The usual suspects
The usual suspects
The usual suspects
Armstrong and Lagutin wrap up 'Toona titles
Armstrong and Lagutin wrap up 'Toona titles
Floyd Landis, fighting a doping scandal that could cost him the Tour de France crown, made his case on US television on Friday and received a vote of confidence from seven-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong. Landis, appearing on CNN's "Larry King Live" programme from Madrid, reiterated that his positive test for an abnormal testosterone-to-epitestosterone level "was a shock as much to me as anyone else." He said he would do everything he could to clear his name. "I'm going to do my best to defend my dignity and my innocence," said the American who rides for the Swiss-based Phonak
CNN’s Larry King LiveInterview with Floyd LandisJuly 28, 2006 LARRY KING, CNN HOST: Last Sunday American Floyd Landis won cycling’s biggest race, the Tour de France. He did it after one of the most dramatic comebacks in the history of the event but a doping test which showed an abnormality has cast a major doubt over the victory and today in his first public appearance since the controversy broke, Landis proclaimed his innocence and he joins me now from Madrid. Was all this, Floyd, a shock to you? FLOYD LANDIS, BICYCLIST: Good evening, Larry, and yes, it was a shock as much to me as to
T-Mobile boss Olaf Ludwig on Saturday denied speculation his cycling team's sponsors had demanded his dismissal for his apparent defense of tainted star rider Jan Ullrich. "There has been no sacking or breaking of contract," Ludwig said before a meeting of sporting directors on the eve of the HEW Cyclassics in Hamburg. "There have been discussions and there will be more in the days to come." The former professional cyclist, the team's owner via his OLC company, has a contract until 2008 with phone company T-Mobile. But Ludwig angered the sponsors by suggesting things could
Saturday's epic 145.9km point-to-point road race was all it was cracked up to be - causing a decisive shift in the men's overall classification, although not without controversy. Sergey Lagutin (Navigators Insurance) won the race from a 6-man group sprint, snatching a 20-second time bonus and the yellow jersey along with it. Chris Baldwin (Toyota United) finished second, taking a 15-second time bonus, and putting him into second overall. Baldwin now trails Lagutin by only 3 seconds in general classification going into tomorrow's criterium, which has a total of 52 seconds of time
Landis at a Friday press conference in Madrid
Lagutin wins
Mezies is forced to give a hard chase after missing a turn on the route
Tea Time: Armstrong's Lipton squad patrolled the front
Van Gilder gets a stage win
Floyd Landis is poised to make the wrong kind of history if his counter-analysis comes back positive: he could become the first Tour de France winner to lose his crown for a doping violation. On Thursday, Landis vehemently denied allegations he doped en route to winning the wild 2006 Tour, but if results of his “B” sample confirm initial tests that revealed “unusual” testosterone levels in his urine, Landis could lose his Tour victory. “All I want to do is ask that everybody take a step back,” Landis said. “All I'm asking for is just that I be given a chance to prove that I'm
The first ProTour cycling event since the Floyd Landis positive doping test, the Vattenfall Cyclassics, takes place in Hamburg, Germany, on Sunday when team and UCI officials will surely be talking about the matter. Though Sunday's 250km, 11th edition of the HEW Cyclassics in theory should be the main event, it is likely that the cycling world will still be taking stock of the news of the positive test for testosterone by the Tour de France winner which broke on Thursday. Of course Landis will not be present at the race but team staff, sponsors, UCI officials and riders will have
Dublin, Ireland (AP) -- The president of the world governing body for cycling pledged Friday he would wage "a crusade against doping" after Tour de France winner Floyd Landis tested positive for elevated levels of performance-enhancing testosterone. UCI president Pat McQuaid cautioned that while Landis' first urine sample tested suspiciously positive with the substance, "we have to wait for the B sample before we can start the sanctioning process." Nonetheless, McQuaid agreed with a suggestion that the cloud of suspicion over Floyd was the “worst possible outcome” for this year's
