Amber Neben Diary: Focused and driven toward London
Fresh off her selection to the U.S. Olympic team for London, Amber Neben checks in on overcoming adversity and leaving her ill-timed Beijing mechanical in China
Fresh off her selection to the U.S. Olympic team for London, Amber Neben checks in on overcoming adversity and leaving her ill-timed Beijing mechanical in China
Lotto brings four riders to help the Gorilla add to his 2011 Tour de France stage win
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Italian facing CONI meeting Tuesday when he arrives for pre-Olympic testing
Be transported to the Fort William course as Aaron Gwin's helmet cam shows you what it really feels like to be a World Cup downhiller
Mark Cavendish and Bradley Wiggins will focus their efforts on Tour de France preparations and not compete in their national championships
Dutch squad announces Tour nine, with Aussie sprinter getting his first shot at a Tour stage win
Images from the stage 6 Stillwater Criterium at the 2012 Nature Valley Grand Prix
Bradley Wiggins set a new mark for wins this spring, becoming the first rider to ever score a treble in the pre-Tour stage races
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1. Bruno LANGLOIS, in 3:05:58 2. Marsh COOPER, at :2 3. Matthias FRIEDEMANN, at :21 4. Christian MEIER, at :21 5. Evan OLIPHANT, at :21
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1. Christian Helmig, in 1.11:25 2. Eric Marcotte, in 1.11:26 3. Tyler Wren, in 1.11:26 4. Chris Uberti, in 1.11:29 5. Tanner Putt, in 1.11:36
UnitedHealthcare rider delivers after team chases down a late break
Industry veteran previously worked for BMC, Specialized and Schwinn-GT
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1. Mattia POZZO, in 2:47:10 2. Marco BENFATTO, at 0 3. Antonino PUCCIO, at 0 4. Mirko ULIVIERI, at 0 5. Michele VIOLA, at 0
World champion will now focus on green jersey in Paris and gold in London.
1. Tanel KANGERT, in 5:54:22 2. Jérémy ROY, at :2 3. Matteo MONTAGUTI, at :31 4. Robert KISERLOVSKI, at 1:46 5. Steven KRUIJSWIJK, at 1:46
U.S. national team rider finishes with the bunch in stage 9 to take the overall victory
Schleck tries to seize the lead in finale, but runs out of road as Kangert claims stage win
1. Vegard Stake LAENGEN, in 2:59:27 2. Russell HAMPTON, at 0 3. Liam HOLOHAN, at :2 4. Chad BEYER, at :2 5. Thomas RABOU, at :7
1. Alejandro Borrajo, in 3.40:02 2. Christiaan Kriek, in 3.40:02 3. Tommy Nankervis, in 3.40:02 4. Heath Blackgrove, in 3.40:02 5. Tom Zirbel, in 3.40:02
Zirbel makes break pay dividends as Specialized-Lululemon teammates surprise women's field
Olympic hopefuls join Tour riders Vande Velde and Zabriskie, plus top 'crosser Johnson, for an Allen Lim-style tuneup
1. Joe DOMBROSKI, in 5:24:42 2. Fabio ARU, at :43 3. Matteo DI SERAFINO, at 2:55 4. Matteo CIAVATTA, at 2:55 5. Pierre Paolo PENASA, at 3:20
1. Michael ALBASINI, in 3:45:39 2. Mikel NIEVE ITURALDE, at 1:15 3. Levi LEIPHEIMER, at 1:15 4. Frank SCHLECK, at 1:15 5. Robert GESINK, at 1:36
American wins atop Gavia to take pink jersey into final stage
Late move by Fränk Schleck and Levi Leipheimer put the two into second and third overall
John Murphy and Carmen Small keep their leaders' jerseys going into stage 5
1. Svein TUFT, CAN, in 27:08 2. Rory SUTHERLAND, UnitedHealthcare, at :30 3. Hugo HOULE, Spidertech-C10, at :46 4. Christian MEIER, CAN, at :55 5. Ryan ROTH, Spidertech-C10, at 1:10
Veteran happy to work with a young U.S. team in London, calls Kloden's comments on RadioShack's Tour selection unprofessional
Auto qualifying national champion laments, takes motivation from missing time trial roster for London
