Will he or won’t he race La Vuelta?
Will he or won't he race La Vuelta?
Will he or won't he race La Vuelta?
Spanish cycling took a blow Monday when perennial team sponsor ONCE announced it will end its 15-year support of cycling at the end of the 2003 season. Rumors began circulating last week that ONCE (a Spanish agency that serves blind people and runs a national lottery) would pull the plug at the end of the year instead of continuing through the 2004 season as planned. The team will compete in the 2003 Vuelta and the remainder of the racing calendar, but an internal decision taken Monday leaves Spain's premier team without a title sponsor come November, reported the Spanish daily
Most of you have probably stopped waiting for my Tour de France wrapup. But for those who might still be interested, here goes. I don't know where to begin, really. It was a wild month for me. I can't remember any other time in my life that was more jam-packed with highs and lows. I talk a lot about living through the suffering cycling offers up, and how the bad days outnumber the good. But it's those one or two elusive good days that make it all worthwhile. Rarely do you experience the depths of disappointment and heights of success in one race. But the Tour de France is unique. You never
Spaniard Joane Somarriba (Bizkaia Spiuk Panda) soloed to victory Monday in the second stage of the Grande Boucle Féminin, a 106km run from Corte to Saint-Florent. Just past Oletta, 84.5km into the race, six riders escaped the bunch – Fabiana Luperini and Jolanta Polikeviciute (Team 2002 Aurora), Judith Arndt (Nürnberger), Nicole Braendli (Prato Marathon Bike), Somarriba and Edita Pucinskaite (Michela Fanini). A few kilometers from the Col de Teghime, Somarriba attacked and took the lead by a handful of seconds over her breakaway companions. On the descent, covered at more than 80 km/h,
In many ways, it is easy to forget that I am living in a foreign country. The unfortunate thing is that it might actually be possible to exist here in Belgium without ever coming to terms with it. By now, the local shops know we are English-speaking and address us accordingly. Ann and Bernard speak English perfectly. With the Internet, it is possible to transport your mind, and therefore the essence of yourself, back to the States in a few millibits per second. The standard pastime between email checks is watching DVD's in the living room – in English, of course. Not that this is anything
Colby Pearce gets ready for the points race
Another frustration - U.S. coach Des Dickie tries to figure out what went wrong for the U.S. in the team sprint
Two-time Olympic gold medalist Jens Fiedler tries to compose himself after being relegated in the sprint competition
Sometimes-Californian Josiah Ng is riding for Malaysia in the keirin
Australian Katie Mactier, who took silver in the pursuit after taking up the discipline in May, meets with her hometown TV crew
Old trackies never die.... American Mark Whitehead and former world champion Michael Hubner trade drinking tales and a few lies
Simon Derney - best named and indispensable part of the keirin
The automatic starter keeps things honest
Arnaud Tournant, the first man to break the minute barrier in the kilo', awaits his start
Chillin' like a villain in Belgium
Before the gun - The Aussie pursuit squad awaits the start before smashing the world record
Stuttgart’s world track championships wrapped up on a high note for Germany as its sprinters showed the host country’s riders were still capable of a bit of teamwork. After the implosion of its team pursuit squad, Germany demonstrated the depth of its sprint program by fending off a strong challenge in the gold medal round from the French to secure the world team sprint competition on Sunday. The final in the three-lap event – formerly tagged with the somewhat confusing moniker of “Olympic Sprint” – pitted Germany’s Carsten Bergemann, Jens Fiedler and Rene Wolff against a strong French
