Look’s new 585 frame incorporates the company’s ‘forged carbon’ technology in the bottom bracket shell.
Look's new 585 frame incorporates the company's 'forged carbon' technology in the bottom bracket shell.
Look's new 585 frame incorporates the company's 'forged carbon' technology in the bottom bracket shell.
Look's new Kéo pedal features an injected carbon body and a large support surface. The titanium axle version weighs 190 grams per pair.
Technical Q&A with Lennard Zinn - Dirty cogs, loose spindles and those darn splines again
Cunego hopes to continue his winning ways in '05, but the team kit will be different
Annual Training Plan ChallengeDear Joe and Dirk,I have a some teammates that are really into cyclo-cross racing. Theywill finish their last 'cross race the first week of December. The firstroad race will be in mid-February! Of course this will not be a "A" race for them. It won't be for me either.These guys typically do not race much in July, August and September sothey can transition and prepare for 'cross. How do you set up the AnnualTraining Plan when the last "A" race is on December 5th and their first Arace for road will be mid April? Do you skip the base periods or shortenall of them
The UCI has deferred a final decision on the question of granting a ProTour license to the Swiss-based Phonak team until November 30. Cycling’s international governing body said Monday that the ProTour applications of three teams – Phonak, the French Ag2R squad and the Belgian MrBookmaker.com team – were reviewed by the UCI licensing commission, but that a definitive action in either case would have to wait until November 30. The commission had initially rejected the Phonak application, citing concerns about the team, its structure and management, following news that three of its top riders
The Mail Bag 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. Don’t just question Tyler, question the testDear Editors:Either I've missed it or no one has brought up the validity of thescience behind the blood test employed in these cases. How was thistest developed? Who funded the research? Was the scientist hiredto develop the test? Is he
The '05 Tour won't be the same without Armstrong
Happier Times: Beloki at the 2002 Vuelta
Will Phonak have cause to celebrate next week?
Spanish shampoo may trigger positiveThe Canadian federal health service, Health Canada, has issued a warning to consumers advising them not to use Blue Cap Shampoo and Blue Cap Spray because the shampoo contains betamethasone, a topical corticosteroid (steroid). The spray may contain a similar substance. Neither chemical is noted on the product labels and Blue Cap products have not been approved for sale in Canada or the United States. Betamethasone may only be obtained by prescription. Use of betamethasone should be monitored by a physician. Corticosteroids, such as betamethasone,
Belgian Sven Nys continued his winning ways as he won the fifth round of the Superprestige cyclo-cross series in Gavere, Belgium, on Sunday. Nys successfully attacked an elite group of world-class ‘crossers in the closing meters of Sunday’s race to take his ninth win of the year – his second in the series – and to further solidify his hold on the overall lead in the Superprestige. The win is also the 24th Superprestige victory of Nys’s career. Belgian Erwin Vervecken made an early attack, charging off of the front row not long after the start. His Fidea teammate, defending world champion
In cyclo-cross, the combination of a flat course and wet ground means only one thing: a hard muddy slog. With its sapping mud pits, Sunday’s final round of the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclo-cross, run on the shores of the Raritan River in Highland Park, New Jersey, may have provided the best course preview for December’s national championships in Portland, Oregon. And if that’s the case, race winners Ann Knapp (Kona) and Todd Wells (GT-Hyundai) will lick their chops if the Portland race serves its expected helping of leg-breaking slop. While the Highland Park course offered little
Nys is still riding strong
Is Wellens finally hitting his stride?
Wells ruled the day
Trebon takes the series
Knapp was solid all season
As was the case last year, the RotaryClub of Marblehead, Massachusetts, is auctioning of a signed TylerHamilton jersey as part of the organization’s annual fundraiser.Hamilton, a member of the Swiss-based Phonak team, is originally fromMarblehead and donated a jersey to the organization last year as well.Relying on an eBay auction and exposure from VeloNews, the Marblehead Rotary earned more than $2500from last year’s jersey auction.To bid, justclick here and help the Marblehead Rotary.
