Money talks: Leipheimer will ditch the Postal colors for Rabobank in ’02.
Money talks: Leipheimer will ditch the Postal colors for Rabobank in '02.
Money talks: Leipheimer will ditch the Postal colors for Rabobank in '02.
The U.S. Postal Service team announced its 2002 roster on Wednesday, with seven new additions including Americans David Clinger, Floyd Landis and Chann McRae, along with Canada’s former Saturn rider Michael Barry. Other new faces on defending Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong’s squad are Belgian Tom Boonen, Italian Gianpaolo Mondini and Czech rider Pavel Padrnos. "I think we have put together a very well balanced group of new riders to the team, which wasn't an easy task after losing riders such as Viatcheslav Ekimov, Tyler Hamilton and Levi Leipheimer," said team director Johan
After two years of partnership, Zaxby's Franchising will not renew its sponsorship of the Zaxby's professional cycling team for the 2002 cycling season the team announced in a press release on Wednesday. The team is currently searching for a new title sponsor. According to the release, Zaxby's Franchising, a franchiser of chicken restaurants in the Southeast, decided to pull all sports sponsorships -- including sponsorships of its ASA racecar driver and several professional golfers -- in order to redirect that money toward television advertising. "Television is really a more
U.S. Postal Service announces 2002 squad
Italian sports doctor Michele Ferrari has been summoned to testify in front of the anti-doping panel of the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), the panel announced Monday. Ferrari, set to face doping-related allegations in a trial next month and the subject of a separate probe by Ferrara magistrates, has been asked to appear on November 21 after CONI received documents relating to the two cases. Ferrari, based in Ferrara and a pupil of another controversial physician Professor Francesco Conconi, has been the mentor of many leading cyclists including America's three-times Tour de France
Rabobank’s Sven Nijs outrode a strong group of the world’s best to win the third round of the Superprestige cyclo-cross series in Asper-Gavere, Belgium on Sunday. Nijs beat countryman Tom Vannoppen and Dutch champion Richard Groenendaal. Nijs powered through a tough course in Gavere as a member of a six-man lead group made up of five Belgians -- Nijs, Vannoppen, Bart Wellens, Mario Declercq and world champion Erwin Vervecken – as well as the Netherland’s Groenendaal. Nijs took advantage of his superior handling skills in the course’s technical sections and gradually built a small, but
It was another Saturn day in U.S. cyclo-cross on Saturday as Tim Johnson and Lyne Bessette scored wins in the elite events at Lancaster, Pennsylvania’s Chameleon cyclo-cross, another in the eastern seaboard’s large number of UCI-sanction ‘cross events. The course proved ideal for Bessette, a neophyte ‘crosser with a great road resume, as she took advantage of the long, open and largely flat course. Despite a handful of off-camber sections and a tough, but short, climb Bessette cruised to an easy win, almost as if she’d been taking on another road race. Bessette attacked right from the gun
After Gullickson rolled a tire, Johnson was pretty much on his own.
Gullickson came back from an unlucky start to take second.
Rookie? The only thing Bessette doesn't know about 'cross is losing.
Editor’s note: Following the court's first rejection of their lawsuit, Earnest and his co-plaintiffs advised attorney Andrew Rosen to offer to drop their right to an appeal if USAC would withdraw its claim against Earnest for nearly $3000 in copying costs. Rosen sent the letter on January 4, 2000Date: January 4, 2000To: Barton Enoch, via facsimile transmissionFrom: Andrew RosenRe: Earnest v. USA CyclingDear Mr. Enoch: I still have received no ruling on our objection to your Bill of Costs. However, in light of the final ruling on our motion for post-trial relief, the time clock on
USA Cycling and Les Earnest have been waging a legal battle ever since the governing body’s board of directors adopted a reorganization plan nearly three years ago. The lawsuit and appeal process have cost both sides a great deal of time and money and left the functional structure of the organization in limbo. But, according to documents recently acquired by VeloNews, that battle would have ended in January of 2000, had USA Cycling accepted a settlement offer forward by Earnest’s attorney.