Quick Step's Paolo Bettini tried for three weeks to win a stage at the 2003 Tour de France but fell short. Now, a week later at Sunday's HEW Cyclassics race in Germany, the Italian upstaged local favorite Jan Ullrich (Bianchi) to win his second World Cup victory of the season. "This is a great race, no matter what people say," said Bettini, who moved into second overall in the World Cup standings. "Some criticize it because the course is relatively undemanding, but look how exciting it was. I'm delighted with this victory, and I'm looking forward to winning this race again." Ullrich and
Russian Olga Zabelinskaia (Vélodames Colnago) won the opening stage of the Grande Boucle Féminin Sunday, a 105km run under blazing sun from Sarténe to Ajaccio. Zabelinskaia crossed the line alone in 3:03:03, trailed nearly four and a half minutes later by Austrian Sara Carrigan. Lisbeth Simer was third at 5:28. American Katrina Grove was fifth at 5:54. The Russian collected both the leader’s jersey and the jersey for best climber. Prerace favorite Susanne Ljungskog is sitting 18th on GC at 6:27. –Copyright 2003/AFP Stage results1. Olga Zabelinskaia (Rus), Vélodames Colnago, 105km in 3:03:03
Olympic gold medalist Marty Nothstein (Navigators) outsprinted the rain and Saturn's Victor Rapinski to win the New York City cycling championship on Sunday. Winner of the match sprint on the track at the Sydney Olympics, Nothstein has been making an impressive transition to road racing and blasted past Rapinski in the final 100 meters of the 62-mile event through the streets of New York. American David Clinger (Prime Alliance-TIAA-Cref) was third. "Since winning the gold medal in 2000, this has been a big transition from the track to the road," said Nothstein. "With proper training
Just moments before a sudden rainstorm swept across Lower Manhattan on Sunday afternoon, former track-racing superstar Marty Nothstein delivered a lightning bolt of his own when he unleashed his world-class speed to win the second annual New York City Cycling Championship on the streets of New York. "I’ll tell you what," said Nothstein, whose rich track-racing resume includes the Olympic gold medal he won at the Sydney Games in 2000. "Since winning the Olympics, I’ve only been focusing on one thing, and that’s coming out to these criteriums to try and become one of the dominant
At the International-Tour de Toona, Saturn completed a sweep of the men’s and women’s races as Lyne Bessette wrapped up the women’s title on Sunday, while Tom Danielson overtook Navigators Chris Baldwin to win the men’s race, which concluded on Saturday. Danielson entered the final stage trailing Baldwin by 20 seconds, but the Saturn rider broke clear in the race, bridging to early breakaways Tim Johnson (Saturn), Brice Jones (7UP-Maxxis) and Baldwin's Navigators teammate Mark Walters. With Johnson and Danielson powering the breakaway, Danielson rode into the race lead. Walters sat on and
Wolff screams encouragement as Bergemann begins the last lap.
Swiss Bruno Risi celebrates the Madison win
Paolo Bettini overpowers the competition
Ullrich gave it his best for the hometown crowd
Marty Nothstein expands his racing résumé
The slimmed-down Nothstein says he's getting the hang of this road-racing thing
Danny Pate pulled the break like a locomotive
The peloton doing business in the financial district
They’ve said the track in Stuttgart, with its aged wooden surface is a fast one. It took the Australian pursuit team to prove just how fast as the four-man team of Graeme Brown, Peter Dawson, Luke Roberts and Brett Lancaster smashed the existing world mark – set by the Aussie squad a year ago – by more than two seconds Saturday. Facing a British team that included Robert Hayles, Paul Manning, Bryan Steel and individual pursuit champion Bradley Wiggins, the Australians knew they had to ride a sub-four-minute pursuit just to remain competitive in the final. The two teams both appeared nervous
Jan Ullrich won the Night of Hannover cycling race Saturday, a midnight event which also turned into a celebration for 85,000 of the Bianchi rider's fans. Ullrich beat out local German Grischa Niermann in a sprint at the end through the city, with Mario Cipollini third, as Ullrich continues a series of city races since finishing second at the recent Tour de France. The German was bombarded by well-wishers and autograph seekers after his recent Tour de France comeback. The 1997 winner finished second to Lance Armstrong. "Everybody's great, I'm very happy about that," Ullrich said.
