Sastre scores the first leaders jersey of the Vuelta
Sastre scores the first leaders jersey of the Vuelta
Sastre scores the first leaders jersey of the Vuelta
CSC rode like a machine
Caisse d'Epargne drills it for second
Milram's sprinters cranked out a surprising third-place finish
Discovery and Danielson rolled it in for fourth
T-Mobile finishes fifth
Astana scores sixth
Riis seems happy
And so does Sastre
Tom Danielson will line up Saturday as an outright protected team captain for the first time of his career, poised to improve on his seventh place finish in last year’s Vuelta a España. The 28-year-old says it’s all systems go for a three-week Vuelta laden with mountains and short on time trials, a recipe that could serve up Danielson with the chance to become just the second American to stand on the final Vuelta podium. Fresh off his first European victory at the Tour of Austria, Danielson will lead a strong and motivated Discovery Channel team keen to make up for disappointment from this
Tom Danielson will line up Saturday as an outright protected team captain for the first time of his career, poised to improve on his seventh place finish in last year’s Vuelta a España. The 28-year-old says it’s all systems go for a three-week Vuelta laden with mountains and short on time trials, a recipe that could serve up Danielson with the chance to become just the second American to stand on the final Vuelta podium. Fresh off his first European victory at the Tour of Austria, Danielson will lead a strong and motivated Discovery Channel team keen to make up for disappointment from this
Roaring voices, clinking beer bottles — even a clattering marching band — pierced Friday’s late-afternoon air, as several thousand spectators watched the finals in Four-cross at the 2006 world mountain-bike championships in Rotorua, New Zealand. The immense crowd was there to see Czech Michal Prokop and American Jill Kintner — both pre-race favorites — take easy victories in their respective events. Prokop and Kintner have already sewn up the 2006 World Cup titles, even with the September 9-10 World Cup finals in Schladming, Austria, remaining. Prokop was dominant in the men’s
The Vuelta a España clicks into gear on Saturday for three weeks of racing which organizers hope provides the sport's beleaguered fans drama on the bike, and not off it. After a summer of doping scandals, the Vuelta hopes to avoid following in the controversial slipstream of the Tour de France. After a scandal-plagued start, when race favorites Jan Ullrich and Ivan Basso were among those suspended over doping suspicions, American Floyd Landis won the Tour's yellow jersey in July only to test positive for after stage 17. Landis is likely to lose that title, which would then go to
Former up-and-coming cycling star Frank Vandenbroucke's colorful career has taken on a new hue after it was revealed he has been riding incognito among Italian amateurs, using a license bearing the photo of none other than reigning world champion Tom Boonen. Vandenbroucke, who in the past has been implicated in several doping affairs, was recently sacked by the Belgian Unibet.com team. His desire to race has not abated, but it was to general surprise that he began racing in the tough Italian amateur scene thanks to a false racing license with Boonen's photo on it. Widespread media
Danielson will be Disco's sole leader in this Vuelta
Danielson will be Disco's sole leader in this Vuelta
A big, fast course and huge crowds highlighted Friday's 4X
Kintner took the women's title with ease
Still another Swiss win in the cross-country
Unlike last year, when Heras was ultimately denied his win, Vuelta organizers want to know for certain who won the race by the time the peloton reaches Madrid.
Vandenbroucke at this year's Unibet presentation. He's since been fired.