Former Alessio and Mercury pro Nicklas Axelsson has been thrown of the Swedish team after admitting to "knowingly" using the banned endurance drug EPO during the world road championships in Lisbon last month. Axelsson, who was riding for the Italian Alessio team, tested positive for erythropoietin (EPO) on the last day of the October 9-14 championships where he finished 18th in the men's road race. The 29-year-old rider, whose career highlights were a third place in the Tour of Lombardy one-day race and sixth overall in last year's Tour of Italy, admitted to a Swedish newspaper
The U.S. chase for UCI cyclo-cross points returns to the mid-Atlantic region this weekend with Saturday’s Chameleon Cyclo-Cross Championship in Landisville, Pennsylvania. UCI points serve as the primary criteria for U.S. team selection to next February’s world cyclo-cross championships in Zolder, Belgium. Confirmed starters in the Men’s Elite field include reigning national champion Tim Johnson (Saturn), Jonathan Sundt (K2 Bike) and Adam Hodges Myerson (Bikereg.com). Other top riders expected to come in search of points include SuperCup National Series Champion - Marc Gullickson
Former 7-Eleven pro and Tour de France stage winner Jeff Pierce has been named USA Cycling’s vice president of athletics. Pierce will oversee competition, athlete development and coaching development programs, filling a position quite similar to that recently vacated by director of competition Sean Petty. The appointment and Petty’s recent shift to the post of vice president of marketing represent an organizational shift, with top-level administrators now responsible for the operations of all of USA Cycling’s road and mountain bike programs, rather than having separate directors for both the
The 13th year of the NORBA national championship series will feature two new locations. But two standbys are absent from the calendar, meaning for the second year in a row the series will consist of just five events. New for 2002 will be stops at Alpine Valley, Wisconsin, and Durango, Colorado. Gone will be Mammoth Mountain, California, and Deer Valley, Utah. Holdovers include Snowshoe, West Virginia, Mount Snow, Vermont and Big Bear Lake, California. According to a USA Cycling press release, Deer Valley was pulled from the lineup due to scheduling conflicts, while planned capitol
The International Mountain Bicycling Association is hoping to bring mountain biking advocacy leaders, top federal land managers and key representatives of other trail and conservation groups from around the world together at the organization’s 2002 Mountain Bike Advocacy Summit, near Moab, Utah, April 18-21, 2002. The summit scheduled to be held at the brand new Red Cliffs Adventure Lodge on the banks of the Colorado River in the majestic Castle Valley, 15 miles east of Moab. By bringing together a dynamic, diverse group for four days of workshops, panel discussions and brainstorming, IMBA
Peter Wedge (Kona) is proving to be unbeatable when it comes to the Canadian cyclo-cross national championships, having just won his fifth consecutive title on Sunday in Edmonton, Alberta. The New Brunswick rider, who rides for Sympatico.ca on the road and Kona off-road, rode away from the 32 strong field on the second lap, never to be seen again. Mountain bike pro Andreas Hestler (Rocky Mountain) battled all race with Carter Hovey (Bolla-Bianchi) for second place, finally pulling away in the last lap and a half of the 10-lap competition. Hovey took the bronze medal. The women’s event
World champion Erwin Vervecken won the second round of the Superprestige cyclo-cross series in Sint-Michielsgestel, the Netherlands, on Sunday, outsprinting fellow Belgian Sven Nijs at the finish. Vervecken and Nijs had broken clear of the rest of the field, which was led in by another Belgian, Bart Wellens, who won the opening round of the series in Ruddervoorde, Belgium, in October. In all, Belgians took the top seven places on Sunday, with Dutchman Gerben De Knegt the first non-Belgian finisher, taking eighth. With the win, Vervecken moved into a tie for the series lead with Wellens,
With no SuperCup races west of Chicago this year, a UCI race in Boulder, Colorado, on Saturday was the next best thing, and Mongoose’s Marc Gullickson and Kona-Voicestream’s Gina Hall came away with the big wins. The men’s race came down to the wire, as Gullickson had his hands full with another local favorite, Travis Brown (Trek-VW). Gullickson had just returned home to Boulder after three weeks on the East Coast for a SuperCup and some UCI races, while Brown had only done a handful of local races this fall. But when the dust cleared after the first half of the race, it was Brown hanging
Gullickson leads early.
