Platt proved he was in for the short haul.
Platt proved he was in for the short haul.
Platt proved he was in for the short haul.
Meet Mark Weir: Fastest PR guy you know.
Voigt is solidly in second
Only three of the one-day European classics have summit finishes: the Amstel Gold Race, the Flèche Wallonne and Liège-Bastogne-Liège. After winning the first two of these races in the past four days, Italy’s Davide Rebellin is uncannily confident that he can win the third of these hilly events this coming Sunday.
Just in case anyone thought Tuesday's victory was a fluke, Italian Damiano Cunego (Saeco) won Wednesday's demanding five-climb second stage to secure his hold on the leader's jersey in the Giro di Trentino. Cunego, the 1999 junior world champion, shot off alone to win the 171km second stage to win in 4 hours, 50 minutes, 23 seconds. The 22-year-old finished 34 seconds ahead of Saeco team captain and Trentino defending champion Gilberto Simoni. The four-stage Giro di Trentino continues Thursday with the 165km third stage from Roncone Breguzzo to Fiavè. Giro di Trentino (ITA 2.2), Stage 21.
Veltec Sports and Look Cycles has unveiled a blockbuster pedal trade-inprogram - deemed “Step Into Carbon”. The program has been designedto bring added visibility to its CX-6 pedal line and provide consumersa limited opportunity to purchase these 100% carbon bodied pedals at agreat discount.The trade-in program is currently underway and will run through May31, 2004. It’s a simple program that provides the consumer with aninstant credit of $50 at the register, when trading in their current pedals(regardless of their condition) towards the purchase of a new pair of CX-6’spedals.For a list of
TORRINGTON, CT (April 15, 2004) - Situated in scenic northwesternConnecticut, Lime Rock Park is recognized and revered for its scenic beautyand its place in motor-sports history. As of May 20th, at 12:00 noon,professional cyclists will descend on this hallowed racing ground and itmay never be the same again.Lime Rock Park will host the 2nd leg of the second annual Tour of Connecticutwith a 50K circuit race on the 1.53 Miles (2.45 K) road racing course. An international field of professional cyclists and invited Category 1&2 cyclists will compete in a fast a furious race. Cyclists will takea
When Italian superstar “Super Mario” Cipollini failed to contest the opening sprint stage of the Dodge Tour de Georgia on Monday, the sport’s cognoscenti immediately questioned what might be amiss with 2002 world champion. Was it the criterium-style finishing circuits that slowed down his Domina Vacanze lead-out train? Was he out of sorts in the near 90-degree heat? Perhaps he had simply arrived in the U.S. out of shape, or maybe, some supposed, the realities of age had finally caught up with the 37-year-old sprinter.
Like an annual rite of spring, the Sea Otter is not only the first major outing of both domestic and international-caliber mountain and road teams, but it’s also one of the best opportunities to see next year’s product now. Here’s a quick look at an assortment of mountain bike related goodies spotted while we roamed the pits. Photo #1 The most significant question of the day for the pro racers competing in the super XC was tire selection. Choices ranged from traditional size 26x2.0 knobby and semi-slick tires to 700x32c cyclo-cross tires. On of the race’s favorites, Trek/VW’s Sue Haywood
The reigning French national women’s champion Sonia Huguet scored her first international victory at Wednesday’s Flèche Wallonne, but it was the fight for the 2004 UCI World Cup that held center stage at the hilly 97.5km event. And that brought added success to Australia’s Oenone Wood, who extended her overall lead by 20 points on Russia’s Zulfia Zabirova. So after five of the year’s nine World Cup races, Wood has 202 points to Zabirova’s 154, while Mirjam Melchers of the Netherlands remained in third with 115 despite finishing outside the points Wednesday. After Wood, 23, crossed the line
Rebellin stayed with Di Luca
Postal's Devolder tries an escape
Hamilton: Ready for Sunday?
