Armstrong takes the win
Armstrong takes the win
Armstrong takes the win
Toyota chasing for race leader Stevic
Hey, it's more stylish this way
Is this kid destined to be a downhiller or what?
Colavita's next sprinter
One determined young athlete
Dave Zabriskie still doesn’t know if he’ll be racing next month’s Tour de France. Fresh off notching his best-ever European result with fifth overall at the mountainous Dauphiné Libéré, the Team CSC rider said he won’t know his Tour fate until team manager Bjarne Riis finalizes the nine-rider selection after the Tour de Suisse concludes this weekend. “He’s keeping me in the dark. I talked to him the day after the Dauphiné and he’s still waiting to make a decision,” Zabriskie told VeloNews. “I feel really good and I know I could handle it, but it’s up to him.” The 28-year-old reached new
It’s no secret as to why Quebéc’s Mont-Ste-Anne resort has become a favorite stop on the UCI World Cup of mountain-bike racing, having been on the calendar every year since the series’ inception back in 1991. Like Kaprun, Austria, or Fort William, Scotland, Mont-Ste-Anne is one of the sport’s hallowed venues, and it underscores the challenges offered by mountain biking in the Northeast. The rooty, rocky cross-country course is both a test of one’s fitness and technical skills, and the steep downhill course tests an athlete’s ability ride at extremely high speed. As sponsorship woes during
Atop the dizzying heights of the Grimselpass, 2614 meters above the sea, Discovery Channel's Vladimir Gusev emerged out of the mist, and after a 120-kilometer break, to claim the seventh leg of Tour de Suisse. A distant second was Predictor-Lotto's popular American Chris Horner, two minutes in arrears, while Astana's Andreas Klöden finished 2:37 back to round out the top three. Victory for 24-year-old Gusev came after he instigated a three-man escape less than 10 kilometers into the stage, on a day that contained three of the biggest climbs in the country. "It was my
Friday morning's time trial along the Mighty Mississippi turned out to be decisive - at least for the next ten hours, while the caravan returns to Minneapolis for tonight's much-anticipated downtown criterium. More than 20,000 cycling fans are expected to show up for the event - a massive party for this bike-loving community. As expected, Kristin Armstrong shot out of the chute like a roman candle, delivering a world champion performance and possibly the coup de grace to leader Catherine Cheatley of Cheerwine, who until today has protected her hold on the yellow jersey of the
Zabriskie hopes to have a shot at another yellow jersey.
Mont-Ste-Anne is always a big draw
Premont is a fan favorite in Quebéc
If Absalon gets on a bike, the odds are good he'll end up on the podium.
Gusev also earned himself a part on the Tour squad with this one.
It sure beats the tire you won at last week's local crit, eh?
Vladimir Efimkin spends another day in yellow
Armstrong knew she was favored in this stage.
O'Neill takes the top spot...
...Stevic takes third...
...which moves him back into the jersey.
Discovery Channel sport director Johan Bruyneel expressed confidence that a new title sponsor will be secured for the 2008 season. Discovery Channel announced February it would end its three-year title sponsorship with the team at the end of the 2007 season. Bruyneel, who, along with Lance Armstrong and Bill Stapleton, owns a part of the team, said the title sponsor hunt continues. “I’m confident. I am optimistic about the future of the team,” Bruyneel told VeloNews. “There are still a lot of things going on as we speak. We’re pushing hard and it could happen at any moment.” Bruyneel also
Hi Bob,First of all thanks for the "Legally Speaking" column. It's informative, sometimes empowering and always interesting. On a group ride last week on a country road with no auto traffic about 10 of us were pace-lining. As we came around a bend we startled a man walking a dog. The leader called it out, we slowed and gave him plenty of room and there was nothing close to contact. But this guy was furious and we rode off to his screams of "You have to ride single file!!!" Was he right? Also, could you direct me to where on the web I can look such things up? We often ride into New
