But snow is old news to Kansas boy Steve Tilford, victory in the 45-49
But snow is old news to Kansas boy Steve Tilford, victory in the 45-49
But snow is old news to Kansas boy Steve Tilford, victory in the 45-49
What goes up . . .
. . . must come down
VeloNews and Inside Triathlon name new sales staffDecember 8, 2005Boulder, CO -- VeloNews and Inside Triathlon magazinesannounce important changes to the advertising sales staff at these leadinginternational cycling and triathlon titles:*Promoted to group advertising director for VeloNews and InsideTriathlon is Nick Ramey, a three-year sales veteran of both titles,and most recently advertising director for Inside Triathlon. A competitivecyclist and multisport athlete (Xterra is his favorite event), Ramey leda renaissance in advertising page sales at Inside Triathlon in 2005,setting new
On the heels of a thrilling 2005 Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclocross Series, that included record fields racing in sweltering Californian heat and a freezing East Coast blizzard, the schedule for the 2006 mixes up locations and dates, adding some variety to the series in it s third year. "Coming off a highly successful second edition of the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclocross, we are pleased to announce an exciting schedule for 2006.," said Paul Salvucci, U.S. Gran Prix Director of Operations. "The combination of continued growth in the sport, highly motivated promoters,
Belgian Sven Nys (Rabobank) won the fifth round of the cyclo-cross World Cup Wednesday in Milan. The world champion soloed to victory ahead of compatriot Erwin Vervecken (Fidea), who finished second at 12 seconds back, and Italian Enrico Franzoi (Lampre-Caffita), who took third just two seconds later. The win kept Nys’s unbeaten streak going in this year’s series and marked his 25th career victory in World Cup competition. In women's competition, the Netherlands' Daphny Van Den Brand (Van Bemmelen-AA Drink) won handily over countrywoman Marianne Vos, who finished more than 30
This week in Austin, the 2006 Discovery Channel team is enjoying its first get-together of the winter. Missing from the roster, of course, is the name of Lance Armstrong, who hung up his cleats after winning a record seventh consecutive Tour de France last July. A couple of weeks prior to the training camp, VeloNews met with Armstrong in Austin to record his parting shots on his 13 years as a professional cyclist. The interview appears in the December 5 issue of VeloNews, which contains a special section looking back on Armstrong’s career. Included in the issue is a look at all of the
Armstrong collects his final Tour
Armstrong wins the world's in 1993
The 2003 Tour was a tough one; it included the famous cyclo-cross around the fallen Joseba Beloki
Stage 15 of the 2003 Tour was a tough day at the office; Armstrong won that stage
A different sort of ride, post-retirement: Armstrong mountain biking with President Bush in August
A different sort of spotlight: at the Grammys with Sheryl Crow
Is he hurting or not? Armstrong strove to be a tough read
For many of us, the next few weeks are likely to include many socialoccasions filled with an abundance of foods (many high in fat), an overflowof alcoholic beverages, and hectic schedules that often thwart the bestlaid plans for calorie burning workouts. Keeping the holidays healthyand minimizing any havoc created by too much food and drink, is best approachedby a mindful approach that combines behavior strategies, nutritional awareness,and realistic goals around food and exercise.Goal SettingFirst, start by clearly defining your goals for this holiday season.Perhaps you are currently
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.Go for it Ivan!Dear EditorI want to voice my support for Ivan Basso in hisquest for the Giro/Tour double. I think it is refreshing to see thatsomeone still has the guts to go for the big prize. Sure, winning the Tourwould be great for Basso, and by going for the win in Italy he is
USA Cycling has selected its team for the UCI Track Cycling World Cup December 9-11 at the Manchester Velodrome in Manchester, England. The riders are Michael Blatchford (Veloworx), Cypress, California; Kevin Belz (CKR Racing), Irving, Texas; Giddeon Massie (Cody) Colorado Springs, Colorado; Christian Stahl (CKR Racing), Bethany, Connecticut; Sarah Hammer Temecula, California; Becky Quinn, Quakertown, Pennsylvania; and Jennie Reed (Gregg's Trek-VW Racing), Kirkland, Washington. Selection procedures for the track talent pool can be found at the USA Cycling website For more about the
Cycling legend Sean Kelly will receive the Mick Doyle Golden Memory Award December 10 during the Canon Hayes National Sports Awards in Aherlow, Ireland. The prize is named for the Irish rugby player and coach who died in a car accident in Northern Ireland in 2004. Kelly won 193 races during his 17-year career, including nine classics and seven consecutive triumphs at Paris-Nice. He just missed the podium at the Tour de France in 1985, finishing fourth, and won the green points jersey in 1982, 1983, 1985 and 1989. Elder Nazon to end pro careerDamien Nazon (Crédit Agricole) has decided to
I am glad to be back in the States for a couple of days, getting ready for cyclo-cross nationals, because I had a serious craving for some good quality Mexican food and was starting to get a little bored hanging out in Belgium by myself. This week will be a welcome break from racing in Europe. What lies before you is my version of a preview — my picks — for ‘cross nationals this weekend. You might not agree with me, but hey, what do you know anyway? Seriously, with a forecast for snow on Friday and temperatures of a high around 30-34 degrees, the only thing certain for this weekend is that
