Tom Zirbel wins final time trial and Jeff Louder triumphes at Tour of Utah

August 18th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

It is called the race of truth for a reason. After 320 miles and over 30,000 feet of climbing over four days, “America’s Toughest Stage Race” came down to the final 7.5-mile flat time trial at the Tour of Utah. Trailing by seven seconds in the overall classification behind Blake Caldwell (Garmin-Chipotle), Utah native Jeff Louder (BMC) came in third and more importantly bested Caldwell’s time by sixteen seconds to be crowned the winner of the Tour of Utah.

Jeff Louder (BMC) gives it everything he’s got in the final meters to win the Tour of Utah

With his form back after breaking his collarbone at the Tour of the Gila back in May, time trial specialist Tom Zirbel (Bissell) stopped the clock at 13:50 to win the final stage. The only other man to break the fourteen-minute barrier, comeback kid Brent Bookwalter (BMC) was second, nine seconds back.

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Team Type 1’s Chadwick Third Overall At Tour of Utah

August 18th, 2008 by thien

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Tooele, Utah – Glen Chadwick’s third-place finish overall at the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah, as well as a third place in the team classification, confirms that Team Type 1 is one of the top stage racing teams in America, said Sport Director Ed Beamon.

Billed as the “America’s Toughest Stage Race,” (the race even owns the copyright on the phrase) Chadwick held onto his podium place with an impressive top 10 finish in Sunday’s final stage, the KJZZ Time Trial at Miller Motor Sports Park in Tooele, Utah.

“I’m really proud of how all the guys rode,” Beamon said. “We were even short-handed for this race, not having Moises (Aldape). So we lost a guy who could have been a real difference-maker.

Aldape competed in the Olympic men’s road race for Mexico, but travel logistics prevented him from making trip back in time for the five-day, five-stage race.

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Jeff Louder wins on his mountain at Utah

August 16th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

The contenders duked it out in the final climb of the Queen stage at the Tour of Utah. Before the stage, 13 riders were separated by 38 seconds in the general classification but after slogging it over 14,778 feet (4,504 m) of climbing over a 98-mile (159 km) road race, the race now comes down to 2 pretenders to the title.

Utah native Jeff Louder (BMC) was triumphant in front of a home crowd and crossed the line first, pointing in pride at his jersey. Yellow jersey Blake Caldwell (Garmin-Chipotle) crossed the line in second place, 13 seconds back. With time bonuses on the line, Caldwell now has a 7-second buffer over Louder going into the final stage, a relatively flat 12-mile (19.3 km) out and back time trial that starts and finishes at the Miller Motorsports Park in Tooele.

Jeff Louder (BMC) points to his BMC jersey when crossing the line in front of an enthusiastic crowd

A break of 7 riders went off in the first 10 miles of the race, and got almost a five minute advantage before being caught on the HC climb up Alpine Loop at around the 55-mile marker. One participant in the break was green jersey Brad White (Successful Living), on his third break of the race, who nailed down the Sprint jersey as no one contended the sprints.

The lone survivor of the break, Mike Creed (Rock Racing) grabbed the KOM points before re-integrating the chasing dwindling field.

By the time the lead group made it to the bottom of the final climb to Snowbird, the numbers were down to about 25 riders with all the contenders present and ready for action. Oscar Sevilla (Rock Racing) was the first one to launch a move which caused ripples in the group. Garmin-Chipotle duo including Caldwell started to chase him down which caused the BMC duo of Louder and Darren Lill to react and chase the argyle pair. Meanwhile, KOM Glen Chadwick (Team Type 1) flew away, passed Sevilla and got a 20 seconds gap to the chasers, but Caldwell went after him and passed the Kiwi.

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Ricardo Escuela wins Tour of Utah crit, no changes in GC

August 16th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

From the beginning, the Successful Living team has penciled in stage 3, the twilight criterium at the Tour of Utah for their fast man, Argentinean Ricardo Escuela, and ‘Tricki Ricky’ delivered the goods.

After yesterday’s stage, teammate and green jersey Brad White repeated the message ‘tomorrow is more about winning the stage with Ricardo.”