JEFF OATLEY: TOP AMERICAN IN RAAM ‘07 Training for the Race Across America is a challenge for any rider. To have the stamina and conditioning to ride 20-hours a day for more than a week in June, a competitor must put in long rides in January, and beyond. How does a guy do that in Fairbanks, Alaska, where temperatures in January can drop lower than 30 degrees below zero? “You ride,” Alaskan Jeff Oatley said in a pre-race interview, explaining that he uses his “snow-bike” with double wide rims and tires. “We ride on sled-dog tracks, which when they’re packed down, is kind of like riding
With the Tour de France just weeks away, there’s a high stakes game of cat and mouse between a half-dozen so-called suspect riders identified by the UCI and anti-doping testers. Anne Gripper, director of the UCI’s anti-doping program, told the AFP that “six or seven” big-name riders have been subject to surprise out-of-competition controls which have yielded some“non-negative” results. Gripper added officials are waiting for the results of the second “B” sample before jumping to conclusions. “We have targeted six, seven riders considered a high risk because of their suspicious behavior and
Thursday's seventh stage of the Tour de Suisse that ended in Crans Montana saw the first sign that the fight for the overall classification is by no means decided. As overnight leader Frank Schleck faltered on what was on paper a relatively straightforward climb, Romandie champion Thomas Dekker of Rabobank showed when in Switzerland he's often at his best, victorious ahead of Volksbank's Gerrit Glomser and Saunier Duval's Gilberto Simoni. 22-year-old Dekker, who won the stage by attacking a select eight-man group towards the top of the final ascent, has no doubt cemented his
Building on Wednesday night's second place finish in the opening stage of Minnesota’s Nature Valley Grand Prix, Kirk O'Bee launched a perfectly timed attack on a long uphill finish in Thursday's Cannon Falls road race, putting his Health Net team back where its riders are most comfortable - on the top of the podium and in the yellow jersey. With a 15-second time bonus for first place, O’Bee managed to bump Toyota-United's Ivan Stevic out of the lead. Stage 2 Video Highlights There was no wind or weather to speak of on this normally tumultuous Cannon Falls road course
This space for rent: Bruyneel says he sees a world of opportunities out there.
Legally Speaking - with Bob Mionske: Two-by-two?
Jeff Oatley misses his two dogs, Hadley and Harriet. MacGregor was happy to fill in so Jeff could soak up some doggie love at the Rouzerville, Pennsylvania, time station.
In Gettysburg.
It may be a long ride, but at least it's a warm ride.
Sunny at the finish, but foul weather at the start forced the stage to be trimmed by half.
Vladimir Efimkin enjoys his time in the jersey
O'Bee scores the win and takes the jersey
The Jelly Belly boys get a bit of motor pacing in after a large crash in the peloton.
Nathan O'Neill leads the peloton early in the race.
Zajicek suffers to stay in the break
Brooke Miller wins for the second year in a row in Cannon Falls.
O'Bee takes over, Cheatley hangs tough at Nature Valley
Cadel Evans was more than satisfied with his Dauphiné Libéré performance, but the fighter inside the Australian couldn’t be held back when he had a chance for victory. The Predictor-Lotto captain couldn’t shake Christophe Moreau up the Col du Télégraphe in Saturday’s critical climbing stage and settled for second overall in his first crack at the Dauphiné. “I still have room for improvement before the Tour. I changed my program this year. The past few years I raced the Tour de Suisse before the Tour, but this year we decided to come to the Dauphiné,” Evans said. “I’ll tell you in July which
Proper dietary preparation is essential to your best efforts.
