5.22.08
2008 COMMERCE BANK TRIPLE CROWN OF CYCLING TEAM
REVIEW
May
22,
2008: Olympians
from then and now, current and former world champions,
and a host of Tour de France talent will descend
on southeastern Pennsylvania in early June, all
there to contest the prestigious Commerce Bank Triple
Crown of Cycling.
Besides lifelong
bragging rights, this talented cast of two-wheeled
stars will vie for their share of a $142,300 prize
purse that includes a $10,000 bonus for the top
man and $5,000 for the No. 1 woman.
Battling for all
that cash will be a deep field that includes four
teams slated to start July’s Tour de France,
the Danish-based Team CSC formation, Italian stalwart
Liquigas, and American powerhouses Team High Road
and Slipstream-Chipotle.
Team CSC will likely
be led by Argentine sprinting sensation and 2007
Philadelphia International Championship winner,
Juan Jose Haedo. Known to friends and teammates
as J.J., this rising ProTour star has already stamped
his authority on the 2008 season, taking commanding
sprint stage wins at the Tours of California and
Georgia. The CSC roster will also include Iowan
Jason McCartney, former Vuelta a España stage
winner, and a 2004 Olympian.
The Liquigas team
is led by sprinter-extraordinaire Daniele Bennati,
who in 2007 scored 11 wins at the grand tours and
classics. This year Bennati has kept right on rolling,
grabbing a pair of stage wins at the prestigious
Giro d’Italia in May.
Team High Road will
likely pin its hopes on the two-headed terror that
is 2007 Triple Crown overall series winner Bernard
Eisel of Austria and Kiwi Greg Henderson. Eisel
won the opening two legs of last year’s Triple
Crown series, easily taking the overall series title.
Henderson is a veritable Triple Crown legend, having
previously won in Lancaster (2005), Reading (2006)
and most impressively Philadelphia (2006).
Meanwhile, upstart
Slipstream will feature a roster with no top-tier
sprinters, but plenty of horsepower, guile and determination.
Be especially on the look out for Dutchman Martijn
Maaskant. The rising young star was fourth at this
year’s Paris-Roubaix, putting the cycling
world on notice that he will be a force to be reckoned
with.
All this top-tier
firepower is not necessarily a harbinger of a one-sided
Triple Crown affair. Home-grown teams such at Toyota-United,
Health Net-Maxxis and Pennsylvania’s own Rite
Aid squad will all do their best to topple the big
boys. Unlike America’s three major stage races
-- California, Georgia and Missouri -- the one-day,
more wide open Triple Crown events present real
opportunity for the domestic based teams. In the
previous six years, the domestics are 8-for-18 in
their heads-up battle with the big budget ProTour
outfits.
California-based
Toyota-United boasts an especially large threat
to the big boys, spear-headed by sprinter extraordinaire
Ivan Dominguez. Despite the presence of four ProTour
teams, the Cuban Missile, as he’s better known,
won the opening stage of this year’s Tour
de Georgia. The Toyota-United roster also includes
Boulder, Colorado-native Chris Wherry, the last
American to win on the mean streets of Philadelphia.
Also be on the watch
for cycling’s new bad boys, Rock Racing, which
boasts a marquee team roster that includes the likes
of ProTour veterans Freddie Rodriguez, Tyler Hamilton,
Victor Hugo Peña and recent Redlands Classic
winner Santiago Botero. The team captured the first
four places at May’s Tour of Colombia prologue,
and Rodriguez remains one of America’s fastest
finishers. Through the years, he’s won almost
every Tripe Crown race at least once.
All told, this year’s
men’s field includes 25 international and
domestic professional teams that will wage a three-race
battle that commences June 3rd with the Lehigh Valley
Classic, an 85-mile, 12-lap circuit race that traces
a twisting path through Allentown and Salisbury
Township. Two days later, the Triple Crown race
caravan will relocate to Reading for a 75-mile,
10-lap affair that darts back and forth between
the city’s downtown and nearby Mt. Penn.
Finally comes the
mother of all North American one-day races, the
Philadelphia International Championship. Celebrating
its 24th running, this epic 156-mile test of mettle
begins and ends on Philadelphia’s famed Benjamin
Franklin Parkway. In between, a fast field of the
world’s 200 best cyclists will hurtle their
way around 10 laps of the 14.4-mile primary circuit
that includes the infamous Manayunk Wall, with its
always-raucous fans and precipitous grades that
exceed 17 percent. Ten long laps are followed by
three testing finishing circuits up and over Lemon
Hill before the 2008 champion is crowned.
The women’s
three-race event begins with criteriums in the Lehigh
Valley and Reading, before concluding with the 56.7-mile
Liberty Classic, held the same day and on the same
course as the men’s finale.
This approximately
120-rider field will also be overflowing with international
talent, including Team High Road and its star-studded
line-up that includes 2007 Liberty Classic winner
Ina-Yoko Teutenberg of Germany, and American star
Kim Anderson.
Looking to pull off
the upset of powerful Team High Road will be the
likes of Webcor Builders, Colavita and 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. Other potential hurdles for Team
High Road include Kristin Armstrong of Cervelo-Lifeforce,
and German Regina Schleicher (Equipe Nurnberger
Versicherung) who won the Liberty Classic in 2006.
Add up all this talent,
and the six-race Triple Crown slate is guaranteed
to be among this year’s most exciting week
of professional cycling.
Source:
Pro Cycling Tour