With a single Swiss flag hanging from the tallest of three flagpoles, a trio of Switzerland’s top young talents stood as their country’s national anthem — Sweitzerpsalm — played in honor of their sweep of the world junior cross-country championships on Thursday. Standing proudly in the crowd, 1996 world champion Thomas Frischknecht — Switzerland’s elder statesman of mountain-bike racing — couldn’t contain his tears. “We have a lot of riders who are already accomplished by the time they come to the junior level,” explained Frischknect, as to why his country’s junior ranks are so deep. “We
If the 2006 World Mountain-bike Championships were to have a poster boy, Clinton Avery would be the local’s choice. While Kiwi cross-country star Kashi Leuchs may garner the brunt of his country’s attention, Avery is Rotorua’s hero. The hulking 18-year old is a long-time member of the New Zealand national cycling team (both road and mountain), and the best up-and-coming mountain-bike racer in this small island nation. As a born-and-raised Rotoruan, Avery is the pride and joy of his community — especially of late. As the 2006 games got underway, Avery’s face graced the cover of the local
The 61st Vuelta a España kicks off Saturday with a different twist. Rather than a short opening prologue or a road stage, the season’s third grand tour debuts with a team time trial that’s only 7.2km long. The pancake-flat course should create some interesting splits in what’s sure to be a wild first week of the Vuelta, with two summit finishes and a series of hard, flat stages across the stinking heat of Spain’s western plains before the second weekend closes. Nine-man teams will start at 7 p.m. in four-minute intervals on a course that’s expected to take about eight minutes at speeds
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEBikes 4 Kids Utah Event Just Around the Corner; 1,000 UnderprivilegedChildren to Receive BicyclesAgenda released for bike giveaway, rides and other event detailsSALT LAKE CITY - August 24, 2006 - Bikes 4 Kids Utah, a non-profitorganization, today announced details of its upcoming fundraiser for underprivilegedchildren in the Salt Lake Valley. Bikes 4 Kids Utah will provide new bicyclesfor 1,000 pre-qualified, underprivileged children from the Boys & GirlsClub of Murray, the Guadalupe School, Holy Cross Ministries, the HispanicRotary and Rose Park Elementary.Along with
The race goes on…BMC sponsors Astana professional road racing team.New team will have office in Switzerland and be led by Marc Biver.BMC, the leading innovative high-end bike manufacturer based in Grenchen/SO,has signed a contract to supply the Astana professional cycling team throughto 2009, seamlessly continuing their engagementin the international race circuit.The Astana cycling team, based in Neuchâtel is being assembledunder the leadership of Marc Biver and will be one of the strongest teamson the international race circuit.BMC is proud to provide the Astana team with the best
Avery has been getting a lot of attention in Rotorua
After a tumultuous season, will Vinokourov still be considered a favorite?
With a short 7.2km course, teams will have to get into their TTT rhythms quickly on Saturday evening.
Denis Menchov admits he won’t be the five-star favorite to win the Vuelta a España while Rabobank teammate Oscar Freire confirms he won’t be taking Saturday’s start. Menchov – who was named winner of the 2005 Vuelta after Roberto Heras tested positive for the banned blood booster EPO – said his efforts from the Tour de France could cost him in the mountainous Vuelta. “I’ve love to win, but the Vuelta is a secondary objective this year after the Tour and I don’t feel as fresh this time,” Menchov told the Spanish daily MARCA. “I think I have a chance, but psychologically I don’t feel as sharp
Ren Chengyuan and Ying Liu ushered in a new era for Chinese women’s cycling Wednesday, as the duo annihilated the field in the debut world U-23 women’s cross-country championships, in Rotorua, New Zealand. Chengyuan, the current U-23 points leader in the World Cup, took the win and the rainbow stripes, crossing the line with a 1:38 gap on her teammate. The win marks the first-ever world mountain-bike championship win for China. The closest pursuer, Sarah Koba of Switzerland, finished nearly five minutes in arrears. Tereza Hurikova of the Czech Republic, winner of last year’s junior world
The Eneco Benelux Tour ended bitterly for George Hincapie on Wednesday after arch-rival Stefan Schumacher (Gerolsteiner) hooked him in the final 50 meters, sending the Discovery Channel leader sprawling to the ground and causing him to lose the race on time bonuses. Schumacher started the 201km seventh and final stage three seconds behind race leader Hincapie, but the German rider bounded ahead to finish third behind winner Philippe Gilbert (Française des Jeux) and runner-up Manuele Mori (Saunier Duval-Prodir) to earn a four-second bonus that nudges him into overall victory in the eight-day
Discovery Channel officials said they felt “robbed” of victory in the Eneco Tour following the controversial finish to Wednesday’s finale when German rider Stefan Schumacher caused George Hincapie to crash less than 100 meters from the line. Schumacher barged Hincapie’s line and sent the race leader toppling to the ground in disbelief and anger as the Gerolsteiner rider took four bonus seconds with third-place to claim overall victory by one second. “It was so unfair what happened to him,” Discovery Channel sport director Dirk Demol told VeloNews. “George felt so strong and the team did an
Menchov will get the jersey back before the start on Saturday
Chengyuan built an early lead and kept it.