Thomas leads Hall
Italian cyclist Massimo Strazzer and Spaniard Juan Llaneras are facing six-month bans from the sport after having returned “non-negative” EPO test results at the recent world track championships. Strazzer and Llaneras both returned the so-called "non-negative findings" from tests carried out in Antwerp, Belgium at the 2001 World Track Championships in which Llaneras won a silver medal in the Madison and Strazzer competed in the team pursuit. Currently both riders are considered innocent until the results of their “B samples” are released. If that confirms the finding of the first they will
According to an Associated Press report from earlier this week, French judicial officials have not found any evidence of doping in their ongoing investigation into the U.S. Postal Service team. The French investigators are testing blood and urine samples from the team from the 2000 Tour de France, the second of Lance Armstrong's three consecutive Tour wins. "For now, we don't have test results that prove that doping products have been taken," said Francois Franchi, the assistant to Paris prosecutor Sophie-Helene Chateau. The investigation began in November 2000, following
After highly successful seasons on both the men's and women's fronts, the team Saturn line-ups won't look much different for the 2002 season. The men's team will welcome three new riders -- Damon Kluck, Will Frischkorn and Jay Sweet -- while the women will add only one new face, 23-year-old Jessica Phillips. The men will see two departures this off-season, with Canadian Michael Barry heading to the U.S. Postal Service and Matt DeCanio joining Prime Alliance. In Kluck, 24, Frischkorn, 20, and Sweet, 26, Saturn will get an infusion of young talent on the men's side. Kluck
"In light of the overwhelming vote of the membership for Proposition A at the 2001 annual meeting, the Board of Directors believes it is necessary and appropriate to take steps to support that vote and the mandate of the members given the pending Wade litigation that seeks to invalidate the vote. Therefore, be it moved that the Board amend and restate the bylaws of USA Cycling in the form dated October 23, 2001, to become effective on January 1, 2002, should the Wade action result in the membership vote for Proposition A at the 2001 annual meeting being declared invalid or void, or an
The USA Cycling board of directors last week adopted a proposal designed to "protect the mandate," of votes cast in support of a reorganization plan approved recently by voters in a membership-wide election. The board approved a measure as a means of establishing a second method of implementing the recently passed "Proposition A," a proposal offered by USA Cycling Development foundation board member Mick Hellman. The board took the action in anticipation of the possible success of pending legal action by USCF members Bret Wade and Les Earnest. Contacted on Wednesday, Earnest said he had
When it comes to the collegiate national mountain bike championships, everybody is chasing the state of Colorado. A year ago it was the University of Colorado at Boulder and Mesa State College taking the Division I and II team titles. This time around Fort Lewis College and the U.S. Air Force Academy pulled off the sweep at the event which took place at Plattekill Mountain in Roxbury, New York, October 26-28. The 2001 championships marked the first time in its eight-year history that the event had come to the Northeast, but that didn’t stop hundreds of athletes from schools all over the U.S.
Klein Bicycle Corporation has announced that it will move its manufacturing operations from Chehalis, Washington, to the home base of its parent company Trek, in Waterloo, Wisconsin, in February of 2002. A news release issued on Tuesday stated that "the move is part of an overall Klein strategy to make the product line more competitive, reduce lead times to better serve customers and prepare for an exciting 2003 product line manufactured in Waterloo." According to the company, all Chehalis-based Klein employees will be offered similar positions with Trek while Klein founder and CEO Gary
USA Cycling competition director Sean Petty has been named as the governing body’s new vice president of marketing, filling a position similar to that recently vacated by Mary Monroe. Monroe resigned as USA Cycling’s chief marketing officer two weeks ago. Chief operating officer Steve Johnson said Petty’s appointment represents an internal restructuring in which the organization will no longer rely on executive directors overseeing the operations of affiliated organizations like the U.S. Cycling Federation and NORBA. NORBA director Leslie Klein was fired in April and USCF director Evan
The Fort Lewis team.
