Barry shows off her hardware.
Barry shows off her hardware.
Barry shows off her hardware.
Zijlaard-van Moorsel's machine.
Big-time swim meet.
The Greeks root on their own.
Stark gets time with Phelps...
...others just wait.
A case of nerves: Hamilton finally relaxed after the finish
Julich: Morale played a big part
Hamilton and Julich during the anthem
Demet-Barry scored the day's first medal
Thorburn finished a strong 4th in the women's time trial
Ekimov adds a silver to his TT gold from 2000
Julich's bronze caps a great season for a man who recently thought about retirement
Tyler Hamilton's gold-medal performance
Olivia Julich: Dad's biggest fan
Ullrich, considered an odds-on fav' for a medal, was disappointed
Today in Athens
Olympic Tech: Bobby J and his funky chainrings
Tyler, Bobby and Dede will be here on Thursday.
Waterworld.
VN made the cut on the media center magazine rack.
Canoe racing at the Olympics.
Scene from the aquatic center.
At night the project images on this thing kind of like Freemont Street in Vegas.
Following two off days for the cycling events here at the Olympics in Athens, the men’s and women’s time trials are up next at Vouliagmeni Olympic Center. The 25-rider women’s field will kick things off at 1 p.m. local time on Wednesday, followed by 40 men at 3 p.m. The 24km-course starts on Athinas Avenue in front of the Vouliagmeni city hall, then heads down the coastal road to the turnaround at the Agia Marina. Wind will be a major factor in the race, which lacks any serious climbs but has several tough false flats. “The wind was really whipping [on Monday] and even today it’s blowing
Iban Mayo, the Basque rider on Euskaltel-Euskadi, is doubtful for the Vuelta a España with a virus that has sapped the strength of the lithe climber. Team manager Miguel Madariaga said they are awaiting results of blood analyses taken this week. “Until I have the results I don't want to say anything for certain,” Madariaga told the Spanish daily MARCA. “With the analysis that we have now, he can't race, his hematocrit is no higher than 37, and that means he has a virus. I'm waiting for the doctor's report but there a 90 percent chance that I believe he won't be able to race the
Leontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel hopes to defend her Olympic time trial crowd on Wednesday despite a hard fall that knocked her out of Sunday’s road race and left her with bruises on shoulder, elbow and hip. The 34-year-old Dutchwoman, who won the road race, the individual time trial and the individual pursuit on the track at the Sydney Games four years ago, fell when she clipped Canadian Lyne Bessette’s rear wheel and brought Swiss Nicole Brandli crashing down on top of her. "I feel good, I slept good. I just hope that my legs are good," Zijlaard-van Moorsel said Tuesday of her recovery. "I
Dear Lennard,On one of the tech segments during the OLN coverage, they interviewed someone from CSC and he talked about a different type of chainring they were using for the time trials. But they didn't explain what the differences were. Did you hear anything about this?Leonard Dear Leonard,Those chainrings are called Harmonic, and they offer a larger gear ratio when the crank is horizontal than when it is vertical (the opposite of Biopace). I asked Bobby Julich about them, and he referred me to the company’s website. And lest you think they are a revival of the old Biopace design, Julich
USA Cycling has scheduled its cyclo-cross national championships for the next four years, selecting New England for 2005-06 and Kansas City, Missouri, for 2007-08. The 2004 national championships are scheduled for December 10-12 in Portland, Oregon. Spin Arts will handle the championships in New England. Race director Tom Stevens organized the 1995 and 1998 national ’cross championships, and assisted with planning in 1983, 1988, 1991 and 1999-2001. Stevens is also the founder of the New England Cyclo-cross Championship Series, the premier regional cyclo-cross series in North America. "Our
Cruz expects to sign with Discovery
Lance Armstrong reaffirmed his intention to race the Tour de France again, but wouldn’t be specific on exactly when during a raucous welcoming home ceremony for the six-time Tour winner in his Texas hometown of Austin over the weekend. While many of cycling’s top names were disputing the Olympic road race, Armstrong was being cheered by 60,000 fans and contemplating his future. “I’ll definitely be back to the Tour,” Armstrong told The Associated Press, shortly before participating in a parade in his honor in his adopted hometown. “I think I have another year or two in me. That’s not just a
Arndt irked at German federation, not CarriganJudith Arndt says her hand gesture as she crossed the finish line in Sunday's women's road race in Athens was not directed at Australian winner Sara Carrigan, but rather at the German cycling federation for excluding her partner, Petra Rossner, from the German Olympic cycling team. Asked by reporters if her finger gesture was aimed at Carrigan, the 28-year-old said: "It wasn't anything to do with Sara. We gave the gold away. Petra is the best sprinter in the world. I'm sad that she did not ride with me. I dedicate my medal to her." The
The Mail Bag 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.Arndt’s childish display hurts the sportEditor:After seeing the salute Judith Arndt decided to give the world Sunday, I felt a comment was needed. The Olympics occur only every four years the last time I checked, which makes election for them and representing your country a great honor.
