Showing posts with label Bochum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bochum. Show all posts

Monday, 15 July 2013

Sparkassen Giro Bochum 2013

28.07.2013 Official Site
Germany, 1-day Road Race
UCI 1.1

Held since 2001 (the men's race began three years earlier), the Sparkassen Giro is a fast and thrilling one-day race held on a tight urban circuit in the North Rhine-Westphalia region of Germany. Last year, due to the Olympics taking place at the same time, the race was stripped of its UCI status; nevertheless, it went ahead with the usual Giro as well as inline-skating races, live bands and DJs (including the rather worrying-to-English-ears Schlager Hit-Mix-Party), circus sideshows and, to finish off, a huge firework display. This year, with UCI 1.1 status returned, the event has grown even bigger and now includes a running race and "the biggest Derny race in the world."

2012 winner Mieke Kröger, pictured here
at the 2012 Thuringen Rundfahrt
If you want to see some professional women's racing this season but can't persuade your family to share your passion for the sport, Sparkassen is the event for you - it's an enormous urban festival with a bike race at its heart.

Want live updates? Boels-Dolmans mechanic Richie Steege and Hitec-UCK manager Karl Lima are Tweeting directly from the race.

Previous Winners
2001 Sharon van Essen
2002 Bertine Spijkerman
2003 Svetlana Bubnenkova
2004 Deirdre Demet-Barry
2005 Angela Hennig
2006 Oenone Wood
2007 Hanka Kupfernagel
2008 Suzanne de Goede
2009 Rochelle Gilmore
2010 Ellen van Dijk
2011 Adrie Visser
2012 Mieke Kröger

Parcours

View Sparkassen Giro 2013 in a larger map

Short circuit: 1.53km
Long circuit: 12.8km

The short, tight city centre circuit suits those riders who feel comfortable in the elbow-to-elbow battles that take place in urban criterium races and, with those sharp corners, is a challenging test of bike-handling skills when taken at speed. The long circuit is an entirely different affair, well-suited to those time trial specialists who can hunker down into an aerodynamic tuck and keep turning a big gear, swallowing up the miles at high speed.

It's an unusual combination with few riders possessing the skills needed to excel on both types of parcours - which is why the Giro has tended to throw up unexpected winners throughout its history.


2012 podium

Monday, 23 July 2012

Sparkassen Giro Bochum 2012

In previous years, the Sparkassen Giro featured a stage race in addition to a criterium, but due to the Olympics it's down to just the criterium this year and doesn't have UCI status (it had been 1.1). Neverthless, it looks set to be a superb event: very few organisers do quite so much to ensure their efforts produce a great day out for cycling fans and the public as a whole - taking place in the German city Bochum on the 5th of August, there are no fewer than seven races (including one with dernys and another for inline skaters), live bands, circus entertainers and, to finish off the day, a fireworks display. This turns a race into a sort of one-day festival and ensures that the race attracts people with no previous interest in the sport, generating welcome income for the city as well as for the race itself; and if even only a few of those who come simply because it's a good, cheap day out for the kids go home thinking that this bike racing thing seems quite good fun and that they might go to a few more races in the future then the organisers can be said to have done a good job.

There are obvious parallels with the IG Markets Nocturne, which has used a similar concept to become one of Britain's most popular cycling events within just a few years. The physical aspects of the two events are very similar too, both using a tight urban criterium parcours that tests riders' skills, ensures all spectators can see the peloton go by several times and makes it very easy for television crews to capture all the action - which is precisely what the sponsors want and goes a long way towards guaranteeing their continued financial support. It's also the sort of parcours that best demonstrates the fast, furious and ever-changing nature of most women's cycling races, with attacks coming left, right and centre and the riders' order changing on every straight and corner.

The parcours is 1.5km in length and begins on Südring by the junction with Kortumstraße (51°28'43.27"N 7°13'1.13"E), a wide thoroughfare with trees along a central reservation that could make for slippery conditions in wet weather, then heads east into a gentle left-hand bend for around 500m and passes by the tall Europahaus tower. 165m after the tower is the tightest corner in the race, a very sharp left leading onto Massenbergstraße. Just across the road is a sculpture created by Richard Serra and consisting of four huge slabs of steel - it's called Terminal and will look familiar to any British fan who has been through London's Liverpool Street Station, as his almost identical Fulcrum stands just outside the station. In addition to a huge amount of street furniture, the corner is made dangerous by tramlines: they vanish again as soon as the riders get onto Massenbergstraße but are ideally placed to catch front wheels. There's also a low concrete kerb separating the two roads, too.

City Hall seen from Bongardstraße, where riders turn left
80m after the corner, riders pass by the entrance to a tunnel and follow the road for 294m through right and left-hand bends leading onto Bongardstraße - the visible through the buildings on the right is the Propsteikirche St. Peter und Paul, founded by Charlemagne and built between 785-800CE but extensively remodeled since. The road then straightens out and continues for 200m to a 90 degree left turn onto Viktoriastraße by the grand City Hall - there's a lot of street furniture along Bongardstraße, but the junction is very clean and smooth; Viktoriastraße remains the same for 135m before being split into two narrow lanes by a central reservation - a potential problem if a large number of riders attempt to get into the lane at the same time, creating a bottleneck. The last corner, a 90 degree left, lies 198m ahead; it's another wide, clear junction with the only obvious hazard being a manhole cover in the middle of the road, right in the line of riders on the right of the peloton - this could be very slippery if conditions are wet. Riders then continue straight along Südring, passing the finish line 80m later. As is always the case with urban races on roads used by trucks and buses, there is a possibility of spilled diesel along the entire parcours.

Start lists have not been released, but will be added here when available. This year, the race does not have UCI status - it had previously been 1.1. However, it attracted some of the top names in women's cycling over the last few years including Ellen van Dijk, Tiffany Cromwell, Chloe Hosking, Noemi Cantele, Valentina Scandolara, Linda Villumsen, Hanka Kupfernagel, Annie Simpson, Helen Wyman and current World Champion Giorgia Bronzini - it seems likely therefore that it will still draw a very competitive field.

Events
Amateur race 13:00
KNAX MiniGiro 14:30
Professional Men 16:00
Professional Women 18:00
Fun Giro 19:30
Derny Race 20:00
Full programme including bands and fireworks