Riders’ commitment to a new cyclingThe Puerto affair highlighted the serious problem of doping in cycling.This, like all other doping cases, greatly harms my sport and me personally.The uncertainty surrounding the identity of riders and other peoplewho could be involved in the Puerto affair is also very harmful and willcontinue to be until the case is closed.Currently, there is a climate of suspicion. It is undermining the credibilityof my sport and is eroding the trust of the public, authorities, organisersand my colleagues.For these reasons, I want to make a contribution to putting the
U.S.-based Computer Sciences Corporation announced Wednesday that, "aftercareful consideration," the company will continue to sponsor the cyclingteam owned and organized by former pro Bjarne Riis.The future of the team was put in doubt last month when Riisadmitted to using EPO and other drugs over a five-year period thatincluded his 1996 Tour de France win. Riis had argued - with apparent success- that his own background might serve the team well in its efforts to controldoping."I don't want the mistakes of my personal past to stand in the way ofthe work we are doing today," Riis said in
With just four victories so far, compared to many more in years before, Robbie McEwen's Tour de France form was a little suspect. On Wednesday in Giubiasco, the pocket-rocket from Predictor-Lotto took a vital step in his quest for a fourth maillot vert by triumphing on Stage 5 of the Tour de Suisse. It wasn't easy, however, the 34-year-old veteran Aussie sprinter having to use each and every part of his compact, muscled frame as he fought with his bike more than anything else to eventually overcome Lampre-Fondital's Daniele Bennati and Milram's Erik Zabel, stage winner last
Former Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong issued a harshly worded statement Wednesday on the eve of the publication of a new book reviving claims that the American cyclist was a doper. Armstrong criticized "From Lance to Landis," the latest book by Irish writer David Walsh regarding Armstrong and doping accusations from the Tour de France, an English follow-up to his “LA Confidential,” published in French in 2004. "Predictably, on the eve of the Tour de France, I will be the subject of a repeated, baseless attack in yet another unobjective book," Armstrong said in a statement released
The possibility of thunderstorms after a long hot summer day did nothing to deter 5000 cycling fans from showing up for an evening of criterium racing in downtown St. Paul for the opening stages of the 2007 Nature Valley Grand Prix, won by Cheerwine’s Catherine Cheatley and Toyota-United’s Ivan Stevic. Minnesota's capitol city provided a tight one-kilometer crit’ course with six 90-degree turns punctuated by heavily painted crosswalks and lightning to the south. Under a sultry and threatening summer sky, the women's field was dominated by Stage 1 Video HighlightsKristen Armstrong,
Evans was pleased with his Dauphiné performance.
McEwen drives it home
An evening of racing. Downtown St. Paul hosts the kick-off of the NVGP.
Armstrong was the rider most of the field keyed on.
Cheatley said her odds were better with an early charge.
Health Net's Jeff Corbett directs his team from his perch
Stevic wins it.
Page looks at ease, despite the absence of mud and barriers
Toyota takes over at the front...
... a sets up Stevic for the win.
Pipp moves up
Discovery Channel removed itself from the cycling’s top teams’ association Tuesday, citing dissatisfaction with the group’s lack of unity. The split comes as the Association International des Groupes Cyclistes Professionels (AIGCP) has struggled to find unified positions on such divisive issues as doping scandals and the future of the ProTour calendar. “I no longer feel confident that this group can lead our sport and represent our team in a positive manner,” said sport director Johan Bruyneel in a team release. “It became clear at our most recent meeting that the goals and objectives among
UCI president Pat McQuaid on Tuesday called on ProTour riders to pledge their commitment to a dope-free Tour de France by making a sample of their DNA available and lodging the equivalent of a year's salary, which they will lose if they fail a drugs test in next month's race. Doping cases have rocked recent editions of the world's premier cycling race. Last year's winner, American Floyd Landis, stands accused of using performance-enhancing substances on his way to victory.FullText of Riders' Pledge Speaking during a press conference after a meeting between the UCI and
Yes, Andy Schleck will one day be a great champion, but after Tuesday's fourth stage of the Tour de Suisse, one should remember that his older brother Frank is not one to be ignored, either. On the steep slopes of the finishing climb to Triesenberg-Malbun, its second category rating belying a vicious character, big brother Schleck asserted his authority with an impressive display of power climbing, and left all rivals in his wake to capture his fifth career victory and the race lead to boot. "Of course, the Tour de Suisse is a beautiful race and it's one of the biggest races of the
