Amstel Gold Race 2009/2010 Live Dashboard
Live Video, Map, Profile, Teams, Results, Photos, TV


Veteran rider Serguei Ivanov (Rus) of Katusha gets the "biggest win of his career" ahead of Saxo Bank and Dutch rider Karsten Kroon
Y! 9 Big Photos from Amstel Gold Race 2009 ()
Posted April 17th 2009, 57 Big Photos from last year's Amstel Gold Race ()

Map  |  Profile  |  Preview  |  News  |  Teams  |  Live Internet  |  TV  |  2008

2009 Amstel Gold Race Teams
Team Rosters and Withdrawals

News and Updates for Amstel Gold Race 2010

November 23 update: The 2010 Amstel Gold Race is Sunday April 18, 2010 March 15 update:
Teams announced for Amstel Goldvelonews

News and Updates for Amstel Gold Race 2009

2009 Post-Race Links:

Serguei Ivanov wins from a late three man break

44th Amstel Gold Race Results
1 Sergei Ivanov (Rus) Team Katusha                         6.38.31 (38.814 km/h)
2 Karsten Kroon (Ned) Team Saxo Bank                                              
3 Robert Gesink (Ned) Rabobank                                0.08
4 Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Silence-Lotto                                            
5 Damiano Cunego (Ita) Lampre - N.G.C.                                            
6 Alexandr Kolobnev (Rus) Team Saxo Bank                                          
7 Simon Gerrans (Aus) Cervelo Test Team                                           
8 Nick Nuyens (Bel) Rabobank                                                      
9 Christian Pfannberger (Aut) Team Katusha                                        
10 Andy Schleck (Lux) Team Saxo Bank
Full Resultscyclingnews
  Highlightssporza
  Highlights The Last Km (coming)sporza
Ivanov wins Amstel Goldvelonews
Ivanov winnaar Amstel Gold Race ( interviews in Dutch with Gesink and Kroon) — nos.nl
Photosyahoo/gettys
  The ugly finish to stage 8 of Tour of Turkey: Scroll ahead to 3'40" for the wrestling take down of the Yellow Jersey on what should have been a ceremonial finsh
9 Big Photos from Amstel Gold 2009sirotti
Graham Watson Photosgrahamwatson

Live Video Streaming and TV Coverage

steephill is also on Twitter with race info and video updates
April 18 update: A work in progress. Feel free to send in additional sources for live video or tv coverage as they become known. Lars de Gier has emailed me details about a potential source for worldwide online video (in Dutch). I'll posted something more when I have a precise link. — Steve

Start Time: Sunday ??? AM CEST ();
Earliest live video: 1:45 PM CEST ();
See all the live video, audio and text options
Approximate Finish: 3:10 PM CET ()

Rider race/bib numbers, withdrawals and links to rider bios
Current Time, Weather and Wind Direction in Maastricht, Netherlands
Current Situation/Live Updates

media source tv or internet comments/restrictions
NOS    live video streaming
   live video streaming
(less restricted)
  tv schedule
NOS TV w/ Dutch ticker
   live video streaming
   live video streaming
restricted?
eurosport    live video streaming
(english audio)
   live video streaming
(french audio)
   internet audio
  tv schedule (Europe)
Eurosport Live at 13:15 GMT (105 min); rebroadcast at 19:00 GMT (90 min); Internet audio hasn't worked for several weeks
sporza    live video streaming
  tv schedule
Sporza live at 14:00 CEST; likely restricted to Belgium/Europe
   live video streaming
  tv schedule
RAI starts at 15:45 CEST (105 min); live? video streaming is restricted to Italy
rtbf    live video streaming
restricted
   live video streaming
(unrestricted)
restricted; french commentary
   live video streaming some restrictions; requires a subscription; english commentary
 live text updates live text updates starting at 11:30 CEST ()
 steephill text updates
 #amstel twitter group
short text updates from any and everyone
check back at race time for more and updated links; email send a comment or a new live link


Startlist now official

April 19 update: Changes to the provisional rosters have been made. Here is the official startlist. Most of the Garmin roster has changed since the provisional startlist was posted last week. — Steve

Race Preview


The route follows a circuitous and bumpy path on the roads near the city of Maastricht before ending in Valkenburg
April 17 update: Please welcome guest columnist, Gavia, to steephill.tv. Many of you will have read her fine work at PodiumCafe where she is a regular contributor.

