It’s okay Daddy you’ll get ’em next time
It's okay Daddy you'll get 'em next time
It's okay Daddy you'll get 'em next time
Evans is the only natural GC rider in this Tour, says McEwen
Landis says racing is therapy for his hip
Dr. Brent Kay describes Landis's hip problem
Landis is playing down his status as a favorite
T-Mobile meets the press
CSC is keeping its collective chin up
Editor's Note:Changes in the rosters of several Tour de France teams reflect exclusions due to the Operación Puerto investigation report released late Thursday. Directors of all Tour de France teams voted not to allow those riders to be replaced. DiscoveryChannel1. José Azevedo (P)2. Viatceslav Ekimov (Rus)3. George Hincapie (USA)4. Egoi Martinez (Sp)5. Benjamin Noval Gonzalez (Sp)6. Pavel Padrnos (Cz)7. Yaroslav Popovych (Ukr)8. José Luis Rubiera (Sp)9. Paolo Savoldelli (I) Team CSCIvan Basso (I) Named in Operación Puerto11. Bobby Julich (USA)Injured in stage 712. Giovanni Lombardi
Course: Huge crowds are expected on this hilly run through cycling-mad Brittany. The stage starts at the birthplace of three-time Tour champion Louison Bobet, who worked in the family bakery at St. Méen-le-Grand before becoming a cyclist. The biggest crowds will be on the Cat. 3 Mûr-de-Bretagne and on the sprint line in Plouay — where Hincapie won the ProTour classic last year. The final 20km is on wide highways with a fast run-in to Lorient, where the finish is on the slightly curving and flat Avenue Jean Jaurès. History: Lorient last saw a stage finish in 2002 when Santiago Botero dealt
The 93rd Tour de France saw its first stage taken by a long breakaway on Sunday when the unheralded Frenchman Sylvain Calzati (Ag2r) attacked solo from a six-man move 32km from the finish of the 181km stage 8 across the hilly Brittany region. Dave Zabriskie (CSC) figured in the breakaway that escaped from just 47km after the start in St. Méen-le-Grand, with Calzati going clear when the peloton showed signs of closing down the six-man break. A week after Jimmy Casper won stage 1 in Strasbourg, Calzati earned France’s second stage win of this year’s Tour, while Ukraine’s Sergei Gontchar
Give Levi Leipheimer credit. Despite suffering a major-league implosion during Saturday’s 52km time trial, the American GC hopeful wasn’t making any excuses Sunday morning at the Tour de France. Leipheimer alluded to both physical and mechanical problems that hampered him on the lead-up and during the TT, but insisted that’s not where the focus belonged. “It’s just an issue I’ve had the last couple days,” he said, unwilling to elaborate further on his health issue. “But I’m not going to make excuses. I don’t like to see headlines that say this guy was bad because of that. The point is I was
1. Sylvain Calzati (F), Ag2r Prevoyance, 818km in 4:13:18 (42.874kph)2. Kjell Carlström (FIN), Liquigas-Bianchi, 02:053. Patrice Halgand (F), Credit Agricole, 02:054. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 02:155. Daniele Bennati (I), Lampre, 02:156. Erik Zabel (G), Milram, 02:157. Bernhard Eisel (A), Francaise des Jeux, 02:158. Luca Paolini (I), Liquigas-Bianchi, 02:159. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Innergetic, 02:1510. David Kopp (G), Gerolsteiner, 02:15 11. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Credit Agricole, 02:1512. Marco Velo (I), Milram, 02:1513. Francisco Ventoso (Sp), Saunier Duval, 02:1514.