Howdy, folks, and welcome back to another installment into the all-encompassing grab bag known as my weekly Web column. It’s been a busy time for me, as the “neighborhood” has twice in the past two weeks extended to California — two trips that reconfirmed my view of my native state as simultaneously the best and worst in our nation. (I think Robert Pielke put it best in the epilogue to his 1996 book “You Say You Want A Revolution” when he wrote: “California has been cursed and blessed with virtually every paradox imaginable. Physically, the state is an incomparable paradise as well as a
Mike “Bling-Bling” Jones
As the Olympics head into their second day here in Athens, doping has been the big story with the focus on Greece’s top two sprinters and their infamous moped accident. But now comes news that cycling has been dragged into the law-breaking fray — albeit on a much smaller scale. The tawdry tale came to light late Saturday when Greek police announced that they’d arrested Anthony Cooke, father of top British cyclist Nicole Cooke. Apparently the senior Cooke ran afoul with the law when he and a friend were nabbed during a clandestine graffiti operation on one of the streets of the road course.
The contrast couldn’t have been greater as the latest batch of cycling medalists faced the media shortly after the conclusion of the women’s Olympic road race on the downtown streets of Athens on Sunday. In the center seat of the raised podium sat Sara Carrigan, a starry gaze striped across her youthful face. Moments earlier the Aussie had grabbed gold, after pushing away from Judith Arndt on the last lap of the 118.8km race. Meanwhile, Arndt looked downright disgusted despite the silver medal swinging from her neck. The German was still seething over the Olympic-team exclusion of former
Och’ fined for water handup outside feed zoneU.S. Olympic road coach Jim Ochowicz was fined Sunday for giving a bottle of water to a rider outside the approved area during the men's road race on Saturday. Ochowicz was fined the equivalent of about $162 by the UCI. No rider was named or fined, officials said. Temperatures topped 100 degrees on parts of the course Saturday, so race officials allowed team cars to pass water and food to riders over an expanded stretch of the course. Temperatures were cooler for the women's road race Sunday along the same 8.2-mile course, but the more generous
Casey Gibson was at it again in Athens on Sunday, enjoying the women's road race and its surprise ending. Below you'll find a sampling of what he saw.
Team doctors working with Leontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel said that it is still uncertain whether the Dutch cycling star will ride the Olympic women's individual time trial after a sickening tumble in the road race in Athens on Sunday. The 34-year-old world and Olympic champion badly bruised her shoulder, elbow and hip when she crashed from her bike two laps from the finish in the road race won by Australian Sara Carrigan. Zijlaard-van Moorsel was badly shaken and was unable to rejoin the race after landing heavily in a crash just as the race was beginning to sort itself out. "She is
There are victory salutes ...
Then Van Moorsel and Brandli hit the deck after a touch of wheels
Van Moorsel and Arndt led the charge past Huguet
Arndt was relentless
The podium
... and then there are other salutations
A leisurely start on a hot day
The women hit the road in Athens
But not before the Yanks had their morning java
Dede's fans were in town ... and they weren't getting arrested for painting the road like some riders' fans
Thorburn hustles despite the heat
This Armstrong chose to race in Athens ... and cracked the top 10
Bessette, sadly, was taken out in a crash and DNF'd
Cooke and Melchers missed out
But Carrigan didn't miss a trick
Palmer-Komar had a go, but wilted in the heat
Officials used this shot to justify the penalty.
It’s an oft overused expression, but in this case it really did apply. Getting the chance to watch the Opening Ceremonies from a seat inside the Olympic Stadium was truly a once in a lifetime deal. The pre-Athlete procession show was like Cirque du Soleil on steroids with a Greek history lesson thrown in for good measure. My vantage point was a lower-level seat on the opposite end of where the torch was eventually lit. Not the greatest spot to see all in the action in the middle of the giant “lake,” but a good place to catch the expressions on athletes faces as they made their way around the
In the aftermath of the brutal 224.4km men’s Olympic road race run on the historic downtown streets of Athens on Saturday, the sentiment toward race winner Paolo Bettini was nearly universal. For a man so marked to still pull off a gold-medal victory was testament to his vast abilities on the bicycle. Outside of a stacked Spanish squad, Bettini’s name was the one most proffered when the favorites list was compiled, yet the Italian still managed to pull one of his trademark late-race escapes, earning him the first cycling gold of the 2004 Summer Games. Bettini grabbed victory by slipping away
Ian Macgregor (TIAA-CREF/5280) won the under-23 national championship road race Friday at Utah’s Deer Valley Resort, attacking a 13-man breakaway and then fencing with Blake Caldwell (U.S. National) over the final kilometers. Macgregor and Mike Cody launched the first serious break of the day just 15km into the 193km race, run on the same circuit on which Lance Armstrong won his first road title 13 years ago. Soon, a second group of six riders bridged up, followed by another group of four that included Caldwell and U.S. National’s Stuart Gillespie. Then TIAA-CREF’s Todd Yesefski, Jay Ku, and
It was a hot one out there in Athens on Saturday, and not just for the riders – Casey Gibson found himself schlepping a few jillion pounds of camera equipment around the men's road race in 90-plus temps and using public transportation: "Way too hot and the first race I ever covered using the subway," Casey reports. After a day like that, what could we do but run everything he sent us?
The Greek flag goes up
Playing with fire.
Bettini wins the gold
Running men.
Canadian pride.
The calm before kickoff.
The media vantage point.
The photographers perch.
Excitement piqued.
Athletes of the world.
The U.S. men's hoops squad.
The ATHOC president addresses the world.
Stoneface prior to his metamorphosis.
Macgregor takes the title