Questions of possible use of a banned steroid by Tour de France champion Floyd Landis were raised because of a urine test that spots elevated levels of performance-enhancing testosterone. The test detects both testosterone and a related steroid called epitestosterone, which is not performance-enhancing. Both are produced by the body and are also made in synthetic form. Landis's Phonak team said his urine sample showed "an unusual level of testosterone/epitestosterone" when he was tested after his amazing come-from-behind performance in the 17th stage of the race on July 20. The usual
UCI ready to release ‘Puerto’ documents Amid the Floyd Landis doping scandal, the UCI released a communiqué late Thursday outlining the next steps in the “Operación Puerto” doping investigation in Spain. With Spanish authorities continuing its investigation, the UCI is moving forward with its own process to discipline riders with alleged contacts with the suspected blood doping ring operated out of Spain. “The UCI is preparing to send the files of riders involved in [Operación Puerto] to the national federations concerned and has asked for disciplinary proceedings to be started in
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you have a comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen in cycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write to WebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name and home town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.Balance neededEditor,Thanks for printing such a narrow spectrum of self-righteous anti-doping pander in your letters section. If this news about Floyd is true it is not disgusting or offensive as your readers claim, only heartbreaking.Jon GrabenstatterColumbus, OhioWhat next?Editor:Et tu,
Tour de France winner Floyd Landis, facing the loss of his title in a doping scandal, on Friday again insisted he was innocent. The 30-year-old rider said that his positive test for testosterone showed up levels which "are absolutely natural and produced by my own organism". Landis said he was in Madrid to consult with his legal team and added he was willing to undergo whatever tests the sport's authorities asked of him to establish his innocence. "Until such research has been carried out I ask not to be judged and much less to be sentenced by anyone," Landis told a news conference at
A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know.Diane Arbus Doping is sport's photograph; Its dirty secret. And the more we see it, the more we think it tells us, the less we really know. By now you're either enraged, puzzled, mystified, or fed up with the latest installment of the seemingly never-ending saga of doping in cycling and its current poster boy, Floyd Landis. Photographs, illustrations, graphs, and reams of information broadcast and published have attempted to make sense of something that doesn't make sense. The more it tells you, the
The Astana cycling team, thrown out of the Tour de France when several of its riders were linked to a Spanish doping scandal, will compete in this weekend's Vattenfall Cyclassics in Hamburg, the team announced on Friday. Led by Kazakh star Alexandre Vinokourov and directed by Australian Neil Stephens, the team will also take part in the Tour of Germany on August 1-9. The UCI on Thursday announced the team, formerly known as Liberty Seguros, could continue competing as long as none of its riders or officials were linked to Spain's Operation Puerto investigation. The UCI's
Floyd Landis, facing the loss of his Tour de France crown in a doping scandal, won't appear as scheduled Friday on comedian Jay Leno's "Tonight Show," but will appear via satellite on CNN's "Larry King Live." "Tour de France winner Floyd Landis is no longer scheduled to appear on'The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,'" a statement from "Tonight Show" network NBCconfirmed on Friday. In fact, Landis was still in Europe on Friday, giving a press conference in Madrid in which he protested his innocence. Landis tested positive for an abnormally high Testosterone/Epitestosterone
Friday's fifth stage at the International Tour de Toona ended in breakaway finishes for both the men and women with no effect on general classification. The men raced four 20-mile circuits through the Mennonite farmlands of Martinsburg, Penn. Bernard van Ulden (Navigators Insurance) outsprinted Mark McCormack (Colavita/Sutter Homes) in a 3-up breakway that was out in front for 79 of the stage's 80 miles. For the women's race, it was Brooke Miller (Palo Alto Bicycles/TIBCO) who nipped Webcor's Felicia Gomez at the line in The pro men's race started off aggressive from
Landis may become the first rider in 102 years to be stripped of the yellow jersey