Ben Berden (Saey-Descacht) won the Hooglede cyclo-cross on Saturday in Belgium, outracing Enrico Franzoi (Saeco) and Erwin Vervecken (Fidea). A lead group of seven formed quickly after the start of the race, including Berden, Franzoi, Vervecken, MrBookmaker.com teammates Mario De Clercq and Davy Commeyne, Sven Vanthourenhout (Quick Step), and American Jonathan Page (Cervelo-Hot Tubes-Adidas-Mavic). At midrace, Page could not match the pace of the others and began to fall back; he would eventually finish seventh. Four laps before the finish, De Clercq and Comeyne also had to let the others
The "Weekend 'Cross Wrap" is a service of VeloNews.com.Stories and results are provided by race promoters and are not producedby VeloNews or VeloNews.com. Promoters are welcome to submit race reportsthroughout the cyclo-cross season to Rosters@7Dogs.com.Reports may be edited for length and clarity.NEW JERSEY: Trebon, Knapp rule Beacon Cyclo-crossIf there were any doubts about just how good Ryan Trebon (Kona) is when he’s on form, they were banished Saturday at the Beacon Cyclocross in Bridgeton, New Jersey. Trebon flattened the field in the fifth race of the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of
Round five of the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclo-cross, run Saturday in Bridgeton, New Jersey, could be used in coming years by Kona as a how-to video in the finer points of winning a difficult ’cross race. Kona riders Ann Knapp and Ryan Trebon swept to wins on the fast, twisting and sandy Bridgeton course, though each rider took a different route to their ultimate destinations on the top step of the podium. There can be no doubt that Trebon has been riding a sweet patch of form for the past month. The lanky mountain biker won the fourth USGP race in Gloucester, Massachusetts, at the
Marblehead Rotary auctions Hamilton jersey
Berden has three wins going into Sunday's Superprestige round
New daddy Page fell off the pace at midrace
Trebon was 'just rollin''
Knapp ran to victory
Rob Vandermark has always had a knack for turning the impossible into the desirable. As the head designer for Merlin Metalworks, back when Merlin was a struggling independent, he figured out how to create externally butted, seamless titanium tubing. The result was the Merlin Extralight, which for many years reigned as a benchmark in the road bike stratosphere. He also created the Merlin Newsboy, a bona fide mountain bike disguised as the most stylish of cruisers. Easy to do, you say, if you have all the money in the world to work with. So at the opposite end of the price scale, he delivered
“Who you gonna believe – me, or your lying eyes?”–Richard Pryor in Live on the Sunset Strip,explaining to his wife that he was not doingwhat she had seen him doing with another woman Plenty of you have noticed and commented upon the “Believe Tyler” ad that has been displayed elsewhere on the VeloNews.com website. Some have derided the concept as absurd or inappropriate, others have defended it as a valiant expression of support for an embattled hero, and at least one guy inquired about running his own ad for a website he called “Don’t Believe Tyler.” We’re still waiting for the check on that
The Mail Bag 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.Let the process play itself outEditor:Perhaps it's just me, but lost in all the gnashing of teeth and recriminations regarding Tyler Hamilton's guilt or innocence is the fact that the original infallible Olympic testing lab decided that Tyler's "A" specimen was "negative" – may I repeat,
Aussie Olympic chief supports independent doping panelAustralia's Olympic chief John Coates has voiced support for the creation of a new independent body to examine drug cases and prevent a repeat of cycling's chaotic buildup to this year's Athens Olympics. A report, authored by top lawyer Robert Anderson into allegations of drug use in Australian cycling and released Thursday, proposed a body independent of the government-funded Australian Sports Commission (ASC) and the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS). Coates said a new drugs body was long overdue, adding that the Australian Olympic
Doubling in size from its first year in 2003, the 2004 San Francisco VeloSwap bicycle swap and show filled 75,000 square feet of the Cow Palace on November 13. Patrick Barrett of the Broken Spoke in San Carlos, California, says "Thank you for producing VeloSwap. This was my first time participating and it far exceeded my expectations. I own a small bike shop and was able to bring most of my bikes and a lot of old clothing, shoes and stuff that had been gathering dust at the shop. We ended up having the best day in our 10-year history. We'll definitely be there every year from now
Friday's foaming rant: Believe O'Grady
Rob Vandermark, President, Seven Cycles.
