Something you don’t see every day: a six-time Tour champ working for a young up-and-comer
Something you don't see every day: a six-time Tour champ working for a young up-and-comer
Something you don't see every day: a six-time Tour champ working for a young up-and-comer
Landis and Armstrong were all smiles at the start
But once the gun fired, Discovery went after Landis's jersey with a vengeance ... here, Cruz and Danielson are shown working together
Zabriskie was in the thick of things until the final kilometers
And youngsters Lowe and Raisin continued their struggle for the best young rider title
Image Files Fleche Wallone/Liege-B-L
Image files - Tour de Georgia Stage 5 and 6
Image files - Tour de Georgia Stage 5 and 6
Rogers photo
Image files - Tour de Georgia Stage 5 and 6
The results sheet for stage 4 of the Dodge Tour de Georgia showed CSC’s Brian Vandborg as the day’s winner. And indeed the Dane did win the wicked 133.4-mile test from Dalton to Dahlonega, finishing in 5:33:02. But the bigger victor on a Friday afternoon where racers were brutalized by wind, rain and hail, was American Floyd Landis.
Last year, Davide Rebellin hit a winning streak that all the pundits thought was once a generation. The Amstel-Flèche-Liège hat-trick had never been done before and no one thought it could be matched anytime soon, certainly not Rebellin himself who said he doubted he could repeat the treble. Now, a year on, and just a week or so after Tom Boonen (Quick Step) delivered the Flanders-Roubaix double, Danilo Di Luca (Liquigas-Bianchi) is on the verge of repeating the unrepeatable. The question going into Sunday’s Lìege-Bastogne-Liège is: Who can stop Di Luca? After a frustrating 2004 season, Di
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. Armstrong’s UCI contributions are disturbingEditor:Learning that Lance Armstrong has donated money to the UCI for drug-testing research was disturbing (See Thursday’s Eurofile). It seems like too much of a conflict of interest. I am not surprised that he wanted to keep it quiet, seeing
Stocking up for a day's worth of racing Dalton Georgia native and Credit Agricole rider Saul Raisin has plenty of fans here in Georgia Pate in his new cycling shorts Health Net looking pro It's Earth Day Disco bus gets mobbed at start
Due to health problems, Michael Barry’s book signing following the Tour de Georgia is canceled. Michael Barry will not be present at Sunday’s book signing following the Tour de Georgia due to health reasons. Signed copies of his new book, "Inside the Postal Bus," will still be available for purchase at the Roswell Bicycles booth all day Sunday, while supplies last. Please call Roswell Bicycles at 770-642-4057 for more information on book sales at the event. More information on "Inside the Postal Bus" can be found at VeloGear.com.
The sun was shining from a clear blue sky Friday on the 260km course of Liège-Bastogne-Liège, the 91st edition of which takes place on Sunday. It was almost like summer, with early tourists hiking the wooded trails of the Ardennes, anglers out in the trout streams, and cows lounging around their meadows of lush, green grass. But this sort of weather is unusual for Belgium, a country that on average has 203 days of rainfall a year, and only three days of what the locals call “excessive heat” — warmer than 30 degrees C (or 86 degrees F). It was great weather for the 25 teams that will contest
Ivan Stevic (Aerospace Engineering-VMG) and Maatje Benassi (Excel Sports) opened the 27th edition of La Vuelta de Bisbee with victories in the Mule Pass Individual Time Trial on Friday. The prologue climbs 837 feet in just 2.8 miles, and Stevic wasted no time in getting to the finish, clocking a 9:39, nine seconds better than Phil Wong (Fiordifrutta) and 16 faster than Cody Peterson (3D Racing). David Clinger (Webcor) finished 13th, 37 seconds back . In the women's race, meanwhile, Benassi crossed the line in 12:13, 20 seconds ahead of Brooke Ourada (T-Mobile) and a further seven
Gamera? No, chimera
Vandborg snatches the win from Ekimov
Rubiera clocked in early for a long day at the office
Phonak set about defending Landis's lead
McCartney, meanwhile, was working for The Boss
Landis with Ekimov on his wheel
Armstrong on the ascent
An appreciative public applauds the peloton
There were two definite declarations to be made following the third stage of the Dodge Tour de Georgia in Rome on Thursday. First, if it wasn’t already, American Floyd Landis made it clear that with or without the services of the now-suspended Tyler Hamilton, the future of the Phonak team is in solid hands as it heads into the important months of the 2005 season.