The Course: Riding in Circles

The Amstel Gold Race follows a circuitous and bumpy path on the roads near the city of Maastricht before ending in Valkenburg. The "Beer Race" is young in cycling terms, dating from 1966. Frenchman Jean Stablinski won the first edition, after a 300 kilometer (!) jaunt between Breda and Meerssen. Since 2003, the race has finished on the Cauberg, a 1.5 kilometer climb with a maximum gradient of 12 percent. This finish is made-to-order for riders like Damiano Cunego and Alejandro Valverde, talented climbers with big sprints.


Racing on a hilly course with narrow roads is always good entertainment. 31 short climbs in total.

A total of 31 short climbs dot the 258 kilometer course, which is one of the more confusing among the major classics. The course traces a series of circles, frequently doubling back upon itself, including three trips up the Cauberg. The climbs rarely last much more than a kilometer, but they are relentless in their repetition. Few flat roads interrupt the rhythm of constant climbing. The Eyserbosweg, which comes with approximately 20 kilometers to go, often serves to whittle down the finishing group, though it comes too far from the finish to be decisive. There is no set pattern to how Amstel is won, and the kilometers between the Eyserbosweg and the finish on the Cauberg typically involve a fair amount of tactical gamesmanship.

steephill is also on Twitter with race info and video updates

Adding to the difficulty, the roads are technical with tight corners, quick climbs, and steep descents. The narrow roads place a premium on riding at the front, while countless speed-bumps and numerous road furnishings stand ready to cause havoc in the bunch. A good portion of the race runs through residential areas, where parked cars stalk an inattentive rider. These obstacles can make for nervous racing, especially if the weather turns wet as it so often does.


Two of the favourites, Cunego and Evans, recently did battle at Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali

The Favorites List

Last year's race winner, Damiano Cunego of Lampre-Ngc is perfectly suited to the hilly classics with his combination of climbing talent and finishing speed. He comes to this year's Amstel with two stage wins and the overall victory at Settimana Coppi e Bartali, a sixth place overall at the Vuelta al País Vasco, and a sixth place at the hilly Spanish semi-classic, Klassika Primavera. At the beginning of the season, Cunego named Liège-Bastogne-Liège, the Giro d'Italia, and the Worlds in Mendrisio as his season's objectives. At the same time, I doubt he'd mind adding another win at Amstel to his record. Certainly, he's on good form and is well-suited to this race.

Likewise for Spanish talent Alejandro Valverde of Caisse d'Épargne who must also rank among the favorites to win. Valverde shares Cunego's fast finish and strong climbing. Though currently in a spot of bother with the anti-doping authorities in Italy, Valverde continues to ride and win, thanks to the indulgence of the Spanish Federation. At the beginning of the season, Valverde claimed the Tour de France as his main objective of the year, and suggested that he would not ride to win before July. Perhaps that plan remains his intention, but in recent weeks, the Spanish rider has shown steadily increasing form. His most recent victory came at the Klassika Primavera where he won the sprint from a group that included Cunego. Valverde has twice won Liège-Bastogne-Liège, but never the Amstel Gold Race, where his highest finish is third. Should Valverde falter, his Caisse d'Épargne team-mate Joaquim Rodriguez has consistently achieved results in the hilly classics and earlier this season won the Montelupone stage at Tirreno-Adriatico, which finished on a wall-like climb.

It's been quite some time since Davide Rebellin won all three of the Ardennes week races, Amstel, Flèche Wallonne, and Liège-Bastogne-Liège, in 2004. But he hasn't exactly sat idle since then. This year will likely mark Rebellin's final year of racing, and he has declared the Ardennes and Worlds as his main objectives. The Italian classics talent consistently figures in the finale of these Spring classics, and finished second at Amstel Gold in 2007 and second at Liège-Bastogne-Liège in 2008. Riding for Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni-Androni Giocattoni (phew!), Rebellin can count on Michele Scarponi and Alessandro Bertolini for support, though he may find it difficult to match the speed of both Cunego and Valverde on the Cauberg.


Frank Schleck didn't particularly enjoy watching Damiano Cunego's victory salute last year.