BASSANO, Italy — It is Monday morning and I’m still too drowsy to fully engage in the level of excitement with which my Italian work mates face the most mundane of activities. Our PR guy Marco mentions some event that evening hosted by Ciclismo magazine and so I somewhat reluctantly volunteer to go along, thinking it will be good to show my face and help schmooze some free press. I didn’t really understand exactly what we were going to, but figured it would be good for the company. My first clue was as we were leaving and he said "you’re going to wear that?" We arrive at an auditorium and
Austrian cyclist Peter Wrolich will set his sights on the 2002 Tour de France after winning Australia's Herald Sun Tour Melbourne, Australia on Sunday. Wrolich, 27, secured his first win in the 11-day race around the state of Victoria with a 15th place in Sunday's 44-kilometer street event on the Geelong waterfront. American Dave McCook won the 44km criterium. Wrolich said his regular European employer, German squad Gerolsteiner, is re-organizing over the northern winter and will try to gain a start in next year's Tour, where Wrolich aims to be a competitor. Wrolich took over the yellow
Giro d'Italia overall champion Gilberto Simoni's spurt at the end of the penultimate lap in steady rains brought him his first victory at the Japan Cup cycling road race Utsunomiya, Japan on Sunday. The 28-year-old Italian covered the 11 laps of the 14.1-kilometer course over the 151.3km race in 4:16:58, beating Australian Cadel Evans, who took second and Christophe Brandt of Belgium, who was third. Evans and Brandt both timed 4:17:49 in a photo finish. "It was a surprise victory for me, because I hadn't expected to win," Simoni said. "I'm glad I was able to show my good performance in
The top North American cyclo-cross racers were in Amherst, Massachusetts on Saturday for Round 3 of the Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series in search of UCI points, which will be used for U.S. world’s team selection. In the men’s elite race, an early attack saw Mark McCormack and Tim Johnson of Saturn joined by Marc Gullickson (Mongoose-Hyundai) break clear of the field on the University of Massachusetts at Amherst campus. For those in attendance last year,it was a familiar sight watching Gullickson take on the two Saturn riders. However, things didn’t go according to plan
Mark McCormack wins at Amherst.
Marc Gullickson and Mark McCormack rode together until McCormack's last-lap surge.
Fourth-place finisher Todd Wells shows his mountain biking skills.
Lyne Bessette dominated the women's field again.
Carmen D'Aluisio and Ann Grande battled with Gina Hall for the remaining podium spots
Police raided the headquarters of the Italian cycling federation in Rome on Saturday in connection with an ongoing probe into doping in the sport, judicial sources said. Detectives seized documents relating to disciplinary measures taken by the federation against nine Italian riders, including Dario Frigo and Daniele De Paoli. Both riders were suspended for six months by the Italian federation's disciplinary commission following the highly publicized police raids at this year's Giro d’Italia in June. Frigo was immediately fired by his Fassa Bartolo team. Frigo and De Paoli's bans
Reigning world cross-country champion Alison Dunlap was at the VeloSwap in Denver, Colorado, on Saturday, hawking some old gear and signing autographs. In the midst of the swap madness Dunlap informed VeloNews that her rumored deal with Team Luna Chix is now a done deal. Dunlap added that former GT teammate Kelli Emmett will also be flying the Luna colors in 2002. The pair will join downhiller Marla Streb, who signed on earlier this fall. The Luna team is a new-for-2002 women’s only outfit, that plans to focus attention on women’s specific issues such as breast cancer. Others spotted at the
French cyclist Stephane Barthe will be the sole French rider in Lance Armstrong's US Postal team as of next year, following the departure of Cedric Vasseur. The 28-year-old Barthe, the 1997 French champion, has been retained in the American team as they make preparations for a fourth consecutive Tour de France title. Armstrong has led the team to victory in the past three editions of the world's biggest bike race. Barthe was largely missing from action in 2001 having fractured his forearm at the start of May in the Four Days of Dunkirk race. Copyright AFP 2001
We'll never forget the last time the Tour de France started in Luxembourg, in 1989. Going into the race, defending champion Pedro Delgado of Spain was the race favorite. That tag soon disappeared. Delgado, incomprehensibly, showed up late for his prologue time trial start. Two minutes and 40 seconds late! The next day, still in Luxembourg, Delgado bonked in the team time trial stage. His Reynolds teammates had to wait for him, and they finished dead last, losing almost five minutes. So, after two days of racing, the Spanish hero was 7:20 down on the new race favorite, Laurent Fignon.
