Cultural dancers in horse outfits
Cultural dancers in horse outfits
Cultural dancers in horse outfits
The longest finish straight, just under 2 kilometers
TV and a photo bike covering the break
Soigniers tell stories while waiting 20 minutes for the field to finish
Landis cooling off at finish
Postal at the helm
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Gracia heads to the win.
Mountain biking has made it to billboard status in Whistler.
To see how Stage 9 of the Tour unfolded live, just go to our Live Update window and follow the action all the way to the finish.
If this year's Tour de France hasn't been exciting enough already, Monday's 184.5km stage 9 through the scorched French Alps proved yet again that there's never a dull day at the Tour. Tragically, last year's runner-up Joseba Beloki crashed out of the race in a high-speed spill with just 4km to go, while four-time defending champion Lance Armstrong had to test his cyclo-cross skills when he bounced through a hay field to avoid the fallen Beloki. When he crashed, Beloki was leading Armstrong in hot pursuit of Telekom's Alexandre Vinokourov, who was heading toward a famous stage win in Gap.
Stage 9 Individual Results1. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, 5:02:002. Paolo Bettini (I), Quick Step-Davitamon, 00:363. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:364. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 00:365. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, 00:366. Ivan Basso (I), Fassa Bortolo, 00:367. Georg Totschnig (A), Gerolsteiner, 00:368. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, 00:369. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:3610. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, 00:3611. Roberto Laiseka (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:3612. Didier Rous (F), Brioches La Boulangere, 00:5213. Denis Menchov (Rus),
After three races of the International Cycling Classic-Superweek, Saturn’s Viktor Rapinski holds the overall series lead over former Superweek champion Harm Jansen. The 17-day event kicked off in Chicago on Friday evening with Prime Alliance’s Jonas Carney taking the win over Rapinski. The following evening Jansen took a solo win in Menasha, Wisconsin, and on Sunday, West Virginia’s Patrick O’Donnell scored a surprise win in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, winning out of a six-man break ahead of Belgian Karel Vereecke (Soenens-Germond) and Jansen. Check back to VeloNews.com over the next two weeks for
Four-time champion Lance Armstrong avoided being fined or punished for his dramatic detour through a field to avoid crashing into fallen rival Joseba Beloki near the end of the Tour de France ninth stage Monday. A race jury determined that Armstrong was deemed not to have benefited from his impromptu change of direction. "Beloki's fall led Armstrong to take evasive action, leading him into a field which he left without gaining any advantage on the group of riders he had been with," said an organizers' statement. Meanwhile, the jury fined several other riders for infractions that occurred
It's my second day here at the Tour and the team product news keeps streaming in, but first, something of a personal look at today's big event. By now, you've all seen (or read about) Joseba Beloki's nasty spill, just four kilometers from today's finish. As the VeloNews crew made its way to the arrive in Gap, two hours in front of the peloton, we noticed the hot road (37 degree centigrade air temp) had begun to "weep" oil in sections where recent road repairs had been made. The highly heated road was so slick that it made even the handling of our Volkswagen Passat a bit tenuous in
Today's photo gallery is a little different, due to a slight misunderstanding between the race committee and me. As a result of said misunderstanding, today’s photos are all from the perspective of the fan, outside the race itself… which is precisely where I found myself for today's stage. Let me explainYou see, the Tour de France has very strict rules about the movement of journalists and photographers during the race, designed to protect the safety and integrity of the riders and the race. Unfortunately, I found myself violating the primary rule for those of us not in the race; Don't get
Stage 1 of Superweek was held in the South Chicago suburb of Beverly. The race was scheduled for 5:35 p.m. on Friday evening. All the athletes enjoyed an authentic taste of Chicago, being treated to several fun-filled hours of bumper to bumper traffic. Everything got off to a late start though, and nobody seemed to miss the start. It was the first year for the stage in Beverly, but surprisingly the crowd was great. Prior to our race, they had a Big Wheel race for the kids, which is always cool. There was also live music and food adjacent to the racecourse. All the fans seemed super excited