Ivan Stevic (Aerospace Engineering-VMG) and David Clinger (Webcor Builders) headline the pro men’s field in the 27th edition of La Vuelta de Bisbee Stage Race, which kicks off Friday. The three-day, four-stage event in the high-desert terrain of southeastern Arizona features an uphill prologue time trial, two road stages and an individual time trial, with more than 175 miles of racing and 10,000 feet of climbing for the pro/1-2 field. Stevic was the revelation of the Sea Otter Classic road stage race April 14-17 in Monterey, California. The 24-year-old Serb won the stage-2 circuit race and
The smooth running of this year's Giro d’Italia appeared further assured Thursday after an agreement between the race organizers and the 20 ProTour teams who had been threatening to boycott the season’s first grand tour. Giro organizers had been under threat of a possible boycott of the race, which begins in three weeks time in Reggio de Calabria because of a dispute over appearance fees. According to the professional cycling teams' union, represented by Liberty Seguros boss Manolo Saiz and Quick Step's Patrick Lefevere, agreement with Giro d'Italia director Angelo Zomegnan
Paris -- The organizers of the Tour de France have renewed their agreement with VeloNews to produce the North American edition of the Official Tour de France Guide for another two years. The Tour and VeloNews have collaborated on the Guide since 2000. The Official Guide to the Tour de France is a high-quality, perfect-bound magazine of 148 pages that exhaustively previews each year's Tour de France. Appearing in June before each year's race, the Guide is packed with features, photos and stats on the world's largest annual sporting event. And with American hero Lance Armstrong
Landis nails it
Armstrong struggled a bit on Thursday
Armstrong concedes he has work to do before July
Julich finishes fourth on the day
Baldwin rode well, despite the sketchy conditions.
Landis knew early that he stood a chance to win the stage
Eki', too, had a strong ride.
Last year, Danilo Di Luca could only watch as rival Davide Rebellin inched away to victory on the Huy climb at the end of Flèche Wallone. Fresh off his victory in Sunday’s Amstel Gold Race, Liquigas-Bianchi rider starts Wednesday’s race as one of the favorites but Di Luca said he’s prefer to win Liège-Bastogne-Liège instead. “I won’t look for the victory at all costs. If I happened to be in good position in the final, I will fight,” Di Luca said. “The Flèche’s route is very suitable for me, but I confirm that Liège-Bastogne-Liège is the race I like the more.” Liquigas-Bianchi will come to
Start List - Flèche Wallone, 2005GEROLSTEINER1. Davide Rebellin (I)2. Marcus Fothen (G)3. Andrea Moletta (I)4. Ronny Scholz (G)5. Marco Serpellini (I)6. Fabian Wegmann (G)7. Beat Zberg (Swi)8. Marcus Zberg (Swi)DAVITAMON - LOTTO12. Serge Baguet (B)13. Christophe Brandt (B)14. Cadel Evans (Aus)15. Bjorn Leukemans (B)16. Axel Merckx (B)17. Koos Moerenhout (Nl)18. Wim Van Huffel (B)19. Preben Van Hecke (B)RABOBANK21. Oscar Freire (Sp)22. Erik Dekker (Nl)23. Thomas Dekker (Nl)24. Theo Eltink (Nl)25. LÖwik Gerben (Nl)26. Mickael Rasmussen (Dk)27. Rory Sutherland (Aus)28. Remmert Wielinga
After he won the Amstel Gold Race last Sunday, a rejuvenated and revitalized Danilo Di Luca said that his next goal was this coming weekend’s Liège-Bastogne-Liège. “That’s a race I’ve always dreamed about winning,” he said. So how come he won the Flèche Wallonne on Wednesday? “Good question,” Di Luca replied. “This morning, we decided that we would see what happens in the race. Well, [Jens] Voigt was riding very, very strong in the break. It was the decision of my director [Roberto] Amadio, and me too, to make my teammates ride.”
For the hopeless romantics among us, a victory by Andrea Tafi in the second stage of the Dodge Tour de Georgia would have been a fairy tale with the classic happy-ending. Tafi, the 38-year-old one-time Paris-Roubaix champion and always one of the sport’s most compelling characters, rolling off the front and soloing home for the win in what will be one of his last events as a professional. It was almost too good to be true — and it turns out it was.
Britain’s Nicole Cooke (Safi-Pasta Zara) once again stamped her formidable authority on the longest kilometer in cycling — the infamous Mur de Huy — taking her second win in the women’s Fleche Wallonne in Huy, Belgium on Wednesday. Cooke won her first Fleche Wallonne title in 2003. Round 5 of 11 in this year’s women’s World Cup series, the 8th edition of the Flèche Wallonne Femmes followed the final 105km and six climbs of the 201.5km men’s race. The women’s course eliminates the men’s run from Charleroi to Huy, picking up the course as it loops through the Ardennes south of Huy. On the
One reporter called it "the Black Monday of American cycling." Just like that, in the matter of a few hours on April 18, the U.S. lost two of the best Tour de France riders of a generation. First, Lance Armstrong, the undisputed king of the Tour, announced he’s abdicating the throne after making a run for a seventh crown come July. Then, Tyler Hamilton, heir apparent and former right-hand man, was delivered a devastating two-year racing ban for illegal blood transfusions. If you add in the ProTour ethics code, Hamilton won’t be able to even think about riding the Tour for four years, when
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. Keep up the fight, TylerEditor:I believe Tyler. A rider of his determination and grit has more credibility. I hope that his appeal will bring out the justice and credibility of his claims. In the meantime, I hope he can maintain the will to keep training and believing in himself. Go
Winning at Huy was unexpected, said Di Luca
Voigt was aggressive from the start
Kashechkin goes for it
The Mur de Huy
Di Luca takes over the ProTour lead.