Maybe it’s a natural progression. Maybe it’s a response to competitive pressures from the newest player in the road market. Either way, consumers will likely be the ones to benefit as Shimano narrows the gap between its 10-speed Ultegra and Dura-Ace groups. The new Ultegra SL, sporting a new "Ice Grey" color scheme, drops close to a quarter of a pound from standard Ultegra. The new group likely comes in response to the increased competition within the mid-level road market, a direct effect of SRAM entering the fray with its economical Rival components. While the new color is striking,
After 3042 miles, Jure Robic of Slovenia has reached Atlantic City, New Jersey to win the 26th Annual Race Across America. In doing his 8 day, 19 hours and 33 minutes ride from Oceanside, California, Robic averaged 14.38 mph, crossing 12 states and cranking up more than 110,000 feet of climbing. So, how many miles did you ride this week? Robic, not known for being verbose, was extra quiet on the podium — understandable, spending something like 190 hours on a bike saddle, over the last nine days, can do that to people. “RAAM is not a bike race," Robic said in a fit of verbosity. "This is
Emergency Fundraising effort for ChenowthNick Chenowth, long time cyclist and world masters champion, has beendiagnosed with cancer. Nick is now in a race for his life, with this potentially terminal illness.Due to circumstances beyond Nick’s control, he does not qualify for insurance,and has no means to allow him to manage the enormous expenses that willbe required for his recovery.Nick is in need of immediate surgery. Each day that passes reduces hischances. With the proper medical attention Nick can recover and be “backin the saddle,” training, coaching, spinning and racing. But he
Two new books about American Tour de France winners are due to hit the shelves next week, and both are expected to cause a stir. Ballantine Books, an imprint of the Random House Publishing Group, is publishing “From Lance to Landis: Inside the American Doping Controversy at the Tour de France,” which will be available on June 26. The book is written by award-winning journalist David Walsh, who is poised to return to his position as chief sports writer with The Sunday Times of London in August. Walsh is a four-time Irish Sportswriter of the Year, three-time UK Sportswriter of the Year, and
Frank Pipp of the Health Net-Maxxis team was on his own at the Austin Criterium last Saturday. With no teammates helping him at the AT&T Criterium, he had to play the race smart and take advantage of opportunities when they opened up. His tactical prowess helped earn him a strong second place in the race behind Frank Trevieso (AEG-Toshiba), and ahead of Ivan Stevic and Henk Vogels (both Toyota-United). "It was a fast race, with a pretty good field," Pipp said. In addition to three riders from Toyota and AEG-Toshiba, he also had to contend with a three-man team from Abercrombie & Fitch,
Bruyneel says the teams' association does not 'represent our team in a positive manner,'
The new Ultegra SL
The XTR Shadow
Robic wins RAAM for the third time
Like his brother, Schleck is built to climb.
The final climb took its toll on many, including race leader Fabian Cancellara.
Schleck takes over the jersey, but keeps it at CSC
Press Release - Friends raise funds for Chenowth cancer battle
Discovery Channel captain Levi Leipheimer is okay despite a fall in Sunday’s final stage of the Dauphiné Libéré. Sport director Johan Bruyneel said Leipheimer wasn’t seriously injured when he slipped on rain-soaked roads while attacking for victory with about 4km to go to Annecy. A frustrated Leipheimer could only watch Alexandre Vinokourov (Astana) ride past him and secure the stage victory. “He’s fine. He hit the side of the round-about. There’s no problem,” Bruyneel told VeloNews. “It was very slippery and he was risking a little bit because he was by himself.” The defending Dauphiné
He was a last-minute substitution when Paolo Bettini decided not to race, and it's a big call to fill the shoes of a current world road champion. But on Monday in the tiny Austrian village of Nauders, after the longest leg of the race, Quick Step's Alessandro Proni repaid the trust to claim victory on the third stage of the Tour de Suisse. Though it was by the barest of margins, as the Italian only just finished ahead of Bouygues Telecom's Xavier Florencio and T-Mobile's Kim Kirchen, who were part of a 28-man group that surprisingly included race leader Fabian Cancellara. So
While Navigators Insurance rider Ben Day was securing his overall leadat the Tour de Beauce, his teammate Kyle Wamsley scored another team win when he took the sprint at the inaugural Crystal City Classic presented by the United States Air Force in Arlington, Virginia. Wamsley and Jon Hamblin (Manulife Financial-Kane Bikes) attacked a high-pacedmain field with 12km to go, and stayed away until the finish of the NRCevent. Local rider Peter Cannel (Artemis Elite-Immediate Mortgage) tookthe field sprint for third.“It is a technical course and hard to make a break so we had to be alittle
VeloNews contributor Vic Armijo is following this year's Race Across America and - when he finds a WiFi signal - is sending in regular dispatches from the road.Monday Evening - Barring some physical catastrophe or mishap, Jure Robic will win his third—and as he claims, final—Race Across America sometime around 6:00 on Tuesday morning. To say that the 41-year-old Slovenian Army major has dominated this year’s Race Across America would be something of an understatement. Aside from a short time back in Arizona where Wolfgang Fasching briefly held the front position, Robic has led the
A break that worked. Proni celebrates a successful 200km effort.