After 60-minute plus 3 laps around a four-corner course, the criterium in downtown Salt Lake City finished in a bunch sprint. Escuela crossed the line first followed by Fast Freddie Rodriguez (Rock Racing). Australian Jonnie Clarke (Toyota-United) was third. Yellow jersey Blake Caldwell (Garmin-Chipotle) crossed in fourth with his shadow Oscar Sevilla (Rock Racing) on his wheel.

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Two for Garmin boys with Caldwell winning the stage and taking over lead

August 15th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

Two in a row for the Garmin-Chipotle team. This time is was Blake Caldwell who emerged from a break to win the stage and take over the yellow jersey from his teammate’s shoulders. After 85 miles (137 km) and 10,585 feet (3.226 m) of climbing, Caldwell outsprinted his two-man breakaway companion Darren Lill (BMC) to win stage 2 at the Tour of Utah. Bringing the chase group, 18 seconds behind for third place was BMC’s Jeff Louder.

Caldwell is now the new leader in the overall classification, with Lill in second place at 4 seconds back, and Jason Donald (Garmin-Chipotle) drops down from first to third.

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BMC’s Jeff Louder and Ian McKissick on altitude and more

August 15th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

For over a week, the BMC Racing Team lived and trained at altitude in the Utah Mountains, preparing themselves for the challenging stages they will face in the 2008 Tour of Utah.

I caught up with Utah native and resident Jeff Louder and his teammate, and sea-level dweller Ian McKissick prior to stage 2 to get their thoughts on altitude and the Tour of Utah.

The team just finished a high altitude training camp, what were you looking to do?
Jeff: I just wanted to be sure to show the guys the terrain and also I think that this is the kind of race that you really have to know the conditions to perform, to do actually some actual race performances in the heat and on the climbs could be beneficial so it’s good the team out, adapt to the altitude, adapt to the heat, the dryness of the air an then just ride the courses and see real world how they feel. You can look at a course on a profile but until you ride up it with a group of strong guys you really don’t know it. Hopefully, these guys have a bit more knowledge than the rest of the field and we can use that to our advantage, we’ll see.

How does altitude impact a cyclist?
Jeff: It’s as much mental than physical. It;s just the way that you feel that is so much different, you can’t breathe, your legs don’t hurt but you can’t breathe, you feel like you’re going to have a heat attack. That’s what I assume, I’ve always lived at altitude, I’ve always trained at altitude. I think it’s just an adaptation like anything else, just getting used to heat, to humidity, it’s just something that the more you do it, the more it becomes normal, so for us to come out and spend some time at altitude and suffer on the climbs like that, it just helps when you get in the race, it feels more normal, well as normal as racing allows you to feel.

What’s the plan for the BMC team?
Jeff: This climb coming up at the beginning, it’s really important to be attentive also it’s a bit of a wait and see, it’s going to set the tone for the entire day but you just don’t know who’s climbing well and who’s not, what kind of cards are people going to lay on the table. For us, we know what’s out there so we’re going to wait and see how the others react, try do use our knowledge to outperform them and then as the race progresses, just try … we have a strong real deep team and hopefully we can use our numbers to good effect.

Everyone is going well?
Jeff: Everyone is going well, they’re all adapted, they’re all tanned (chuckles) been in the sun.

Are there any surprises to watch for in stage 2?
Jeff: The first climb is real steep and it’s pretty long. And it’s really early, it could all come all together but it’s definitely going to take a little strings out of some legs real quick. It’s not like a lot of races we see where everything happens at the end, it’s going to happen at the beginning and the finale is also very tough. I think the heat will play a factor and the wind. It’s a cool stage, it’s dynamic, it’s going to benefit people who are aggressive.

Are you still carrying the Cascade form? [Jeff finished second overall]
Jeff: I think I’m going pretty well. It’s today and Saturday. If there’s someone close in the time trial but otherwise it’s not quite long enough to make a big difference. If you want to win the race, today is the beginning and Saturday is the confirmation.

What is the impact of altitude on a cyclist?
Ian: I think the key is, one of the things you have to be really conscious of is not to go too hard because if you go too hard then you end up never re-covering. So like yesterday, when the attacks were going, everything seemed to be in slow motion and if you’re not careful yeah you’ll go too deep and you’ll never recover.

How long would it take to get acclimated in a race like this?
Ian: I couldn’t tell you, I can say that we were up at the training camp, the first three days were hard, pretty miserable and after that I started feeling pretty normal so I think after three days you’ll be okay.