Chengyuan set a hard pace at the start and was joined by Liu
Gilbert sails to the stage win as Hincapie sprawls behind
Schumacher charges ahead for a time bonus and the overall win
Hincapie seems disinclined to hear Schumacher's explanation
New Zealand's winter weather on Tuesday offered up a wet and chilly combination before 14 teams took on the first event of the 2006 World Mountain Bike Championships, the 9.2-mile team relay, won in solid fashion by a strong and consistent Swiss team. Held near Rotorua, a geothermal resort community on New Zealand's north island, the world's got off to a somewhat stormy start on Tuesday as a strong downpour and subsequent ice storm left the course on the slopes of Mt. Ngongotaha covered with a glaze of slick mud. Conditions, however, did nothing to slow the Swiss team of Florian
It’s been 17 years since the world mountain bike championships debuted in Durango, Colorado. Since then, the discipline’s marquee event has ventured out of the mountains of North American and Europe only once, for the 1996 world’s in Cairns, Australia. For 2006, the world’s again head south of the Equator, this time to the resort town of Rotorua, on New Zealand’s north island, where a host of championship events will run through Sunday. The move underscores the UCI’s professed commitment to develop mountain-bike racing outside of traditional European and North American markets. The sport’s
Tour de France winner-in-waiting Oscar Pereiro said he expects Caisse d’Epargne teammate Alejandro Valverde to win the Vuelta a España, which is set to start on Saturday in sunny Málaga. He said Valverde will have fresher legs and more motivation for the season’s final three-week grand tour following the chaos that’s come in the wake of the Floyd Landis doping scandal. “I bet that Valverde will win the Vuelta,” Pereiro said in an interview with the Spanish daily AS. “Alejandro and I are good teammates and good friends. The circumstances of the road will put us in our place and dictate if
Our latest reader-submitted Photo Gallery is now up for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of ourmost recent contest. Take the time to wander through that gallery and see if you agree or disagree with our choice of winner. Maybe it’s because these past few weeks of cycling news have been so depressing that we gravitated to Doug Manno’s “Colorado Color - Kenosha Pass.” No post-race dope test here, just a reminder of why we all ride. Nice work! Drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.com to work out the details and we’ll send you a copy of
German David Kopp (Gerolsteiner) sprinted to victory in the sixth and penultimate stage of the Eneco Tour of Benelux on Tuesday. Italy's Marco Zanotti (Unibet.com) and Belgian Philippe Gilbert (Française des Jeux) crossed second and third in the 213km stage from Bornem to St. Truiden, a nervy racec marked by numerous falls. "Normally I should launch the sprint for my leader (Stefan Schumacher), but I found myself alone on the front and decided to attack and go for the win," explained the 27-year-old Kopp. George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) holds the overall race lead going into
Team CSC manager Bjarne Riis doesn't believe Ivan Basso can race again for his squad unless he is acquitted in the doping scandal that barred the Italian cyclist from the Tour de France. CSC suspended Basso after he was among nine riders pulled from the Tour on the eve of the race. The cyclists had been implicated in an alleged blood-doping program in Madrid. "I have difficulties seeing a future for Basso with CSC unless he is totally cleared," Riis told the Politiken on Tuesday. "I feel really bad about this case. Basso is the worst that could happen to me – it has ruined my image. I
Mountain-bike racer Jose Antonio Hermida has been ordered home by the Spanish cycling federation just four days before the elite men’s world cross-country championships race, after documents emerged linking his name to the ongoing Operación Puerto doping investigation. As a result of the order, Hermida left Rotorua, New Zealand, site of the 2006 World Mountain-Bike Championships, on Tuesday. According to a statement released by Hermida, the federation made the decision after concluding that a nickname found in documents related to the doping investigation referred to Hermida. The
Unlike last month’s Tour de France, the Discovery Channel enters the Vuelta a España with a pre-designated leader, team manager Johann Bruyneel said Tuesday. During a conference call with reporters, Bruyneel said the entire team, which lacked a clear leader at the Tour, will be built around enhancing the general classification hopes of American Tom Danielson, who joined his team manager in the call on Tuesday. Bruyneel, joined by Danielson, discussed the team’s strategy and approach for the Spanish grand tour, which begins in Málaga Saturday, August 26, with a 7.2km team time trial, and
Vogel led the first charge for Switzerland.
