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Photo ©:
Ben Atkins
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La bicicletta della Campionessa
By Ben Atkins in Cittiglio, Italy
La Campionessa herself
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The top tube
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Like the Prince's fork
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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A champion's saddle
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Bastianelli's Record gruppo
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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The Campagnolo Record Ultra
Narrow chain
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Measuring the beats
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Bastianelli's bike is numbered
up and ready to roll.
Photo ©: Ben Atkins
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Having recently featured the
bike of men's world champion Paolo Bettini, it seems only proper
that we should also take a closer look at the steed of his female counterpart,
Italian compatriot Marta Bastianelli. To this end, we managed to coax
it - and briefly her - to one side before the recent Trofeo
Alfredo Binda, in the northern Italian town of Cittiglio.
Bastianelli won her rainbow jersey in slightly unexpected fashion in
Stuttgart last year. The 20 year-old rider was sent up the road to force
riders of other nations - particularly those of Dutch defending champion
Marianne Vos - to chase to the benefit of Italian team captain Giorgia
Bronzini. However, no concerted chase ever developed and Bastianelli
was able to win alone. Vos won the sprint for silver, and Bronzini -
appropriately - took the bronze.
From a visual perspective, Bastianelli's bike stands in stark contrast
to that of Bettini. Whereas the Quick.Step rider's steed is resplendent
in custom rainbow and gold livery from stem to stern to celebrate his
world and Olympic titles, Bastianelli's bike is essentially standard
team issue white-and-red with only a rainbow-striped Selle Italia SLR
saddle and some appropriately coloured bar tape to celebrate the achievement.
While this could be taken as a sign of the champion's modesty, it is
far more likely an indicator of the unfortunate gulf in budgets between
the men's and women's sides of the sport.
Even so, Bastianelli competes aboard no second-tier ride. We recently
reviewed - and raved about - the
new Pinarello Prince and found its exclusive use of Torayca's 50HM1K
carbon to yield a particularly light and responsive frame. The unmistakeable
Onda FPX curves in the fork blades and chain stays also manage to provide
a smooth ride and are designed to take the sting out of uneven road
surfaces without compromising lateral stiffness. Front end rigidity
is further enhanced by the tapered steerer tube, which flares from a
standard 1 1/8" at the stem clamp to 1 1/4" at the crown.
Not one of the tallest members of the women's peloton, Bastianelli
uses the smallest size frame available: a 44cm with a sloping top tube.
While it's possible that - like Bettini and many others - she has selected
a slightly smaller size than usual to decrease weight and increase rigidity,
Pinarello's decision not to produce the Prince in a women's-specific
geometry probably has more to do with it. In general, women tend to
have longer legs and shorter torsos than men of similar height and dropping
the frame size is Bastianelli's only real option to get a proper top
tube length.
Bastianelli's mount features an almost identical specification to the
Prince we tested; the major difference - apart from size- is the choice
of wheels used by the Safi-Pasta Zara-Manhattan team. For the training
spin and course reconnaissance ride the day before the race, Bastianelli
used the same wheels as the rest of her team: the Mavic Ksyrium SL,
shod with 23mm-wide Continental Grand Prix 4000 clinchers. As one of
the big favourites for victory at Trofeo Alfreda Binda, though, she
switched to a more aerodynamic pair of Pinarello's house brand Charisma
deep section carbon wheels. However, a not-too-close inspection of these
revealed that they were borrowed from Lithuanian team-mate Diana Ziliute.
The majority of the finishing kit is also from Pinarello's in-house
MOst brand. A pair of 40cm-wide Lion Air bars is clamped to a Tiger
Lite stem, and the SLR saddle is held in place by a carbon Tail seatpost.
Two 5mm-tall carbon spacers sit above the stem clamp, suggesting that
Bastianelli has lowered her position since taking possession of the
bike or, more likely, that the team mechanics have taken the safety
first approach and deliberately clamped the steerer below the top for
increased safety, more positioning flexibility and a slightly more solid
purchase on the tube.
Bastianelli's gruppo is an almost entirely Campagnolo affair, the sole
exception being a MOst TANK FP chainset fitted with a standard sized
pair of 53/39T chainrings. Like most of the men's peloton, she uses
the new "Red" version of Campagnolo's Record Ergopower levers and the
hilliness of the course was taken into account with the selection of
a 12-25T cassette. Brakes are a pair of standard Record D-Skeleton calipers
equipped with some carbon-specific pads to work on those borrowed Charisma
wheels on race day. Like the rest of her team-mates, Bastianelli uses
Pinarello-branded Look KeO Carbon pedals.
Interestingly enough, at 7.42kg (16.36lb) Bastianelli's bike weighs
over 400g (0.88lb) more than the significantly larger bike we tested,
even in race day configuration with the Charisma wheels. In fact, some
of this weight difference can probably be attributed to those wheels,
seeing as how Bastianelli used the clincher version which is substantially
heavier than the tubular option. The rest of it can be explained by
the fact that some of the finishing kit is less than top of the range.
For instance, the rainbow-striped SLR saddle, far from being a specially
made version just for her, is in fact a limited edition run of Selle
Italia's base level version that accounts for a full 55g more than the
lightest one with carbon rails.
Even so, Bastianelli may still consider herself lucky. While she and
other team captains like Ziliute and Bronzini (who ride for sister team
Titanedi-Frezza Acca Due O) have Record-equipped bikes, the realities
of the budgetary gap between men's and women's racing means that many
of their team-mates have to "make do" with second-tier Chorus.
PhotographyFor a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here
Images by
Ben Atkins/Cyclingnews.com
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Full specification
Frame: Pinarello Prince FPX monocoque in Torayca 50HM1K carbon
fibre
Size: 44cm sloping
Fork: Pinarello Onda FPX with tapered 1 1/8" to 1 1/4" steerer
Critical measurements
Rider's height: 1.67m (5' 2") ; Weight: 55kg (121lb)
Seat tube length, c-c: 440mm
Seat tube length, c-t: 480mm
Top tube length: 490mm
Saddle height, from BB (c-t): 675mm
Saddle nose tip to C of bars: 497mm
C of front hub to top of bars: 545mm
Front brake: Campagnolo Record D-Skeleton
Rear brake: Campagnolo Record D-Skeleton
Levers: Campagnolo Record QS Ergopower 10 Speed "Red"
Front derailleurs: Campagnolo Record QS STD+CT 9s/10s
Rear derailleurs: Campagnolo Record
Cassette: Campagnolo Record 10s steel/titanium, 12-25T
Chain: Campagnolo Record Ultra Narrow
Crankset: Pinarello TANK FP 50HM1K Carbon, 170mm, 53/39T
Bottom bracket: Pinarello TANK FP with ceramic bearings
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Wheelset: Mavic Ksyrium SL Premium clincher (training); Pinarello
MOst Charisma clincher (racing)
Tyres: Continental GP4000 clincher, 700x23c
Bars: MOst Lyon Air 1K, 40cm (c-c)
Stem: MOst Tiger Lite 1K, 110mm
Headset: Pinarello
Tape/grip: World Champion striped tape
Pedals: Look KeO Carbon, Pinarello edition
Seat post: MOst Tail Carbon 1K
Saddle: Selle Italia SLR with World Champion stripes
Bottle cages: Elite Patao Carbon 66mm
Computer: Polar S725X with wireless speed and cadence sensors
Total bike weight: 7.42kg (16.36lb)
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