There was no disputing who was the best male cross-country rider to hit the single-track during Saturday’s pro cross-country at the Deer Valley resort at Park City, Utah. NORBA National Mountain Bike Series leader Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski (Subaru-Gary Fisher) gapped the men’s field on the first of four seven-mile laps and held on to win , the fourth event of the 2006 series by more than three minutes. “I was honestly surprised I felt as good as I did, because I trained more with Sonoma in mind,” he said, referring to the national championships July 15-16 at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma,
WeatherCloudy in morning, some intermittent showers, but mostly sunny in afternoon, highs in upper 70s Stage winnerSylvain Calzati (Ag2r), 4h13:18, 42.874kph – The 27-year-old Calzati shot away from a six-man group with about 35km to go to solo home to win in the Tour’s first successful breakaway. It was only his second career victory to go along with a stage-win in the 2004 Tour de l’Avenir. He was the last rider named to the nine-man Tour squad. Race leaderSergei Gontchar, 1490.6km in 34h38:53, 43.021kph – Gontchar had an easy day in the saddle, finishing 100th in the main bunch to
..sh*t from Shinola is no longer in question. Apparently, I can't tell the difference. If you read my entry from yesterday, you will correctly conclude that my predictions were total crap. I admit it. Fifty-two kilometers of bad predictions and I forgot that Sergei Gontchar was even in the race! Then today the race continued to be bizarre. We raced full gas for the first 50k and then finally an acceptable break that everyone seemed to be happy with went away. Dave Z. (a.k.a. “The Green Hornet”) made the break and we were all proud of him, fighting his way to the front and joining
Australian Stuart O’Grady was very close to abandoning the Tour de France last Tuesday, after fracturing his L4 vertebra in a crash on stage 3 to Valkenburg. He finished the stage more than 11 minutes down and miraculously came back the next day to carry on. Before stage 8 on Sunday, O’Grady explained how he is recovering while also dealing with the pain in this interview with Rupert Guinness. VeloNews: It’s been six days since you fractured your vertebra, how is it holding up now? Stuart O’Grady: I am actually feeling better day-by-day. I am doing a heap of chiropractor work and things
George Hincapie was among the riders who were expecting more in Saturday’s time trial, finishing 2:42 off the pace set by Gontchar. “I was disappointed with my performance. I thought I’d do better, but that was not the case. I felt dehydrated and I ran out of fuel. Maybe I ate too soon,” Hincapie said. “It was definitely not a normal performance for me.” Hincapie said he just couldn’t find his rhythm on the rolling 52km course, but said all is not lost. Most riders are using Floyd Landis as the Tour reference point and in that measure, Hincapie is 1:30 behind his former teammate. “We just
Nine days ago, the T-Mobile team was driving over picturesque Alsatian roads on its way to a pre-race press conference, when director Olaf Ludwig announced that two members of the squad – Jan Ullrich and Oscar Sevilla – would not be making the three-week long journey through France with them. At first the news caused confusion and a sense of helplessness among those riders still slated to contest the 93rd Tour de France. So they did what all cyclists do when they need to clear their heads: they went on a bike ride. Three hours later, refreshed by sun and exercise, the remaining seven
The director of the T-Mobile cycling team has been fired because of allegations that he had been in contact with a Spanish doctor accused of doping. The T-Mobile team had already suspended sporting director Rudy Pevenage and riders Jan Ullrich and Oscar Sevilla after they allegedly had contact with Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes, who is accused of being at the center of a blood-doping ring. Fuentes has been charged in Spain with crimes against public health. Spokesman Christian Frommert said Pevenage was fired Saturday because the evidence indicated that he had had contacts with Fuentes. "He told
Casey Gibson remains on tour with Le Tour – enjoy today's shots.
