Vande Velde
Vande Velde
Vande Velde
Reigning Giro d’Italia champion Gilberto Simoni kick-started his season– literally – over the weekend, competing in 7.5km cross-country skiingrace near his hometown of Trento, Italy.Simoni and Saeco teammate Leonardo Bertagnolli participated in the racewhich drew more than 5,000 skiers. For the 32-year-old two-time Giro champion,it marked the transition into formal preparations for the upcoming season.“As with tradition, I’ll start my preparation at home then join my teammatesin Terracina,” Simoni told La Gazzetta dello Sport. “Some of myteammates will race in Qatar, but I prefer to stay and
Italian national team cycling coach and former race star Franco Ballerini has been called before a judge in Florence to answer charges of taking doping products in 1998, the year he won Paris-Roubaix for the second time, the Ansa news agency reported Sunday. Ballerini will appear before a judge at Pistoia, just outside Florence on January 14, to answer charges of taking anabolic steroids. His summoning comes following an enquiry opened by a court at Brescia which implicated former national coach Antonio Fusi and nine riders including Ballerini on charges of “sporting fraud,” a crime which
Japanese rider Masahiko Mifune, just four days short of his 35th birthday, upset a star-studded field to win the $60,000 Hong Kong Cycle Classic on Sunday. Mifune of the World Wide Cycling team from the Netherlands, outsprinted Australia's Cameron Hughes and Slovakian ace, Milan Dovrscik to claim the top prize in the 80km individual circuit race. "This is one of my favorite circuits and I felt good at the finish. I had some luck at the finish and I think it was tactics that won the day for us," said the 34-year-old Belgium-based Japanese. Mifune sat back and made his move around 500 meters
Ballerini in 2002
Geneviève Jeanson was in the news a lot during 2003 - first, because she is one of Canada's biggest cycling stars, and second, because of the high hematocrit result she posted at the road world championships in Hamilton, which led to her withdrawal from the women's road race mere hours before its start. Although Jeanson tested negative in a subsequent doping control, the frenzy, particularly among the Quebec media, has taken a long time to die down. Jeanson has been sparing in her media contacts since, in part because of the Quebec College of Physicians' investigation of Maurice Duquette on
Jan Ullrich spent his holidays on the Spanish island of Mallorca, training, we assume. The German star was spotted riding with several T-Mobile teammates and will return to the Mediterranean island later this month for more training. The Spanish daily AS reported the 1997 Tour de France champion will make his 2004 season debut at the Mallorca Trophy, Feb. 1-5. USPS ‘getting fixed’Lance Armstrong’s U.S. Postal Service team status for the 2004 season is still pending, but team director Johan Bruyneel said it’s just a matter of paperwork. “We had some delay with the paperwork, mainly because
Tour of the Gila race director Jack Brennan has notified VeloNews that the Tour of the Gila will have a new title sponsor for the 2004 edition of the race. National Geographic Adventure magazine has signed on, replacing the Silver City Holiday Inn Express as title sponsor, with the motel remaining on board as a co-sponsor. Brennan explained that in a very unusual development, Mike Trumbull of the local Holiday Inn Express - the previous title sponsor - did the work to find the new one. Trumbull, who is chairman of the Silver City/Grant County Chamber of Commerce tourism committee, worked
Geneviève Jeanson spent a good deal of time in the spotlight during 2003, and she wasn't always celebrating
Spain’s national team coach, Paco Antequera, said he’s already named three riders who will be part of the five-man Olympic road-race team to compete in Athens in August. Antequera told the Spanish daily MARCA that world champion Igor Astarloa, runner-up Alejandro Valverde and two-time world champion Oscar Freire top the list. “Freire, Valverde and Astarloa, even though he doesn’t like the heat, are the focus of my plans,” Antequera said. “The three are winners, they ride well in the hills and are quick, which is what you need in these kinds of races. The other two places will be the time