While many of Nathan O’Neill’s Saturn teammates were celebrating Tom Danielson’s impending overall win at the International /Tour de ‘Toona — and others were preparing to defend Ivan Dominguez’s title at the New York City Cycling Championships — O’Neill sat in a hospital bed three hours away, at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. As the fourth stage of The International came to a field sprint, the Aussie was wearing the leader’s jersey when he was taken out in a gruesome headfirst crash, suffering a broken nose, facial lacerations, and as it would be later discovered, two broken
According to USPRO road racing champion Mark McCormack, there are two things the 105 racers scheduled to start Sunday’s New York City Cycling Championship will be concerned with. The first is a problem that anyone who has negotiated the streets of Manhattan will be familiar with: potholes. The second thing that could make things interesting in Sunday’s 100km race, held in New York’s Financial District beneath the skyscrapers of Wall Street, is a forecast that’s calling for rain. "The taxis don’t have the most leak-proof engines, so you’re dealing with a lot of oil on those roads," said
The Aussies blaze to gold in the team pursuit
Two's a charm. The Australians had to start twice
Brett Lancaster, Luke Roberts, Peter Dawson and Graeme Brown meet the press
In case you're wondering, it's a 55x14
O'Neill, on a better day, after winning the Oak Glen stage at Redlands
My question for the week: How many donuts is too many donuts for one person to eat in a morning? I’m talking all morning – from the time you stumble into work and pour yourself that first cup of coffee until the time you’re ready to haul out for an hour-and-a-half lunch break. Without divulging any numbers, suffice it to say that I powered through a few of those round fried things this morning as I banged out my column, and am just wondering whether I overdid it or not. Drop a line to VN.com and let me know. * * * Last week I proposed letting readers pay $150 to write my column for me.
Cycling's World Cup moves back onto center stage with Sunday's 253km HEW Cyclassics race in Hamburg, Germany, the sixth stop of the 10-round series. The rolling course features no less than 23 rated climbs, but none are hard enough for the top pros to get out of the big ring. The course heads out into the farmland outside of Hamburg before heading back into the bustling port city for two finishing circuits. Whether it will come down to a bunch sprint or not is kind of a crapshoot. The race hits the short but steep Wasseberg climb three times, the last coming just 15km from the finish,
World champions Australia boosted its chances of defending its team-pursuit title after topping qualifying here Friday at the world track cycling championships. The foursome of Graeme Brown, Peter Dawson, Ashley Hutchinson and Stephen Wooldridge clocked an impressive 4:03.26 to launch their bid for Australia's first gold of the championships. Britain, who came third in the team event last year behind second-placed Germany, came a close second with France qualifying in third and New Zealand placing fourth. In the absence of a pursuit team from the hosts, who are the reigning Olympic
Leontien Zijlaard-Van Moorsel wasn’t sure what to think when she lined up against Katie Mactier to successfully defend her title in the women’s individual pursuit final at the world track cycling championships on Friday. “Before the world championships, I really had no idea who she was,” remarked Van Moorsel just before her start, “but you have to admit she’s riding really well, no?” Van Moorsel was by no means alone in the Stuttgart velodrome this week. As far as the track world is concerned, Mactier is a complete neophyte, having taken up the discipline only after encountering visa
Broadmark Capital’s Cameron Evans and Saturn’s Laura Van Gilder took the stage wins on Friday at the International-Tour de ’Toona, while Chris Baldwin (Navigators) and Lyne Bessette (Saturn) lead the overall standings. Baldwin assumed the race leadership when Saturn’s Nathan O’Neill couldn’t start the day’s stage, as a result of injuries suffered at the end of Thursday’s stage. On Friday, the men’s race saw an eight-man breakaway group form at the end of the first of four 20-mile circuits. Included in the group were Evans, Kris Hedges and Ian Dille of Snow Valley, Oscar Piñeda (7UP-Maxxis)
Leontien Zijlaard-Van Moorsel en route to gold
Franz Stocher gives Austrians a reason to cheer
Not your average bargain-basement concrete track, eh?
