Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Bike Bar

What if you could have a party, drive around town, drink beer, and do exercise, all at the same time? You'd have the Bike Cafe. Sit, drink, and pedal. The bartender stands in the middle and steers.


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Friday, June 05, 2009

Bike Rack Advertising

Great idea. Ads on bike racks all over Cologne. Most were location based with arrows pointing out the direction to the local business being advertised.

Amsterdam would need a bit more capacity for locking bikes. Their racks don't have ads, but the bikes do. Cards hooked onto handlebars. I guess that's the equivalent of flyers on the windshield.

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Wait in the Vehicle

If more Americans did their errands on bikes, this would be the equivalent of "I'll be quick. Wait in the car". Gotta trust those kickstands.

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Smoking on Two Wheels

Lot of smokers. Lot of bikers. Bound to catch someone doing both. Hey, he's not trying to win any races, but still seemed odd. Then again, there is a long history of smoking and biking...

...just not recently.

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Chinese Capitalists Part 2

Some more small business owners. Beijing has an abundance of "sidewalk bike shops", selling locks, tubes, tires, and doing repairs. My guess is you won't find any fancy tools around here. There's nothing a screwdriver, hammer, and duct tape can't fix.

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

Bicycle Delivery

No Arrowhead or Sparkletts trucks in Shenzhen. If you want to deliver 5 gallon water bottles around here, you do it by bike. Carrying 4 on each side, that's 40 gallons of water which is over 300 pounds. Props to anyone who not only can ride a bicycle with that much weight, but can also prevent it from collapsing. Notice how close the bottles are to the ground. No sharp turns for this guy.

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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Kam Po Wong Ads

You don't know who Kam Po Wong is? He's only Hong Kong's best cyclist! The Lance Armstrong of Hong Kong. Well, I know who he is and it looks like people in Hong Kong know who he is too. I saw him in 2 ads in one day. Tiger Woods and Kobe Bryant endorsements don't sell anything in this town.

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Friday, January 12, 2007

Munich Six Days

Yup, that's current world and olympic champion Paolo Bettini. For someone who is well versed in track cycling as I claim to be, not having been to a six days race was a threat to my credibility. If I ended up in Europe during the colder months, I would go. There are many 6 days races between October and January all around western Europe. See UCI track schedule. Munich just so happened to be the most convenient time and place. For some history about six days racing read the wiki.

Watching a track world cup or world championships is fun, but it has its dull moments, for example, team pursuit qualifying, pursuit qualifying. women's sprint repechages. first lap of every sprint round, etc. Everyone wants to see the madison. Well, 6 days racing is essentially 6 days (or more accurately, 6 nights) of only the events you want to see. This is the ultimate in spectator friendly sports and it could so easily be hugely popular in the US because it once was.

I knew 6 days were awesome, but seeing it in person still totally exceeded my expectations. This isn't an indoor velodrome...this is an indoor stadium! You get to sit back and watch Paolo Bettini and Erik Zabel (1st and 2nd at the road world championships 1 month prior) go around in circles for hours and hours. It sure beats sitting on the side of a road in the heat waiting for the tour to come by. Considering it's a 200 meter track with 10 to 11 second laps, those guys deserve every penny of their €100,000 start money. When the lap cards show 199 laps to go, you gotta like what you do. Bettini had only been riding the track for a few weeks, but he madisons like the best of them. He excels in the derny races probably because of motorpace training for road. There's only one thing that makes him stick out as a roadie. He was the only guy on the track who accelerated or sprinted out of the saddle.

View of an empty stadium. Paolo Bettini makes it look easy. Watching the race from up high.

There will be around 5 or 6 different events each night. So there's constantly winning and cheering. The riders are having a good time too. Before a race starts and all 30 of them are on the track, they'll ride single file and do the wave. Likewise, the wave in the stands should follow them around the track.

In addition to the madisons and points races, there were three other types of events that warrant some explanation.

1. Derny racing is not a paired event (ie no handslings). Each of the 15 racers has his own motorpacer (aka derny) who is very overweight and/or has a mustache. Many of them are former racers. It's a mass start race like a scratch race, but essentially they have a teammate who gives them a good draft and can always pick up the pace. It must involve some communcation so the driver knows whether his racer wants to attack or drop off the back. In general track races are conducted in pretty close quarters with some elbow contact, but in this event they keep their space. You won't see any 4 up sprints to the line. Usually only 1 or 2 are in contention by the end. The speed is fast and the motors are roaring and spewing out gasoline exhaust. Here's a video clip of Zabel and his motorpacer adding another victory:

