with rain and slippery roads playing almost as big a part as the racers themselves.  How has the first week developed and what might we see in the coming two weeks?

As for the protagonists (or antagonists depending upon which side of the fence you're on), Katusha is here thanks to the CAS ruling that placed them into the World Tour, although without the defending second place Joachim Rodriguez.  Ryder Hesjedal (defending champion) lined up next to Cadel Evans, Vincenzo Nibali, Michele Scarponi, Robert Gesink and the odds on favorite, Bradley Wiggins.  It was anyone's guess who could challenge Wiggins for the overall honors of the 2013 Giro, especially after his and Sky's dominating performance in the Tour de France last year.  But as has been shown through the first week, the Giro is an unpredictable and fickle mistress, causing a number of the GC contenders to come to grief and leaving us all to wonder who will take home the coveted Maglia Rosa.

Stages

In the past few years, the Giro has been criticized as being too intense.  Too demanding.  Flat out too hard.  Michele Acquarone has done a fantastic job in balancing the act in order to ensure star quality participation and exciting racing from beginning to end. Balancing time trial kilometers with mountaintop finishes, flat sprint stages and stages suitable to allow a break to go clear and somehow managing to not tip the balance towards one specialist or another is a difficult task indeed.  Let's see how the stages developed.

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Welcome To Holy Week

Screen Shot 2013-03-31 at 7.10.31 AM[dc]T[/dc]here's no better introduction to "Holy Week" than the celebration of Easter.  However, the real thrill of the day (besides 55 degrees and no cars on the roads) is the 97th running of de Ronde Van Vlaanderen or the Tour of Flanders.  As always, the storylines are written and the battle lines are drawn up:

Peter Sagan's amazing early season with his win at Ghent Wevelgem, Fabian Cancellara's realization of his Flanders/Roubaix double winning form of 2010, Tom Boonen's run of bad luck throughout the spring, Philippo Pozzato's eternal struggle for that big win, Thor Hushovd's newfound confidence….

It's the perfect soap opera to be played out on 256 kilometers of the roads of Belgium on a chilly Easter Sunday.  

Welcome to Holy Week. 

*UPDATE*

7:05AM, 3/31/13

Boonen crashed out of Flanders

I had written this post a few day ago and instead of editing it down, I'm going to just add this as a footnote:  Tom Boonen, in the hunt for his record breaking 4th win at Flanders, has crashed out of the race after 19k.  There will be no battle between Sagan, Boonen and Cancellara.  There will be no Belgian tricolore on display today (or likely for Roubaix either.)  This could be as game changing as Cancellara's feedzone crash in Flanders last season.  

Get better soon, Tom.

Thoughts on Lance Armstrong and the Fallout of USADA/UCI (Podcast #1)

Since a written post on the Lance Armstrong fallout would be far too long to actually read, I've pulled together a podcast to discuss some of my personal thoughts on the fallout from the USADA and UCI reports.

As always, comments and questions are welcome.

Lance Armstrong: Survivor, Champion, Cheater

I've pondered on writing a post like this for the past few months, and now that it seems the dust has settled, I think it's time for it to see the light of day.

Armstrong

So many of my friends, patients and clients have asked me: “so what is your opinion about Lance and the whole doping thing?”  Each time, I've given them the same answer: I personally believe he's guilty as hell.  A few people got into the whys and the hows of it all, but rarely did anyone care except to parrot the oft heard “he never tested positive” and “he's passed more than 500 tests.”

Hrumph.

How do I really feel, now that it's all said and done?

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Tour de France Prologue

Wiggins was the big winner

WARNING: SPOILERS

With the Tour de France starting today in Leige with a short prologue time trial, arguably the most important race of the year is underway.  6.4 km isn't much, but it has already given us an early indication of who's ready and who's not.  Surprisingly, it might not be who you think.

Spoilers after the jump:

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