Media Highlights
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Arndt wins her second Bronze at World Championships
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Team Columbia Bert Grabsch wins elite Men's World Time Trial Title
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Arndt takes final overall in Toscana
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Teutenberg storms to second stage in Tuscany
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Arndt and Teutenberg victorious in Tuscany
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Columbia women take the lead in Giro della Toscana
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Greipel takes his 13th win of the season
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Arndt Blasts to Third World Cup of Season and Wins Series Overall
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Three for Cavendish in Missouri
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Boasson Hagen takes third win at Tour of Britain
Pinotti wins Tour of Ireland and Rabon takes the final stage
August 31, 2008
Columbia's Marco Pinotti outgunned the opposition for a hard-fought overall win in the Tour of Ireland on Sunday, whilst team-mate Frantisek Rabon provided the icing on the cake with a victory on the final stage.
In a dramatic last day's racing from Killarney to Cork, culminating in four laps of a 15 kilometre circuit including the ultra-hard Saint Patrick's Hill, Rabon formed part of an early break whilst Pinotti went for the overall from a chasing group.
After wearing down the other riders in the break, Rabon moved clear with three kilometres to go for a solo win, whilst Pinotti attacked from a nine-man group behind to take the overall.
"I had to play a very strategic game." a delighted Pinotti said.
"As soon as [team-mate] Michael Barry was caught I went. By attacking on the flat I could open up a bigger advantage than if I had done so on the climbs."
"I'd planned to come good in this last part of the season, but you never know if it will actually happen."
"This is the best year of my career by far, I've finished third in Romandie before, but this is the first stage race of my career." "Cycling is changing, and that's meant I have more opportunities to win."
"I just wish I had been in this team when I was a younger rider - they're really good for me. Still, better late than never."
"My next big target will be the World Championships time trial in Varese, I'm current national time trial champion in Italy and I will go all out to get a great result there too."
Rabon's victory was Columbia's fourth stage out of a possible five - following Mark Cavendish's hat-trick of wins on the first three days racing.
"I was really pleased to be able to get this win, I went away in the break but then I wanted to be sure my team-mates didn't need my help, either." Rabon said.
"But when I heard that Marco had attacked and had got 40 seconds on the main group, I thought he would be all right because he's one of the best time triallists in the world."
"It was not easy doing what I had to do, each time I went up Saint Patrick's I felt different. The first time I was going great, the next time I felt terrible, it wasn't at all clear what was going to happen from one lap to the next. But then I just went for it, and it worked out fine."
"I was really pleased because we'd done a lot of work for Mark in the first three stages, and I'd been feeling tired. But today's stage was 140 kilometres long, not 200 kilometres, a distance I could do, so it all worked out perfectly."
Credit: Mario Stiehl
Credit: Mario Stiehl
Credit: Mario Stiehl