Hi, Bob,I signed a contract with a cycling-related manufacturer to endorse their product. I believe in the product and have used it successfully for several years. At the end of the nine-page agreement there was a clause called Force Majeure. This clause contains language about fires, floods, wars, etc. What’s up with this, and how does it apply to the contract? Thanks in advance,B.D. Dear B.D.,I suspect the Force Majeure was included as simply as boilerplate. In law, the term “boilerplate” refers to standard language contained in a legal document that is identical to language used in
How apropos – Sven Nijs won the GP Sven Nijs on New Year’s Day, and easily, too. His biggest competitor, world champion Bart Wellens, who was five for five in the seven-race Gazet van Antwerpen Trofee series going into today’s race in Baal-Tremelo, in Belgium, was no threat in the snowy weather. Nijs took off very fast from the gun, leaving the pursuing peloton behind after the first lap. Wellens had chosen the wrong tires for the conditions – but even with the right rubber, he could not compete with the flying Nijs. Wellens and Ben Berden refused to abandon the chase, but Nijs had the
Oleg Grichkine (Moscow City Sports Association) clinched overall victory in the Tour of South China Sea today as teammate Sergey Koudentsov won the closing stage-eight criterium in Macau. Grichkine won four of the tour’s eight stages to finish 17 seconds up on Kam Po Wong (Pocari Sweat Hong Kong) and 31 ahead of Peter Milostic (Bicisport Australia). Grichkine also claimed the points competition. Meanwhile, the U.S.-based Navigators cycling team announced that Grichkine would no longer race with the squad and would instead concentrate on his work with the Russian national team. “The
Who else could win the GP Sven Nijs?
World champion Bart Wellens is five for five in the seven-race Gazet van Antwerpen Trofee series after winning the Azencross on Tuesday in Loenhout, Belgium. Wellens attacked on the first lap, and only Sven Nijs could match his pace. It was a two-man race that finally was settled when Nijs went astray in the final corner, leaving the door wide open for Wellens to win his fifth straight race. Nijs hung on for second, followed by Ben Berden in third. American Jonathan Page crossed in 18th place. Results1. Bart Wellens2. Sven Nijs3. Ben Berden4. Erwin Vervecken5. Peter Van Santvliet6. Sven
Challenger Wong Kam Po (Pocari Sweat Hong Kong) gave it all he had in stage seven of the Tour of South China Sea, but there was no wresting the overall lead from Russian Oleg Grishkin (Moscow City Sports Association) Maros Kovac (Dukla Trencin) won the hilly stage on Coloane, Macao, but the real race was between Grishkin and Wong, first and second on GC. After a couple of early breaks were reeled in, Wong attacked with five laps to go, joined by Alexey Kolessov (Kazakhstan National Team) and Robert Nagy (Dukla Trencin). Grishkin’s team kept the move under control, commanding the front of
The Navigators have confirmed the team’s lineup for the 2004 Jacob’s Tour Down Under, set for January 20-25 in Adelaide, Australia. The eight-man team will include Siro Camponogara, Vassili Davidenko, Jeff Louder, David McKenzie, Kirk Obee, Ciaran Power, Burke Swindlehurst and Phil Zajicek. Henk Vogels, the team’s Aussie star on the comeback from his terrible crash last July, will not ride JCTDU but will join his teammates for a short training camp before the race. The riders will then participate in an official team camp and presentation in Italy in early February and stay in Europe to
Wellens was back on top Tuesday at the Azencross in Loenhout, Belgium
Berden, who won the last World Cup, settled for third
Why is this man smiling? Groenendaal finished 22nd
Page, meanwhile, scored another top-20 finish
Kovac charges up the hill to victory
Dear VeloNews.com readers. Wishing you a New Year filled with good health and happiness. I look forward to your questions for 2004. Monique Dear Monique,Had a quick question about the rising levels of mercury found in our fish sources. I’m famous for my diet of canned tuna. I can easily go through a can or two of BumbleBee white albacore tuna in water a day. From what I’ve read, this could easily put me at risk for mercury poisoning. What’s the latest on this issue? Thanks,CP. Dear CP,That is a very good question, as the American Heart Association advises us to eat two fish meals per
