Evans was the only rider to bridge to Contador.
Evans was the only rider to bridge to Contador.
Evans was the only rider to bridge to Contador.
Nicolas Portal with the Havik.
Portal had a crowd waiting for him at his team bus.
Alberto Contador with his green glasses.
A closer look at the Havik
Sponsored athletes will have a special branded model.
Bruyneel was happy before the stage. We're bet he's even happier now.
A busy start village
The start village at the Tour offers a variety of entertainment
Stage 9 - A Casey Gibson Gallery
Meanwhile, the fans gather on the climbs...
Some - those on catered tours - get to watch the Tour on TV and then from the side of the road
Some fans make a long trip to show their colors.
Stage winner Juan Soler Hernandez looks quite composed.
Leipheimer and Evans were in good company.
Hincapie on the Galibier
Gibson offers many thanks to Volkswagon, for making posi-traction to allow him to park like this on the Galibier.
It takes work to look good on the podium
French TV has to set up a studio in the most obscure places, every day.
Ludewig gets the stage . . .
. . . Massaglia gets the lead
Despite a barrage of attacks designed to ruffle their feathers, Discovery Channel has again emerged on top at the Tour of Qinghai Lake, as race leader Allan Davis claimed his second stage triumph with a last-minute lunge to the line in Xihaizhen. After 152 kilometers in the saddle, the plucky Australian learned his lesson from yesterday, this time going head-to-head with Stage 2 winner André Schulze and matching each other meter by meter - with only a perfect throw of the bike deciding the outcome. "It was close, but I knew I had it," said Davis. "I've got really good legs - a lot better
Moreau animated the chase on stage 8.
Moreau hopes to keep attacking through the mountains.
Davis confirms why is race leader at this point
Sparkling vintage for the stage winner...
.. and the race leader's bottle.
Rasmussen’s ride
Another view, the team trains on 32-spoke alloy tubular wheels.
Rasmussen’s one-piece PRO Stealth Evo handlebar and stem combination
There’s not even a place for a second waterbottle cage.
Rasmussen’s wheels are kept separate from the rest of the team.
The majority of the team uses the new prototype carbon wheels from Shimano we’ve seen under many other teams at the Tour.
Many of the bikes had Kool-Stop brake pads.
Leipheimer hopes the 10-second penalty won't make a difference in Paris.
Vande Velde and Zabriskie meet the press
No charity... just sage advice
Leipheimer expects a lot from the Pyrénées.
Leipheimer meets the press.
On the lead-up to the 2007 Tour de France, Michael Rasmussen proclaimed that a third straight polka-dot jersey was not his No. 1 ambition. The Danish climbing specialist was targeting a place on the final podium in Paris. Sunday Rasmussen took a big step to making that dream come true, winning the brutal stage 8 run between Le Grand Bornand to Tignes, and taking over the race lead in the process.
COURSE: Following a rest day at Tignes, the favorites will prepare for what should be one of the Tour’s major climbing days. This stage features the Tour’s highest mountain pass, the Col de l’Iseran (9085 feet) right from the start, which is followed by 70km of downhill and flats before the very long ascent via the Col du Télégraphe to the rugged Col du Galibier (8678 feet). After 35km of descending from the Galibier, the 2km climb to the finish in Briançon averages almost 7 percent. HISTORY: No less than 32 Tour stages have finished in Briançon, the most recent in 2005 and 2000. Two years
With another mountain-top finish on the schedule, Saturday’s fifth stage at the Cascade Classic held the promise of shaking up the overall standings in the men’s race. But while Jeff Louder (Health Net-Maxxis) won the day, Phil Zajicek (Navigators Insurance) retained his GC lead by coming across on his wheel for second in the stage, followed closely by Chris Baldwin (Toyota-United), Scott Moninger (BMC)and Ben Jacques-Maynes (Priority Health-Bissell).
