Monday, November 4, 2013

Colnago C40 B-Stay Oscar Freire WCS Limited Edition frame set

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Óscar Freire Gómez (born 15 February 1976 in Torrelavega, Cantabria) is a former Spanish professional road bicycle racer. He was one of the top sprinters in road bicycle racing, having won the world championship three times, equalling Alfredo Binda, Rik Van Steenbergen and Eddy Merckx. In the later years of his career, he has been more of a classics rider. He has won the cycling monument Milan – San Remo three times, four stages in the Tour de France and seven stages of the Vuelta a España, throughout a successful career.
Despite his diminutive stature, Freire was a good sprinter. He had a training philosophy where he rode shorter distances than most pro cyclists, sometimes covering only about half the distance his colleagues would.

Colnago C40

1998
BALLERINI’S GREAT­EST ROUBAIX WIN
Powering his Colnago C40 on his own for the final 70km, on a day marked by foul weather and a crash by his team leader Johan Museeuw, Franco Ballerini takes his sec­ond Paris-Roubaix win. His Mapei team-mates Andrea Tafi and Wilfried Peeters take sec­ond and third after pow­er­ing the break­away from which Ballerini spring­boards to victory.

1996
MAPEI SWEEPS ROUBAIX PODIUM
Belgian Johan Museeuw crosses the line first at Paris-Roubaix in a choroe­graphed fin­ish after he and Mapei team-mates Gianluca Bortolami and Andrea Tafi escape with 86km to go and prove unstop­pable. All three are aboard Colnago C40s as team spon­sor Georgio Squinzi instructs that Museeuw should win.

1995
BALLERINI WINS PARIS-ROUBAIX
While other teams exper­i­ment with moun­tain bike tech­nol­ogy, Colnago sticks to his prin­ci­ples and sup­plies Mapei rid­ers at Paris-Roubaix with C40 bicy­cles with Precisa straight forks. Franco Ballerini wins aboard his C40 and is Over a nine-year period Mapei rid­ers go on to win five Paris-Roubaix on Colnagos






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