Di Luca timed his move perfectly
Wolrich - really it is - takes the win
Tafi gets encouragement from his director
Eki drives at the front
Start List - 2005 Tour de Georgia* Under-23Discovery Channel1. Lance Armstrong USA2. José Azevedo POR3. Michael Barry CAN4. Antonio Cruz USA5. Tom Danielson USA6. Viatcheslav Ekimov RUS7. Jason McCartney USA8. José Luis Rubiera ESPDS Johan BruyneelPhonak11. Niki Aebersold SUI12. Aurélien Clerc SUI13. José Enrique Guitierrez ESP14. Robert Hunter RSA15. Floyd Landis USA16. Tomasz Nose* SLO17. Sascha Urweider SUIDS René SavaryCSC21. Bobby Julich USA22. Christian Vande Velde USA23. David Zabriskie USA24. Andy Schleck* LUX25. Brian Vandborg DEN26. Lars Bak DEN27.
Maps, Profiles and info Tour de Georgia
Racing legend Eddy Merckx said he perfectly understands Lance Armstrong’s decision to retire at the end of this summer’s Tour de France. It’s an inevitability that every professional racer faces. “To stop or continue racing, it’s always a personal decision,” Merckx told Het Nieuwsblad. “I’m not going to judge him. It’s easy to understand that things are harder for him, with everything that he’s suffered to get to this level.” Like many, Merckx agreed that Armstrong had the physical attributes to continue if he wanted to. Merckx said Armstrong could have easily transformed himself into a
The Dodge Tour de Georgia, the biggest stage race of the 2005 domestic road-racing season — with what is arguably the most competitive field in North American history — is set to begin Tuesday morning in Augusta, Georgia. Marked by appearances from American ProTour team leaders Bobby Julich (CSC), Floyd Landis (Phonak), Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner) and defending champion Lance Armstrong (Discovery Channel), the race will again serve as an early season stage racing test, with the state of Georgia as the backdrop. It’s no overstatement to describe Lance Armstrong’s decision to return to
After what was more leisurely stroll than bike race, it was Phonak's Robbie Hunter taking the first stage of the 2005 Dodge Tour de Georgia on Tuesday. Hunter charged to the front at the end of the 128.9-mile stage that started in Augusta, taking the win in downtown Macon. Jelly Belly's Ben Brooks took second, with Italian Michele Maccanti (LPR) in third.
Cold-setting (that means bending to you and me)Dear Lennard,I ride a 1980's vintage Klein Quantum with an 8-speed rear. ShouldI be able to get the frame adjusted to fit a wider 9- or 10-speed wheel?BrianDear Brian,Were this question about a steel frame, it would be not be a problem,but no, you cannot adjust an aluminum frame permanently without damagingthe frame. But you can flex the stays to put in the wheel each time youdo it without hurting the frame. You just can't make fast wheel changes.However, cold-setting an aluminum rear end so that it holds 130mm rearspacing rather than the
Tyler Hamilton expressed dismay Monday after USADA handed down a two-year racing ban for illegal blood transfusions. It’s a charge Hamilton continues to vigorously deny. “It caught me completely by surprise,” Hamilton told Rick Sadowski of the Rocky Mountain News. “Not for a second did I think it was going to turn out this way. The bottom line is an innocent athlete was suspended from competition. You could say it’s a victory for USADA, but I think it's better to say it's a tragedy for all athletes. I'm innocent.” He can return to competition April 17, 2007, but he forfeits all
The UCI ProTour has reached a turning point in its opening season. Behind us are the early (cold) stage races and the flat-landers’ spring classics. Now come the two hilly Ardennes classics (with a different set of characters, even from last Sunday’s Amstel Gold Race), followed by the summertime stage races: Switzerland’s Tour de Romandie next week; Italy’s Giro and Spain’s Tour of Catalonia in May; followed by the French Dauphiné Libéré and the Tour of Switzerland in June; and all culminating with the Tour de France in July. Like the races, the winners have also come in waves. First there
Map Stage 1
Profile Stage 1