With 1700 athletes converging on Roger Williams Park in Providence, Rhode Island, for the Liberty Mutual U.S. National Cyclo-cross Championships, promoters needed to find companies capable of giving every athlete critical pre-race support. Clif Bar has been selected to create the warm-up area and cool-down zone available for every athlete, positioned close to the start-finish area. Mavic and its famous Tour de France 'Service Course' will be on hand to provide mechanical support. And Polar Beverages will operate the water station. "These are the national championships. We appreciate
The Feed Zone with Monique Ryan: Slender for the holidays
Fraser and his new Cannondale
Screeeeeetch!Dear Lennard,I have a brand new Santa Cruz Blur equipped with Avid Juicy 7 discs. After a few rides in dry weather where the brakes performed flawlessly and silently, I rode the bike in the rain. I almost had to abandon braking altogether and just drag my feet to stop as the squealing sound was so loud it was shaking out my fillings. Since then, even in dry weather, the brakes continue to squeal on and off, and frankly I am afraid to use them in the wet again. The brakes are properly installed and bled. Did I not break them in long enough (three rides of easy road riding with
The legendary cobbles of the Forest of Arenberg could make their return to the traditional route of Paris-Roubaix, after a regional council voted to allocate 220,000 euros to aid in the repair of sections that have collapsed in recent years. Last January, the Amaury Sport Organization, the organizer of “The Hell of the North,” pulled the feared 2.4-kilometer stretch of cobbles from the race route because large portions were determined to be too dangerous, due to mining subsidence. At the time, Race director Jean-François Pescheux said that past coal mining operations in the area triggered a
One of cycling’s greatest-ever climbers, Charly Gaul of Luxembourg, died on Tuesday, two days short of his 73rd birthday. Gaul was hospitalized after a fall at his home in Itzig, 10km outside Luxembourg City, and died shortly before noon from a pulmonary embolism. He leaves a wife and a daughter. Gaul is best remembered for his exploits in the mountain stages of the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia, particularly in adverse weather conditions. He won the Giro in 1956 and 1959 and the Tour in 1958. At the Tour, Gaul was handicapped by racing in the era of national teams because Luxembourg, a
The Philadelphia International Championship Bike Race could anchor a revived million-dollar Triple Crown series in 2006, one of the race’s founders said on Tuesday. The 1993 Thrift Drug Triple Crown —which included the 112-mile Thrift Drug Classic in Pittsburgh, the six-day K mart Tour of West Virginia and the ninth running of what then was called the CoreStates USPRO Championship — was won by a young Lance Armstrong, then racing for Motorola, who was victorious in all three rounds and collected the $1 million winner-take-all bonus. "Our race and the Triple Crown first defined Lance as a
He's having fun, isn't he? George Hincapie on the cobbles of the Arenberg Forest
Gaul racing stage 18 of the 1958 Tour, which he won
Gaul in stage 17 of the 1959 Tour
Gaul in 2001, with Bernard Hinault
Gaul on the Col de Porte during stage 21, preparing to descend in a pouring rain
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. After looking through a remarkable selection of entries, we settled on Brett Rumble’s “Checking the weather on the Galibier.” We get a lot of photos of race leaders battling over the great climbs of the Tour, Giro and Vuelta, but for some reason this shot of the guys fighting not for a stage win, but to just make the
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.Is Wilcockson planning a book?Editor:Has John Wilcockson considered writing a book containing all of his "behind the scenes" accounts of the various Tours? I would love it — every time I read one of his Greg LeMond stories it kills me to come to the end. I want to keep going but I have to
My fall is filled with cyclo-cross. Along with writing about exciting ’cross technology, I race on a single-speed and give up five weekends every fall to help a local promoter put on his ’cross series here in Boulder, Colorado. The finals, which doubled as the American Cycling Association state championships, were raced this past Saturday at Xilinx Software’s Longmont campus — complete with drum line. The men’s race was one of the most exciting local events I have been to in recent memory. I was a spectator because a lapse in concentration a week and a half ago, while testing the hardness
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) considers gene doping a developing threat and has pledged to pursue detection methods and enforcement policies to ensure that the practice "never becomes a major issue in sport," an agency spokesperson said following a symposium in Stockholm, Sweden. The December 4-5 meeting, held in collaboration with the Karolinska Institute and the Swedish Sports Confederation, was the second such sponsored by WADA, the first being a March 2002 workshop in New York. The Stockholm meeting brought together more than 50 participants from 15 countries and included
VeloNews Photo Contest: A new winner and a new gallery
Drumming up some support
Coelho leads JHK
JHK deals with a dropped chain
We're racing a former Giro champ? Yikes!