2. A 1 lap flying time trial is much like a 200m time trial that a sprinter would do, but in this case you have endurance riders working as a pair. Both riders take a couple laps to wind up the speed. They're one behind the other until the last second when at full speed, the front rider handslings the back rider. With the kinetic energy of two people he does the fastest 200m of his life. The best times were just under 10.5 seconds, which a track sprinter could beat on his own. I didn't catch the exchange in this clip, but you can still see Dutchman Danny Stam cover a lot of distance in a very short time:

3. For the elimination race, it took me the longest time to figure out what was going on. They were slinging each other like a madison, but only close to the end when there were 4 guys left on the track did I realize this had a "miss and out" component to it. Elimination is a paired "miss and out"! Two-man teams sling each other in and out. Only 1 of the 2 is racing at a time, but if he's last on a lap, his pair is eliminated. To make an analogy: elimination is to miss and out as madison is to points race. I hereby declare this type of event the awesomest track event ever. It's a shame there's no world championships for it.

As a licensed USCF official, I probably shouldn't admit this, but I had a hard time keeping score, so I didn't try. I'm not exactly sure how it's tabulated, but I'll take the jumbotron's word for it. The important thing is that Zabel won most of the races and the overall. He could accelerate like no one else. It only takes a 10 second gap to take a lap and Zabel could just sprint out of the pack like he was racing with Cat 3's. I'm not sure how much of this is choreographed since he's the local favorite and everyone has a paid contract with the organizers.

Watching the race from down low. Erik Zabel in yellow. Musicians are performing in the infield while the riders take a break. Isaac Galvez (rear) and Juan Llaneras in the 1 lap TT. Galvez died in a crash 2 weeks later at the Ghent Six Days.

The racing goes from around 8PM until after midnight, but people aren't sitting in their seats the whole night. VIP's get their restaurant and bar on the infield. For common folk, all around the track are restaurants, bars (including a carousel bar), sponsor exhibits, bike shops, and fast food,...ox burgers, anyone? There are a couple breaks from racing where they have live music or some kind of performance. At a bike race in the US, all the spectators are probably bikers. At this event, the people in the crowd are just your average local sporting fans and they know more about track cycling than most American roadies. Here's a good video clip I found on YouTube. It's a few minutes long and gets a nice view of the track on the final night when the stands were completely packed.

Blurred racers sprint for the finish. Derny racing: Every racer gets motorpaced. Danny Stam and Peter Schep wind it up for the the flying 1 lap.

I selected some of the best photos to post here, but there are plenty more. Check out the thumbnail gallery.

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Sunday, December 31, 2006

Benelux Tour - Den Helder

Do you ever read cyclingnews and say, "Hey, there's a protour race nearby tomorrow. I think I'll go check it out."? Unfortunately you can't say that in the US, not yet anyway. But if you're in Europe, you'd probably say that all the time. The Benelux tour is the ProTour's creation, because the individual tours of Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxemburg, aren't cool enough on their own...at least not as cool as the Tour of Poland says the UCI. This year's Benelux tour didn't even go to Luxemburg, so it's more the Bene tour. This year it started in Den Helder, an hour north of Amsterdam.
My favorite road cycling event to spectate is a prologue. You get to see everyone one at a time over several hours. You can watch the big names warm up, see all the team cars, walk around to different points along the course. Which sure beats 200 guys flying by in less than 5 seconds.
Being a ProTour event, all the big teams and the big names were there. Star attraction of course is Tom Boonen. Racers are passing by the staging area. Are the people watching them race? Some are, but a lot more (including me) are next to the Quick Step bus watching Boonen warm up. If more people are watching you warm up than are watching someone else race, you just might be a Tom Boonen. Even my video clip of him warming up has been viewed over 2500 times on YouTube. It's my most viewed clip of this blog:

The one drawback to watching a race in person, is that you don't see the finish or know who won, unless of course you're at the finish line or quick enough to get to the podium ceremony. I guess a radio or portable TV would also help. In any event, it would be nice if they could post some unofficial results somewhere. As I found out later, George Hincapie was 2nd by half a second. George came back to take the lead of the race by one second, but on the last day, he was crashed out by Stefan Schumacher whose 2 second bonus gave him the win by 1 second. Yes, the same Schumacher who won the prologue by half a second. Maybe next year they can find some hills in the Benelux region so the time gaps aren't so close. Here are some nice pictures from the prologue:

Big crowd watching Boonen warm up. Rabobank rider about to start. T-mobile getting low in a straightaway.
View from a hill as Astana rider goes by. Getting close to the action. Spectators on a hill cheering on a Lampre rider.
CSC warms up. Swede Magnus Backstedt, looking intimidating as always. World champion Tom Boonen warming up.
Backstedt takes a turn. Boonen without a rainbow jersey in the time trial. George Hincapie (USA) loses this TT by half a second.