Colorado Color - Kenosha Pass
Kopp takes the stage
Three-time world champion Oscar Freire said he is unsure he will be able to take Saturday’s start of the Vuelta a España as he continues to suffer the dizzy spells that forced his departure from the Tour de France. The Rabobank sprinter won the Vattenfall Cyclassics in late July, but was forced to skip the Clásica San Sebastián as the problem worsened. He’s been taking medication, but is worried he won’t be stable enough to race the vertiginous Vuelta. "I don’t know if I can start. My head hurts and I suffer dizziness. I am training and I will decide in the next few days, according to how
Two-time world champion and Olympic gold medalist Julien Absalon of France is the man to beat in the world mountain-bike cross-country championships this week in Rotorua, New Zealand. Absalon, who won the European title at the end of July, heads the field contesting the 6km course along with third-ranked Jose Hermida (Spain) and second-ranked Christoph Sauser (Switzerland). The top-ranked woman in the cross-country is world and Olympic champion Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjaa (Norway), who will be trying to fend off a field including second-ranked German Sabine Spitz and Irina Kalentieva of
Tom Boonen made the most of home advantage when winning the fifth stage of the Eneco Tour of Benelux Monday in Balen, Belgium. The Quick Step rider came out on top in a sprint just meters from the house where he lives, with New Zealand's Julian Dean (Crédit Agricole) and Italy's Simone Cadamuro (Milram) taking second and third. George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) retained the leader's red jersey with just two stages remaining. Germany's Stefan Schumacher (Gerolsteiner) is lying second with Vincenzo Nibali (ILiquigas) third. Boonen, who was adding this to his successes in
The Mailbag 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.Classifying the resultsDear VeloNews,I see that Tyler Hamilton has won the Mt.Washington Hillclimb again.Perhaps, for the sake of truth in reporting, you should note that whileHamilton came in first in the Suspended Doper division, good old Ned Overend won in the Non-Suspended-Doper
Cycling could be thrown into tumult yet again as the UCI said it’s poised to release more names linked to the ongoing “Operación Puerto” doping investigation in Spain. Reacting from pressure from the top ProTour teams - which met last week in Brussels to demand the UCI release all names linked to inquiry ahead of this weekend’s start of the Vuelta a España - the UCI is expected to reveal even more names connected to controversial Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes. The French sports daily L’Equipe reported that the new list could include as many as an additional 50 names from 14 squads, seven
Boonen takes a soggy sprint at the line
American George Hincapie moved up from fourth to lead the overall standings in the Eneco Tour of Benelux after capturing Sunday's stage-4 time trial around Landgraaf in the Netherlands. The Discovery Channel rider took the leader's red jersey from Belgium's Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic) after covering the 16.1km race against the clock in 19 minutes, 58 seconds. Up-and-coming Italian rider Vicenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Bianchi) came in second, only 36 one-hundredths of a second adrift, with Stefan Schumacher (Gerolsteiner) seven seconds back in third. Boonen trailed in 62nd,
Eufemiano Fuentes, the Spanish doctor accused of running an extensive blood-doping network, had contacts in France and Germany, doping expert Werne Franke charged on Sunday. "The Spanish investigation files mention houses in France and Germany that were involved in the doping," Franke said in Focus magazine. Former Olympic champ and Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich is alleged to have been given EPO and other banned substances by Fuentes, who was accused of running a blood-doping ring. The 32-year-old Ullrich has repeatedly denied all doping allegations and says he does not know