The Alps … what an experience they were. And the people. I have never ever ridden through so many crowds. Whatever happens, it is an experience I will never forget. With them behind us now, I’ll have a bit of time to reflect back on the experience; well, that is until the Pyrénées come under our wheel and the road goes painfully up again. Today’s stage was hard, hot and hurt as the result sheet shows (I was 78th at 15:38, along with 13 others). This time I couldn’t finish with the leaders, as I did on stage seven where I was fourth, or even as I did in stage eight where I hit the last climb
Bumped into 1987 Tour de France winner Stephen Roche the other day. Literally. But as anyone who has followed the Tour will tell you, as the race gets bigger and bigger and more congested along the way, bumping into people is what you do. Forget meeting them. Doing so with Roche was a good thing. Our subsequent chat brought back a lot of fond memories. We spoke of his great races and tigerísh spirit to racing. We spoke of 1987, the year of his triple crown — victory in the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France and the world professional road championship (at Villach, Austria). We spoke and spoke
More than anything, I wish the biggest story of the day was AlexanderVinokorouv’s victorious attack in the closing kilometers of Stage 9. Instead,our attention was once again drawn to the dangers of racing bicycles, thistime illustrated by Joseba Beloki’s brutal crash on the final descent ofthe day.No one really knows what happened first, whether his rear tire blewor slipped in melted asphalt, but the result was quick and painful. Belokifought to stay upright, his wheels dug into the soft pavement, and he wasthrown violently to the ground. Early reports indicate the impact brokethe upper
Two days removed from the World Cup downhill at Grouse Mountain, just outside Vancouver, British Columbia, a handful of the circuit’s best gravity riders made the two-hour trip north up Highway 99 to Whistler to contest a pair of races at the famous ski resort. First up was Monday’s Joyride BikerCross (same concept as mountain cross and/or four-cross), where Frenchman Cédric Gracia and American Jill Kintner earned wins on the track that snaked its way towards the main village underneath the Fitzsimmons chairlift. In the men’s final, Gracia (Siemens-Cannondale) grabbed the lead early, then
Armstrong is forced off the road as Beloki crashed
Vino' now in second overall
Armstrong puts on 'cross demo' for a startled spectator
Prince Albert of Monaco talks with five time Tour winner Bernard Hinault
Beloki before the start
Millar was on the attack before Vino charged
Armstrong's pedal sports the new 2004 Dura-Ace anodization...
...but not the larger contact platform of the final production version.
L'Alpe d'Huez is just as steep going down as it is going up
Stage 9 Tech Talk: Hot tar, sticky brakes and Lance's daily driver
Stage 9 Tech Talk: Hot tar, sticky brakes and Lance's daily driver
Armstrong, Ullrich and Basso finish
Virenque celebrates the climber's jersey with Laurent Jalabert
Stage 9 Tech Talk: Hot tar, sticky brakes and Lance's daily driver
On the Col d'Izoard
Jaksche was a big factor all day.
Up the Côte de la Rochette - moments before Beloki's crash
Armstrong knows better than anyone that this race is far from over
Riding with Richard
Gracia grapples with his new trophy.
It’s a name that’s synonymous with the Tour de France: L’Alpe d’Huez. The numbers are well known — 13.8km long, 21 switchbacks, 7.9 percent average grade — but they can’t begin to tell the story of the fabled climb. It has become to cycling what Kitzbühel is to ski racing, or Monaco to Formula 1. So when planning the course of this centennial Tour, it was clear that L’Alpe d’Huez had to be one of the “must” stage finishes. The Alpe wasn’t included in the Tour’s itinerary until 1952, so it has been featured only 21 times (this year will make it 22) in the event’s 89 editions. Although that
This is the third straight 200km-plus stage, and the most challenging yet. All the action will be in the final 100km. That’s when the race reaches the foot of the Col du Télégraphe, which is the start of 30km of uphill work (other than one brief downhill) to the 2645-meter (8697-foot) summit of the Col du Galibier, the high point of the 2003 Tour. This northern approach is unrelenting, and usually sees the peloton reduced to a handful of riders, especially if the weather is cold or wet. There will surely be some sort of regrouping on the 40km-long descent, but then comes the infamous 13.8km
This is an unusual mountain stage, with the longer climbs at the start, and two shorter uphills near the end. The Col d’Izoard is one of the Tour’s mythical climbs, but much of the peloton will regroup in the 64km before the next hill. The long, steep Izoard descent, followed by a snaking road down a canyon, gives an opportunity for a breakaway to establish itself. A beautifulroad alongside (and across) the Serre-Ponçon lake — the largest reservoir in Europe — precedes the last two uphills: St. Appolinaire (28.5km from the finish) and La Rochette (8km from the line). They are long enough
