Amgen Tour of California – Stage 3
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 3
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 3
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 4
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 4
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 5
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 5
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 6
Amgen Tour of California - Stage 7
At its customary pre-season training camp in Solvang, California, the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team opened the doors of the Royal Scandinavian Inn to the media on Monday and Tuesday for an opportunity to meet the team’s riders. In lieu of an official team presentation, which will be offered via video on the team’s Web site, thepaceline.com, team representatives arranged one-on-one interviews with print, Web and video journalists in Solvang, a small Danish settlement in central California. Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, a part owner of the team, was in attendance at
Led by 2006 Giro d'Italia winner Ivan Basso, the Discovery Channel CyclingTeam is heading into the 2007 season with high hopes. The team is now holdingits traditional pre-seasontraining camp in Solvang, California. Earlier this week, the team openedits doors to reporters and photographers. VeloNews photographerCasey Gibson was there to capture the scene.
Come the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, the entire episode could make ideal fodder for one of NBC’s sappy vignettes about struggle and sacrifice. But right now Mike Friedman is ready to put his ordeal with dangerous blood clots, doping innuendo and an aborted spring racing campaign behind him. The 24-year-old just wants to race his bike and build on a promising debut season in 2006 where he finished top American at the International Championship in Philadelphia, and won a pair of U.S. national track titles. “People hear blood and they immediately think drugs,” lamented Friedman, who last
Belgian Tom Boonen dominated Australian Graeme Brown in a bunch sprint to win an explosive fourth stage of the Tour of Qatar on Wednedsday. Quick Step’s Boonen thus picked up his third individual stage win in as many days after a mainly flat 139km of racing between the Camelodrome and the Gulf of Doha. Brazilian Murilo Fischer (Liquigas) finished third behind Rabobank’s Brown, who on Monday was accused of causing mayhem in the bunch sprint during which Predictor-Lotto’s Tom Steels crashed and was left with a broken collarbone. Boonen will take a 27-second lead over teammate Steven De Jongh
Sastre focusing on Tour-Vuelta doubleTeam CSC’s Carlos Sastre believes he can aim even higher at the Tour de France and is taking aim at the final podium for the 2007 edition. Fourth overall in last year’s Tour as well as at the Vuelta a España, the Spanish climber said he’ll skip the Giro d’Italia to focus on preparing exclusively for the Tour before rebounding for a run at the Spanish tour. “I will work for victory in both the Tour and the Vuelta,” Sastre told Spanish journalists. “These are the most important races for me and I’d honestly like to shine.” The decision will end Sastre’s
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To say that the decision to sign Basso was not without controversy is an understatement. Will the gamble pay off?
Leipheimer has made adjustments in his 2007 plan.
Beppu with the recently retired Ekimov
Not many places better for early season training
Cruz toys with a new ride
Och' with Sean Yates
Planning the day's ride
Armstrong still has a big investment in the team
Ivan Basso is attracting his fair share of attention in Solvang
Tony Cruz and Ekimov lead an early morning ride.
Even though he is retired, Eki still has a good time on the training ride.
Tom Danielson further hones those climbing skills.
Basso and Rubiera
Hincapie shows off his stars and stripes.
Hincapie and Czech rider Pavel Padrnos
Leipheimer moves up to take a pull
Basso at the front
Basso tries out his new TT helmet.
The team heads back to Solvang past a walnut grove.
Long time Discovery Channel mechanic Vince Gee washes up a bike after the ride.
Head mechanic Julien DeVries checks measurements on a new bike.
Leipheimer is still deciding which pair to wear.
Basso relaxes after an easy ride and time with reporters
Boonen leaves little doubt as to whose sprint is better... at least at this point in the season.