Russian rider Sergei Koudentsov has been ruled out of the world track championships here Thursday after an abnormal blood test. The 24-year-old, 11th in the men's 15km scratch race on the first day of the championships on Wednesday, was randomly tested by officials from the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) on Thursday. An abnormal hematocrit level - an indication, although not proof, that banned substances could have been used - means he was declared unfit to ride. The Russian may now have to submit a urine sample for testing for the banned endurance enhancer EPO
It's transfer season and there's been plenty of action in the days following the conclusion of the 2003 Tour de France. Here's a recap of some of the week's major contract extensions and transfers in the pro peloton: >> Transfer news: Mayo flavor of the month No less than seven teams are said to be in the bidding for Alpe d'Huez winner Iban Mayo, the most exciting Spanish rider to come through the ranks in years. Mayo's contract with Euskaltel-Euskadi runs out at the end of the 2003 season and there's a long list of foreign teams hoping to sign the 25-year-old rising star from Spain's
Britain's Bradley Wiggins will meet Australian Luke Roberts in the final of the men's individual pursuit Thursday at the world track cycling championships. Wiggins, 23, who set a blistering time of 4:17.34 in qualifying on Wednesday, sailed through his 16-lap heat against Russian Alexey Markov in 4:20.243 on Thursday. Meanwhile, Roberts booked his second consecutive championship final. The 26-year-old won silver last year in Copenhagen behind compatriot Bradley McGee, who is not competing. The winner of the prologue in this year's Tour de France is undergoing tests to determine the cause of
Looking for a moniker to attach to this year’s mountain-bike season. How about the summer of suffering? Like no campaign in recent memory, 2003 has served up injured riders in spades, ending promising seasons and tipping the power balances in several title chases. The most notable downfalls have been those of Americans Brian Lopes (broken ankle) and Alison Dunlap (separated shoulder), but others who’ve spent at least some time on the disabled list include Roland Green, Tara Llanes, John Waddell, April Lawyer and Dustin Adams. Green’s been back for a while now, and Lawyer and Llanes made
Looking for a moniker to attach to this year’s mountain-bike season. How about the summer of suffering? Like no campaign in recent memory, 2003 has served up injured riders in spades, ending promising seasons and tipping the power balances in several title chases. The most notable downfalls have been those of Americans Brian Lopes (broken ankle) and Alison Dunlap (separated shoulder), but others who’ve spent at least some time on the disabled list include Roland Green, Tara Llanes, John Waddell, April Lawyer and Dustin Adams. Green’s been back for a while now, and Lawyer and Llanes made
Bradley Wiggins got a bit of scare Thursday night in Stuttgart, but he had a plan, a schedule and a touch of confidence and held on to win the world individual pursuit title in a tighter than expected gold-medal final against Australian Luke Roberts. Wiggins, who had set the high mark in qualifying rounds and turned in the best time in the semi-final, said he enjoyed the role of being the favorite going into the final. “At least the others knew what they had to aim for,” Wiggins said of his impressive 4:17 he set on Wednesday. And aim is precisely what Roberts did, leading the 4000-meter
On Tuesday, Saturn’s Nathan O’Neill and Lyne Bessette took the day’s stage wins and moved into the overall leads at the International stage race in Altoona, Pennsylvania, displacing previous race leaders Chris Baldwin (Navigators) and Genevieve Jeanson (RONA-Esker). After a day of heavy attacking by Saturn and RONA, Bessette broke clear late in the race, soloing over the final climb and then powering her way to the race win, 34 seconds ahead of defending champion Heather Albert (Team Basis), with the main field of about 20 another nine seconds behind. After entering the day trailing Jeanson
The International race leader Nathan O’Neill crashed in the final few hundred meters of the Hollidaysburg circuit race on Thursday, resulting in a broken vertebra according to his team and taking the Australian Saturn rider out of the six-day stage race. O’Neill was tangled up in a crash that took down about a half dozen other riders and hit the ground head first. Although he would be credited with the same finishing time as the main pack and retain the overall lead at day’s end, O’Neill didn’t get up to cross the finish line, and was taken away in an ambulance. Up front, Navigators Burke
Britain's Bradley Wiggins claims gold in the pursuit
France's Laurent Gane outkicks the defending champ in the keirin
Natallia Tsylinskaya of Belarus defends her 500-meter crown
There's no rest for the weary Lance Armstrong. Two days after wrapping up a record-tying fifth straight Tour de France victory, cycling's top star won a 37-mile race in Graz, Austria. Armstrong finished the Altstad-Kriterium -- 55 laps on a course through the city -- in 1 hour, 34 minutes, 40 seconds. The 31-year- old Texan pulled away from the field on the 50th lap and edged Berhard Eisel for the victory. Copyright (c) 2003 Bell & Howell Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. All-star Vuelta shaping upAn all-star roster is shaping up for September's Vuelta a