Adham Sbeih tested positive for erythropoietin (EPO) at the U.S. Elite Track National Championships August 26 in Trexlertown, Pennsylvania, according to the U.S. Olympic Committee. The USOC announced Tuesday that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's review board had found that "sufficient evidence of doping exists to proceed further in seven cases," including Sbeih's. The 30-year-old Sacramento resident, who raced for Sierra Nevada-Clif Bar in 2003, won the individual pursuit at this year's nationals and rode on the championship-winning team-pursuit squad. He and the six others, all
Dear Lennard,So there are two Giro TT helmets, right? (The round one that everyone has and the square one that Lance rides.) In the Vuelta I noticed that David Millar was wearing the square variant. What's the deal with this? Is one faster in certain conditions? Why David and Lance?– Geoff Dear Geoff,As far as I know, Lance’s helmet is not available for sale, whereas the other one is. Lance’s was designed specifically for him and works well with the hump in his back. Apparently, Millar has reason to believe that it is fast for him, too. When I was at the final time trial in the Tour in 2001,
The Moscow City Sports Association team showed that they are the class of the field on Tuesday in the Tour of South China Sea. During the sixth stage at Zhuhai, the team worked like a well-oiled machine to deliver Russian sprinter Oleg Grishkin to his fourth win in this tour. Kam Po Wong (Pocari Sweat Hong Kong) collected six bonus seconds by finishing second, and that may prove important in the final calculations, as he is the favorite in Wednesday’s stage on Coloane Island, which finishes up a steep climb. The stage began with a flurry of attacks. American Chris Baumann (Sierra
Adham Sbeih racing at the 2003 track nationals
The bunch rolls through the start-finish
Ciaran Power (Navigators) was the emphatic winner of Rás Turcaí in Carraroe, Ireland, on Sunday. On a 10km circuit, Power took control over the 89-man field when he attacked on each climb of the six laps and comfortably set himself into a 20-second lead just after the halfway point. Power was reproducing the sort of form that saw him take two stages in last year's Milk Rás as he powered away to increase his lead to more than a minute at the finish. The former Ofoto Lombardia rider David O'Loughlin came second after taking the first prime of the day, but he couldn't match Power, who was a
Russian sprinter Oleg Grishkin (Moscow City Sports Association) won the fifth stage of the Tour of South China Sea on Monday, taking the bunch sprint just ahead of Aussie Brett Aitken (Bicisport Australia). It was the third victory so far in the eighth annual race for Grishkin, who claimed stages one and four, and holds the overall lead just 13 seconds ahead of Kam Po Wong (Pocari Sweat Hong Kong) and a further second over Aitken. The tour has been a sprinter’s race since stage three, and while Grishkin didn’t look good in the hilly second stage, where he briefly surrendered the jersey to
Grishkin and Aitken – and a few of their closest friends - have at it in stage five
Belgian Ben Berden soloed to victory on Sunday in the Grand Prix of Belgium, the fourth round of the cyclo-cross World Cup. Dutchman Richard Groenendaal took off on the first lap in Koksijde, pursued by a host of Belgians. Sven Nijs took a spill and lost about 10 seconds, but first Bart Wellens, then Berden were able to join Groenendaal at the front. With three laps remaining, Groenendaal and Berden left Wellens behind – and during the last lap, Berden took off alone to win. Groenendaal hung on for second, followed by Erwin Vervecken, Wellens, Nijs and Sven Vanthourenhout. Nijs, winner of
Italian Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo) has been named cyclist of the year for 2003 by a panel of readers of the sporting newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport. The Italian sprinter was favored by 31.7 percent of the 5527 people consulted on the Milanese daily newspaper’s website. Petacchi beat out compatriot Paolo Bettini, who garnered 23 percent of the votes, and American Lance Armstrong, who drew 19.3 percent. German Jan Ullrich got only 6.2 percent, while Italian Gilberto Simoni polled just 5.1 percent. Petacchi, who will celebrate his 30th birthday on January 3, won 24 times this
Our man in Belgium, Marcel Van Hoecke, was on the job in Koksijde at the fourth round of the World Cup. A gallery of the usual Belgian battlers, along with a resurgent Richard Groenendaal and the tenacious Jonathan Page, is presented below. For the story, click here.