Since the 2003 Tour route was released in December, Sunday's stage 8 over the Télégraphe and Galibier climbs and up the 21 famed switchbacks of Alpe d'Huez had all the makings of a classic. Well, it certainly lived up to expectations. More than 400,000 fans lined the twisting, 14km final climb to Alpe d'Huez and enjoyed one of the most spectacular and exciting Tour stages in years. Iban Mayo (Euskaltel) delivered on his promise to win a Tour stage and shot away from a lead group of favorites with just over 7km to go and held on for the biggest win of his career. Lance Armstrong surged
Stage 8 Individual Results1. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 5:57:302. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, 01:453. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 02:124. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, 02:125. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 02:126. Joseba Beloki (Sp), ONCE - Eroski, 02:127. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, 02:128. Ivan Basso (I), Fassa Bortolo, 02:129. Roberto Laiseka (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 02:1210. Pietro Caucchioli (I), Alessio, 03:3611. Christophe Moreau (F), Credit Agricole, 03:3612. Roberto Heras (Sp), U.S. Postal Service, 03:3613. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi,
Well, my pre-race top-five predictions aren't all doing so hot, so I fear that I may not be the wise sage I claim to be. However, one thing that I predicted that is definitely coming true is that Lance Armstrong is really having to fight for dominance this year. As I've said before, I think Armstrong will win this Tour de France, but I think it's going to be his toughest win ever. Today was an obvious example of that, since in the Alpe d’Huez stage in 2001, Lance just killed everyone, and buried the race on the first mountain day. Today, many men still have realistic hope of taking a
When the Tour de France visited L’Alpe d’Huez two years ago, Lance Armstrong destroyed his opposition by a two–minute margin and virtually put his third Tour win on ice. That’s far from the case this year. In Sunday’s spectacular alpine stage, the defending champion was attacked from all quarters and it was the Texan who conceded the two minutes to an explosive Iban Mayo — the 25-year-old Euskaltel-Euskadi rider who already pushed Armstrong to the limit in taking second place at last month’s Dauphiné Libéré. You could say that Armstrong and his U.S. Postal-Berry Floor team were
Lance Armstrong loves to win, but he knows it is better to concede some battles in the effort to win the war. When he has a great day, Lance can leave everyone behind with one hard attack, but today wasn’t great and it became clear to him early on in the Alp d’Huez climb that the best strategy was to ride defensively. Lance went into Stage 8 intending to attack on Alp d’Huez and put as much time as possible into his main rivals for the yellow jersey. The US Postal Service set him up perfectly to do just that, setting a blistering pace up the initial slopes of the mountain. Their efforts
This was the one everyone was waiting for. At 219km, the stage from Sallanches to L'alpe D’huez was the fourth longest of this Tour, but it was, by a long stretch, the toughest so far. Of the five climbs, two are among the toughest (and most famous) in the world: the hors categorie 2645-meter Col du Galibier (the highest point of the entire race) and the much-feared 1850-meter L' Alpe d'Huez. To take on a day like this, both riders and their equipment needed to be ready for the seemingly endless climbs as well as heart-stopping descents. Here's a look at some of the equipment the riders
It’s one of the most overused adjectives when it comes to mountain-bike racing, but in this case “epic” really did apply. With heavy rain moving in and out all day, and a legitimately tough course serving as the stage, the fourth stop of the UCI World Cup concluded with a pair of cross-country races that produced enough drama to fill a week of daytime television. When it was all done, the day’s heroes were Norwegian Gunn-Rita Dahle and Belgian Roel Paulissen, each taking World Cup victories after spending full days at the front. For Paulissen, the win was a long time coming, erasing his name
A great injustice has occurred on the Tour de France and not a soul has stood up to make a point of it. By doing so now, I’ll probably find out why lips have remained tight. Basically, Tour history has stiffed the person who should be credited with founding the Tour. And it took today’s stage 8 from Sallanches to L’Alpe d’Huez to highlight that omission. As the stage passed the 2654-meter summit of the Galibier after 157km and we began the long descent, looking to the right we saw the massive stone monument dedicated to Henri Desgrange. Known as H.D (pronounced “ash-day” in French) to his