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Denis Menchov goes for back to back grand tour wins

July
3

By SAMUEL PETREQUIN, AP Sports Writer MONACO / Denis Menchov won the Giro d’Italia and will attempt to capture the Tour de France to become the first man to win both races in the same year since the late Marco Pantani in 1998.

The 31-year-old Russian impressed in claiming the biggest win of his career in Italy in May and turns his attention to the Tour where he will have the help of his strong Rabobank team and rising star Robert Gesink.

The best young rider of the Tour in 2003, Menchov is one of six riders considered joint-favorites this year along with Alberto Contador, Lance Armstrong, Cadel Evans, Andy Schleck and defending champion Carlos Sastre.

“I feel good, comfortable and confident,” Menchov said on Friday during a press conference at the eve of the first stage in Monaco. “I feel relaxed after my victory on the Giro and I’m looking forward to starting the race tomorrow. It will be difficult, but I know that I can win.”

With Gesink on his side, Menchov’s ambitions carry added legitimacy. The 23-year-old climber from the Netherlands will be riding in his first Tour but has already confirmed his talent this season with a third-place finish in the Amstel Gold Race and by taking fourth place in the Dauphine Libere.

“Robert is an important piece of our team,” Menchov said. “He is a strong guy and he is good in the mountains. I hope that we can do the same race we did last year and that we will be able to a play some tactics in the mountains.”

Gesink said he wants to learn from Menchov and promised to dedicate himself to working for the Russian’s victory.

“Denis is our main guy for the general classification,” Gesink said. “He will be the leader of the team and the rest of us will try and help him.”

In Italy, Menchov secured victory by winning two of the race’s key stages — a hilltop finish and a challenging time-trial. The Russian said the Tour’s opening time-trial Saturday, a 9.6-mile route with climbs, tricky hairpin bends and fast curves, would be crucial.

Besides the overall standings, the Rabobank team can aim for stage victories with riders such as the Spanish duo of Juan Antonio Flecha and former world champion Oscar Freire. Hampered by back problems this season, Freire hopes to retain the best sprinter’s green jersey he won last year. But he will face a strong challenge from Briton Mark Cavendish, considered to be the king of sprints.

“It will be difficult but not impossible,” Freire said. “I won the green jersey last year, so why not this year?”

This entry was posted on Friday, July 3rd, 2009 at 9:13 PM by Randall Wolf. Print This Post Print This Post | Email This Post Email This Post

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Randall Wolf Randall Wolf is Director of Photography at The Journal News/LoHud.com, and has ridden more than 80,000 miles on a bike during the past 35 years. Some of these miles include a three-week touring trip from Suburban Philadelphia to Nova Scotia and back at age 16 and a few years later a solo two-week trip to Montreal. In 1985, he photographed the first U.S.-based team in the Vuelta a Espana, a three-week professional cycling race throughout Spain. He has participated in professional teams and races throughout the U.S. including the national championship in Philadelphia, and Tour of Georgia. In the mid-Ô90s he competed as an amateur racer throughout the Northeast. Bike commuting was his choice of transportation while working in Baltimore and Toronto. He is a ride leader and member of the Westchester Cycling Club and Rockland Bike Club, and lives in Garrison with his wife.
About the authors
Robert Brum Robert Brum, an assistant metro editor for The Journal News/LoHud.com and The Rockland Express, grew up cycling the roads of Rockland County. He now lives in Queens and rides with the Long Island Bicycle Club. Brum logs between 2,000 and 3,000 miles a year cycling throughout the Northeast.
David Schloss David Schloss is the co-founder and president of the Rockland Bicycling Club. A lifelong cyclist and self-described bicycling addict, Schloss is also a professional writer, photographer and educator, he is also the director of a group that supports photographers, which allows him to travel the globe, sneaking in rides.
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