Speculation and rumors are flying over which name might be behind the positive doping test from the Tour de France after overall winner Floyd Landis pulled out of a pair of lucrative post-Tour criteriums Wednesday and Thursday. Protocol designed to protect the anonymity of involved parties until a second “B” sample can confirm a doping violation hasn’t stopped media around the globe from going into overdrive, many suggesting that the unnamed rider could well be Landis. The UCI revealed Wednesday that the anti-doping laboratory at Châtenay-Malabry in Paris discovered an “adverse analytical
The Phonak Cycling Team confirmed Thursday that Tour de France winner Floyd Landis is the rider who submitted a positive "A" sample following the 17th stage of this year's Tour de France. Landis tested positive for high levels of testosterone during the race, his Phonak team said in a statement issued Thursday. The statement came a day after the UCI, cycling's world governing body, said an unidentified rider had failed a drug test during the Tour. And the statement came just four days after Landis stood on the victory podium on the Champs-Elysees, succeeding seven-time winner
Comunidad Valenciana saw its wild-card bid to start the upcoming Vuelta a España revoked late Thursday by race officials. Citing the team’s alleged links to the ongoing doping investigation in Spain, race officials said the continental team is no longer invited to the season’s final three-week stage race, set for Aug. 26-Sept. 17. The team will not be replaced. Vuelta officials based its decision on tough anti-doping language in the ProTour’s Ethics Code – the same rationale cited by Tour de France officials last month when it left out nine riders from four teams ahead of the start in
The managers of Germany’s ZDF said Thursday the public television network might cease broadcasting the Tour de France in reaction to winner Floyd Landis testing positive for testosterone. "We signed a broadcasting contract for a sporting event, not a show demonstrating the performances of the pharmaceutical industry," ZDF editor-in-chief Nikolaus Brender said. "We are going to think about our future as broadcaster and maybe refuse to broadcast this event." Even before the race started on July 1 it was engulfed in doping controversy, with top German contender Jan Ullrich, his T-Mobile
Last Thursday, after he witnessed the phenomenal solo breakaway by Floyd Landis into Morzine that put the American in position to win the Tour de France, UCI president Pat McQuaid was quivering with excitement. “I followed Landis in the car of [race director] Jean-Marie Leblanc and I’ve never seen anything like it,” McQuaid told VeloNews. “That was cycling at its most beautiful.” One week later, speaking by phone from Sweden, where he had just taken part in a 50km fun ride with former world team time trial champion Erik Petterson and 700 other cycling enthusiasts, McQuaid was in a very
There was universal shock and dismay following news that Tour de France winner Floyd Landis is the rider behind the A sample. Here is a sampling of reactions from key players in the sport: Jonathan Vaughters, ex-pro, CEO of Slipsteam Sports and manager of the TIAA-CREF, to VeloNewsI believe Floyd is innocent. The majority of T/E tests are over-turned at the CAS level. The guy will probably be proven innocent in eight months time, but in the short-term, the media is killing him. Floyd is basically paying for the sins of all the morons who came before him, who have denied, denied, denied. He’s
The Landis family does not appreciate being mobbed. Floyd Landis’s mother left her Farmersville, Pennsylvania house after being swamped by reporters in the wake of the Tour de France winner’s over-the-limit testosterone A sample news. Then, late Thursday night, Floyd Landis held a telephone press conference where he declined to disclose his location. “Not to be elusive, but I have to figure out a way to get home and stay anonymous,” the California resident said from Europe. Landis and his sports agent held the telephone conference to address the testosterone question, and to deny he had
(Hollidaysburg, Penn.) - The Tour de 'Toona's fourth day of racing took place Thursday in Hollidaysburg - where the Slinky toy is manufactured - and did not result in any significant changes on general classification, allowing the sprinters to take center stage. Juan Jose "JJ" Haedo (Toyota United) easily took the uphill sprint, scoring the team's second stage victory. The men's race saw several mutt breakaways go up the road, but none posed a serious threat on the undulating course. In the women's race 4-time national criterium champion Tina Pic (Colavita) maintained
Preliminary indications suggest that at least one rider at the Tour de France did not follow this young woman's advice.