Boonen and Leif Hoste up front
Lastweek I reported on the first day of the CyclingScience Symposium and Expo at the Hotel Boulderado in Boulder, Colorado. The conference featured a second day of lectures, followed by a third expo day at which purveyors of equipment and services for improving cycling performance offered their products for public view. Tied up by other commitments, I was unable to attend the expo, but I did find the second lecture day to be fascinating. Computer-modeling your musclesDan Heil, Ph.D., FACSM, an associate professor of exercise physiology at Montana State University in Bozeman gave a very
Tour de France officials are frustrated over the slow progress of the Floyd Landis disciplinary case and are looking at the very likely prospect that the case won’t be resolved before the start of the 2007 Tour. Speaking to the Spanish daily AS during a break at the Tour of Qatar, Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme deplored the slow pace of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. Asked if he expects the case to be resolved before the July 7 start in London, Prudhomme replied, “Unfortunately, I am afraid not. " “It’s the same thing that happened to the Vuelta a España with Denis Menchov,” he
Belgium's Tom Boonen (Quick Step) won the third stage of the Tour of Qatar around Doha on Tuesday, beating Italian sprint king Alessandro Petacchi (Milram) for the second consecutive day. Austria's Bernard Eisel (T-Mobile) took third spot behind Boonen who strengthened his grip on the leader's gold jersey. Boonen said afterwards: "I was in about 50th place with three kilometers to go, which was too far back, but Matteo Tosatto helped me get up to the front. I then let the Milram team do the work before waiting for the right moment to start my sprint." Boonen refused to go
Lawyers for Jan Ullrich have submitted their opposition to Swiss authorities' decision to send a sample of the cyclist's saliva to German prosecutors, the Bonn office said Tuesday. Bonn prosecutors want to compare the Swiss samples with those seized by Spanish authorities during the Spanish drug inquiry Operación Puerto last May to determine whether the German was a client of the raided laboratory run by Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes. "The Swiss tribunal must now decide whether or not to accept our request," said prosecutors' spokesman Friedrich Apostel. "If they believe us
Embattled 2006 Tour de France winner Floyd Landis says he doubts he will race professionally this season even if he is cleared of doping charges. In an interview with the U.S. sports television network ESPN, Landis said he and his lawyers have become frustrated with obstacles delaying his chance to make his case to a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) arbitration panel. "I've pretty much written off this season," Landis said. Landis, 31, said no hearing date has been set yet and none is likely before late spring, — perhaps late May or June — and as a result it would be out of the question
USA Cycling and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency announced Tuesday that two riders, previously suspended for missing doping tests, have had their licenses reinstated, after both agencies concluded that harsh penalties were unfair in both cases. Cale Redpath of Durango, Colorado and Alice Pennington of Hood River, Oregon both accepted one-year suspensions for failure to appear after being selected as reserve athletes at USA Cycling and UCI-sanctioned events during the 2006 season. Normally, anti-doping rules require that podium finishers and a select group of randomly chosen riders are required to
Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme is frustrated by the slow speed of the Landis case.
Boonen bests Petacchi again
Healion held a lead of more than seven minutes - but it wasn't enough
There's a highway sign you don't see often in the other tours
He faced scorpions, snakes and hostile U.S. soldiers and his bicycle took a beating, but the 63-year-old Chechen now back home after cycling to and from Mecca says he is counting his blessings. Dzhanar-Aliyev Magomed-Ali returned to this war-torn Chechnya town on January 18. His pilgrimage, or hajj, to the Muslim holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia, had little in common with the exploits of most Western adventurers. But his story reflects the dogged determination of many older people in this battle-scarred region of southern Russia, which has spent most of the last 12 years in armed conflict
Our latest reader-submitted PhotoGallery is now ready for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of our most recent contest. Take the time to wander through that gallery and see if you agree or disagree with our choice of winners this week. This time around, we found Felipe Borja’s “Cycling in the Andes Imbabura-Ecuador” reminded us of the real joy of solitary cycling in some of the world’s most beautiful territory. Congratulations Felipe. Nice work. Please drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.comto work out the details and we’ll send you a
Christian Vande Velde rides into the 2007 season with renewed confidence he can pick up where he left off last year, which included a stop atop a winner’s podium for the first time in his European racing career. “It’s not easy to win in Europe. Now that I’ve done it, I know it’s possible again and it doesn’t seem so far-fetched,” Vande Velde said. “The confidence is going to play a big factor. Just knowing you can do it and knowing you’ve succeeded the year before, you’re just going to have more confidence overall.” The 30-year-old all-rounder won the Tour of Luxembourg, his first victory
Former world champion Tom Boonen won the second stage of the Tour of Qatar over 135km from Al Wakra to Doha on Monday, moving into the overall leader's gold jersey in the process. The Quick Step rider beat Milram's Alessandro Petacchi and Frenchman Jean-Patrick Nazon in a sprint finish to snatch the gold jersey from his Dutch teammate Steven de Jong, who held it after Quick Step's team time trial victory in Sunday's opening stage. The defending Tour of Qatar champion Boonen admitted he had been lucky to win after Pettachi's Milram team launched their leader's sprint
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Cleaning up the front page of VeloNews.com, we noticed a wealth of stories on what turned into a memorable weekend for American riders at the 2007 World Cyclo-cross Championships in Hooglede-Gits, Belgium. Rather than let this stuff fall of the front page within a day and disappear, we thought we'd at least provide a single reference point for readers to review reports from two days of racing that gave Americans Jonathan Page, Katie Compton and Danny Summerhill silver medals in their respective events. Congratulations to all of you.Race ReportsVervecken wins; Page takes silver!Compton
Cycling in the Andes Imbabura-Ecuador
Vande Velde has a lot to look forward to in 2007.