Stefan Nimke spent a long and nerve-wracking spell in the “hot seat” Wednesday night as the 25-year-old German set an early standard in the men’s kilometer time trial at the 2003 world track championships in Stuttgart. Pounding out an impressive personal best of 1:01:225, Nimke thought that perhaps he stood a chance of making the podium “but not a gold medal with a field like this here, no.” But despite his early start and a field of serious contenders – including defending world champion Chris Hoy, three-time world champion Shane Kelly and the feared Frenchman Arnaud Tournant, the first
With a month's worth of Tour tech coverage tucked away, I feel obligated to adjust the spotlight back to the mountain bike. But before I get knee-deep in dirt donkey tech, I feel compelled to bring-up one remaining Tour question still rolling around in my head. If Chris King [headsets] is such a big supporter of U.S. Postal, why didn't Trek's TT bikes (there will be more photos run of Lance on his TT bike than on any other bike) have King headsets installed? Instead, the TT bikes sported the antiquated threaded 1-inch Shimano mountain-bike headsets. These headset have had their threads
Saturn’s Ina Teutenberg and Snow Valley’s Kris Hedges grabbed the stage wins at stage 2 of the International stage race in Pennsylvania, while RONA’s Geneviève Jeanson and Navigators Chris Baldwin retained the overall race leaders’ jerseys. With both RONA and Navigators riding to defend their race leaders, the men’s race saw several opportunists take advantage to break clear, while the women’s race came down to a field sprint at the end of the 74-mile day in Johnstown. The three-man breakaway in the men’s race contained Hedges, Webcor’s Marc Hagenlocher and 7UP-Maxxis’s Oscar Pineda. The
Italian Michele Bartoli (Fassa Bortolo) took the overall lead from France’s Stephane Berges (AG2R-Prevoyance) Wednesday by winning the third stage of Belgium’s Tour des Regions Wallonnes, a 200.3km run from Namur to Bouillon. Bartoli, 33, outkicked a group that had broken away on the last of eight climbs, including Ukrainian Yaroslav Popovych, Luxembourger Kim Kirschen (Fassa Bortolo) and Belgians Peter Farazijn (Cofidis), Jurgen Van Goolen (Quick Step-Davitamon) and Dave Bruylandts (Marlux-Wincor Nixdorf). Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Davitamon) took the bunch sprint at eight seconds back.
Franco Marvulli of Switzerland defended his men's 15km scratch title at the opening day of the world track cycling championships in Stuttgart, Germany. The 24-year-old Swiss won the inaugural scratch world title last year in Copenhagen. Meanwhile, Olga Slusareva of Russia won the women's 24km points title. Edita Kubelskiene of Lithuania came second with Yoanka Gonzalez of Cuba taking the bronze in the 22-lap race.
Just back from covering the fourth round of the NORBA NCS in Sandpoint, Idaho — an aptly named region — and I think I’ve finally cleaned the chalky silt out of my clothes, equipment and ears. Held at 4500 feet elevation in the quaint Schweitzer ski-resort village, pro and elite-level racers couldn’t have asked for much more in a venue: easily accessible race courses and lodging, live music, a welcoming community, beautiful vistas overlooking Lake Pend Oreille and perfect weather. Spokane-based Round and Round Productions has been hosting the NORBA regional championships at Schweitzer for
Meanwhile, back at the ranch
Meanwhile, back at the ranch
Stefan Nimke
Arnaud Tournant - 3rd overall
The podium
Franco Marvulli
Olga Slusareva
Derek Wilkerson (Hillenbrand Racing) chokes his way through the dust
Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood: Short track mind
Perry, in green shirt, with sign
It's like mountain cross, without the jumps and berms, and a whole lot longer
Eddy Merckx, rated the greatest cyclist ever, believes Lance Armstrong can surpass his record five Tour de France triumphs. Merckx, winner in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1974, told Le Parisien daily he would not even be surprised to see Armstrong win a seventh Tour. "He can win a sixth and, why not, a seventh Tour, if he concentrates solely on that one race," the Belgian said. "He knows how to prepare himself and with his drive and talent a sixth win is foreseeable. When you know how much he suffers in the heat you have to recognize how intelligently he raced this year." Armstrong lost
One of the great reasons to ride for the Cycling Center is the partnerships that Bernard has made with other Belgians in the cycling community here. One such person is Frans van Merke. Frans has fit many of the great Belgian professionals, including Nico Mattan, Frank Vandenbroucke, Axel Merckx and Tom Steels. Not too shabby a clientele, eh? And he is nice enough to work with us crazy Americans, with the weirdest equipment he has ever seen. Of course, if it isn’t Campy and isn't steel, well, it is just a little odd. I am poking fun at him a bit, but he definitely likes the most normal