Seven's Elium mixes carbon tubes with either steel or titanium tubes and lugs. The Elium Race shown here boasts extra rigidity for criteriums and road racing.
Seven built an especially light bike for Mary McConneloug to take to the Olympics. The same featherlight tubeset is now available to all in the Olympic Sola.
"Cycling in the News" is a regular service of VeloNews.com. Readers,reporters and friends are encouraged to send links to current stories aboutcompetitive cyclists and cycling that appear in the mainstream media. Ifyou come across a news item that you believe may be of interest to otherVeloNews readers, we would be grateful if you choose to send it to Rosters@InsideInc.com.BikeBiz.com - Great Britain - November 18, 2004The cycling proficiency test is dead; long live the National StandardThe new National Standard for cycle training in England has been operationalfor some months but it got its
Olympic cycling bronze medalist Axel Merckx has picked up Belgium's annual sportsperson of the year award, it was announced Thursday. The 32-year-old professional rider, the son of legend Eddy Merckx - considered the greatest cycling champion of all time - succeeded motocross rider Stefan Everts who won last year's title. Axel Merckx has displayed great talent in the sport, but is often compared to his famous father - nicknamed "the Cannibal" for his voracious appetite for victory – who won five Tours de France and most of the sport’s other prestigious titles, including the world
'05 season on menu at Georgia luncheonThe Georgia Partnership for Economic Development will host a luncheon and panel discussion about the upcoming 2005 cycling season, including the Dodge Tour de Georgia, from noon to 2 p.m. Friday in Atlanta. The gathering will be at Technology Square, 85 Fifth Street, in room 132. Race announcer and cycling commentator Dave Towle will moderate the panel discussion. Joining Towle on the panel will be Jeff Corbett, director of HealthNet-Maxxis; Micah Rice, director of Jittery Joe’s-Kalahari; Nathan O’Neill, five-time Australian time trial champion, who
Merckx won the bronze medal for the road race in Athens
The Mail Bag 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.Ill-gotten gains?Editor:On the topic of Dave Fuentes' suspension, it's interesting to read that the arbitration panel essentially counted his entire spring and summer of racing as part of his suspension term. That's really unfortunate. I guess this means riders in the future should dope
It's showdown time in the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclocross. Going into the final two races this coming weekend, Canadian Geoff Kabush has a slight advantage in the race for the final podium's top step, leading perennial American favorite Marc Gullickson (Redline) by just 34 points. Three other Americans - Ryan Trebon (Kona), Adam Craig (Maxxis Giant) and Mark McCormack (Clif Bar-Colavita) - are each within striking distance and have plenty of motivation to do well. If an American can clinch the series victory, he's assured of a spot on the U.S. team headed to the World
Will Kabush still be celebrating on Sunday?
Not if Gully can help it.
The Australian Olympic Committee said Tuesday it has appealed to international sport's highest arbitration body to open the way for Australian cyclist Michael Rogers to claim a bronze medal from the Athens Games. The AOC has joined Russian committee in seeking the disqualification of American cyclist Tyler Hamilton from the Olympic individual time trial. Gold medalist Hamilton was suspended by his Phonak team in September, soon after he won an individual time trial at the Vuelta a España. Results from two failed blood tests suggested he had been guilty of an illicit blood transfusion.
