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| They quite like their scooters in San Remo. |
San Remo is a bustling town, it may be faded from the point of view of genteel people wintering here, but it's anything but quiet, the Via Roma is the main drag - and it is heaving.
The shops are full of expensive consumer goods, the casino looks in good nick, and there are no charity shops.
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There's a route preview on Pez here but suffice to say that both the Cipressa and Poggio are tougher and narrower than they look on TV - and the descents are wild.
It sounds corny, but I felt really excited as I drove the Renault Kangoo - yeah, it's grim! - up the Poggio decent, it's just a strip of tarmac, but it's so special.
The Cipressa
Cipressa is a nice, quiet wee place with a church beside the road,
right at the top of the climb.
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No doubt the riders won't even
notice the beautiful church which |
From the bottom of the Poggio to the finish line isn't as far as it seems on the box and you can imagine how desperate a finale it must be.
You have to fight for position on the coast road so you are at the front when the road narrows and the hairpins start, then keep your wits about you on the climb; the front is the only place to be on that decent and the same applies on the run-in too.
The Via Roma
The Via Roma isn't as wide or glamorous as it appears on telly, and
what you don't realise is that it's lifting all the way to the line
- a really hard sprint to get right.
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We got up here early to beat the road closures. Alessandro Federico is covering the race for Pez too, and is chasing the riders down from Milano in the car. I'm doing the actual race report from here, courtesy of the telly in the bar, and the trusty BlackBerry; the live feed starts at 14.50.
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| Tension mounts as the race draws closer... |
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| Some fellas just never will see the point of carbon-fibre. |
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| Zabel hangs in over the top of the Poggio. |
I did a report on the race, which you can read on Pez here. I have great respect for Oscar Freire and he was a great winner, but I would liked to have been there when an Italian won - just for the buzz. I had fancied Paolini, he's strong and good at getting it right for the big day, but I guess all the Liquigas eggs were in the 'Pippo' basket today.
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| Kirchen working hard to close a small gap over the top of the Poggio - Freire is comfy 3rd in line, managing his effort - he said later he "trusted his sprint completely". |
Gilbert was letting Ricco do the lion's share and in time-honoured Belgian fashion trying to be too fly - in the last kilometres, it's all or nothing when guys like Marco Velo and Fabio Sacchi are rampaging on the front behind you.
The Italian papers were fullsome in their praise for Ricco on Sunday though. Petacchi had no excuses, Milram worked like galley slaves to set the race up for him, but at the end of a long, fast race Oscar is the cutest and the quickest - he hasn't been World Champion three times for nothing.
My fellow "Pezutee", Ale (who is a naval architect in 'real' life) reckons that Petacchi hasn't recovered from his knee injury of last year; we both agreed that the Giro would be the big test for him.
Zabel did a ride today though: he was working hard as part of Petacchi's train but still took sixth.
The bar emptied quickly and quietly - like I said, it would be good to be in there when an Italian won.
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A relatively high Brit representation yesterday provided a good solid ride by Jez Hunt for 17th, with Roger Hammond 42nd and Dave Millar 71st.
So now it's time to forget about 'proper' coffee and newspapers with cycling content, and brave the Jolly Scallies on the Easyjet to Liverpool... I wonder who'll win at the Lake of Menteith tomorrow?
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Email: editor@veloresults.co.uk