Wellens has been winning everything this season – until now
Today was Berden's day to shine
Richard Groenendaal shot away from the gun on Sunday
But he was shadowed by a host of Belgians, including the eventual winner, Ben Berden
Bart Wellens was having an off day, and could only manage fourth
Erwin Vervecken, meanwhile, copped the last step on the podium
And Jonathan Page flew the stars and stripes to 19th place
World time trial champion David Millar says the 2004 Athens Olympics will overshadow the Tour de France in his season’s goals and is eyeing an appearance in track racing to bolster his chances. “I competed in the Sydney Olympics and it was a great lesson for me,” Millar said in a press conference this month. “The Athens Olympics are now one of my biggest objectives from here on. The Tour de France is my second objective for next year, and the World Championships will come third. “Sydney was a magnificent experience, and I learned a lot. I now know what to expect from the Olympics, and yes,
The Health Net Pro Cycling Team, presented by Maxxis, announced on Thursday the signing of former Prime Alliance rider Danny Pate. The announcement came from Gregory Raifman, Chairman & CEO of Momentum Sports Group, LLC, a Piedmont, California, based company that owns and operates the Health Net cycling team. A resident of Colorado Springs, Pate, 24, has shown great promise as a professional, riding in Europe for Saeco in 2000 and returning to the U.S. to take the No. 2 ranking in the NRC Standings in 2002 while riding for Prime Alliance. To date, Pate is perhaps best known for his win at
Bart Wellens won the latest round of the Superprestige cyclo-cross series on Christmas Day in Diegem, Belgium. It was his fourth win in five outings, and his 16th victory this season. In the early going, a lead group formed containing Wellens, Mario De Clercq, Sven Nijs, Tom Vannoppen and Erwin Vervecken. During a tactical game of “Who’ll take the lead?”, Wellens kept a low profile, but in the fifth lap he went for it, accelerating through a turn. Only De Clercq was able to keep up, but soon even he fell off the pace, eventually finishing second. Vervecken crossed third. American champion
Wellens claimed his fourth Superprestige race of the season
Vervecken found himself settling for the lowest step on the podium ...
... while Nijs missed the podium altogether
Vannoppen was right behind Nijs in fifth
U.S. champ Page wore his Santa hat for the Christmas Day race
De Clercq doesn't look overjoyed to finish second again
Joseba Beloki sounded like a lot of other riders at last week’s 2004 Vuelta a España presentation: The route looks great, but the Tour de France is the priority. “It’s likely I will race both the Vuelta and the Tour, but the Tour will always be the most important race for me,” the three-time Tour podium finisher told VeloNews. “The Vuelta course looks very challenging, and it’s one I like and I’d like to win, but there’s the Tour and perhaps even the Olympics, which every athlete dreams about.” Beloki was all smiles at the presentation ceremony, especially since his injuries have healed
Santa Cruz Bicycles and DSD have announced the formation of the Santa Cruz Syndicate team, which will compete on the 2004 mountain-bike racing circuit. Comprised of top athletes in gravity racing, street, urban, free ride and ultra-marathon, Santa Cruz Syndicate is not the typical factory racing effort. One of the details that sets Santa Cruz Syndicate apart from standard teams is that all riders are allowed to sign individual sponsors for personal items, such as clothing, goggles, helmets and shoes. Riders with individual clothing sponsors will be flying them in Syndicate colors, and have
American cyclist David Clinger has sealed a ride with Mario Cipollini's Domina Vacanze team for next season, the Italian team announced Wednesday. The 26-year-old from California, a former member of U.S. Postal, has been a professional for six years and rode with the Festina team before moving to Postal in 2002. He left Postal to race for Prime Alliance during 2003. –Copyright 2003/AFP
