Leipheimer’s bike on Thursday — illegal.
Leipheimer’s bike on Thursday — illegal.
Leipheimer’s bike on Thursday — illegal.
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
This guy on the rooftop was not photographing cyclists, a reminder of what else is in the news in London this week.
Pre-prologue rule 'clarification' sends mechanics scrambling
Prologue - London, 7.9km
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
A young fan waves a flag in support of
Gusev’s bike had yet to be changed and was still illegal, as Discovery mechanics interpreted the rule.
No yellow jersey, no No.1, but Pereiro will be the last out of the start house on Saturday
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Cadel Evans rolls onto the stage to big cheers. Aussies very popular here.
The UCI’s bike schematics that supposedly help clarify the TT position problems.
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Prudhomme and Mayor Livingstone in front of the London banner.
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Discovery Channel team on stage.
COURSE: The prologue starts in theheart of London, goes past Downing Street (residence of Britain’s PrimeMinister), the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey to BuckinghamPalace (residence of Queen Elizabeth II). The course then climbs Constitution Hill, passes through Wellington Arch and loops around The Serpentine, a lake in Hyde Park, before heading back downhill to the Victoria Memorial and to the finish on The Mall, London’s grandest avenue, with Buckingham Palace as the backdrop. HISTORY: This is the first timethat the Tour has started in London, although the race has visited
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
The Sherlock Holmes pub just outside Trafalgar Square is rocking, just a half block from the opening ceremonies.
Enrico Degano – an Italian on the Barloworld wild-card team – will be the first rider out of the gate in Saturday’s prologue start to the 94th Tour de France. Degano will role down the start ramp at 3 p.m. London time in the 7.9km course through the heart of downtown London past such landmarks as Big Ben, Westminster Abbey and Buckingham Palace. The 189-rider start list was released Friday ahead of the traditional prologue, with last year’s runner-up, Oscar Pereiro, starting last at 6:08 p.m. Pereiro snagged the No. 11 start bib after Tour officials decided to not award the traditional No.
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
The sun is finally out on the River Thames, and it looks great!
Predictor-Lotto’s Cadel Evans and T-Mobile's Michael Rogers are leading a two-pronged Aussie bid for top finishes in the race's general classification, with Evans considered the best bet for success. The soft-spoken former mountain biker last year became Australia's highest-ever overall finisher when he came in fifth overall. Rogers placed a respectable 10th - although both he and Evans could be moved up a notch if American champion Floyd Landis is eventually disqualified for doping following his positive test for a skewed testosterone-epitestosterone ratio. In the meantime,
Pereiro will start with bib No. 11
The smiles quickly faded as reporters continued to ask doping questions.
Negotiating the trash trail
Shimano’s prototype carbon crank.
This prototype lever displays the refined DoubleTap mechanism.
A close look at Shimano’s prototype crank reveals and aluminum spider.
The back of the new Red cassette prototype.
Before, Specialized’s 2006-7 Transition.
The front of the Red cassette prototype.
After, Specialized’s 2008 Transition.
Vinokourov had a tough press conference on Thursday
A pile o’ time-trial wheels.
Leipheimer says he's ready
Before, plenty of work.
Both men say that Astana poses a big challenge
After, and ready to go.
Bruyneel would like to get back to winning the Tour.
CSC director Bjarne Riis announced on Thursday he will not be present to follow his riders during this year's Tour. In May the 43-year-old Dane admitted to doping during his career, notably during his 1996 Tour de France victory. He was subsequently stripped of the title last month by Tour officials. Riis took the decision to sit out the Tour following criticism by former German CSC rider Jorg Jaksche during an interview with German newspaper Der Spiegel. Jaksche told Der Spiegel he used performance enhancing drugs during his spell with the CSC team in 2004 and that the Danish
Freire is plagued by an old problem.
Boonen is more relaxed - and a little more humble - going into this year's Tour.
Perhaps no team enters the Tour de France with as much potential in the race’s four jersey competitions as the Netherlands’ Rabobank squad. With defending two-time King of the Mountains Michael Rasmussen, Russian GC contender Denis Menchov, Spanish sprint star Óscar Freire Gómez and the emerging 22-year-old Thomas Dekker, the team brings riders capable of winning each of the race’s esteemed competitions. Winning more than one jersey is unlikely for Rabobank, however. Menchov, who finished sixth last year, doesn’t top anyone’s list of GC favorites, and at the team’s pre-race medical check
Rasmussen is ready to climb
It was such a nice day, some even forgot it was a bike race...
In his 13th year as a professional, Ag2r-Prevoyance rider Christophe Moreau said Thursday he thinks he can do something he’s never done at the Tour de France — finish on the podium. Though he’s no stranger to the Tour’s top 10 (he was fourth in 2000, and has twice finished eighth), Moreau has never reached the final podium in Paris. But after dominating the Dauphiné Libéré in June, and more recently winning the French national championship, the 36-year-old Moreau has reason to think this year might be different. In the 12 times he has arrived to the start of the Tour, it’s the most serene
Dekker is here for the experience.
