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March 2, 2020
Strade Bianche 2011 – Gaiole in Chianti – Siena : 190 km
With Tirreno-Adriatico starting next Wednesday, Milan-San Remo now just two weeks away and cobbled Classics looming large on the horizon,
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March 2, 2020
Strade Bianche 2011 – Gaiole in Chianti – Siena : 190 km
With Tirreno-Adriatico starting next Wednesday, Milan-San Remo now just two weeks away and cobbled Classics looming large on the horizon, Saturday’s Monte Paschi Strade Bianche race on the dirt roads of Tuscany, will be a key indicator of riders’ form. The hilly race through the hills south of Siena has rapidly become a special race on the calendar. Major professional races often inspire Gran Fondo sportive rides but it was the Eroica sportive, where riders have to use bikes made before 1987, which inspired RCS Sport to create the Strade Bianche professional race in 2007. That first race was captured by Alexandr Kolobnev, and when Fabian Cancellara out sprinted Alessandro Ballan to take the second edition the following spring, a new classic was born. The 190km race is now a permanent fixture the weekend before Tirreno-Adriatico, and continues to grow in prestige with each passing year. The combination of stirring scenery and combative racing has made it a firm favourite with fans and riders alike, and perhaps the ultimate proof of its appeal has come with the recent trend of inserting Strade Bianche-style stages into the route of the Giro d’Italia on its passage through Tuscany.
Philippe Gilbert won on the “white roads” of the Montepaschi Strade Bianche, after a hard-fought 190km of racing in Tuscany. Under impetus from the Omega Pharma-Lotto man, the lead group of 20 broke up on an uphill stretch in the final kilometre, and he went on to accelerate clear of Alessandro Ballan (BMC Racing Team) and Damiano Cunego (Lampre) in the streets of Siena to take a classy victory.
Gilbert’s win was his second of this campaign, after taking a stage of the Volta ao Algarve. It was also just the latest in a series of masterpieces that the Belgian has served up on Italian roads. He ended his 2010 season with a stunning solo win at the Tour of Lombardy, but he showed his dexterity on the Strade Bianche by holding his nerve and leaving his move until he reached Siena’s charming cobbled streets.
“Italy is my paradise,” Gilbert beamed after the finish. “My last race here in 2010 was Lombardia and the first one here this year is Strade Bianche, and they’re two wins that I’ll never forget.”
As the leading group of 20 splintered in the final kilometre, Gilbert knew that timing and positioning would be as important as brute strength on the technical approach to the finish line in Siena’s Piazza del Campo. Reaching the final corner in first position was crucial, but Gilbert allowed the dangerous Ballan test the waters before he unleashed his own fearsome sprint in earnest.
“It was a nervous finale on dangerous little streets,” Gilbert explained. “I let Ballan launch the sprint before starting my own. 250 metres from the line he came up alongside me and we battled for the last corner, but I was on the inside and I knew that could be a decisive advantage.”
The former world champion Ballan acknowledged that Gilbert had been clever to take the inside line, but he was pleased with his form in Tuscany.
“I was behind Philippe Gilbert and Damiano Cunego was on my wheel,” Ballan said. “Gilbert took the inside and I didn’t want to pass him on the outside because I was afraid that I would crash. Overall, I’m happy with my condition. It bodes well for the upcoming races.”
Cunego admitted that there was little that he could do against the in-form Gilbert, who has signalled himself as the man to watch on all terrains this spring.
“Gilbert’s burst was deadly,” Cunego said. “I tried to hang tough, hoping to recover on the flat and on the descent before the Piazza del Campo. I tried, I pushed and I even almost got back on coming up to the line, but Gilbert had more than everyone.”
The early salvoes on the dust roads
Unlike the Giro d’Italia’s visit to this part of the world in 2010, there was no rain in Tuscany on Saturday, but the strade bianche still required the utmost of technical ability and daring from the peloton. While Gilbert left his signature move until the race reached Siena, there was no shortage of action on the dust roads themselves, as the combination of sharp inclines and technical, unmade surfaces broke up the peloton repeatedly.
Andy Schleck (Leopard Trek) was among the aggressors on the first stretch of dust road, just 35km in, but a puncture forced him out of the move. Soon afterwards, the day’s main escape came together, when a 12-man group got away at the 43km mark: Alessandro De Marchi (Androni Giocattoli), Joost Posthuma (Leopard Trek), Giairo Ermeti (Androni), Martin Kohler (BMC), Federico Rocchetti (De Rosa), Davide Ricci Bitti, Patrick Sinkewitz (Farnese-Neri), Matthias Brandle (Geox-TMC), Peter Velits (HTC), Paolo Longo Borghini (Liquigas), Thomas Peterson (Garmin-Cervélo), Adam Hansen, Greg Van Avermaet (OmegaPharma-Lotto) and Stuart O’Grady (Leopard-Trek).
