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Columbia-Highroad goes 1-2 in Philly
There’s no stopping Team Columbia-Highroad’s blond German sprinter André Greipel. He has won race after race since he returned from the injured list a month ago. After a stage win at the Four Days of Dunkirk on May 10, three stages of the Tour of Bavaria in late May, and Germany’s Neuseen Classic last week, he made it six wins in four weeks on Sunday afternoon by taking the 25th anniversary edition of the TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship.
Saxo smokes ’em in Luxembourg
It was double delight for Saxo Bank on Sunday in the final stage of the Tour of Luxembourg as Matti Breschel dashed to a stage victory and Fränk Schleck wrapped up the overall. Breschel’s win made it three straight stage victories and the top prize as Saxo Bank dominated the five-day Luxembourg tour and held off a challenge from Andreas Klöden (Astana). Andy Schleck won Friday’s attack-riddled stage, winning an eight-up sprint that put Kazakh rider Assan Bazayev (Astana) into the leader’s jersey.
Evans nips Contador to open Dauphiné
Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto) powered to a morale-boosting time trial victory Sunday against archrival Alberto Contador (Astana) to open the 61st Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré. Evans covered the technical, 12km course in Nancy in 15 minutes, 36.64 seconds, posting the best time on a steep climb at 3km and then holding off Contador by eight seconds to win the stage and claim the leader’s jersey at the eight-day Dauphiné.
Teutenberg says her third Philly win was the hardest
It all looked so easy for Team Columbia-Highroad’s Ina Teutenberg as she sped along Philadelphia’s Benjamin Franklin Parkway Sunday morning to win her third TD Bank Liberty Classic. At the line, the veteran German sprinter was two lengths clear of New Zealander Joanne Kiesanowski (Team Tibco) and the top American, third-placed Shelley Olds (Proman Hit Squad), at the head of a 12-strong breakaway group.
Three top Katusha riders oppose new team rules
Three top riders on the Katusha cycling team are refusing to comply with new internal anti-doping rules imposed by the Russian-backed program, a team official said on Sunday. The trio who are refusing to sign contracts including the new conditions are Australian Robbie McEwen and Belgians Gert Steegmans and Kenny De Haes, Katusha's sporting director Serge Parsani told Agence France Presse. Under the stringent new conditions, racers testing positive would have to pay a fine amounting to five times their annual salary.
Mach and Pitel fight off challengers at Mt. Hood Classic
With more than 10,000 feet of climbing on tap, the 92-mile Wy’East Road Race was supposed be the day for riders to shake up the overall GC of the 2009 Pacific Power Mt. Hood Cycling Classic. But little changed in the overall after stage 3 as OUCH-Maxxis rider Chris Baldwin, who started the day 15 seconds down on race leader Paul Mach, failed to detach the Bissell rider from his wheel after several blistering attacks in the final kilometers. Trek-Red Truck’s Rob Britton won the stage in 4:07:31, just one second ahead of Baldwin and Mach.
Dominguez tests 2010 Fuji in Philly
Fuji-Servetto sprinter Ivan Dominguez will race the TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship aboard a prototype 2010 Fuji SST bike. Fuji has only produced five such frames, and Dominguez is giving the company final feedback before it begins full production for the 2010 model year line. The 2010 SST represents an evolution of the 2009 model, with the most obvious differences being the integrated carbon seatmast instead of a seatpost, and a 1.5-inch lower headset instead of the 1 1/8-inch version.
BMC ready for Dauphiné challenge
BMC lines up Sunday for the 61st Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré in what will arguably be the team's most important stage race since its inception. A seven-man squad begins the grueling eight-day stage across the French Alps with high hopes of putting a man in the top-10 overall and making a strong impression against the top ProTour squads.
Hinault blasts … well, everyone
Bernard Hinault never had the reputation of guarding his tongue when he ruled the peloton as the patron. Now 54, it’s obvious some things haven’t changed. Le Blaireau — the Badger — didn’t hold back when he fielded questions during a presentation this week in Montereau, the starting village of the final stage of the 2009 Tour de France. The last French winner of the Tour had an opinion on just about everything, and didn’t hold back when it came to criticizing the current state of the French peloton.
Contador downplays Dauphiné chances
Everyone is calling him the pre-race favorite for victory at next week’s Dauphiné Libéré, but Alberto Contador isn’t buying into it. The Spanish climber insists he wants to use the eight-day French race across the Alps – which opens Sunday with an individual time trial in Nancy -- as a trampoline for success in the Tour de France in July.
Boasson Hagen favored at 25th Philly Championship
It doesn’t seem possible that Edvald Boasson Hagen, the budding superstar at Columbia-Highroad and favorite to win this Sunday’s TD Bank Philadelphia International Championship, wasn’t even born when Eric Heiden won the inaugural edition of the 156-mile race in June 1985.
OUCH’s newest rider puts the hurt on the Mt. Hood field
The infamous Columbia River Gorge winds whipped themselves into a frenzy Friday and tried to whip the riders as well in the stage 2 time trial at the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic. OUCH-Maxxis' newest rider, Chris Baldwin, nipped race leader Paul Mach (Bissell), tightening the GC battle with two stages left. The women's race is also very tight with prologue winner leader Edwige Pitel (Sorella Forte) winning the stage and taking back the leader's jersey. Three-time Mt. Hood victor Leah Goldstein now sits in second just two seconds back.