Last year saw 23-year-old Aussie sensation Jared Graves blaze through round after round of NMBS downhill and mountain cross. By year’s end, Graves had both series in his pocket, not to mention a second-place finish at the world championships in Livigno, Italy, behind American Brian Lopes. Graves has shifted his attention to the World Cup for 2006, and sits second in the four-cross standings behind 2003 world champion Michal Prokop (Author) of the Czech Republic. But Graves has something this year he couldn’t quite find last season — a World Cup win. The Aussie very nearly won the downhill at
Jill Kintner and Michal Prokop won the first stop of the 2006 Jeep King of the Mountains Mountain Biking World Professional Championships on Saturday in San Luis Obispo, California. The Czech Republic’s Prokop, 25, who has won four of the first five races of the 2006 UCI World Cup this season, defeated three-time world champ Brian Lopes in the final round. Kintner, who like Prokop is 25 and has four UCI World Cup wins under her belt, defeated 2005 NORBA downhill champ Melissa Buhl. Competitors in the Jeep series start on separate prongs of a Y-shaped course that converges in midrace,
American Tour de France favorite Floyd Landis (Phonak) will hold a press conference on Monday to respond to press reports that he is suffering from a degenerative condition that could threaten his career and may undergo hip surgery following this year’s race. Landis, sitting second in the Tour de France behind race leader Sergei Gontchar (T-Mobile), will meet the press on Monday afternoon at his team hotel in Bordeaux, where the 4500-strong Tour entourage is based for an official rest day. On Sunday, the website www.bicycling.com announced that Landis’s cycling days "may be numbered,"
Kristin Armstrong (Team Lipton) and Matt Cooke (LSV-Kelly Benefit Strategies) claimed the women’s and men’s elite road race titles Saturday at the USA Cycling National Festival at the Seven Springs Mountain Resort in Champion, Pennsylvania. Armstrong, Thursday’s elite women’s national time trial champion, took the title at the line ahead of five riders in a sprint finish. Just one second behind Armstrong, Christine Thorburn (Webcor-Platinum) took second and Amber Neben (Buitenpoort/Flexpoint) took third in a photo finish. The final kilometer of the course featured a 250-meter climb before a
Stage 8: St-Méen-le-Grand to Lorient - 181km
Stage 8: St-Méen-le-Grand to Lorient - 181km
Updated Team Rosters
Calzati holds off the chase to win
JHK prepares himself for the day's rigors
Vanlandingham solos to victory
Stage Stats: Stage 8 by the numbers
Stage Stats: Stage 8 by the numbers
Stage Stats: Stage 8 by the numbers
The Green Hornet on the move
O'Grady at Sunday's start
With a relatively safe composition, this break was allowed some distance.
Zabriskie earned a few time bonuses along the way.
The weather cleared soon after the start and allowed for a good day in the saddle for most.
Gontchar enjoying his time in yellow.
Phonak gives chase, but only to limit the damage
.Carpe Diem!: Calzati sensed an opportunity and went for it
Hincapie wasn't pleased with his performance on Saturday
T-Mobile in yellow.
Boonen on the second climb
Bruyneel meets the press, including our own Jason Sumner, up against the bus
Calzati leads over the first climb
French fans show their colors along the route
A chicken hat completes this ensemble
A somber Hincapie meets Mr. Microphone
Horner and Hushovd on the climb
The peloton winds through Bretagne
Phonak drives the chase
Riders relax in the village, making use of free phones
Vive la France! A World Cup fan shows her colors
Zabriskie gives it the gas
Graves is making his mark this season
Course: With a week of racing in their legs, the GC contenders finally get their day in the sun with this critical 52km time trial. The counterclockwise circuit has two distinct halves: narrow, hilly back roads at first and long, straight flat highways at the end. The final 15km are likely to be very fast with a tail wind. History: A total of 13 Tour stages have finished in Rennes, the unofficial capital of the Brittany region, the most recent in 1994 when a massive 270km stage from Cherbourg was taken by Italian Gianluca Bortolami from a seven-man break that contained Motorola’s Sean Yates
If any greater upset were possible in the stage 7 time trial of the Tour de France, then anyone who witnessed today’s race of truth would have been pressed to think of one. The 52km St. Grégoire to Rennes time trial in Brittany was decisive, mainly because of the way it seriously compromised the Tour-winning hopes of so many pre-race favorites. No rider really emerged as a standout contender to win the first post-Lance Armstrong Tour — but there was a major a shift in the balance of power, from Discovery Channel to T-Mobile. Take out the stage winner, Ukrainian Sergei Gontchar (T-Mobile),
1. Sergei Gonchar (Ukr), T-Mobile, 01:01:432. Floyd Landis (USA), Phonak, 01:02:443. Sebastian Lang (G), Gerolsteiner, 01:02:474. Michael Rogers (Aus), T-Mobile, 01:03:075. Gustav Larsson (Swe), Francaise des Jeux, 01:03:176. Patrik Sinkewitz (G), T-Mobile, 01:03:227. Marcus Fothen (G), Gerolsteiner, 01:03:258. Andréas Klöden (G), T-Mobile, 01:03:269. Denis Menchov (Rus), Rabobank, 01:03:2710. Joost Posthuma (Nl), Rabobank, 01:03:28 11. Cadel Evans (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 01:03:3212. Vladimir Karpets (Rus), Caisse d'Epargne-I.B., 01:03:3513. David Zabriskie (USA), CSC, 01:03:4014.