I just returned to a very chilly Boulder, Colorado, after spending a few days in the warm sun of Santa Barbara, California, where Giant Bicycles arranged to show off its 2005 product line. While the majority of major manufacturers already paraded their 2005 wares this past summer, Giant was forced to wait until the Interbike tradeshow because its new Maestro suspension mountain bikes weren’t quite ready until then. Indeed, even the bikes that Giant brought to Interbike’s Outdoor Demo were not 100-percent ready, so I was eager to try out the actual production road and mountain models that
Time Sport International, founded in 1986, is a comparatively young company, but it has been at the forefront of the pro racing scene ever since the debut of its revolutionary TBT pedal in late 1987. The TBT was the first modern clipless pedal to allow rotational float, a common feature on high-end pedals today but one that was unheard of at the time. Despite the system’s unusual approach, the TBT was an immediate success, garnering victories in the men’s and women’s Tour de France in 1988 with Pedro Delgado and Jeannie Longo. Shortly thereafter, Time developed a clipless mountain-bike
Losing my gripDear Lennard,I am having a problem with the removal of the drive-side bottom bracketcup. It is a Shimano UN 72 and it has been removed so many times that thesplines are now gone. The bottom bracket itself works fine and I can leaveit in, but eventually it will need to be replaced. The splines are so rounded off that when pressure is applied in an attemptto remove the cup, the bottom bracket tool spins and further chews up thesplines. I am turning the tool clockwise for removal.Jeff Dear Jeff,The first thing to try would be to get your hands on a Tacx BB cupremover, since it
A three-member review panel of the U.S. Arbitration Association and the Court of Arbitration for Sport has unanimously ruled Dave Fuentes committed a doping violation when he tested positive for oxymetholone metabolites at the Redlands Classic on March 25. The 31-year-old from Berkeley, California, who had 12 wins in 2003, disputed the test results, but the panel found sufficient evidence to recommend a two-yearsuspension from the sport. The panel also recommended that Fuentes's suspension begin the day of the infraction, meaning that he may compete again on March 25, 2006. In addition,
November 15, 2004 (Berkeley, CA) – An October 30 dinner and silent auction for the NorCal High School Mountain Bike League at Delancey Street in San Francisco drew a crowd of 140 and raised more than $20,000 to support training for the twelve high school teams throughout Northern California who participate in the League. The NorCal League is the brainchild of Berkeley High School math teacher and former amateur road racer Matt Fritzinger, who founded a racing team and organizes the annual coaches’ conference, winter riding camps, and the spring race series as well as a weeklong summer riding
Giant-Pearl Izumi team rider Adam Craig showed up to camp
The TCR Advanced you can buy in the United States.
The TCR Giant won't sell here...
... because this seatpost requires a perfect cut.
Time Sport's founder and president, Roland Cattin
The lightest version of Time's new RXS pedal has a titanium spindle, with a claimed weight of only 195 grams per pair.
Paolo Bettini's Time VXR. Bettini has since upgraded to the lighter VXRS frameset, and he will have a new time trial ride for 2005.
Will the CAS force a medal shuffle?
Technical Q&A with Lennard Zinn - Splines, cleats and big guys on bikes
The Mail Bag 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.Hincapie’s a gentleman and team playerEditor:Regarding the letter from Earl Aneas dissing George for apparently not signing an autograph for his wife (see Friday’s mailbag: “Don’t look to Hincapie at all”): I live in South Carolina near where George resides when he's stateside and had
The five cities looking to host the 2012 Summer Games submitted bids to the International Olympic Committee on Monday, with Paris the front-runner to win next year's vote. London, Madrid, New York and Moscow also turned in documents, each book totaling more than 550 pages. The IOC will evaluate such credentials as venues, security, transportation, hotels and financing. “The bid document in itself is not enough to get you across the line, but it will make your bid better," said London 2012 chairman Sebastian Coe, the Olympic 1500-meter champion in 1980 and 1984. “This is what I would
The Swiss cycling team Phonak said Monday that its very survival was at stake following an initial decision by the UCI to leave it out of the 2005 ProTour. Phonak, which has had three top riders fail doping tests this year, vowed to fight for its place on the final list at a hearing with the UCI's licensing commission on November 22. "The participation in the ProTour is of existential significance to the team's future and vitally important to Swiss cycling in general," the team said in a statement. "Participation in the most important races has to be guaranteed and is the principal
Just complete an online survey about what features you look for in training monitoring equipment. It's quick. (20 minutes tops) It's easy. (All we're looking for are opinions) And if you complete it before November 22, 2004, you could win $100 cash! By participating, you will help companies create quality products that help people train more effectively. And win yourself some sweet spending money in the process. To get started on the survey, simply copy the following PIN number, click on the link below, and paste the PIN number in the designated window. PIN number: training789 Link:
Andreas Rihs, Chairman of Phonak Holding SA, may pull the plug on the cycling program.