So what if the UCI doesn't like discs? This is an ACA race
The Challenge Grifo
World champion Sven Nys (Rabobank) won the fourth round of the UCI cyclo-cross World Cup on Sunday in Wetzikon, Switzerland — but the victory didn't come easily. The Belgian had to come from behind to take the win over Netherlander Richard Groenendaal and Belgian Bart Wellens, who crossed second and third, respectively. Nys flatted while answering an attack by Italian Enrico Franzoi and had to make up a deficit of more than two minutes on Groenendaal, who had taken the lead. Wellens and Groenendaal tried in vain to shed themselves of Nys, but the world No. 1 proved far superior to his
In the perfect send off to what has been a cyclo-cross series with its fair share of bad weather and challenging conditions, the Caster’s Grand Prix, run Sunday in Warwick, Rhode Island as the final round of the 2005 Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series, presented racers with the most challenging conditions yet, a lethal combination of fresh snow, freezing temperatures, and even sleet. But if the race day conditions seemed utterly miserable and treacherous to most riders, they were the perfect storm for noted bad weather specialist Tim Johnson (Cyclocrossworld.com-Louis Garneau)
Logstor, Denmark (Reuters) -- CSC's Ivan Basso is determined to fill the cycling spotlight left by Lance Armstrong's retirement by attempting to win both the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France in 2006. Basso originally announced he would focus on the Tour de France after finishing second behind Armstrong this year. But he announced a surprise change of plan at his team's first training camp of the new season in northern Denmark."It's a risk going for two major races in the same season but I really want to try and win both the Giro and the Tour," Basso told Reuters. "It
Groenendaal always does well in these conditions...
... but he and Wellens have one big hurdle to get past to win.
Peter Dlask
Gerben DeKnegt
Enrico Franzoi
Jonathan Page
Wellens is looking strong at this point in the season
Sven Vanthourenhout
But in the end, it's Nijs again
McCormack goes into nationals on a high note
Johnson takes the series
Bruno Roy more than made up for Saturday
For a man whose chief cyclo-cross training in 2005 has involved more hours spent remodeling his house than racing, Todd Wells (GT-Hyundai) has been using his race days to their fullest. With a strong elite men’s field gathered in anticipation of next weekend’s U.S. Cyclo-cross National Championships, Saturday’s W.E. Stedman Grand Prix in Wakefield, Rhode Island, round five of the 2005 Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series, was a regional race with national implications. But Wells put paid to the rest of the field’s dreams, dominating the cold, wind-whipped course from start to
Wells gets all Sven Nijs on the barriers
Dickey dogs Bruno Roy
"This is an in-house policy on how we do business in the State Patrol, and it's not something that we invite the citizenry to participate in. "— Jeff Goodwin, spokesman for the Colorado State Patrol, discussing a new 2500-rider cap during an interview with a Denver newspaper "It’s for your own good." Man, did I ever hate hearing that as a kid, especially when it was followed by, "Because I said so." And I don’t like it any more as an alleged adult. Problems with authority, don't you know. So you can imagine how I felt when the word came down that the Colorado State Patrol has
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.Forget the heroes, just ride your bikeDear Editor,Since everyone else is jumping in, I figured I’d throw my two-cents in regarding the Heras case, too.I've been riding for 10 years now and until about three years ago the only professional cyclist’s name that I knew with any degree of
The chief of the Colorado State Patrol will meet with state legislators and event organizers after an outcry from the cycling community over the chief’s decision to cap the size of organized rides at 2500 cyclists. Rep. Michael Merrifield, D-Manitou Springs, told VeloNews on Friday that he, two other legislators and event organizers will sit down with Col. Mark Trostel on December 12 to discuss the edict. Critics say the cap threatens established rides like the Elephant Rock Bicycle Festival, which attracts nearly 7000 cyclists each year, and will drive away new events, like the Denver ride
At the ripe age of 34, Gilberto Simoni will be riding in the distinctive yellow and red jersey of Saunier Duval for the 2006 season. The two-time Giro d’Italia winner has already mapped out his season’s top goals, which includes a start at the inaugural Tour of California as well as a run at a third maglia rosa. "The team has an interest to go (to California) and make a good preparation," Simoni told the Spanish daily Diario Vasco. "Later we’ll see which races I will start, but it’s sure I will go to the United States." Simoni said he’s excited about the new team and ready to take over the
