Paris-Roubaix: Fabian Cancellara does the double

Fabian Cancellara on his way to winning the 108th Paris-Roubaix (AFP/Getty Images)
Olympic time-trial champion Fabian Cancellara powered to his second one-day classic victory in a week, winning Paris-Roubaix Sunday with another humbling of Belgian rival Tom Boonen.
The Swiss rider's second victory in the gruelling 259km race, known as the 'Hell of the North' due to its 27 sectors of bone-shaking cobblestones, means he also becomes only the 10th rider to achieve a rare classics double.
Last week Cancellara, who rides for Saxo Bank, left Quick Step rival Boonen struggling to keep pace with an attack 15km from the finish line of the Tour of Flanders.
After Boonen's second place finish in Milan-SanRemo, and his runner-up place in Flanders, the pressure was on Belgian's biggest cycling star to take revenge.
But on Sunday the three-time Paris-Roubaix champion was again at Cancellara's mercy - only this time the Swiss waited until Boonen had used up some ammunition, and was having a feed at the back of a small chase group, before attacking with just under 50km to go.
A combination of unrivalled power from Cancellara and a crucial lack of collaboration in Boonen's chase group allowed the Swiss to build a quick, unassailable lead before going on to savour his win in style.

Cancellara celebrates the win
Even before he reached Roubaix's famous outdoor velodrome Cancellara was celebrating, brandishing the gold angel trinket his family had given him last week for Easter.
Two minutes later, Norwegian Thor Hushovd outsprinted Spaniard Juan Antonio Flecha to claim second place with Boonen arriving in fifth a minute later.
"I knew that with my form and the way the last weeks were going I would be difficult to catch once I took a 10 metre lead, that they would be scared," said Cancellara.
"Boonen, Flecha, Hushovd... I think they knew straight away they were racing for second place, and that allowed me to race my own race. Boonen was trying to make some breaks (attacks), so obviously I had to follow him and a couple of times I was starting to doubt myself.
"But my team car was telling me not to race his race, to race my race. That's what I did, and when I came through the Mons-en-Pevele cobbled sector I decided I would be going all the way to the finish on my own."

Cancellara battles the cobbles
Cancellara emerged from Mons-en-Pevele, one of the most difficult cobblestone sectors, with a 20-sec lead on Boonen and the wind, which had been blowing into and across the peloton all day, at his back.
With over 45km to race victory was still far from guaranteed, but the disastrous tactics being deployed behind him went in his favour.
Boonen was left in a seven-man chase group which notably contained Hushovd, Filippo Pozzato, Leif Hoste and Flecha but, apart from Boonen, they had practically conceded defeat.
"I think when Cancellara went everyone understood pretty quickly that we wouldn't be catching him," said Cervelo rider Hushovd, who improved on his third place finish from last year. "That's why I'm really happy with my second place."
By the time Cancellara had emerged from the seventh from last cobbled sector at Templeuve, his lead had grown to an unassailable 1:30.

Flecha and Hushovd were third and second, respectively
Boonen was angry with the rest of the riders in the group.
"If Cancellara attacks and I can't follow him that's fair enough. But I'm really angry with the way some of the other guys rode," said the 29-year-old Belgian, who won the race in 2005, 2008 and 2009. "At no time did any of them try to race and some of them, including Flecha, had already resigned themselves to racing for second."
Flecha said: "I gave everything I had so for me it's a great finish. Cancellara's strong, but he also had the balls to attack from as far out as he did. For me, he's a great champion."
Last week Cancellara became the first Swiss since Heiri Suter in 1923 to win at Flanders, and his Tour of Flanders/Paris-Roubaix double is Switzerland's first since Suter's double.
To date, Cancellara now has four major one-day classic wins - Milan-SanRemo in 2006, two at Paris-Roubaix (2006 and 2010) and the Tour of Flanders (2010).
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© AFP 2010
Results
| 1 Fabian Cancellara (Swi|Team Saxo Bank) | 6:35:10 | |
| 2 Thor Hushovd (Nor|Cervelo Test Team) | 0:02:00 | |
| 3 Juan Antonio Flecha Giannoni (Spa|Sky Professional Cycling Team) | ||
| 4 Roger Hammond (GBr|Cervelo Test Team) | 0:03:14 | |
| 5 Tom Boonen (Bel|Quick Step) | ||
| 6 Björn Leukemans (Bel|Vacansoleil Pro Cycling Team) | 0:03:20 | |
| 7 Filippo Pozzato (Ita|Team Katusha) | 0:03:46 | |
| 8 Leif Hoste (Bel|Omega Pharma-Lotto) | 0:05:16 | |
| 9 Sébastien Hinault (Fra|Ag2R La Mondiale) | 0:06:27 | |
| 10 Hayden Roulston (NZl|Team HTC - Columbia) | 0:06:59 | |
| 11 Sébastien Rosseler (Bel|Team Radioshack) | 0:07:00 | |
| 12 Arnaud Coyot (Fra|Caisse D'epargne) | 0:07:05 | |
| 13 Tom Veelers (Ned|Skil - Shimano) | ||
| 14 Kasper Klostergaard Larsen (Den|Team Saxo Bank) | ||
| 15 Maarten Wynants (Bel|Quick Step) | ||
| 16 Mikhaylo Khalilov (Ukr|Team Katusha) | ||
| 17 Lloyd Mondory (Fra|Ag2R La Mondiale) | ||
| 18 Jeremy Hunt (GBr|Cervelo Test Team) | ||
| 19 Frédéric Guesdon (Fra|Française Des Jeux) | ||
| 20 Mathieu Claude (Fra|Bbox Bouygues Telecom) |
For full results, report and photos, visit Cyclingnews.com.
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User Comments
There are 5 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 5 of 5 comments
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Radioactiveman
Posted Sun 11 Apr, 4:38 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Awesome breakaway, boonen was snoozing :)
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TheSommelier
Posted Sun 11 Apr, 4:53 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Cancellara is turning out to be quite a force in the classics now, hopefully his early season form will last going into the grand tours...bravo!
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flegghighsmells
Posted Sun 11 Apr, 7:02 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Absolutely epic. Cancellara was just knocking up time on the break. 1 minute, 2 minutes, 3 minutes, the guy is a MONSTER!
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boz64
Posted Sun 11 Apr, 8:25 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Er... why no mention of our very own Rogers Hammond's commendable fourth place in this article?
Congrats to Fab tho... looking like he's gonna be a very tough man to beat this season!
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Meds1962
Posted Mon 12 Apr, 12:42 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
I thought it's called The Hell of The North because it passes through some of the WW1 battlefields that we still in terrible condition when the first post war race passed thrrough, not because of the cobbles.