...well, at least until the climbing started.
Alessandro Petacchi, charged with doping by the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), will learn his fate on July 24. The 33-year-old sprinter will be handed his punishment by the disciplinary commission of the Italian Cycling Federation (FCI). CONI's anti-doping prosecutor Ettore Torri, who charged Petacchi with doping on Wednesday, has requested the FCI ban him from cycling for a year. Petacchi, who had been provisionally suspended by his Milram team last week, has been replaced by Ukrainian Andriy Grivko for the Tour de France, which gets underway in London on Saturday. Petacchi tested
Rasmussen took the climber's jersey at the '06 Tour after his win at La Toussuire
Many options
If Alexandre Vinokourov expected an easy ride during Thursday’s press conference, he was in for something of a shock. The Tour’s red-hot favorite bristled under repeated questions from testy journalists who queried him about his relationship with Dr. Michele Ferrari, the infamous prepatori who helped Lance Armstrong win seven straight Tour de France victories. “I started to work with (Ferrari) in 2005. He’s my physical trainer. I have worked hard. I have done nothing banned,” a defensive Vinokourov said. “I only work with him in training programs. I work with the team doctors with questions
Moreau rode brilliantly to take the Ventoux stage at this year's Dauphiné.
Trevor Linden
A determined and confident Levi Leipheimer confronts the start of the 2007 Tour de France with new motivation after rejoining the American team Discovery Channel following a five-year run with foreign teams. Leipheimer, 33, lines up Saturday in London as the top American hope for the final podium when the Tour ends July 29 in Paris. “I think I am coming into this Tour a little fresher and a little off my best form. Last year, I was too good too early,” Leipheimer told the assembled media Thursday evening. “This year, I’ve tried to push that back because the end of the Tour this year is so
Secret agent man. Zellmann is playing this release for everything he can.
A beautiful day in British Columbia and leader's still maintain grip on overall
A year ago, Quick Step-Innergetic’s Tom Boonen came to the Tour de France with both the rainbow jersey and heavy expectations on his shoulders. The two-time winner of the Tour of Flanders and reigning world champion came to the Tour with four stage wins to his name and was expected to add to his tally while contesting for the green points jersey. Instead, Boonen did neither, leaving the Tour after stage 15, having worn the yellow jersey for four days. Asked about his main objective for this year’s Tour at a pre-race press conference on Thursday, Boonen played it coy, initially saying, “My
The new Red shifter displaying eight degrees of lever adjustment. In this example, the shift lever is adjusted inwards and the brake lever is left out.
Markus Fothem’s new bike, the Specialized Tarmac SL2.
That small pin below the hood is responsible for the shift lever reach.
The large headtube hides the different sized headset bearings.
This small screw adjusts the brake lever reach.
Longtime race director Jean-Marie Leblanc has finally retired, leaving Christian Prudhomme in charge of the Tour de France. The 2007 edition starts in London on Saturday, and with no clear favorite, it is shaping up to be one of the most open races in years. Lance Armstrong, who won seven straight Tours beginning in 1999, has retired. Last year's winner, Floyd Landis, is still under the cloud of doping accusations. Other big names, such as Ivan Basso, have fallen afoul of the crackdown on drugs in the sport. But Prudhomme insists that other stars will emerge to take their
Another scenic: This time, it's mainland British Columbia
Alessandro Petacchi lost his spot on Milram’s Tour de France team on Wednesday after being charged with doping by the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), according to Agence France Presse. CONI's anti-doping prosecutor, Ettore Torri, asked the Italian cycling federation (FCI) to ban the 33-year-old sprinter for one year following a "non-negative" doping test after the third of his five stage wins at the Giro d'Italia. The urine sample Petacchi gave at Pinerolo on May 23 showed an unusually high level of salbutamol, a substance primarily used to treat asthma. “We signed the ProTour
Home sweet home: race founder Dean Payne and his beloved Seventies-era motorhome
Tour de France hopeful Andreas Klöden said Wednesday that he was weary of trying to clear his name as other members of his Astana team are suspected of doping. "I have nothing to confess," Klöden told German daily Die Welt. "You have to believe me when I say that I have never done anything illegal." On Wednesday, Klöden signed the UCI’s anti-doping pledge, but admitted that he wasn’t happpy about it. "I didn't have a choice in order to compete in the Tour de France ... but I felt violated by this procedure. I no longer enjoy competing in the Tour de France. It's like a suspended
And now, how the other half lives: Hestler and his VW van
Alessandro Petacchi lost his spot on Milram’s Tour de France team on Wednesday after being charged with doping by the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), according to Agence France Presse. CONI's anti-doping prosecutor, Ettore Torri, asked the Italian cycling federation (FCI) to ban the 33-year-old sprinter for one year following a "non-negative" doping test after the third of his five stage wins at the Giro d'Italia. The urine sample Petacchi gave at Pinerolo on May 23 showed an unusually high level of salbutamol, a substance primarily used to treat asthma. “We signed the ProTour
The parade start is really part of the local 4th of July parade.