Fränk Schleck of Saxo Bank won the 2006 edition of this race, attacking 9 kilometers from the finish to celebrate a solo victory on the Cauberg. Since then, Schleck has consistently made the podium at the Amstel Gold Race and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. Schleck has the climbing legs and endurance for these hilly classics, but a lack of finishing speed complicates his chances. He needs to escape alone or find the right breakaway partner to win. If he goes to the line with a rider like Valverde, Schleck is all but certainly riding for second.

If things don't go well for Schleck on the day, the Saxo Bank roster is well-stocked with talent. Alexandr Kolobnev recently finished second at the GP Miguel Indurain, and Karsten Kroon played race-maker at Brabantse Pijl, but finished fifth after misjudging the sprint. Though he hasn't shown especially good form lately, Andy Schleck rode a stellar Liège-Bastogne-Liège last season in support of Fränk. Did I mention this Saxo Bank team is stacked?

Hot off a third place finish at the Ronde van Vlaanderen, Philippe Gilbert of Silence-Lotto has set the Amstel Gold Race as one of his objectives for the season. The Ronde result came as a surprise: Gilbert had not expected to ride the Flemish monument. A Walloon, Gilbert has long dreamed of winning his home races, Flèche Wallonne and Liège-Bastogne-Liège, but has said in recent interviews that he believes that the Amstel Gold Race suits him better. He has yet to achieve a high finish at the Dutch classic, though, and his performance remains one of the more suspenseful aspects of this year's race. Gilbert will share team leadership at Silence-Lotto with Dutch talent Thomas Dekker, who has ridden well in these hilly classics in the past. Dekker has struggled to find form this season, though, in part as a consequence of allergies. So far in his career, the young Dutch rider has typically shown better in the stage races than in one day classics.

Other riders to watch include Kim Kirchen of Team Columbia-High Road, who last year won Flèche Wallonne. Kirchen has the legs for the climbs, but doesn't quite have the finishing speed of riders like Valverde and Cunego. Kirchen has spent the Spring re-building his form after he broke his collarbone at the Tour of California. Also returning from injury is Oscar Freire of Rabobank. Freire is generally characterized as a sprinter, but he has a versatile talent which has thrice won him Brabantse Pijl, a race that serves as a preview for the hilly Spring classics. The Amstel Gold Race is nonetheless likely too heavy on the climbing for the former World Champion. Instead, Rabobank will rely on young Dutch climbing talent Robert Gesink for a good result. The team sent Gesink to Tirreno-Adriatico for some speed work earlier this season, but he has struggled to find form and did not figure in the finale at Brabantse Pijl. Gesink may have found his legs since then, and if so, he could certainly cause his share of trouble on the hilly roads around Maastricht.

Cadel Evans, meanwhile, is on steadily building form, though he has declared the Tour de France his principal objective. Evans typically rides well in the hilly classics, though he lacks the finishing speed of the outright favorites. He celebrated one of his highest finishes in the Ardennes last year with a second place at Flèche Wallonne. He shares team leadership at Silence-Lotto with Philippe Gilbert. Christian Pfannberger of Katusha, has no previous results at Amstel, but has showed some form recently at the GP Miguel Indurain and the Settimana Coppi e Bartali. Like Pfannberger, German rider Fabian Wegmann of Team Milram is riding well, finishing second at Brabantse Pijl, but has never managed a high placing in the Spring classics. Wegmann has a nice turn of speed for the finish, but has struggled with the relentless climbs and lengthy distances of races like the Amstel Gold Race.

Long Shot Shout-out! A long shot shout-out to Vincenzo Nibali of Team Liquigas. The talented Italian is more made from the mold of a stage racer than a one day rider, but has recently shown a marked liking for the front of the bike race. Sadly, this effort has not rewarded him with any big victories just yet. In past seasons, he has won the GP Ouest-France and the Giro di Toscana, and recently finished fifth at GP Miguel Indurain and fifth at Klassika Primavera, ahead of Cunego, but behind Valverde. Well, yes, I did say he was a long-shot, didn't I? Forza Vincenzo! — Gavia


2008 third and fourth place finishers, Alejandro Valverde and Davide Rebellin, are also back this year.

more previews...
Official Site: course map and climb profiles — amstelgoldrace.nl
Malty mayhem guaranteed on Amstel's bergscyclingnews
How To Win Amstel Goldpodiumcafe
Y! Just posted April 17th 2009, 57 Big Photos from last year's 2008 Amstel Gold Race ()


The course profile consisting of three overlapping circuits