On the Mur
Dekker shook things up with 16km to go
Vino' tries his legs
The day's first break had some horsepower
Health Net leads the chase
Pate and Fraser at work
Julich and ther climbers are looking forward to the hills
Fraser gets a big kiss from his sis'
Defending Dodge Tour de Georgia champion Chris Horner made a bold pre-race press conference statement Monday when he announced he would not be content with anything less than overall victory. “My form is very good,” said Horner, who is fresh off an overall win at the Sea Otter Classic to add to his stage race wins at Redlands, Pomona Valley and just about every other domestic stage race he has chosen over the past two years. “I’ve got the legs and I’m here to win. Anything less and I won’t be satisfied.” It’s not the first time Horner has predicted victory. Last September, on the eve of the
April 13, 2004 (Steamboat Springs, Colo.) – EN-R-G Foods, Inc., makersof Honey Stinger energy bars and gels, announced today that it has becomethe official bar and gel supplier to the elite Subaru-Gary Fisher mountainbike race team. Boasting several of the world’s best mountain bike racers,the Subaru-Gary Fisher Team includes:· Ryder Hesjedal – reigning NORBA NCS XC champion andSilver Medalist at both the 2003 Elite World Championships and 2003 CanadianNational Championships. He will race in Europe this spring with the USPostal Service cycling team then focus on the World Cup and Olympics
Dear Lennard,The question is simple enough: What is the quickest/best way to change/fixa tubeless tire? While I love the ride characteristics and generally betterflat resistance of tubeless, fixing a flat--when it eventually does happen-orsimply swapping tires for another tread pattern is nothing short of anordeal. Skinned knuckles, broken tire levers (which you're not supposedto use anyway) and at least a half-hour's worth mano-a-rubber WWF styleaction seem to be the minimum commitment. On a recent ride, a friend who used a tubeless sealant nicked his sidewallon a sharp rock, adding a
Former junior world champion Damiano Cunego (Saeco) delivered his first big victory as a pro in the opening stage of the four-day Giro di Trentino in northern Italy. The 22-year-old, who won the junior world title in 1999, attacked late in the 168km opening stage and held off Jure Golcer (Formaggi Pinzolo Fiave) to take the stage. Vaunted as one of the future grand tour hopes in Italy, Cunego is a keen climber eager to show his stuff in the next month’s Giro d’Italia. Two-time Giro champion Gilberto Simoni (Saeco) came to life under the Italian (not Tuscan) sun and finished sixth in the
20 April – Pozzoleone, Italy – Fi’zi:k, the elite hand-madeItalian saddle manufacturer is releasing limited edition Team Replica Arionesaddles. In honor of Italian fi’zi:k sponsored teams participatingin the 2004 Giro d’Italia, the company is producing a limited number ofcustom team replica Saeco Macchine per Café, Alessio-Bianchi andVini Caldirola-Nobili Rubinetterie Arione saddles.The limited edition Arione team replica saddles retailing for $139,will be available in late May and will be distributed in the US throughfi’zi:k’s exclusive US distributor, BikeMine (www.bikemine.com –
Canadian veteran Gord Fraser (Health Net-Maxxis) took the opening stage of the 2004 Dodge Tour de Georgia Tuesday, beating sprint specialist Ivan Dominguez (Colavita Olive Oil) and last month’s Criterium International winner Jens Voigt (CSC) to the finish line in front of an enthusiastic downtown Macon crowd. Fraser’s lead-out man Greg Henderson finished fourth, with Landbouwkredit-Colnago’s Ukrainian sprinter Yuri Metlushenko in fifth.
Horner gets his time trial bike dialed in for Thursday's double-day
Julich, Wohlberg and Baldwin listen as Horner gives yet another animated answer
Cipollini brings a new quality to racing in Georgia
Horner in Georgia: “I’m here to win”
Horner in Georgia: “I’m here to win”
Race announcer Dave Towle hams it up with Jacky Durand
Fraser put it all on the line
Getting in TV time
Cipo' was there with a lap to go, but faded on the last climb
Julich, waiting for the big climbs later in the week, was happy to have finished in the main field...
... as was Armstrong.