French cyclist Richard Virenque has signed a two-year extension to ride for Belgian team Domo-Farm Frites. "I am happy to continue with this team in as much as none of the French teams made a move for me and that is sad," Virenque told the French wire service AFP. The 31-year-old Virenque returned to racing on August 15 after purging a nine month suspension for taking illegal performance-enhancing drugs. One of the most popular cyclists in France, Virenque was shunned by his home teams and eventually signed a three-month contract with Domo-Farm Frites. Wearing Domo colors, he made a
Personalities present at Thursday Tour presentation in Paris had a generally favorable impression of the race’s 2002 route. Here’s what some of them told the reporters for the Agence-France-Presse. Marco Pantani (Mercatone Uno, 1998 winner): "It seems to be a well-balanced Tour. It’d be necessary to be vigilant in the Pyrénées. Then, the time differences for the podium could be made on the Ventoux. The stage to La Plagne is the one that pleases me the most." Richard Virenque (Domo-Farm Frites, five-time KoM): "I’m in a hurry to be in the month of July, for sure, the Tour de France being my
Giro d’Italia champion Gilberto, who will race for the Saeco team next year, is confident that he has what it takes to deny Lance Armstrong what would be his fourth consecutive victory in the Tour de France. "I have had a look at the route for the 2002 Tour and I like it," said Simoni on Thursday, speaking via the Internet from Japan. "Assuming I am racing [the Tour], I will certainly have a chance of winning it. I am stronger than Armstrong on the climbs." The Italian’s main problem will be getting to the start line, as Saeco is not one of the 16 automatic team selections. Even so, he went
A look at Tour 2002: Shorter but tougher
According to a report in the Danish newspaper Extra Bladet, three-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong called Dr. Michele Ferrari during a stage of the 2000 Tour. In an interview with the paper, Ferrari, who is suspected of having distributed and administered doping substances to athletes, said Armstrong telephoned him during the stage from Courcheval, which saw an attack by Italian Marco Pantani. Ferrari's trial in Italy, a country where sports doping is a criminal offense, resumes December 12. Ferrari said, "Pantani's attack took place a good distance from the finish and I
The domestic cyclo-cross season continues Saturday, October 27, at the Amherst International, a selection race for the U.S. team that will compete in the world championships in Zolder, Belgium. The Amherst race will also crown the 2001 North Atlantic regional champions. A UCI category 3 race, Amherst International is the third leg of the seven-race Verge New England Cyclo-Cross Series and will pay out $3500 in prize money. The event began 11 years ago as a University of Massachusetts dorm-room project by then-student Adam Hodges Myerson, who is still promoting the race today. National
An Italian court of appeals has overturned Marco Pantani’s recent conviction for sporting fraud on the grounds that he was convicted for using drugs in 1995, when the practice was not yet illegal in Italy. The court did not dispute the original facts of the case. Pantani had been sentenced to a suspended three-month prison term for doping-related allegations surrounding a race in 1995 but on Tuesday the court ruled that 'the deed was not enshrined in law as an offence.' Pantani had been admitted to hospital after crashing during the 1995 Milan-Turin classic and medical tests revealed the
Damon Phinney died peacefully at Boulder County Hospice on Sunday, October 21, after a 15-year struggle with metastatic prostate cancer. He was 73. Phinney was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts with roots going back to the earliest times in New England. Both grandfathers were sea captains. He graduated magna cum laude from the University of Massachusetts with a degree in mechanical engineering in 1951 and worked five years for Westinghouse, 10 years for Sundstrand Aviation in Denver, and more than 30 years for Ball Aerospace.
The U.S. cyclo-cross scene continues to heat up, as an important month of racing on the East Coast continued over the weekend, with the Monkey Hill Cyclo-Cross race in Wilmington, Delaware, on Sunday. After the departure of world champion Erwin Vervecken, who dominated last weekend’s SuperCup-ECV doubleheader, the men’s race was wide open at Monkey Hill, with a national-level field assembled for the UCI race. Meanwhile, in the women’s race, Saturn’s Lyne Bessette remained undefeated in her first season of cyclo-cross. With the downsizing of the SuperCup series, other UCI-sanctioned domestic
Kona-VoiceStream’s Bart Bowen will be out of action for 12 weeks following a broken femur at the Monkey Hill Cyclo-Cross race. Bowen crashed on the second lap of the race, landing hard on a pavement section of the course. According to his team, the break in his bone occurred 4 inches below the head of his femur and will require surgery to insert a steel rod into his leg. In a team release, Bowen said, "It’s amazing how fast it happened. One minute you’re having a blast and the next your whole world is upside down." The injury effectively ends Bowen’s cyclo-cross season, as the national
The European Superprestige cyclo-cross series opened in Ruddervoorde, Belgium, on Sunday, with former world under-23 champion Bart Wellens taking the first series lead. Wellens scored a solo win in Ruddervoorde, 59 seconds ahead of runner-up Sven Nijs. World champion Erwin Vervecken, back from his trip to the U.S., was third, another 11 seconds back, while defending Superprestige champion Richard Groenendaal was fourth. The second round of the Superprestige series will take place November 4, in St. Michielsgestel, the Netherlands.