Pure insanity. That’s how the new national criterium champion Brad Huff (TIAA-CREF) described the final lap of the 100km USPRO championships on Sunday in Downers Grove, Illinois. Only the Navigators could muster any semblance of a lead-out, and their efforts were not in vain as Aussie Hilton Clarke blew past Toyota-United’s Tony Cruz and Huff after the decisive final corner to take the win. Huff charged to the front with 300 meters and held it until near the final corner at 150 meters when Cruz pulled even with him. The pair swung wide out of the corner, and Clarke took the inside line and
Casey Gibson was at it again this weekend, this time on our side of the pond, shooting the USPRO criterium championship in Downers Grove, Illinois. Here's what he sent us.
Hincapie rides the time trial
Clarke and Huff celebrate their respective victories
Cliff-Ryan shows she knows how to win on the big wheels, too
Leogrande can't believe he pulled it off
No, it's not an acid trip. It's an arty look at the start of the women's race
The elite men
Jason Allen out front
Adam Bergman drilling it
Tony Cruz takes the lead
Brad Huff on the road . . .
. . . and on the podium
Gord Fraser at the start
Tina Pic and Laura Van Gilder dicing
Theresa Cliff-Ryan on the podium
Kayle Leogrande leads . . .
. . . all the way to the podium
The first red, white and blue USPRO jersey of the year will on the line Sunday at the national criterium championships, and it will be U.S. cycling’s Big Three — Health Net-Maxxis, Toyota-United and Navigators Insurance — throwing the heaviest blows. But many of the men likely to win the100km race in Downers Grove, Illinois, are not eligible for the U.S. national jersey, which will go to the first American across the line. Gord Fraser, Health Net’s Canadian sprinter, will be retiring at the end of the season and will surely be looking to go out on a high note. His New Zealander teammate Greg
World champion Tom Boonen won a sprint finish to take the third stage of the Eneco Tour of Benelux on Saturday ahead of Discovery’s Max Van Heeswijk and Australian Baden Cooke (UniBet). Quick Step team leader Boonen, who also won Thursday's first stage, extends his overall lead to an 11-second advantage over Liquigas’s Manuel Quinziato, who won on Friday. Boonen later revealed that he had initially set out to set-up victory bids for two of his teammates. "I decided to lead out the sprint for my teammates Wouter Weylandt and Steven De Jongh," explained Boonen after the 185km stage.
Julich season over after pulling plug at BeneluxBobby Julich’s season is likely over after the veteran American didn’t start the 185km third stage at the Eneco Benelux Tour on Saturday. Team CSC officials said the defending champion has been struggling with his form since coming back from a broken wrist suffered in the first time trial of the 2006 Tour de France. “You could see he was empty both in the head and in the body and he was afraid of getting caught up in a crash and decided it was just better to go home and prepare for next season,” Team CSC sport director Tristan Hoffman told
Pinkham Notch, N.H. (AP) Tyler Hamilton, who's been suspended from sanctioned races for the past two years, returned to the White Mountains Saturday to win the only race he has been free to ride the 7.6-mile Mount Washington Auto Road Bicycle Hillclimb. Grosse Point, Mich.-native Aimee Vasse won for the women, coming in at 1:08:31 to place 22nd overall in a field of almost 600 riders. Hamilton's time was 52:21. His suspension over a blood doping offense ends Sept. 22, just in time for the World Cycling Championships on Sept. 24. For Hamilton, of Marblehead, Mass., the race was a