Fraser's happy no matter what
Armstrong: I'm happy
Gilberto Simoni admitted he’s not on the same form as he was this time last year after stumbling through a lackluster string of performances in Spain. The defending Giro d’Italia champion said cold, rainy weather during the Tour of the Basque Country and the Tour of Aragon were not to his liking. He abandoned both races while arch-rival Stefano Garzelli (Vini Caldirola) took victory in Aragon on final-day time bonuses. "I know I’m not in the same form as I was last year and I know that Garzelli is definitely riding better than me at the moment,” Simoni said on the team’s web page. “However,
Last Saturday Primo Life Club entertained the latest selection of the beauty contest binds to the 2004 Road Cycling World Championships. Few votes between the three finalists: the first place has gone to Elisa Basso, 22 years old from Varese (Lombardy), the second to Eleonora Sorato and the third to Elisa Prando, both are 18 years old and from Veneto region. On Friday 30th April the Hollywood Dance Club in Bardolino will entertain the final evening. The six winners will prize the champion of the World’s, scheduled from 27th September to 3rd October in Verona and Bardolino. The five
Joe and Dirk answer questions on rowing for cyclists and customizing a second peak
Pro racers from across the U.S. and Europe trickled in to the town of Macon,Georgia, over the weekend as organizers of the country’s richest stagerace, the Dodge Tour de Georgia, made final preparations to commence racingTuesday, April 20. In only its second year, the event received a huge boost with the Januaryannouncement that five-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong wouldbring his U.S. Postal Service-Berry Floor team to the event and use therace as preparation for a sixth consecutive Tour win. Shortly thereafter,2003 title-sponsor Dodge renewed its commitment for 2004, and a more
The Mail Bag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com, appearing each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. 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.OLN's bait-and-switch?Editor,Well, I see it's beginning to happen to OLN's coverage of bike racing. They suck you in with promises, good coverage, plans to show all the stuffyou want and then cancel it all so they can show more motor sports
HARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA (April 19, 2004)- Sportsbook.com, oneof the world’s largest retail-focused Internet sports bookmakers, formallyannounced today that it will become the new title sponsor for the erstwhileworlddiff.com Women’s Cycling team, one of America’s best developmentalprograms.Founded in 1997, Sportsbook.com had amassed a database of nearly 350,000customers from about 150 countries when it was purchased in 2001 by Sportingbet.com,a British company traded on the London Stock Exchange that processed morethan $900 million in bets last year. Today, Sportsbook.com is
NORRISTOWN, PA (April 19, 2004) – On Saturday, June 5, one hundredformer international cycling legends and patrons of the sport will pedal65 miles, with police escort, from the Lehigh Valley Velodrome in Trexlertownto Philadelphia’s Benjamin Franklin Parkway. It’s the annual Founders’Ride and Legends Luncheon which, this year, will celebrate two decadesof pro cycling in Pennsylvania and raise money for the Allentown-basedNicole Reinhart Memorial Fund.Since 1985 Philadelphia has hosted the national professional road cyclingchampionship, now one of the world’s top ten international cycling
It had been seven years since Gerolsteiner’s Davide Rebellin had taken back-to-back World Cup victories at the Clasica San Sebastian and Championship of Zürich. And despite having won 30 races since then, he was desperate to regain the prestige that had been grabbed in recent years by his fellow Italians Paolo Bettini and Danilo Di Luca.
Stefano Garzelli (Vini Caldirola) outfoxed – and outsprinted – Denis Menchov (Illes Balears) to snatch overall victory in the 49th Tour of Aragon in Spain. Garzelli finished third behind stage-winner Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo) to earn a four-second time bonus to put him in a tie with Menchov, who held the lead since winning the opening stage Wednesday to the ski area at Valdelinares. Based on stage placements, however, Garzelli earned the tie-breaker and the overall title in an important victory as he prepares for next month’s Giro d’Italia. “The objective was to arrive in good
With two separate gravity events on the agenda for Sunday, the pro men and women were scheduled to tackle the characteristically short Sea Otter downhill course at an early 9 a.m. start time, with Aussie Mick Hannah (Haro-adidas) and American Marla Streb (Luna) atop the podium as the day's downhill runs finished up. On short course, with sub-three-minute times for both men and women, small mistakes could cost riders a lot, a point underscored by the sub-one-second-time-gaps separating first and second places in both categories. Early on it looked as though Eric Carter’s (Hyundai-Mongoose)
Veteran Tara Llanes (Giant-Pearl Izumi) and newcomer Donny Robinson (Avent) capped off the weekend's gravity racing at the Sea Otter classic with victories in Sunday afternoon's mountain cross event. Racing on what many riders said was one of the most exciting courses ever constructed for the four-up gravity discipline, Llanes earned her win in a dramatic pass over the course's final obstacle: a six foot wide water-filled moat, while BMX pro Robinson scored his in a three-up sprint for the finish. Most impressive is the fact that, until this trip to the Sea Otter, Robinson had never ridden a
Alison Dunlap and Filip Meirhaeghe entered Sunday’s cross-country races with the same goal but entirely different strategies. Dunlap needed do little more than follow the wheels in front of her, knowing that as long as she stayed close her 1:03 lead in the overall standings was safe. Meirhaeghe, meanwhile, had some work to do. Trailing GC leader Seamus McGrath by 14 seconds, and with three other riders in front of him, the reigning world champion would need to go on the attack if he hoped to end up with the day’s biggest prize. In the end both plans worked, as Dunlap and Meirhaeghe left
Bettini's move had promise
Di Luca tried his luck on the Keutenberg
Of the two leaders, Rebellin had just a bit more at the finish
The Amstel is a big draw for Dutch fans all along the route
Landis finishes in 29th
Rabobank at the helm
Wesemann still leads the World Cup
Streb credits an 'intense off-season' for her win
Australia's Mick Hannah took second in the mountain cross and won the Downhill Domination Omnium title
Some riders weren't so lucky getting over the infamous 'moat' section of the mountain cross course
Mick Hannah