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Shawn Milne Scores Team Type 1s First Pro Victory   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #151 of 406 |
Hsinchu City, Taiwan (March 13, 2008) – American Shawn Milne scored his first
win in a
field sprint in nearly two years Thursday at the Tour de Taiwan, earning Team
Type 1 its
inaugural victory as a professional cycling team.

Milne picked up a 10-second bonus at the end of the 92-mile (148 km) Hsinchu
City
Circuit Race to climb into second place overall, seven seconds behind John
Murphy (Health
Net presented by Maxxis) with three stages left in the eight-day race. Last
year, Milne won
the Tour de Taiwan while racing for Health Net.

"As they have done so well all week, the Merida squad took control of the final
10
kilometers to set up the sprint, but our guys played it nearly perfectly at the
end," Team
Type 1 Sport Director Ed Beamon said. "This win will certainly be one for Shawn
and the
entire team to remember."

Team Type 1 is in its first season as a professional cycling team. It was
founded in 2004
by racers Phil Southerland and Joe Eldridge to inspire people living with
diabetes to take a
proactive approach to managing their health and overcoming obstacles often
associated
with the condition. The past two years, Team Type 1 has won the eight-rider
corporate
division of the Race Across America (RAAM). All 11 racers on its
elite/developmental team
have Type 1 diabetes, as do four of its 15 pro riders.

"This victory is definitely a big day – not only for all of us on the team – but
for everyone
who is affected by diabetes," Southerland said. "It shows that people with
diabetes can
compete on the highest of levels and also be a part of a winning team. We could
not have
accomplished today's win without the tremendous support of all of our friends
and
sponsors along the way. This victory takes us one step closer to our ultimate
goal of
someday racing in the Tour de France."

Wesoly Marek (Merida Europe Team) finished second and Sung Baek Park (Seoul City
Cycling Team) was third as Murphy placed sixth to keep the race lead he seized
on Stage
2. The pancake-flat stage was completed at an average speed of 28 miles an hour
(45.3
kph).

Beamon said without an individual time trial, the Tour de Taiwan has shaped up
to be a
battle for the sprinters. Up until Thursday's stage, Murphy had held a
commanding lead
and was beginning to look impenetrable.

"We really wanted to put pressure on Health Net since today and tomorrow were
the only
semi long stages left," Beamon said. "The roads are flat, but we were hoping for
some
wind, and we feel we have the endurance to race hard and put pressure on the
other
teams."

Strong and savvy riding by the Japanese teams of Team Meitan Hompo-GDR, Skill
Shimano, and the very fast AISAN Racing Team have kept the action hot, and the
Australian Drapac Porsche team has made certain that the southern hemisphere has
been
well represented. The Polish Merida Europe team has reflected its CCCP roots by
coordinating spectacular late race attacks and strong, coordinated lead-outs
while their
Taiwan-based bike sponsor is sure to be proud of their wins on Stages 2 and 4.

Milne came into Stage 5 in sixth place, 16 seconds behind Murphy. But at the
first bonus
sprint at mile 32, the Beverly, Mass., resident picked up one second by
finishing third.
Taiji Nischitani (AISAN Racing Team), who now lies third overall, also closed
the gap on
Murphy with second place in the sprint.

Twenty miles later, Team Type 1 launched an attack after the second bonus sprint
that
sprung Valeriy Kobzarenko and Emile Abraham into a 12-man breakaway.

"Health Net and AISAN were forced to chase hard for one-and-a-half laps," Beamon
said.
"As the break was caught Milne and Erik Hoffman (Giant Asia Racing Team)
continued to
turn the screws by escaping in a group of five. That break lasted less than a
lap, but
Health Net was starting to show fatigue, and the race was nearing the finish."

Friday's stage is a 79-mile (127.7 km) circuit race through Taipei County.





Thu Mar 13, 2008 3:33 pm

sweide
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Hsinchu City, Taiwan (March 13, 2008) – American Shawn Milne scored his first win in a field sprint in nearly two years Thursday at the Tour de Taiwan,...
Sean Weide
sweide
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Mar 13, 2008
3:33 pm
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