What about the heat?
Ian: I’m not a big fan of the heat but yesterday was pretty hot and I didn’t feel that I was melting so not too bad.

The high-altitude training camp seems to be paying off with 3 BMC riders at less than 28 seconds from the leader after stage 2. Darren Lill is in second at 4 seconds back, Louder in fourth at 24 seconds and Brent Bookwalter in the fifth spot.

Jeff Louder (BMC) finished third in stage 2 at Tour of Utah

All photos copyright Lyne Lamoureux

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Jason Donald wins first stage and first yellow jersey at Tour of Utah

August 13th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

The first stage of the 2008 Larry H Miller Tour of Utah is in the books. Under blue skies with temperatures reaching the low 90s, Garmin-Chipotle’s Jason Donald won the 3-way sprint against his breakaway companions Sheldon Deeny (Fan Sports Network) and Brad White (Successful Living).

The field crossed the line 19 seconds after the winner, with Ricardo Escuela (Successful Living) winning the sprint.

An ecstatic Donald also grabbed the yellow leader’s jersey with added time bonus of 10 seconds. White won enough points in the three HotSpot Sprint lines to win the green sprint leader’s jersey.

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Tour of Utah Plays To Strengths Of Team Type 1

August 12th, 2008 by thien

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Salt Lake City — Team Type 1 has been targeting the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah since the National Race Calendar (NRC) was unveiled.

“It is certainly the most demanding American stage race and I expect it to be one of the most competitive,” Team Type 1 Sport Director Ed Beamon said. “But I think it is the type of race that really suits Team Type 1.”

The five-day, five-stage race begins Wednesday and is 342 miles (550 km) long and includes 30,000 feet of climbing – nearly all of it taking place at more than 5,000 feet. That figures to favor Ian MacGregor and Fabio Calabria, who live and train at altitude in Colorado, as well as Glen Chadwick, who competed in the Olympic road race in Beijing last week.

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Talking Utah with Burke Swindlehurst

August 12th, 2008 by Lyne Lamoureux

Billed as America’s Toughest Stage Race, after taking a hiatus in 2007, the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah is back in 2008, bigger than ever. From August 13 until August 17, the 17 teams will be challenged by the 5-day, 5-stage, 336 mile race with 30,000 feet of climbing will all take place within a 100-mile radius, encompassing Salt Lake City, Nephi and Ogden.

Who best to describe the course than Bissell leader and Salt Lake City resident Burke Swindlehurst who finished fourth overall in 2006. I chatted with Burke last week during his final preparation for the Tour of Utah.

Burke Swindlehurst at Tour de Nez where his teammate Aaron Olson won the overall

Lyne: We talked way back in February, just before the Tour of California, where you had basically just joined the Bissell team, and we talked about your goals for the year – which were “help the team get results” and “personally, Gila, Hood, Cascade and Utah”. You finished second at Gila, and Ben Jacques-Maynes finished 3rd at Hood. How satisfied are you with your year so far?
Burke: I’m actually very satisfied so far, it’s been better than I expected so far actually. I had a couple of races where I wanted to do well where things didn’t work out but it was more of … just how racing pans out more than not being prepared or not having form. Obviously the podium at Redlands was a really nice unexpected surprise, I usually don’t have super good form that early in the season, so that was nice. And then, Gila, pretty much went according to plan but there was just one little Columbian guy that kind of got in the way of things (laughs) but overall, I’m pretty happy with it.

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BMC Racing Team - Tour of Utah Training Camp and Preview

August 11th, 2008 by thien

Courtesy of bmcracingteam.com/

As the Tour of Utah readies itself to live up to its “Hardest Race in America” billing, BMC sets very high ambitions for success in this late summer goal

For over a week now the BMC Racing Team has been living and training at altitude in the Utah Mountains, preparing themselves for the challenging stages they will face in the 2008 Tour of Utah later this week.

Utah native and resident, Jeff Louder, has been contributing his local knowledge to the camp by helping to organize the days’ rides and giving an insider’s view of race’s climbs to some of the team’s Utah neophytes. “The camp has been going really well,” Louder confirmed at the weekend. “We’ve been acclimatizing to the altitude, everyone is in good spirits, and we’ve certainly confirmed that the race will be very, very hard!”

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