View of the North Sea from Den Helder

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Thursday, October 26, 2006

Field of Bikes

I locked my bike at the Central Station and when I came back several hours later, the bike was gone. I had just had a conversation with someone about how bicycle thefts were way down, and there was no way anyone would steal this bike in this place at this time of day. In spite of a multi-level bicycle parking structure (shown left), there is a shortage of bike racks at the station. I assume it's a safe bet to do what other people are doing, so I locked the bike to a pole next to the bike racks. Two other people did that. I did it too. Turns out you can't do that and a bike shop right next to the station gave me info on where impounded bikes are taken. Whether it was there or not, I had nothing to lose to check it out. I hate losing my own stuff, and more than that, I hate losing someone else's stuff. Luckily, the bike arrived at the impound lot right when I did. I signed the paperwork. Yes, the rainbow colored ladies bike is mine. Thanks to the well marked bike paths, I found my way back, but it took over an hour. It would have been a lot more comfortable if I had my road bike with clipless pedals. Before I left the impound lot I had to take a picture of this field of bikes. I've never seen this many bikes in one place....must be the size of a football field. Something tells me a lot of bikes go unclaimed.

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Thursday, October 19, 2006

Tour De France 2006

It'll be a while before we know who goes into the history books as the 2006 Tour winner, but drug tests aside, I saw Floyd in Paris in yellow. I heard the star spangled banner played on the Champs Elysee for him. i saw the American flag raised above Spain and Germany. Combined with Lance's 7, that makes 8 years in a row of closing down the busiest street in Paris to play the American national anthem. France shows goodwill to us, and I think we should return the favor by playing La Marseillaise on the 405.

Chances are pretty good that an American won't be on that top spot for a while, and OLN doesn't show the whole podium ceremony, so I took video of it. I tried panning around 360 so you can see all the people from around the world who came to Paris to show their support for America and the War. Even though Google just paid $1.65 billion for YouTube, they're still letting me upload videos for free that you can watch without ads. The only difference between now and right before the first dot com bust, is that before the first dot com bust, free stuff had ads.

The final stage is a good one to spectate because they race about 6 laps of the Champs and you can see them twice per lap. After the race, every team is presented and does another lap holding flags and waving to the crowd. The avenue is so long (and tree lined) that it can accomodate all the people without being too far back (or exposed to sun). If you can get there early enough with a few other people, chairs, tape, and/or rope, you can really stake some prime territory. But you can't stake the finish line. That area has a grandstand only for sponsors/VIPs (pronounced by europeans as "vips", rhymes with tips, not "V-I-Ps").

Before the race gets to town, if you get bored standing next to a barrier on the sidewalk, your best bet is to find the jumbotron and watch the race. Then you can see that they're all going really slow, drinking champagne, shaking hands, being totally inconsiderate of me having to stand around in the 90 degree heat and humidity. How can you guys still be 60km from Paris?

When they do finally arrive, they don't dissappoint. These guys are fast.

There were too many photos to post them all here. Check out the photo gallery on flickr.

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Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Cobble Cam

We all know biking on cobbles is a very shaky experience. Now it's captured on video.

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Saturday, July 08, 2006

Velodrome in Alkmaar

The Dutch national team trains at the indoor 250m velodrome in Alkmaar, about 30km north of Amsterdam.

A closer look at the roof and support columns. I think it looks like the underside of an open umbrella.

Think you have good bike handling skills? Try sending a text message while riding on the black line!

This is Cees. (pronounced 'case') He's the goat that hangs out around the velodrome.

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Biking thru the Dutch Countryside

Traded my road bike for a ladies city bike. Handlebars high enough to sit upright. A handy bell in case anyone gets in my way. A light that's powered by the wheel's motion (which doesn't work), and best of all, no top tube, so I can get on and off quickly and comfortably. Unfortunately, I'll never get used to coaster brakes. I am constantly reminded by the sudden jolt, don't pedal backwards while coasting!

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Thursday, July 06, 2006

Tour de France in the Netherlands, July 4

Every once in a while, the tour comes to the Netherlands. Stage 3 of the 2006 tour finished in Valkenburg which is in the very southern tip of the Netherlands. It's closer to Germany and Belgium than it is to Amsterdam. This is a popular place for bike racing. It hosted the 1999 World Championships and the Amstel Gold race finishes up the Cauberg climb every year. The dutch national championships were in nearby Maastricht last week (see earlier post).

Given the proximity to other countries and the fame of this climb, there were an insane amount of people there. About 500,000 in a town with a population of 4,000.
This video shows tons of people just at the base of the climb.

To pass the time, people threw cups of beer at people on the other side of the road, or better yet at the people waving from the publicity vehicles driving through the course.
It had to be one the hottest and most humid days ever. I found some shade and space on a flatter part of the course with 4km to the finish.
Don't blink. The pack just flew by.

Once the main pack went by I cut across back to the Cauberg to see the stragglers/crash victims finishing.