Opening up the throttle 200 meters from the line in Bird Island, Weisenhof's Andri Schulze chose to sprint long and hard towards the finish of the second stage of the Tour of Qinghai Lake, and his result surprised everyone but himself. Immediately gapping the peloton right behind him, the German's bold move and strong legs combined in perfect unison to deliver the 32-year-old his second season victory and his second at Qinghai Lake, out-sprinting race leader Allan Davis (Discovery Channel) and Selle Italia's Alberto Loddo. "The team worked the last 10 kilometers for me, and in
Stage 8 results1. Michael Rasmussen (Dk), Rabobank, 4:49:402. Iban Mayo (Sp), Saunier Duval-Prodir, at 02:473. Alejandro Valverde (Sp), Caisse d’Epargne, at 03:124. Christophe Moreau (F), Ag2r Prevoyance, at 03:135. Frank Schleck (Lux), CSC, at 03:136. Cadel Evans (Aus), Predictor-Lotto, at 03:137. Andrey Kashechkin (Kz), Astana, at 03:138. Alberto Contador (Sp), Discovery Channel, at 03:319. Denis Menchov (Rus), Rabobank, at 03:3510. Carlos Sastre (Sp), CSC, at 03:3511. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 03:59 12. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Discovery Channel, at 03:59 13. Cobo Acebo
Australian cycling fans may be drowning their sorrows in a cold Foster’s Monday after learning that not one but three of their nation’s top riders were out of the Tour after Sunday’s critical climbing stage. First to leave the race was CSC’s Paris-Roubaix champion Stuart O’Grady, who was taken to the hospital after a crash on the fast and tricky descent of the Cormet de Roselend. According to hospital officials O'Grady suffered fractures to five ribs. “For the moment he is in the hospital and is getting a scan,” said CSC team director Kim Andersen. “It is difficult to say more than
Discovery Channel played its joker card Sunday and sent Spanish phenomenon Alberto Contador on the attack. The 25-year-old Paris-Nice champion took flight and easily marked accelerations by Christophe Moreau and Iban Mayo up the Cat. 1 Tignes finale, but saw a puncture with about 4km to go take the wind out of his sails. “I tried to get back but I lost my rhythm. I was going well and it’s unfortunate to have this bad luck,” said Contador, who finished eighth at 3:31 back. “Things were going OK and you have to remember there’s a lot of racing ahead of us, but when you lose time like this
What a difference a day makes. Less than 24 hours after celebrating Linus Gerdemann’s Tour de France stage win and capture of the yellow jersey, T-Mobile found itself down three riders, including team captain Michael Rogers, who crashed and dislocated his shoulder while riding as the virtual yellow jersey on a stage-8 descent. Mark Cavendish’s abandonment had been planned for today to prevent exhausting the young sprinter in his first Tour. The likely abandonment of Patrik Sinkewitz, however, was anything but foreseen. After the Tour’s first summit finish atop the Cat. 1 climb in the
Weather: Very much, highs in 80s, intense alpine sun, brisk cross-headwinds Stage winner: Michael Rasmussen (Rabobank) claimed his third career Tour stage with a daring attack on the Cornet de Roseland. The former world mountain bike champion known as “Chicken” spun his slender legs to reel in the day’s early break that included George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) and soloed in for victory at 2:47 ahead of Iban Mayo (Saunier Duval-Prodir). Race leader: Rasmussen erased enough time to overtake leader Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile) to claim the yellow jersey for the first time of his career. The
Just as CSC’s time-trial specialist Fabian Cancellara took the first yellow jersey of this Tour de France at the prologue in London and held it until the race hit the mountains, Rabobank’s climbing specialist Michael Rasmussen took the mailliot jaune Sunday at the summit finish Tignes, and could well keep it until next Saturday’s 54km time trial in Albi. By winning Sunday’s stage on a colossal solo effort, Rasmussen took the race lead by 43 seconds ahead of overnight leader Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), and 2:39 over Spanish climber Iban Mayo of Saunier Duval. More importantly, however, is
Riders, writers, fans and photographers knew Sunday's 165km stage from Le Grand Bornand to Tignes would be decisive. Our man Casey Gibson was there to document it all for the record books.
In what he described as “the most painful 3k I’ve had in quite awhile,” Kirk O’Bee (Health Net-Maxxis) outsprinted second place Ricardo Escuela (SuccessfulLiving.com-ParkPre) and third place Ben Jacques-Maynes (Priority Health-Bissell) to take the sixth and final stage of the Bend Memorial Cascades Cycling Classic on Sunday.
They mountains started in earnest today and they didn't disappoint. Oh and before I go on. I would like to write a little disclaimer. All of these entries have been written on my Blackberry and my bn button doesn't work well, I am at altitude and... well, I have a lot of excuses. So anyway, about the mountains. Yesterday offered a little taste things to come with the Columbiere. Today, though, was the real deal, with six categorized climbs. There were attacks from the gun and they didn't let up until we crossed the line. Racing up and then down the climbs made for a really
Stage 9 - Val-d’Isère to Briançon - (159.5km)
Stage 9 - Val-d’Isère to Briançon - (159.5km)
Schulze takes a gamble
Davis holds the jersey
Rasmussen gets his first-ever yellow jersey. Can he keep it?
Rasmussen took advantage of his strength on Sunday, but concedes the Tour is far from over.
Gerdemann rode well and remains in second on GC
O'Grady suffered three broken vertabra, five cracked ribs and a broken scapula.
Rogers' dislocated shoulder meant the Tour contender was forced to withdraw.
Vinokourov showed a crack in his armor on Sunday, but with Kloden's help, he fought back to stay in contention.
Leipheimer finished 12th on the day.
Moreau was aggressive on the final climb
Very little time in the flats meant riders were either climbing or trying to survive fast descents.
Rasmussen takes off
By the base of the final climb, there were just three... and Rasmussen quickly rid himself of Aroyo and Colom.
Hincapie spent hours off the front, before being reeled in and settling in for a long ride to the finish.
Mayo managed to scamper off for second place
Rasmussen is likely to keep the jersey at least until Saturday's time trial. After that? Who knows?
Readying for another day of marketing before the peloton rolls through
Seeking divine intervention to boost those climbing legs?
Robbie Ventura holding the mike for Versus network.
The village departe in one of it's most beautiful settings ever.
Stapleton talks about life... before disaster hit T-Mobile on Stage 8.
Stage winner Rasmussen is a picture of concentration.
Moreau and Evans lead the chase.
An intense Contador on the final climb.
Chris Horner suffers on the final climb.