Giro d’Italia winner Gilberto Simoni will ride for the Italian Saeco team next season, the team announced on Monday. Simoni signed a two-year contract with the team and will join Tour of Lombardy winner Danilo Di Luca, whose transer from Cantina Tollo was announced several weeks ago. In other team news, Fassa Bortolo announced that it has added former world time trial champion Sergei Gontchar, up-and-coming Swiss-American rider Sven Montgomery and Italian Giani Faresin for the 2002 season.
Bowen before his crash.
Gully makes his way to the win.
The unbeatable Besette.
Going up at Monkey Hill.
Not everyone came to race, but the ones who did gave the crowd in downtown Miami plenty to cheer about at the final stop of the Pro Cycling Tour on Sunday. In the men’s race in was recent Prime Alliance addition Chris Horner getting to the line first in the 85-minute, plus five laps criterium that snaked its way around a 1.4-mile circuit in the shadow of the city’s skyscrapers. The event was originally slated to run 90 minutes, but when CycleScience’s Joel Chavez crashed hard into a barrier near the end of the first lap and had to be taken to the hospital, the race was neutralized, then
Only Horner and Carney were around at the finish.
The break left early and never came back.
Hincapie was in street clothes long before the race was over.
Klasna shows off his new hardware.
The women's sprint finish was a close as it can get.
Your women's winner.
Italian Danilo Di Luca of the Cantina Tollo team dominated a sprint finish to win the 95th edition of the Tour of Lombardy, the final event in the 2001 UCI World Cup road series. On-form Dutchman Erik Dekker lifted the World Cup trophy after finishing 13th in the 10th and final event. The 25-year-old Di Luca, an up-and-coming professional who was beaten by a whisker here two years ago, made sure of victory this time as he completed the rain-soaked 258km ride from Varese to Bergamo. He held off fellow escapees Giuliano Figueras (Panaria) and Michael Boogerd (Rabobank), who finished second
Di Luca attacks.
Di Luca took Figueras at the line.
Dekker (left) lifted the World Cup, while Vainsteins finished third overall.
Former women's world road race champion Zinaida Stahurskaia of Belarus has been handed a four-month, off-season suspension by cycling's world governing body UCI Friday after failing a dope test in June. The ban from the International Cycling Union (UCI) was confirmed by officials from the Belarus cycling federation in Minsk on Friday. The 30-year-old Stahurskaia, who tested positive for a banned diuretic in the women's Tour of Italy, was banned from defending her title at the world road race championships in Lisbon, Portugal, last month in accordance with UCI
Nico Mattan of Cofidis won the Tour of Piedmont in northern Italy on Thursday after all but 17 riders were declassed for falling too far behind in the 190km race. Mattan was one of the instigators of the decisive breakaway, which began just 20km into the race. The leaders quickly began to build up their lead, until it exceeded 17 minutes. At the 135km mark, the lead had reached 17:40, prompting the rare decision from the race directors to force the peloton out of the race. The race directors said there was no justification for the passivity of the main field, and that they had to open parts
Italian Mirko Celestino (Saeco) won the 86th edition of Milan-Turin in Italy on Wednesday, as the European pro peloton prepared for the final World Cup classic of the year, Saturday’s Tour of Lombardy. Last year’s Milan-Turin was cancelled due to floods in northern Italy, but this year, Celestino won the 203km one-day classic, outsprinting Niki Aebersold (Coast) and Eddy Mazzoleni (Tacconi-Vini Caldirola) at the finish, after a lead group of nine went off the front on the final difficult climb, the Superga. Celestino won two World Cup races in 1999, the HEW Cyclassic and the Tour of