Is it worth sitting on a train 6 hours (roundtrip), and standing around in really hot weather for 3 hours....to see the tour go by for 2 seconds? When I put it that way, no, not really. It's only worthwile to spectate a time trial, a climbing stage, or a circuit race. But I'll do it again in two weeks watching the final stage in Paris. At least there they do 10 laps of the finishing circuit. When you're an American cycling fan in Europe in July, you'd be overrun with guilt if you didn't stop by the tour once or twice.

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Wednesday, July 05, 2006

GP Gerrie Knetemann, June 28

It's not too often that I get to be in a follow vehicle at a pro race in europe. So far, it happens every 24th year. I'll try to make it a more frequent occurence, because it really is the best place to be during a race and I would even argue it's the best place to be, period. How does one get to sit shotgun in a team car for a race? It helps to be a team director, a mechanic, or in some cases it works to be a well-connected cycling fan;)
Some background info: Gerrie Knetemann was a well known pro racer from back in the day and more recently he was the national team coach. He died last year and this race was created in his memory. The race was 5 laps on a 30 km loop in eastern netherlands, close to germany in a reasonably hilly area with nice big U.S. sized homes, and narrow curvy roads (please see earlier post regarding lack of straightaways). The participants were mostly dutch racers and dutch pro teams. A handful of top dutch pros that are on foreign teams raced together as the national team. You might be familiar with such guys as Servais Knaven (Quick Step), Karsten Kroon (CSC), and Max Van Heeswijk (Discovery). A fourth well known cyclist joins them for this picture:

National team coach Egon Van Kessel gives a pre-race pep talk. "Now listen guys, you're all here cuz your teams didn't think you were good enough for the tour, but you're a hell of a lot better than anyone else here. You're all wearing different jerseys and I don't pay you, so let's have some fun."

Does Max Van Heeswijk ever stop smiling? So far the answer is no. Not before the race, not during the race, not after race.

Waiting in the caravan for the race to start. In the caravan lottery we got number 15. Not so good when there's 20 teams.

I thought it might be boring to sit in the 15th car, after all, I wouldn't see the race much. I was wrong. There's the race radio, the radios with the riders, joking around with the other team managers, driving erratically on closed roads, enjoying the scenery and spectators. The team car is a busy place. And in a really big race there'd also be a laptop, TV, gps, etc. Four hours flies by. One minute you're chatting with the Rabobank guys.

The next minute it's Jeroen Blijlevens driving the official race car.

Two of our guys were in the breakaway and once the gap reached over a minute, our car was allowed to move up. That was great because now I'd actually be watching the race. Here's video of us passing the field.

Another video watching the race from behind.


You also get to see the riders a little bit more when they drop back to the cars for bottles and food. Usually the exchanges are pretty quick but in this video, Karsten Kroon is taking a while. It seems like he wanted water but the bottle he got was a sports drink.

The gap grew to almost 3 minutes, but near the end it got reeled in....way to spoil the fun Landbouwkrediet-Colnago. Consequently the car had to go back and I didn't see the finish. A Rabobank rider won. But Max Van Heewswijk was still smiling. All in a day's work. It wouldn't be a bike race if there wasn't post-race standing around in chamoises (or whatever the plural of chamois is).

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Dutch National Championships. June 25

The video quality from a Canon digital camera is surprisingly good, but also surprising was how large the video files are. YouTube compresses it quite a bit, but it's the best option I know of for sharing videos online. If you watch this video real close, you can see Michael Boogerd zipping by solo and crossing the finish line. This was the pro race for the Dutch national championships held in Maastricht, the only real hilly area in the Netherlands. The Amstel Gold race is also held in this area in the spring. Only around 30 or 40 racers finished probably because of some rain, the climbs (Dutch climbs are also known as "flat roads" in Switzerland) and all the turns. From the 3 dutch races I've seen so far, I'm convinced there is a rule forbidding straightaways longer than 200m in any part of a Dutch race.


Here's the start/finish area. I wonder who the title sponsor is. hmm. Maybe it's vodafone?



Whoa, that's a pretty big jersey, maybe T-mobile's the sponsor.



Riders coming through the start/finish.



Michael Boogerd gets the dutch champions jersey for the 10 millionth time. Just like Lance...once you find a good race, you just win it year after year without any other top results.


The Maas River. Whoa, that's gotta be the widest river I've ever seen, which doesn't mean a whole lot because I haven't seen too many rivers.

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Biking along side a rowing race just south of Amsterdam, July 2

Just south of the city is a 2km long rowing venue, called the Bos Baan because it's a track (baan) along the Amsterdam Bos (forest). From what I'm told, it was built (or shall I say dug...you don't build a hole) in the 1930s to create jobs. Nothing stimulates an economy like a big digging project. Probably due to canals and rivers everywhere, rowing is a pretty popular sport here.


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