Even the yellow jersey lends a hand
Even the yellow jersey lends a hand
Even the yellow jersey lends a hand
New crops frame the peloton
Julich on the bridge
The final sprint
Freire celebrates
Landis is biding his time
Course: This stage, which starts in the Belgian city of Huy on the right bank of the Meuse River at the foot of the infamous Mur de Huy, brings the Tour back to France. It traces some of the roads of the Mur’s classic, the Flèche Wallonne, climbing a couple of Ardennes hills in the opening 60km; but then it heads southeast on a flat-to-rolling route, mainly on wide, straight roads till it reaches the French border. The final two hours will be hectic, first on 80km of twisting, undulating back road through the countryside of Picardy, until the race reaches a straight, hilly highway inside 15km
It was a double-digit day for Robbie McEwen on stage 4 of the Tour de France. He uncorked a perfectly timed sprint with 200 meters to go in St. Quentin, France, to score his 10th career Tour de France stage victory in dominating fashion. The 34-year-old Australian they call "the pocket rocket" shot away in a tough, uphill sprint through a sweeping left turn to beat Spanish sprinter Isaac Galvez (Caisse d’Épargne-Illes Balears) by two bike lengths, while an exasperated Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic) came through in fifth shaking his head in frustration but retaining the maillot jaune. "I
1. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto2. Isaac Galvez (Sp), Caisse d'Epargne-I.B., 00:003. Oscar Freire (Sp), Rabobank, 00:004. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Credit Agricole relegated4. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Innergetic, 00:005. David Kopp (G), Gerolsteiner, 00:006. Daniele Bennati (I), Lampre, 00:007. Francisco Ventoso (Sp), Saunier Duval, 00:008. Michael Albasini (Swi), Liquigas-Bianchi, 00:009. Bernhard Eisel (A), Francaise des Jeux, 00:0010. Jimmy Casper (F), Cofidis, 00:00 11. Michael Rogers (Aus), T-Mobile, 00:0012. Anthony Geslin (F), Bouygues Telecom, 00:0013. George Hincapie (USA),
Defending Tour de France points champion Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole)was relegated from his fourth-place finish in Stage 4 of the Tour de France Wednesday after officials ruled him guilty of irregular sprinting.Hushovd, who wore the yellow jersey after winning the race prologue and again two days later, was ruled to have blocked Austrian sprinter Bernhard Eisel as both riders raced to the finish line in a bunch sprint.Robbie McEwen, of Davitamon, won the sprint well ahead of his rivals to claim his second stage of the race and tenth of his career, allowing him to reclaim the race's
Following the latest round of reports intimating possible links between CSC’s Ivan Basso and the Spanish doping ring called Operación Puerto, team doctor Joost De Maeseneer addressed the press at the Tour de France stage 4 start in Huy. While Maeseneer maintained he never saw anything that indicated Basso may have been involved in illicit activities, he conceded that there’s no way he and the team’s other two doctors can keep an eye on all the riders all the time. Maeseneer also said there is no reason for Basso or anyone else to seek services outside the confines of the team. "If Stuart
From the morning sign-in at the start to the podium at the finish, Casey Gibson covers it all. Here's what he saw between the lines today.
Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong has dropped all defamation lawsuits in France over allegations he used performance-enhancing drugs, his French lawyers said. The cyclist made the decision after being vindicated by three other recent rulings in his favor, Donald Manasse and Christian Charriere-Bournazel said in a statement. "Mr Armstrong considers that his honor and reputation have been re-established for all people who examine the facts in good faith and that no further purpose is served now in pursuing other actions in defamation," they said. A defamation case against
Weather sunny, very warm again, brisk crosswinds Stage winner Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto), 4:59:50, 41.423kph – McEwen earned his second win in three days to make it an even Tour 10 on his career. Second-place Isaac Galvez (Caisse d’Epargne) shook up a late crash to finish second, but was no match for McEwen’s top-end speed. Thor Hushovd (Credit Agricole) was relegated for dangerous sprinting. Race leader Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic), 19:52:13, 42.445kph – The world champion could only muster a disappointing fifth in the sprint, but he retained his one-second lead to Michael
Five-time Tour de France winner Eddy Merckx likes American Floyd Landis' chances to win this year's race. Merckx says Landis seems to be in top form after wins this year so far at the Tour of California, the Tour de Georgia and Paris-Nice. "He's in very good shape, he has a very good team," said Eddy Merckx, stepping out of the team bus before Wednesday's fourth stage. "I think he could win the Tour." Merckx may not be totally impartial, though, since his son Axel, is a Phonak teammate of Landis. Besides Landis, Merckx said he also likes American Levi Leipheimer,
Stage 4: Huy to Saint Quentin - 207km
Stage 4: Huy to Saint Quentin - 207km
McEwen claims his 10th career Tour stage win
Boonen had hoped for a stage win, but keeps the jersey
Martinez is just one of Bruyneel's many options at this Tour
Quick Step had a lot of responsibilities on Wednesday
Robbie the Rocket does it again
Boonen stays in yellow
Crédit Agricole on the front
McEwen gets ready for a day in the saddle
The Disco's head to the start
Hincapie ready for a day at the office, too.