The respective federations of all three podium finishers deny contact from the UCI
Landis on the attack on Stage 17
Landis in yellow
It's been an emotional roller coaster for Landis
Juan Haedo
A day of frantic attacks
Hi-speed 'toona
Pic avoided the crash and took the stage
Armstrong's Lipton crew kept a close watch on GC threats
Levi Leipheimer will join Discovery Channel next season, the American cycling team confirmed Wednesday. Leipheimer had finished 13th overall and claimed second place in one of the Pyrenees stages of this year's Tour de France with German team Gerolsteiner. "I am very excited about riding for this team," said the winner of the 2006 Dauphiné Libéré. According to a release issued by Specialized, the bike sponsor of Leipheimer’s current team, the American notified the company that he was leaving at the end of the year. "My best results, wins at the Tour of Germany and Dauphiné Libéré,
Mariano Friedick (Toyota United) scored a 10-second winner's time bonus to take the lead at the International Tour de Toona on Tuesday. Meanwhile, four-time national criterium champion Tina Pic (Colavita) took the stage-2 field sprint ahead of Lipton's Laura van Gilder, but Alison Powers (Advil-Chapstick) retained the yellow jersey heading into Wednesday’s decisive 98-mile stage, which features a Category 1 climb over Blue Knob ski resort at mid-race. In the men’s race, a five-man breakaway got away early and nearly made it until the end. Stefano Barberi (Toyota-United) and Bernard
Americans returned from the 38th Tour de l'Abitibi this weekend where some of the nation’s best junior cyclists claimed three stage wins and fifth place overall. One of the most prestigious junior stage races in the world, the 2.HC rated UCI event is the only North American junior race on the UCI Calendar and is often referred to as the "Tour de France for juniors." More than 160 junior cyclists, including 54 Americans, from seven countries lined up for eight stages in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region of northern Quebec. U.S. National Team rider Kevin Soller (Breckenridge, Colorado)
Frankie Andreu, co-director of the Toyota-United Pro Cycling Team has been fired, purportedly for missing a trip to Nevada's Tour de Nez in late June. Andreu, who just completed a month-long reporting assignment at the Tour de France for the Outdoor Life Network, said he learned of his dismissal soon after returning to his home in Michigan. “On July 25th, 2006, the day after I returned home from the Tour de France, I was informed that my contract was being terminated by the Toyota-United Pro Cycling Team," Andreu said in an e-mailed statement on Wednesday. "I was very surprised and
Anti-doping tests conducted during the recently completed 93rd Tour de France have turned up an “adverse analytical finding,” the UCI confirmed Wednesday. The name of the rider will not be released to the public until further tests are conducted. The rider and their team, national doping and cycling federations as well as the World-Anti Doping Agency have been notified. Under anti-doping rules, a second “B” sample will be tested to confirm the results. If both samples come up positive, the rider will face sanctions for a failed doping test. If the “B” sample comes back negative, no sanction
Five Astaná riders who were forced out of the 2006 Tour de France because of alleged links to a blood doping investigation have been formally cleared by Spanish courts. Joseba Beloki, Isidro Nozal, Sergio Paulinho, Allan Davis and Alberto Contador have all received a written document officially clearing them of any links to the ongoing “Operación Puerto,” the Spanish newspaper El Diario Vasco reported Wednesday. The five riders received a legal document signed by Manuel Sánchez Martín, secretary for the Spanish court heading up the “Operación Puerto” investigation, stating, “there are not
Wednesday’s 96-mile point-to-point road race took the riders through four counties starting from the Johnstown Galleria Mall and finishing at the Logan Valley Mall in Altoona. The yellow jersey would change hands in both the men's and women's race on a day of attrition over an undulating course. Frank Pipp (Target Training) was the surprise winner in the men's race, nipping prologue winner Karl Menzies (Health Net) and Ciaran Powers (Navigators) at the line. The 20-second time bonus was enough to put Pipp into second place overall. But Menzies second place finish was good enough
Friedick (left) and Haedo celebrate their one-two punch
The break nearly stuck
Health Net chases
Pic gets the stage
Beloki, leaving the Tour last month
Armstrong tears up the road on her own
Pipp takes it in the sprint
Our latest reader-submitted Photo Gallery is now up for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of ourmost recent contest. Take the time to wander through that gallery and see if you agree or disagree with our choice of winner. While bicycles and bicyclists are not the dominant images in Lonnie Shull’s “What a long strange trip it's been,” we kept coming back to it for precisely that reason. Sometimes being on a bike takes you to a place that reminds you of just how small and insignificant you are (and, no, that doesn’t always have to occur