KBS Pro Cycling kicks off fundraising efforts for World Bicycle Relief
The Kelly Benefit Strategies Pro Cycling Team is proud to announce that more than $42,000 has been raised as it kicks off a yearlong fundraising drive in support of World Bicycle Relief.
Contador: Lance ‘just another teammate’
Spain's Alberto Contador on Friday said that he considers Astana teammate and Tour de France rival Lance Armstrong as "just another member of the team." Contador said relations between the two men are cordial. "We've not seen each other a huge amount since the start of the season," said the 26-year-old, who was speaking before the start of the Criterium Dauphine Libere, which starts on Sunday. "Two or three days in California, two or three days in Tenerife and one day at the Tour of Castilla y Leon. It's not much, especially as we are not the
Jelly Belly, Team Type 1, and Colavita confirmed for Missouri’s Tour de WingHaven NRC event
Jelly Belly, Team Type 1, and Colavita-Sutter Home presented by Cooking Teams are confirming for this year's edition of the Tour de WingHaven on June 21 within the WingHaven community of O'Fallon, Missouri. Professional teams registered to date include UCI Continental teams Jelly Belly, Team Type 1, and Colavita - Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light.
Fitchburg Longsjo Classic’s Past Champion’s Celebration to include the Raleigh Boys
The Raleigh Boys, the cycling team from the seventies that put America on the international stage, will be part of the 50th Fitchburg Longsjo Classic, July 2nd -5th, and its Past Champions Celebration Banquet being held in Fitchburg, MA. This year, the four day stage race includes a special celebration dinner, which is open to the public, on the Fourth of July and will include many of the Longsjo Classic’s past champions along with the Raleigh Boys, who are being sponsored by Wheelworks Bicycle Stores/ Cycling Centers, a major Bay State retailer.
Andy Schleck scores stage win in his home country.
Native son Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank) scored a stage victory in the Tour de Luxembourg Sunday, while Astana's Assan Bazayev took over the leader's jersey. The younger of Saxo's Schleck brothers took the sprint ahead of his teammate Matti Breschel and Aitor Galdos of Euskaltel-Euskadi. The three were part of a 15-rider break that formed about 12 kilometers before the finish. The break included Bazayev, who was sixth on the stage, at the same time as Schleck.
Bruyneel says money is still not forthcoming from Astana
Astana has yet to pay a bank guarantee on which their racing future depends, manager Johan Bruyneel said Friday. "The problem has not yet been sorted," Bruyneel told AFP regarding pending payments due from the Kazakh cycling federation, the team's owner. In midweek, the UCI said the team had provided financial guarantees which would allowing Astana to retain their license. But Bruyneel explained there were still loose ends to tie up. "The bank guarantee which was incomplete has been reconstituted, that is
Ventoux top attraction of daunting 2009 Dauphiné
The 61st Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré clicks into gear this weekend in the traditional dress rehearsal ahead of the Tour de France with a highly anticipated duel between Alberto Contador and Cadel Evans. While many eyes will be on those two for a glimpse of bigger things to come in July, the outright battle for overall victory should be wide open, with such names as Ivan Basso, Igor Anton, Robert Gesink, ambitious French riders such as Rémy Di Gregorio and Pierre Rolland lining up in one of the most competitive fields in years.
Armstrong, Hansen welcome son
Former Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong became a father for the fourth time late Thursday. Armstrong, who recently returned from competition at the Giro d’Italia, arrived in Aspen, Colorado, earlier this week to join his girlfriend Anna Hansen in time for the birth of a seven-pound-five-ounce son, named Max. Armstrong announced last December that he and Hansen were expecting their first child together. Armstrong also has three children with his former wife Kristin.
Di Luca wants Vuelta invitation
Just days after finishing second in the Giro d’Italia, Danilo Di Luca is making his case about racing the Vuelta a España later this season. With his LPR team already overlooked for the spring classics and the Tour de France, Di Luca is pulling out all the stops in a bid to gain an invitation to the season’s third grand tour. “After a Giro like this, I deserve a chance to race the Vuelta,” Di Luca told La Gazzetta dello Sport. “If they invite us to the Vuelta, Petacchi would race as well, and we would give them a spectacle.”
McWhirter and Mach take over at Mt. Hood
One day after just missing the top podium spot in the prologue of the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic, the Bissell Cycling Team stomped its way to a one-two finish in the Cooper Spur Circuit Race, capitalizing on time bonuses to claim the top two GC spots as well. Bissell’s Paul Mach surged away from the lead group with just a few kilometers remaining and took the 85-mile race’s top prize. Mach’s teammate Morgan Schmitt crossed the line second after momentarily catching Mach on the finishing pitch. California Giant-Specialized rider Justin England finished third.
The (Other) Young American – A Conversation with Tejay Van Garderen
Editor’s Note: This article is based on a recent conversation with Tejay Van Garderen. It was conducted before Van Garderen suffered a crash with an automobile while training in Lucca, Italy on Thursday. The American, who was descending a narrow road, averted a head-on collision with the car, which was driving up the hill, but his training bike was destroyed in the crash. Van Garderen was taken to a local hospital but suffered only minor scrapes and bruises in the encounter.