The day's break
Fans are still enthusiastic, and today's crowds were very large. Big day for hay bales too.
Landis and crew stayed near the front.
Boonen wants a stage win...
... but McEwen wins another
... and the world champion has to settle for another yellow jersey.
The fans are happy to get a look at whomever makes the podium
VeloNews ventures into video...
... but these guys don't seem too concerned.
CSC doctor Joost De Maeseneer
Stage 4 by the numbers
Stage 4 by the numbers
Tour doctor Gerard Porte assists Dean after he hit the deck in the finale
Course: This is another long stage (216.5km), which starts in Luxembourg,passes through Belgium and finishes in the Netherlands. The first halfof the course is mainly on straight, wide highways, while the second half,from where it joins the Liège-Bastogne-Liège classic routeat Vielsalm (107km), is mostly on winding, often narrow, back roads. Withsix climbs in the last 90km — starting with L-B-L’s Haute-Levéeand ending with the Amstel Gold Race’s Cauberg 2km from the finish — thepeloton is almost certain to be split by attacks. History: An almost identical finish to a stage came in 1992,the
The cycling gods were both generous and horribly cruel in dealing out their judgments on the Tour de France peloton in Tuesday’s stage 3 from Esch-sur-Alzette to Valkenburg. Generous to those like stage winner Matthias Kessler (T-Mobile) and Belgian world champion Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic), whose fourth place and time bonuses earned him the overall lead. Fittingly, Boonen’s feat has come in time for him to wear the yellow jersey in Wednesday’s stage through his home country before the Tour re-enters France. “[Wearing the yellow jersey in Belgium] is something that might happen once
1. Matthias Kessler (G), T-Mobile2. Michael Rogers (Aus), T-Mobile, 00:053. Daniele Bennati (I), Lampre, 00:054. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Innergetic, 00:055. Erik Zabel (G), Milram, 00:056. Luca Paolini (I), Liquigas-Bianchi, 00:057. Oscar Freire (Sp), Rabobank, 00:058. Eddy Mazzoleni (I), T-Mobile, 00:059. Georg Totschnig (A), Gerolsteiner, 00:0510. Fabian Wegmann (G), Gerolsteiner, 00:05 11. Alexandre Botcharov (Rus), Credit Agricole, 00:0512. Mirko Celestino (I), Milram, 00:0513. Rubiera José Luis (Sp), Discovery Channel, 00:0514. Cadel Evans (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 00:0515. George
Weathersunny, very warm again, light windStage winnerMatthias Kessler (T-Mobile), 4h57:54, 43.605kph – The 27-year-oldGerman earned back some pride for his tarnished team to win in a bold attackon the Cauberg. He held off a late charge to win his first Tour stage withteammate Michael Rogers coming through second.Race leaderTom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic), 14h52:23, 42.788kph – TornadoTom finished fourth at five seconds back to slip into the maillot jaunefor the first time of his career. Three-time world time trial championRogers is just one second behind the world road champion. Overnight
A day after celebrating Robbie McEwen’s stage2 win, the Davitamon-Lotto team was left battered and bruised following the crashed marred stage 3 run from Esch-Sur-Alzette to Valkenburg. McEwen’s lead-out lieutenant Fred Rodriguez got the worst of it after he and Rabobank’s Erik Dekker went down with about 50km to go on Tuesday. Dekker’s injuries included broken teeth and cuts and bruises to his face. Rodriguez injured his right shoulder. Both were taken to the hospital in Verviers, Belgium, for further examination. “It’s a possible broken collarbone and wrist, but we don’t know for sure,”
CSC's Stuart O'Grady is doubtful for the fourth stage of the Tour de France after fracturing a vertebrae in his back here Tuesday. The Tour de France veteran was among several riders who crashed on the undulating 216.5km third stage which played host to a hectic finale. A CSC team spokesman said a CAT scan at a hospital in nearby Genk had shown that O'Grady fractured a vertebrae in his lower back, but that a decision would only be taken on Wednesday morning. "He has fractured it in a way that means he may still be able to race," team spokesman Bryan Nyygard told AFP. "Stuart is
From start-line caravan to finish-line chaos, Casey Gibson covers it all. Here's what he saw between the lines today.