Tom Danielson and Bob Roll will host a fund-raiser for the Fort Lewis College Cycling Scholarship Fund on December 16 in the community Concert Hall in Durango, Colorado. Among the other cycling luminaries scheduled to attend are USPRO champion Chris Wherry, Michael and Dede Barry, Ned Overend, Todd Wells and Shonny Vanlandingham. Doors open at 5 p.m., with a social and silent auction scheduled from 5:30 to 6:15. The main event runs from 6:30 to 7:30. Tickets are available online at www.tomdanielson.com/pages/scholarship.htm. Cost is $10 (students); $20 (balcony and orchestra); and $25
Whether it’s the FSR suspension or Body Geometry saddle technology, Specialized has invested millions of dollars designing products that enhance the riding experience of a wide range of people. Securing such innovations with patent protection makes it possible for Specialized to continue this kind of investment, thereby better serving riders while ensuring that Specialized dealers have a bright future filled with constantly improved, differentiated and revolutionary bikes and equipment. Under the terms of a recently reached agreement, Scott USA admits that its existing Genius bicycle
With nine stages remaining in the 1985 Tour de France, Frenchman Bernard Hinault seemed to be on a clear course to his fifth overall victory. He was 5:23 ahead of his American teammate Greg LeMond in second place, and 6:06 ahead of third-placed Irishman Stephen Roche. Not much was expected to change on stage 14 from Villard-de-Lans to St. Étienne, a transitory stage that featured the fairly gentle Cat. 1 Col de l’Oeillon and Cat. 4 Croix de Chabouret climbs just before the fast descent into the finish. Colombian mountain goat Lucho Herrera attacked on the major climb to add points to his
The Colorado State Patrol has reconsidered its decision to set a 2500-rider cap on organized cycling events in the state, according to Rep. Michael Merrifield, D-Manitou Springs. "The latest is that the CSP is backing off to ‘study the issue’ for the next year," Merrifield told VeloNews Friday evening. "I intend to keep up the pressure." Col. Mark Trostel, chief of the CSP, told a press conference at the patrol’s Lakewood headquarters that while he had "had a lot of input in support of this, too," he had decided "in the spirit of cooperation and problem solving" to delay implementation of
The Elephant Rock may be riding off into the sunset
Simoni plans a trip to California, then another crack at the Giro
Did the fifth yellow jersey in Hinault's collection arrive in part to a misunderstanding?
Hinault still sports signs of his crash in stage 19
Rudy Pevenage, the veteran Belgian director who helped steer Bjarne Riis and Jan Ullrich to back-to-back Tour de France victories in the 1990s, is back in the good graces of T-Mobile and will officially rejoin the team as one of four sport directors for the 2006 season. Pevenage had a falling out with former T-Mobile manager Walter Godefroot three years ago and left to lead Team Coast, which dissolved in the midst of the 2003 season. He continued to work with Ullrich upon his return to T-Mobile in 2004, but only as an advisor and wasn’t allowed to officially travel with team staff during
A newcomer to cyclo-cross, Chris Horner, will line up to race at the Liberty Mutual U.S. National Cyclo-cross Championships. Horner recently made his cyclo-cross debut at the final two races in the Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclocross in California. Starting from the middle of the pack, Horner made up for a lack of prowess with pure power. He placed 13th and 11th, respectively, and earned crucial UCI points to secure a good start position in Providence. Rhode Island.
Pevenage continued to work with Ullrich, despite the row with Godefroot.
Organizers unveiled the route of the 2006 Tour de Georgia on Tuesday, highlighting the addition of three new host cities – including Chattanooga, Tennessee – and the legendary steep climb up Brasstown Bald Mountain. Scheduled for April 18-23, 2006, the fourth edition of the Tour de Georgia, North America’s only UCI Hors Classe (2.HC) stage race, will include 12 Southeastern cities in two states. The Tour de Georgiawill begin in Augusta on Tuesday, April 18, and conclude its 650-plusmiles of racing with in Alpharetta on Sunday, April 23. The race will returnto the Georgia communities of
Recently crowned NORBA U-23 national champ Lea Davison has joined the Trek-VW racing team. The 22-year-old rider recently graduated from Middlebury College in Vermont and is looking forward to her first season as a full-time professional racer. "I am absolutely ecstatic about joining the Trek-VW squad for the 2006 season," said Lea. "The Trek-VW team offers the best support on the circuit and does everything possible to help a rider perform at the best of their ability. The team is extremely talented and experienced. Under the tutelage of Sue Haywood, one of the best female mountain bikers