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Casey Gibson shares behind the scenes photos of the Garmin-Chipotle team
Photographer Casey Gibson has been given full access to shoot behind the scenes with the Garmin-Chipotle team at the Tour. He will share some of his best shots from the first four days.
Schumacher wins the stage 4 time trial and takes the yellow
Stefan Schumacher (Gerolsteiner) rode to a dominant — if surprising — victory in stage 4 of the Tour de France on Tuesday, taking the yellow jersey from overnight leader Romain Feillu (Agritubel). The German posted the fastest time by far in the 29.5km individual time trial, 35:44, some 18 seconds faster than green-jersey Kim Kirchen (Team Columbia) and David Millar (Garmin-Chipotle), and a further nine seconds quicker than overall contender Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto).
Jeannie Longo wins another national title and an Olympic team berth.
French cycling legend and five-time world champion Jeannie Longo on Tuesday clinched a 55th national title in winning the individual pursuit at the national championships in 3:48:896 ahead of great rival and holder Cathy Moncassin. "I started off a bit less quick than Cathy but from half-way I gave it all I had," said the 49-year-old Longo, who later this summer expects to compete in her seventh Olympics. She booked a berth last month with an outstanding win in both the road race and time trial at the French championships.
CSC’s Sorensen takes stage, lead in Austrian tour
Team CSC’s Anker Chris Sorensen slipped into the leader’s jersey at the 60th International Tour of Austria after winning the second stage on Tuesday. Sorensen finished 12 seconds in front of Thomas Rohregger (Elk) and 27 seconds ahead of Ruslan Pidgornyy (LPR Brakes) in the stage from Toblach/Dobbiaco up to the Kitzbüheler Horn. Dimytro Grabovskyy (Quick Step) and Michael Barry (Team Columbia) escaped the peloton after 40km and eventually built a lead of 13:40.
Adam Craig gets the word — he’s made the Olympic mountain bike team
For the last year, American cross-country mountain bike racer Adam Craig (Giant) has been battling it out on the World Cup and National Mountain Bike Series for a slot on the U.S. team. Last week, after a solid performance at the world championships, Craig got word that he had made the team. This week he shares his journal and includes a report from his Giant teammate, Carl Decker. —Editor
Staying out of yellow is key for Cadel
This Tour de France couldn’t be going any better for Cadel Evans. In four days of racing he and his Silence-Lotto team have ridden conservatively, largely out of the spotlight — just like the modest Aussie wants it. He showed his form was coming along nicely on opening day, losing by just one second to the explosive Alejandro Valverde on the uphill finish at Plumelec. On stages 2 and 3, his team kept him near the front of the peloton all day, well away from the crashes that were all too common.
The Tour Is Won on the Alpe
Retail Price: $21.95 Web site: www.velogear.com The Tour Is Won on the Alpe: Alpe d'Huez and the Classic Battles of the Tour de France is a new book by cycling historian Jean-Paul Vespini. Each chapter covers one Alpe d'Huez stage, starting with Fausto Coppi’s victory in 1952. Vespini tells the story of the celebrated climb that so often determines the winner cycling’s biggest prize.
Columbia’s Ina-Yoko Teutenberg takes her third consecutive Giro stage win.
Team Columbia won her third consecutive stage of the Giro d’Italia Femminile on Tuesday, increasing her overall lead in the race to 17 seconds over Kirsten Wild (AA Drink). “It feels pretty unreal to get the hat trick,” said Teutenberg. “I can’t believe it but I’m definitely happy about it. For sure though, it will be a different story tomorrow and another girl will be in pink." Wednesday's stage climbs twice up the Monte Serra and finishes at the top after 106km of racing. “No matter how hard I try, it will be a different race tomorrow,” added Teutenberg.
Cycling Nutrition with Monique Ryan: Losing the last 20 pounds
The extra 20 pounds Hi Monique, I enjoyed your article in the recent VeloNews (May 22, 2008) about nutrition for cyclists. A lot of what you discussed I was already doing (learned from trial and error over my riding career of 25 years), but have a question I'd like to address to you that a lot of other cyclists might also find interesting.