The Navigators will be heading to Australia after the New Year to make its season debut in the Jacobs Creek Tour Down Under, Jan 20-25. The team will join 11 other squads in what’s the first major race of the 2004 season. Heading to Australia will be Siro Camponogara, Vassili Davidenko, Jeff Louder, David McKenzie, Kirk Obee, Ciaran Power, Burke Swindlehurst, and Phil Zajicek. They will hook up with their Aussie teammate Henk Vogels for a brief training camp prior to the race, the team reported. The official team camp and presentation will follow the JCTDU with a complete team gathering in
More than a dozen Americans will be racing in Europe this season, ranging from five-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong to newbies like Tom Danielson, Tim Johnson and Patrick McCarty. U.S. Postal Service remains the engine behind the strong American presence in Europe, with eight riders representing the colors across the pond. But there’s growing diversity in the American expatriate community, with seven teams from Denmark, Italy, Spain, Holland and Switzerland boasting a Yankee rider, and the U.S.-based Navigators planning another springtime assault on the continent. Americans are
U.S. Postal Service and Fassa Bortolo are among a handful of teams that have yet to be registered in TT1, according to the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The teams of American Lance Armstrong and Italian Alessandro Petacchi – along with Alessio, Domina Vacanze, Kelme and Milaneza – have until January 8 to supply more information, according to the Professional Cycling Council (PCC). A spokesman for the PCC told the news service AFP that the council was "very optimistic" that the teams – particularly Postal and Fassa – would resolve any lingering questions by the deadline. The
Quark will pick up where Saturn is leaving off – Team Sports Inc. announced today that it has signed the shoe company to a three-year deal as the title sponsor of a women's pro cycling team. Canadian Lyne Bessette will captain the team, which has also signed 2003 national champion Sarah Uhl. Quark is negotiating with three other athletes and looking for two additional riders. The Quark team will kick off the 2004 season with a March training camp in California, and make its racing debut on March 13 at McClane Pacific, in Merced, California. Team Sports will manage the team; former Saturn
Armstrong: Looking for No. 6
Mario Cipollini says he will pull out of the Giro d’Italia early to prepare for an assault on the 2004 Summer Games, according to the Italian sports daily La Gazzetta dello Sport . The Lion King said he will race in the Giro until the first serious mountain stages and then head to Australia to train for what he hopes will be a slot on the Italian track team to race in the individual pursuit. The 2002 road world champion has flirted with the track before, but this time seems determined to make a run for a gold medal. Overlooked for the 2003 road world championships team, Cipollini would
Bart Wellens scored his 15th victory of the season on Sunday at the Vlaamse Druivenveldrit, a Category 1 cyclo-cross in Overijse, Belgium. The only question on his competitors’ minds these days is when Wellens will leave them behind. In Overijse, Wellens waited until the second lap to take off. “I didn't really start all that well,” said Wellens. Regardless of how well he started, Wellens finished just fine – the gap quickly grew too big for the pursuit to close, leaving Mario De Clercq and Sven Nijs to settle for second and third, respectively. Meanwhile, the newly crowned U.S.
Marc Gullickson (Redline) and Mary McConneloug (Seven Cycles) made it two for two this weekend, each winning the final weekend’s worth of racing in the Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series. Today, in the Patterson Construction-NEBC Cyclo-Cross, riders were greeted with a course that was shockingly slick with ice, snow, and mud, pushing riders' abilities to the limit. In the men’s series, Mark McCormack (Saturn) held the lead in the overall standings over last year's series winner, Marc Gullickson (Redline), winner of the previous day's race in Rhode Island. Meanwhile, in the
Wellens did it again on Saturday
De Clercq had to settle for second
Groenendaal still can't get a break
And U.S. champ Page wasn't having a banner day, either
In fact, everyone had that look on his face ...