The break built a maximum advantage of three minutes but with no Lampre-ISD man in the move, it was always going to be difficult to stay clear of the pink and blue train at the head of the bunch. The lead group fragmented as the difficult surface began to take its toll and eventually O’Grady and Van Avermaert pulled clear, first with Ermeti for company, and then by themselves.
“It wasn’t the perfect situation to go with the early breakaway. but O’Grady made the jump and I just followed him and we were gone,” Van Avermaet said. “When you have such good legs, you try to make the best of it.”
They managed to stay clear of the peloton until just after the final section of dust road, but the 18% slopes there were to put paid to their hopes of victory. They were swallowed up with 12km to go, as Lampre-ISD began to wind things up for a finale that they felt was well-suited to Damiano Cunego’s talents. Indeed, the Italian was himself a prominent figure at the head of the bunch, but in the end, he too would have to yield to the sparkling Gilbert, who toasted another fine win.
Results :
1 Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Omega Pharma-Lotto 4:44:26
2 Alessandro Ballan (Ita) BMC Racing Team
3 Damiano Cunego (Ita) Lampre – ISD
4 Jure Kocjan (Slo) Team Type 1 – Sanofi Aventis
5 Fabian Cancellara (Swi) Leopard Trek
6 Angel Vicioso Arcos (Spa) Androni Giocattoli
7 Oscar Gatto (Ita) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
8 Giovanni Visconti (Ita) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
9 Greg Van Avermaet (Bel) BMC Racing Team
10 Fabian Wegmann (Ger) Leopard Trek
11 Michael Albasini (Swi) HTC-Highroad
12 Ryder Hesjedal (Can) Team Garmin-Cervelo
13 David De La Fuente Rasilla (Spa) Geox-TMC
14 David Gutierrez Gutierrez (Spa) Geox-TMC
15 George Hincapie (USA) BMC Racing Team
16 Massimo Codol (Ita) Acqua & Sapone
17 Patxi Javier Vila Errandonea (Spa) De Rosa – Ceramica Flaminia
18 Emanuele Sella (Ita) Androni Giocattoli
19 Marco Pinotti (Ita) HTC-Highroad
20 Rubens Bertogliati (Swi) Team Type 1 – Sanofi Aventis 0:00:40
21 Francesco Failli (Ita) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
22 Craig Lewis (USA) HTC-Highroad 0:00:45
23 Przemyslaw Niemiec (Pol) Lampre – ISD 0:01:00
24 Hayden Roulston (NZl) HTC-Highroad 0:01:15
25 Daniel Oss (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale 0:01:50
26 Leonardo Bertagnolli (Ita) Lampre – ISD 0:02:30
27 Stuart O’Grady (Aus) Leopard Trek 0:03:20
28 Mark Cavendish (GBr) HTC-Highroad
29 Vicente Reynes Mimo (Spa) Omega Pharma-Lotto
30 Cadel Evans (Aus) BMC Racing Team
31 Andy Schleck (Lux) Leopard Trek
32 Tiziano Dall’Antonia (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale
33 Cayetano José Sarmiento Tunarrosa (Col) Acqua & Sapone
34 Paolo Ciavatta (Ita) Acqua & Sapone
35 Ramunas Navardauskas (Ltu) Team Garmin-Cervelo
36 Patrik Sinkewitz (Ger) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
37 Alessandro Donati (Ita) Acqua & Sapone
38 Roberto Ferrari (Ita) Androni Giocattoli
39 Maciej Bodnar (Pol) Liquigas-Cannondale
40 Daniele Ratto (Ita) Geox-TMC
41 Alan Marangoni (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale
42 Manuele Mori (Ita) Lampre – ISD
43 Davide Ricci Bitti (Ita) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
44 Leonardo Giordani (Ita) Farnese Vini – Neri Sottoli
45 Bernhard Eisel (Aut) HTC-Highroad
46 Paolo Longo Borghini (Ita) Liquigas-Cannondale
47 Marcel Wyss (Swi) Geox-TMC
48 Giampaolo Cheula (Ita) Geox-TMC
49 Tom Stamsnijder (Ned) Leopard Trek
50 Matthias Brandle (Aut) Geox-TMC
51 André Greipel (Ger) Omega Pharma-Lotto
52 Martin Kohler (Swi) BMC Racing Team
53 Fabio Taborre (Ita) Acqua & Sapone
54 Dmitry Kozontchuk (Rus) Geox-TMC
55 Cameron Wurf (Aus) Liquigas-Cannondale
56 Chad Beyer (USA) BMC Racing Team
57 Thomas Peterson (USA) Team Garmin-Cervelo
58 Giairo Ermeti (Ita) Androni Giocattoli