5.14.08
PROFESSIONAL WOMEN’S TEAMS NAMED FOR COMMERCE
BANK LIBERTY CLASSIC
May
14,
2008: Organizers
of the Commerce Bank Triple Crown of Cycling have
announced the 20 professional women’s teams
that will contest a three-race battle in southeastern
Pennsylvania in early June. At stake is a $34,000
prize purse that includes $5000 for the overall
series winner.
Battling for the big payday
will be a talented field of six-rider squads that
includes three of Europe’s top teams, plus
the cream of the crop from this side of the Atlantic.
As usual the marquee event of the series will be
June 8’s Liberty Classic, which is celebrating
its 15th running on the historic streets of downtown
Philadelphia.
The overwhelming favorite
to capture Liberty gold will be defending champion
and two-time winner Ina-Yoko Teutenberg. The German
sprinting sensation is on fine form once again,
already taking an impressive third at the season
opening World Cup in Geelong, Australia. Teutenberg
will be backed by the powerful Team High Road squad,
sister outfit to the dominant men’s team and
No. 1 in the most recent World Cup rankings.
“Ina will definitely
be our plan A,” confirmed Kristy Scrymgeour,
High Road’s communications manager. “Our
main concern is making sure no one gets away on
the last trip up Lemon Hill. If we can keep the
race together Ina will be hard to beat in a sprint.”
High Road also boasts American
stars Mara Abbott and Kim Anderson. A year ago,
the 22-year-old Abbott was the revelation of pro
peloton, winning a stage of the Redlands Classic,
the national road race championship, and scoring
a silver at the Montreal World Cup. All that happened
while she was still devoting time to swimming and
college. This year, the young American is fully
focused on cycling, with her eyes trained on the
Summer Olympics in Beijing.
The biggest threat to High Road will be Equipe Nürnberger
Versicherung, and its own fast finisher, Deutschland
native Regina Schleicher. Schleicher was world champion
on the road in 2005 and won the Liberty Classic
a year later. Nürnberger was second in the
most recent World Cup standings.
Swiss-based Cervelo-Lifeforce
are the newcomers to the Liberty Classic, but that
doesn’t mean they’re coming only for
the experience. Led by 2006 world time trial champion
Kristin Armstrong, Cervelo-Lifeforce has the best
chance of derailing another German blitzkrieg.
Since 1996, only two non-Germans
have won this prestigious women’s event, the
last coming in 2003 when Canadian Lyne Bessette
snuck away during the final climb of Lemon Hill
and held her advantage all the way to the finish.
Armstrong, a non-sprinter who was second in this
year’s Tour of Flanders, will need a similar
scenario to unfold if she’s to become the
first American to win the Liberty Classic.
Webcor Builders could also
make some noise during the Commerce Bank Triple
Crown of Cycling. The California-based team started
2008 with a bang when team rider Katheryn Mattis
scored a breakthrough win at the Geelong World Cup
in late February. That victory celebration was muted
a week later when Mattis broke her collarbone after
crashing at the Tour of New Zealand. Nonetheless,
Webcor’s international aspirations remain.
The 2007 National Racing Calendar team champion
spent much of its spring campaign in Europe, helping
team leader – and rheumatology doctor –
Christine Thorburn pursue a spot on the U.S. Olympic
team.
But come Triple Crown time,
the team’s hopes will lie with Canadian Alex
Wrubleski who is in the midst of a career year.
Already in 2008 Wrubleski has scored a pair of top
4s in World Cup events, and in April she grabbed
the top step of the Redlands Classic stage race
podium after taking enough bonus time in the final
stage to steal the overall title away from High
Road’s Abbott.
Other teams to watch include
Colavita-Sutter Home, which is led by Tina Pic,
one of the sport’s most decorated pros. During
her lengthy career, Pic has won multiple U.S. national
criterium championships and National Racing Calendar
titles. This year Pic has gotten a boost from rising
Aussie star Tiffany Cromwell, who won the overall
titles at the Garret Lemire Memorial Grand Prix
and the Sea Otter Classic Road Race.
Also keep an eye on Team Tibco,
which scored the top podium step at the inaugural
Tour of California criterium earlier in the year
when Brooke Miller out-kicked Cheerwine speedster
Laura Van Gilder.
The women’s three-race
series commences June 3rd in Allentown, Pennsylvania,
with the first of two Commerce Bank Triple Crown
pro women criteriums. The second 25-mile crit will
take place two days later in Reading. Following
a pair of rest days, the race caravan will relocate
to Philadelphia for the 56.7-mile Liberty Classic,
which is run on the same circuit as the men’s
Philadelphia International Championship. In both
cases racing begins and ends on Philadelphia’s
famed Benjamin Franklin Parkway.
In between, the world’s
fastest women cyclists will scratch and claw their
way around four laps of the grueling 14.4-mile circuit
that includes the infamous Manayunk Wall, which
boasts precipitous grades in excess of 17 percent.
Expect another furious dash to the finish and perhaps
the first American winner in the race’s long
and illustrious history.
Professional
Women’s Teams for 2008 Commerce Bank Triple
Crown of Cycling
Note:
As of 5/6/08

Source:
Pro Cycling Tour