... even Wellens, who was winning
Last year's Verge New England Cyclo-cross Series champions – Marc Gullickson (Redline) and Mary McConneloug (Seven Cycles) – returned to the fore on Saturday as the series moves into its final weekend. From the starting whistle in South Kingstown, Rhode Island, the men's elite race was on fire. Series leader Mark McCormack (Saturn) got the hole shot on theuphill sprint start, with newly crowned under-23 national champion JesseAnthony (Hot Tubes) right on his wheel. By the end of the first lap, a leadgroup containing McCormack, Anthony, Gullickson, Ben Turner(7UP-Maxxis), and Zak Grabowski
U.S. Postal Service sport director Johan Bruyneel said the team’s paramount goal for the 2004 season is putting Lance Armstrong into the yellow jersey on the Champs Elysees for a sixth time. “In theory, (winning the Tour) is the only thing that counts. If we can do that, that’s history,” Bruyneel told VeloNews during the presentation of the 2004 Vuelta a España in Madrid on Wednesday. “It’s going to be difficult. This year was more difficult than other years, and we’ve tried to learn a few things from last year. It was a combination of things, and Lance is not improving anymore, but that
Although he signed with the domestic Health Net squad just six weeks ago, 26-year-old David Clinger is now rumored to be in negotiations with Mario Cipollini’s Domina Vacanze squad for the 2004 season. Health Net team management would neither confirm nor deny the rumor. “We can’t completely comment on that,” said Thierry Attias, President and COO of Momentum Sports Group, the organization that owns and runs the Health Net cycling team. “I’d say it’s half true. We have a completely valid and enforced contract with David. He does now have an opportunity to ride with Cipollini, and we’ve been
Big team news this week came courtesy of the Kona camp, which unveiled its 2004 squad as well as a unique new sponsor. But it was the one name missing from the roster that grabbed most of the attention. After spending the previous seven years aboard a Kona, Canadian cross-country pro Geoff Kabush will not be back with the team in 2004. The reason for the parting of ways depends on whom you ask, but it’s safe to say it wasn’t the most harmonious ending. “I spent a little time checking to see what else was out there, then decided that I wanted to be back with Kona,” explained Kabush. “But
Gary Houseman, who won the rain-soaked UCI World Cup downhill July 12 at Grouse Mountain, British Columbia, has accepted a one-year suspension after testing positive for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) at that race, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced Friday. THC, a metabolite of marijuana, is a prohibited substance under UCI regulations. The suspension for the 23-year-old ITS-Santa Cruz rider, from Temecula, California, began on July 12. All results that occurred on or after that date – including his Grouse Mountain downhill win – are declared invalid. Houseman also was fined 2,000
Houseman racing at Grouse Mountain
Kelme-Costa Blanca and Angel Casero reached a verbal agreement Wednesday for the 2001 Vuelta a España champion to join the Spanish green team for a one-year contract. News broke during Wednesday’s 2004 Vuelta presentation in Madrid, and Casero seemed relieved to get the deal done after finding few options for a contract next season after the collapse of his former employer at Team Bianchi. “We got it done this morning, and I have a verbal agreement with (Kelme team manager Pepe) Quiles, and the only thing left is to sign the papers,” Casero said. “I’m happy, and I look forward to getting
Will Frischkorn has signed with Colavita-Bolla for 2004, rejoining former Saturn teammates Mark McCormack, Ivan Dominguez and Nathan O’Neill. "I am very excited that both Will and Nathan (O’Neill) will be joining Ivan and I on the Colavita-Bolla team for 2004,” said McCormack. “We all shared in a magical season during 2003, and it will be great to be able to build upon the accomplishments we achieved together.” The 22-year-old Frischkorn turned pro with Mercury in 1999 while still a junior. He has won five national championships, including the under-23 national road-race title in 2002. In
Pablo Lastras models the new Balears-Banesto jersey
Angel Casero
Will Frischkorn at Redlands
Pro shooter Rob Karman of Roadbikephotos.com, who captured more than 3000 images from this past weekend's mud-splashed national cyclo-cross championships in Portland, Oregon, is selling those shots – along with a pledge to donate $1 from every 5-by-7 print and $2 from every 8-by-10 to the American Cyclo-cross Foundation (ACF). If you'd like a reminder of what it felt like to wear a few soggy pounds of Oregon real estate on your jersey, this is your chance. And you'll be helping the ACF with its annual drive to help send the U.S. cyclo-cross team to the world championships, which will be held