Page relishes a great ride
Katie Compton gave the United States its second silver medal in two days at the World Cyclo-cross Championships today in Hooglede-Gits, Belgium, as France’s Maryline Salvetat overcame a rough start to battle her way to victory in the women’s race on Sunday. Salvetat’s teammate Laurence Laboucher hung on for third, while pre-race favorite Hanka Kupfernagel (Germany) faded to fifth after crashing at the halfway point while in the lead.
Belgians narrowly averted what could have been viewed as a national tragedy at this year’s Cyclo-cross World Championships as defending champion Erwin Vervecken came from behind to win the elite men’s race on Sunday.
In an event often swept by the Belgian squad, Vervecken was the only one of his countrymen who managed to step onto the podium in front of a huge home crowd in Hooglede-Gits, Belgium, as the efforts of pre-race favorites Sven Nys and Bart Wellens were hampered by crashes and a series of difficulties throughout.
Belgium’s Quick Step-Innergetic team shrugged off this week's doping allegations to take top honors in the opening stage of the Tour of Qatar, a team time trial in Doha on Sunday. Dutchman Steven De Jongh crossed the line first after the six kilometer race against the clock to be the first to take charge of the leader's gold jersey. Quick Step, with former world champion Tom Boonen riding in Qatar, covered the circuit in a time of six minutes 33 seconds. Quick Step was followed in by Milram, four seconds adrift, with Liguigas another four seconds back in third. "It was very tough,"
It took him five years of struggle and sacrifice, but over the course of a single hour in slippery conditions at Hooglede-Gits, Belgium, American Jonathan Page confirmed his status as the greatest cyclo-cross racer the U.S. has ever produced. Page led the Elite Men’s race for much of the 2007 UCI World Cyclo-cross Championships, with only a small bobble on the last quarter lap opening the door for Belgian Erwin Vervecken to dash away for the win. Page rode home in second, the first time an American man has stood on the podium at the Elite ‘Cross Worlds. For a rider who has opted to live
An already remarkable world championship weekend ended on a spectacular high note for Americans as Jonathan Page rode a nearly flawless elite men's race on his way to a silver medal, adding to those already earned by junior Danny Summerhill and American woman Katie Compton. While Page's remarkable performance was a big part of the news Sunday, there was a lot going on behind the head-to-head battle between the American and eventual winner Erwin Vervecken. Photographer Graham Watson was there to capture it on film.
Even though she is a three-time U.S. national champion, it’s worth remembering that the 2006-07 ‘cross season is Katie Compton’s first full season in the sport. It’s especially worth remembering because on Sunday Compton did what no other American woman ever has, she earned a medal at a UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships. Compton’s stellar silver in Hooglede-Gits, Belgium marked a historical high point for U.S. women’s ‘cross on the same weekend Danny Summerhill achieved the same mark in the junior men’s race and Jonathan Page took second in the elite men’s race. All told, it’s been a
Salvetat knew she had a strong opponent in Compton.
An early favorite, Kupfernagel got off to a good start.
Big crowds turned out for Sunday's big race
Compton quickly worked her way through the crowd.
Kupfernagel's troubles started with a mid-race crash and she soon had company
Compton shed the Dutch duo of Van den Brand and Vos
Salvetat was overwhelmed by her win
American Rhonda Mazza finishes in 11th