Gravity racers hopped in their trucks and headed west Friday afternoon, driving 45 miles from Deer Valley, Utah — site of the fourth National Mountain Bike Series event for 2006 — to West Jericho, a suburb of Salt Lake City. The small, dusty town is home to the Rad Canyon BMX track, which hosted the mountain-cross competition. Rad Canyon is one of the best-known BMX venues in the country — it sits on the outskirts of a housing development, and routinely hosts the ABA National Championships. And the venue had most racers talking — but not about the long commute. “It looks like they have put
I am back on the air after a short break due to technical difficulties with my Blackberry Service. So I woke up this morning to 30 real e-mails (and a hefty dose of SPAM) and now life is back to normal again. I am driving to the time trial start right now, trying not to think too much about the situation at hand… or how fast Sabine is driving. We rode the course this morning in the rain and I was appalled at all the people already lining the course. The funny thing is that sometimes there are more people before the race, lining the course to scoop up some free swag from the publicity
Among the sheaf of communiqués issued by the Tour de France organization Saturday night, the one that the riders are probably happiest about gives details of the charter flights they will take Sunday evening after stage 8. They’re headed to Bordeaux, where they’ll enjoy a full rest day on Monday and have time to take stock of what is developing into one of the strangest Tours in living memory. But before their flights, which are scheduled to leave Lorient at 6:15 and 6:30 p.m. local time, there’s the not-small matter of a tricky 181km stage across the hills of Brittany to overcome. Huge
With the overall standings at the Tour de France finally breaking up a bit, the St. Grégoire to Rennes time trial proved to be as decisive as it was surprising. Our guy Casey Gibson was there and here are a few of the images he captured on Saturday.
WeatherCloudy in morning, partly cloudy skies and increasing winds in afternoon,highs in upper 70s, low 80sStage winnerSergei Gontchar (T-Mobile), 1h01:43, 50.554kph – The 36-year-oldUkraine pulled a surprise win on a day when the pundits were predictingan American sweep. The 2000 world time trial champion was fastest at allthe splits to win his first career Tour stage. Floyd Landis (Phonak) wassecond at 1:01 despite a bike change at 13km after his aero-bars broke. Race leaderGontchar, 1,309.6km in 30h23:20, 43.095kph – Gontchar becomesUkraine’s first rider to wear the yellow jersey, taking
Calm under fire is always a good quality in pressure packed races like the Tour de France. And judging by the way Floyd Landis sloughed off a bevy of stage 7 bike problems Saturday, the American is as cool as they come. Despite having to change the level of his aero’ bars just an hour and a half before the race, and then having those bars break during the 52-kilometer individual time trial, Landis still managed a strong second place finish, making him leader in the clubhouse after the 2006 Tour’s first truly decisive stage. “It was a little mechanical, no problem,” said Landis, who’s now
If you ask the UCI commissaries at the Tour de France, Floyd Landis’s “praying mantis” time trial position is illegal. The race jury put the kibosh on Landis’s distinctive time trial position on Saturday little more than one hour before the start of the 52km time trial, the Tour’s first decisive day since rolling out of Strasbourg on July 1. Landis’s preferred angle – with his elbows together and his hands pressed together high – challenged UCI technical regulations that say a time trial bike’s handlebars and seat must be on the same horizontal plane. (see “Tour Tech - Landis readies for
Stage 7: St. Grégoire to Rennes - 52km (ITT)
Stage 7: St. Grégoire to Rennes - 52km (ITT)
Gontchar roars to the win and the overall lead
Landis switched bikes and still managed a runner-up finish
The new man in yellow
GC says it all: 62. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Gerolsteiner, 06:17
Despite the bike switch, the Phonak leader kept his cool
Julich was the day's only non-finisher
The Big Question of the Day: What happened to Levi?
Zabriskie rode to a respectable 13th place
Of the big GC contenders, Landis was the big winner of the day
When the Tour hits the mountains next week, Landis will have to be considered a favorite.