USA Cycling announces the final selections for the men's and women's road teams for the London Games
The strongest US riders to represent the US in London have been announced
The Fulcrum hoops responded as quickly as a 29" wheel ever has for me
RadioShack boss says he will cooperate with USADA investigation and has not participated in a doping program in his teams
In the debut of VeloLab, our tech team put four aero road bikes to the test. Get the results from the lab and the road
The messy business of reassigning Lance Armstrong's Tour titles
1. Fredrik Carl Wilhelm KESSIAKOFF, in 46:36 2. Fabian CANCELLARA, at :2 3. Maxime MONFORT, at :20 4. Jérémy ROY, at :25 5. Robert GESINK, at :27
Kessiakoff upends Cancellara as Costa keeps his GC lead in Switzerland
Officials attempt to shorten, ultimately call off Nature Valley GP third stage
Mavic unveiled its new aero wheelset, built as a complete system, this week
Schleck says he hasn't seen someone with as much fitness and drive as Wiggins in a long time
The doping investigation into Lance Armstrong could impact Olympic selections for London on Friday
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1. Matt COOKE, Exergy, in 4:12:32 2. Francisco MANCEBO PEREZ, Competitive Cyclist, at :7 3. Rory SUTHERLAND, UnitedHealthcare, at :7 4. Hugo HOULE, Spidertech-C10, at :10 5. Chris BUTLER, CSS, at :12
Nick Legan answers reader questions on a 30+ cassette for the new Dura-Ace, gearing for bike storage and more
Sports law attorney Michael McCann says embattled Tour champ unlikely to face federal charges in the wake of USADA's allegations
USADA v. Armstrong questions answered; cycling confronts elephant in the room; RadioShack could miss Tour; HoogerHeide to host ’cross worlds
Lenndard Zinn says this infinitely-adjustable ride avoided the usual drawbacks of a dropper post
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Lenndard Zinn says you'll forget about the price of the Kronolog dropper post for the infinitely-adjustable ride without the usual drawbacks
Slovak wins his fourth stage in six tries in Switzerland
1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, in 4:30:08 2. Ben SWIFT, Sky, at 0 3. Allan DAVIS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0 4. Michael ALBASINI, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0 5. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at 0
While embattled RadioShack-Nissan director goes quiet, Chris Horner may be back in the Tour de France
1. Carlos Alzate, in 1.15:42 2. Brad Huff, at s. t. 3. Alejandro Borrajo, at s. t. 4. Freddie Rodriguez, at s. t. 5. Eric Young, at s. t.
1. Tom Zirbel, in 15:56 2. John Murphy, at :4 3. Scott Zwizanski, at :6 4. Frank Pipp, at :10 5. Bobby Sweeting, at :14
Images from the Saint Paul Criterium at the 2012 Nature Valley Grand Prix
Carmen Small, Theresa Cliff-Ryan, Tom Zirbel and John Murphy were all stage winners on Wednesday in Saint Paul, Minnesota
Craig Lewis grabs his first individual professional win after breaking his leg at last year’s Giro d’Italia
Images from stage 1 of the 2012 Nature Valley Grand Prix
American won the mountain stage to Terminillo on Tuesday, but ceded the overall lead with a late flat two days before the decisive mountain stage
1. Craig LEWIS, CSS, in 4:05:07 2. James SPARLING, RAL, at :5 3. Alexander SEREBRYAKOV, Team Type 1-Sanofi, at :29 4. Matthias FRIEDEMANN, CSS, at :29 5. Serghei TVETCOV, Exergy, at :29
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Highlights of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency letter to Lance Armstrong, Johan Bruyneel and others