The Open Road
My journey to the Classics this year did not turn out the way I had envisioned just days ago. The airspace never opened up here in Europe for the flights to run and my team was unable to work out any other options, waiting hours on hold trying to book any method of travel. So I decided to take matters into my own hands and rent a car to drive the 1,300 kilometers to Belgium. I found that even though the cost to rent a car for a one-way trip was approaching the 2,000 Euro mark per day, I could rent the same car and return it back to Spain for just 20 Euros a day.
My mind was made up. I would pick up the car in Girona, drive to Belgium and race through Liege-Bastogne-Liege, then drive down to Italy to pick up Brendan Quirk for a few days of training on the Giro d’Italia course and finally bring the car back to Girona in early May. I am tired just from writing about all of the driving ahead, but at least I know I will get to where I need to be. The outrageous bike charges and the countless security screens that come with air travel will not be missed either.
Driving in Europe is not all that bad either. I am amazed at how much the scenery changes in such short distances. Being from America I am use to driving hours on end before I was out of the deserts of the West, or the mountains of North Carolina. Here in the space of a couple hours you go from the arid landscape of Provence, past the high mountains of the Alps and you are in the rolling pastures covered in yellow mustard seeds that make up central France. The scenery defiantly keeps the drive entertaining, but I was more than excited to pull into our team hotel late last night. It was a long trip that took some thirteen hours from door to door, but I am happy I did it. It is great to be back with the team and where I belong. I hated watching Amstel on TV, and I didn’t want to be in that same position the rest of the week. These races are some of the best of the year and regardless of how I feel after the long drive I can’t wait to race tomorrow.
For 2010, Fleche Wallonne has had a pretty significant course change. As always we pass the infamous Mur de Huy three times. With its slopes kicking up above 20% it has always been a deciding factor, but probably never more than it will be this year. In past editions we would pass the Mur two times before the finish on the third trip up, but those first two times were always far out from the finish so the pace was calm. This year the 2nd passage comes just twenty-nine kilometers from the finish, so it will play a vital role in the race. The run-in to the 2nd passage will be chaotic, as we all know the race will be decided there. HTC-Columbia’s goal is to have some riders up the road by then as with a finish like tomorrow it is always good to be a little ahead of the game.







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