Belgian Sven Nys won the third round of the cyclo-cross World Cup on Sunday in Pijnakker, Netherlands. Hometown favorite Richard Groenendaal, who crashed once, crossed second at 23 seconds back, followed by Belgian Sven Vanthourenhout at 0:49. Nys finally broke the Czech stranglehold on this season’s World Cup, following victories by Zdenek Mlynar in Wortegem-Petegem (Belgium) and Kamil Ausbuher in Tabor, Czech. Groenendaal had a perfect start, riding ahead of a chase group that included Nys, Mlynar and Italian Enrico Franzoi. But Nys eventually leapt away from the bunch, and when
To keep herself motivated in races she’s comfortably winning, Mary McConneloug (Seven Cycles) often imagines racing against her top competition from the West Coast. “Ann Knapp is just around the next corner,” she thinks to herself, “and Gina Hall is right behind me. I have to keep it pegged.” Sunday’s fifth stop on the Verge New England Cyclo-cross Series looked like another day for McConneloug to race against imagined opponents, but a racer on loan from Colorado ended up giving McConneloug a real run for her money. While she spends most of her time racing multi-hour mountain bike events,
Nys continues a great season
Mind Games: McConneloug often fights her biggest battles in her head
McCormack fights his way into the lead
The Swiss team Phonak is not among a list of 19 teams receiving a “favorable sanction” to participate in the UCI's 2005 Pro Tour, sources have told Agence France Presse. Phonak was the only one of 20 teams presented to the UCI to be overlooked by the organization's licenses commission. The UCI is expected to announce which teams will be granted Pro Tour licenses early in December. The news follows three doping positives involving Phonak riders: American Tyler Hamilton, 2004 Olympic gold medalist in the individual time trial; Spain’s Santiago Perez, runner-up in the 2004 Vuelta a España; and
After two years with Mario Cipollini’s Domina Vacanze team, Specialized Bicycles announced that it was switching its sponsorship to Germany’s Gerolsteiner squad for 2005, in part because the team has added American Levi Leipheimer to its roster. Specialized also announced an expansion of its domestic sponsorship role next year, adding its support to the men’s side of USA Cycling’s under-23 development program. Specialized will supply bikes and equipment for road, mountain, cyclo-cross and track to the U-23 team. We chatted with Mike Sinyard, Specialized’s president and founder, about his
The Mail Bag 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.Letter writer praises letter writersEditor:It’s encouraging to know that people out there feel the way that I do (see Wednesday’s mailbag). First, Ian Sharp makes a great point about doping and lifetime bans. Only drastic punishments will leave athletes thinking about their mistakes and
Sunday’s return to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park for round three of the Bay Area Super Prestige Series will be a homecoming for two Northern California cyclo-cross stars from the days when California ruled the ’cross roost. Former junior national champs Jim Gentes and Clark Natwick, who were archrivals in the mid-1970s, will find that the area near the park’s Polo Fields which will host Sunday’s round has changed little since their racing heyday, with its cypress tree forests, sandy paths, and trails covered by pine needles. San Jose’s Gentes won the national junior title during the
When Germany’s Nina Kraft, 35, swept to her overwhelming 17-minute victory over Switzerland’s Natascha Badmann at the 2004 Ironman Triathlon World Championship in Hawaii October 16, photographers noticed a curious thing when Kraft crossed the line. She had her head down and never looked up. She looked almost embarrassed, which many took for shyness. When Badmann crossed the line in second place, her joy was palpable and open. “Nina needs to take lessons from Natascha about giving good finish line,” said one veteran triathlon journalist at the time. With Tuesday’s revelation that Kraft
VeloNews Q&A: Specialized's new team, Gerolsteiner's new ride
Mike Sinyard