At this point in the 2005 Tour de France, Tom Boonen had already given his Quick Step team a couple of stage wins and taken the green jersey. Twelve months later, he again leads the points competition and he starts Wednesday’s stage 4 in Huy, Belgium, wearing the yellow jersey of race leader — but without winning any of the opening stages. The world champion would like to change that win-less record as soon as possible. But, first, let’s see what has kept Boonen from adding to his list of 17 season victories. After coming an excellent 12th in Saturday’s prologue, the tall Belgian was the
Stage 3: Esch-sur-Alzette to Valkenburg - 216.5km
Stage 3: Esch-sur-Alzette to Valkenburg - 216.5km
A tough route that covered some Classic terrain
If at first you don't succeed: Kessler wins by 50 meters after missing a win by that same margin on Monday
Arrieta: The most aggressive
Stage Stats: Stage 3
Stage Stats: Stage 3
World Champion gets a new jersey for Wednesday's stage
Voigt says he expects an early break to succeed one of these days
Rodriguez and Dekker are both out of the Tour
Voigt at the start: He had plans for a busy day
Good luck... and don't dope.
Hushovd's second day in yellow
Hincapie may aim for another jersey
On the road
Doing the day's voice over
Kessler wins
and has reason to celebrate after Monday's heartbreaker
and his T-Mobile teammate, Rogers, leads the field in.
Fourth-placed Boonen gets the jersey
Valverde knew the truth the moment he stood up
Rodriguez and Dekker
Arrieta tried to hold off the field but fell victim to the Cauberg
Kessler's win was that much sweeter after Monday
Boonen wears yellow into Belgium tomorrow
He's got the jersey. Now he wants a stage.
Stage 4: Does this one suit Boonen?
Course: The Tour’s second longest stage (228.5km) opens with two significant Cat. 3 climbs in the forested hills of the Vosges and closes with two shorter Cat. 4 climbs on the France-Luxembourg border just before the finish. In between is 150km of rolling terrain through the agricultural Lorraine region. There’s bound to be an early breakaway on such a long stage, but the straight wide roads favor the sprinters’ teams in pulling things back together before the final 20km. The two Cat. 4 climbs with 16km and 13.5km to go, followed by two smaller, unrated ones in the last 5km, could spawn a
After suffering a stroke of bad luck in a finishing sprint for the second straight day at the Tour de France, it might seem like the gods are against Thor Hushovd. If that’s the case, they’ll have to try harder to hold back the big Norwegian, who snatched the yellow jersey back from American George Hincapie with a third-place finish behind Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto) and Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic) in the 228.5km stage 2 from Obernai, France, to Esch-sur-Alzette in Luxembourg. In a long jaunt north from the Alsace region of eastern France to the industrial mining and steel
1. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto2. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Innergetic, 00:003. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Credit Agricole, 00:004. Oscar Freire (Sp), Rabobank, 00:005. Daniele Bennati (I), Lampre, 00:006. Luca Paolini (I), Liquigas-Bianchi, 00:007. Stuart O’Grady(Aus), CSC, 00:008. Bernhard Eisel (A), Francaise des Jeux, 00:009. Erik Zabel (G), Milram, 00:00 10. Peter Wrolich (A), Gerolsteiner, 00:0011. Cristian Moreni (I), Cofidis, 00:0012. Inaki Isasi (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:0013. Michael Albasini (Swi), Liquigas-Bianchi, 00:0014. Francisco Ventoso (Sp), Saunier Duval, 00:0015.