Karl Menzies (Health Net-Maxxis) and Alison Powers (Advil-Chapstick) scored the opening victories on Monday as the International Tour de Toona got under way with the Altoona Beasley prologue in downtown Altoona, Pennsylvania. Organizers welcomed a record number of pre-registered participants to central Pennsylvania for the evening 3.1-mile (5.6km) time trial, which saw riders leaving the start house every 30 seconds. Just over five seconds separated the top five pro men contenders. Menzies turned the fastest time of the day, 5:09.19, followed by Shawn Milne (Navigators Insurance) in
I promised in my July 3 column to follow up about bruising, inflammation, Tyler Hamilton’s lower back and heart attacks. I set it aside for the Tour, but I’ve been reminded enough that it’s time to spell it out. I was in Europe at the time, having come over with my wife to visit a dear friend in Germany who had just barely survived a massive heart attack a few weeks before. He is an extremely strong man, former Olympian and many-time German national champion in judo who was almost never sick. He was one of the last people you might expect to suffer a heart attack, as is Hugh Walton, another
Next year is going to be a good one for tech-heads. We already have so much 2007 stuff to ride and talk about — and we’re still more than a month away from the season’s first trade show. The latest look ahead came this past week when Michael Zellmann, SRAM’s PR and media manager, visited VeloNews HQ in Boulder showing off SRAM’s new Force road group. At the Sea Otter classic in April, both Lennard Zinn and I had the opportunity to ride a pre-production version of the new components, which were very close to the finished product. The group Zellmann dropped off is from the first official
Jan Ullrich has vowed to win the Tour de France before he retires from pro cycling — and he has been in contact with seven-time champion Lance Armstrong's Discovery Channel team. ''I have always said, 'I will finish with a Tour victory,' '' Ullrich told the Swiss daily Blick. ''Unfortunately, this year I was prevented from doing so. That's why I will try to add another year.'' While he has been in contact with Discovery Channel, Ullrich said that no concrete agreement had been reached. The team is said to have hired Gerolsteiner rider Levi
What a long strange trip it's been
Menzies turns the fastest time of the day
Powers is looking forward to the hills
SRAM’s PR and media manager, Michael Zellmann, chillin' before the climb . . .
. . . and suffering up Flagstaff Mountain
The new Force crankset
Cassette and rear derailleur
Rear brake
The front end
It’s been a while since VeloNews.com provided a Fred’s-Eye View of the domestic mountain-bike scene. It could have something to do with that skinny-tire race that’s been going on in France — but the fat-tire crowd has been throwing down, too. USA Cycling crowned some new champions July 13-16 out in sweaty Sonoma County, California, and more than a few newcomers made themselves players. Infineon Raceway was the stage, and I came back home with a camera full of snapshots and a tape recorder bursting with audio clips. Here are a few snippets from four days of dust, sun and fat tires. Ryan
The wind was at his back now, gently rustling the banners along the Champs-Élysées and urging Floyd Landis on with a certainty he hadn't felt since he lit out of Pennsylvania Dutch country as a kid, vowing some day to win the world's greatest bicycle race. On Sunday, Landis was every bit as good as his word. ''I kept fighting, never stopped believing,'' he said, and the yellow jersey stretched snugly across Landis' slim shoulders confirmed the wisdom of that. The first Tour de France of the post-Lance Armstrong era was captured by another American — on the same
New Tour de France champion Floyd Landis leapt to second in the latestPro Tour standings released on Monday.The American's victory moves him to just 20 points behind leader AlejandroValverde of Spain, while Australian Cadel Evans's top five finish on theTour propelled him to sixth in the standings. Standings1. Alejandro Valverde (ESP) 195 points2. Floyd Landis (USA) 1753. Frank Schleck (LUX) 1504. Tom Boonen (BEL) 1455. Ivan Basso (ITA) 1386. Cadel Evans (AUS) 1207. Christophe Moreau (FRA) 1188. Jsrg Jaksche (GER) 1109. Alessandro Ballan (ITA) 11010. Damiano Cunego (ITA) 10611.
Tour de France champion Floyd Landis said Monday he hopes to have his ailing right hip replaced within the next month so he can return to the sport with the possibility of defending his title next July. Speaking with American reporters in a conference call from his hotel room in Paris, Landis said he remains confident that he can resume his racing career, despite the fact that he will become the first professional cyclist and only one of a small number of professional athletes to successfully undergo total hip replacement surgery. Landis dismissed concerns regarding the very limited
Trebon gave it where he could
Haywood for a morale boost from her win
Riffle loved the win, hated the course