Andrew Hood’s Tour de France Notebook, stage 4
Garmin party: Garmin-Chipotle was in a good mood today. The riders raced with a yellow dossard because they stood atop the team GC while Will Frischkorn raced with a red background on his number after winning Monday’s most aggressive rider’s prize. Frischkorn said he felt Monday’s effort in his legs, but admitted he didn’t go too hard in Tuesday’s TT.
Will Frischkorn’s Tour de France diary, stage 4
And now the real racing begins... After three road stages on the rolling roads of Brittany, we had a bit of a change today with a shorter-than-normal-for-the-Tour time trial. We'd flown in a day early last week to scout this one out so there were no surprises out there, nice for the heads of the guys really gunning for it. And gun they did. Danny lit it up with a hot early time, then Christian and David put in some really solid rides near the end that solidified our lead in the team GC and sets us up well looking forward to the days ahead.
2008 Tour de France stage 4 – By the numbers
Stage 4, Cholet-Cholet, 29.5km (individual time trial)
Weather:
Mostly sunny, with building clouds in afternoon, no rain. Strong SW winds up to 35kph, highs in upper 60s
Stage winner:
Evans pleased with Tour time trial results
While Gerolsteiner’s Stefan Schumacher scored an impressive ? and surprising ? win in Tuesday’s 29.5km individual time trial in Cholet, he’s still not ranked among the favorites to wear the yellow jersey in Paris on July 27.
Schumacher has his own out-of-competition positive to explain
Germany's Stefan Schumacher pulled on the Tour de France yellow jersey here Tuesday, and was then forced to defend himself quickly over a positive test for amphetamines last year and explain why he was invited to race the Tour, while Tom Boonen was not. Schumacher, who denies taking the stimulant, tested positive after a police stop while returning from a disco. The incident reminds some of Boonen's out-of-competition positive test for cocaine this spring, which resulted in Boonen being denied a Tour start.
Live Coverage – Stage 4 Tour de France, 2008
- 05:35 AM: Tune in Tuesday morning at 8:00 a.m. EDT
for live coverage of stage 4
- 02:06 PM: Good day and welcome
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the fourth stage of the 95th edition of the Tour de France, a 29.5km individual time trial in Cholet.
Gerolsteiner test-drives Shimano’s electronic time-trial shifters
Shimano’s electric time-trial shifters made their racing debut on Tuesday during the stage-4 individual time trial in Cholet. Ever since the “E-Dura-Ace” group showed up three years ago there was speculation that it might become a powerful time-trial tool. The system can be routed internally through a radically shaped time trial bike without hampering shifting performance. And the time-trial version sports shift buttons in both bar-ends and brake levers, which means a rider can shift regardless of whether he’s on the aero bars or the bullhorns.
Tour Tech – The new Volt
You’ve already seen the new Bell Volt helmet, even if you didn’t recognize it as new. Thor Hushovd put the Volt in the spotlight of victory at the end of Sunday’s stage two. The new model will slot in as the top road and cross-country race helmet from Bell.
Mr. Rogers’ Tour – Will power
Oh so close. Garmin Chipotle’s Will Frischkorn, out ahead of the peloton in a four-man breakaway from the first 10 kilometers of the Tour’s third stage from Saint-Malo to Nantes, came within a wheel’s length of winning a stage in his first grand tour. Not a bad ride for a rider who only learned he was heading to the Tour de France a week before the start, on a team that earned a wildcard invitation to the world’s biggest bike race.
Echelons, rain showers, crashes — and now a time trial
When I was an amateur racer in Brittany a few decades ago, one event I did was the local classic, Nantes-St. Nazaire. We raced on some of the same flat roads that the Tour de France peloton covered Monday; and the weather was similar: heavy rain showers and a strong southwest wind. Although I usually enjoyed racing in the rain, that classic was the first time I encountered fast-moving echelons, angled into the wind. It was all I could do to grovel in the gutter, trying to hang on to the thin line of riders stuck at the back. It’s not a pleasant memory.