But Health Net’s Karl Menzies got the best of them all, getting out of the last corner first.
But Health Net’s Karl Menzies got the best of them all, getting out of the last corner first.
But Health Net’s Karl Menzies got the best of them all, getting out of the last corner first.
Danielson and Barry enjoy a mellow day in the saddle.
Priority Health’s Tom Zirbel won the time trial and got fifth in the road race, but a ninth place finish in the criterium dropped him to fourth in final points-based classification.
The Vuelta came down to a battle of two-against-one at times.
The action heated up when the peloton reaches the closing circuit in Madrid.
The boys from Khazakstan celebrate in Madrid.
Discovery takes the team prize
Zzzzooooom. Vinokourov powers through the tough part.
SpeedyReedy to Host Power Meter Clinic for Cyclists and TriathletesBoulder, CO, September 15, 2006 — Seattle's top triathlon retailerwill host a workshop with one of the world's leading power meter coaches.Hunter Allen will lead a workshop on the benefits and methodology of trainingand racing with a power meter on Friday, September 22 beginning at 7:00p.m. After the presentation, Allen will answer questions and autographcopies of Training and Racing with a Power Meter. The event is free ofcharge and is open to interested triathletes and cyclists.SpeedyReedy is located at 1100 N.
Vinokourov stayed calm, pounded through the TT and keeps the lead going into Madrid on Sunday.
Danielson maintained his spot on GC
Bodrogi sets the early standard
IRVINE, Calif. 9/13/06 -- Long-time sales and management executive David Pfeiffer has been named the new president for Shimano American Corporation, the Irvine, Calif.-based bicycle component and fishing tackle manufacturer, announces Kozo Shimano, current Shimano American president. Pfeiffer’s new role is effective December 1, at which time Kozo Shimano will move into a senior executive position for corporate advocacy and public relations, enabling him to pursue both his personal and company interests in growing the bicycle and fishing tackle markets. “David has extensive experience in all
The Discovery Channel Pro Cycling team will investigate former team lieutenant Frankie Andreu's admission that he used EPO in preparing for the 1999 Tour de France, team officials announced Friday. In a statement released by the team, officials said lawsuits were possible as a result of Andreu's admission of doping to the New York Times and asked for probes by the International Cycling Union and US Anti-Doping Agency. "Team management will be investigating this issue and considering all legal options and trust that the relevant authorities (USA Cycling, USADA and the UCI) will be
Every cyclist's worst fear was realized for Jon Dechau on the evening ofSeptember 13. Dechau, 33, was killed after being struck from behind bya motorist. The accident occurred in Lima, New York, about 20 miles southof Rochester.The Livingston County sheriff’s office said that Dechau was riding westbound on the shoulder of route 20 approximately two feet to the right of the white line. A sheriff’s spokesman said a westbound vehicle driven by Sharon Cameron, 61, crossed the white line and struck Dechau from behind at approximately 45-50 mph, and Dechau died at the scene. Cameron could not
Arrieta wins
Astana controlled the bunch
Vino' holds the gold
CSC tried the old attack-into-the-crosswind gag
Vino' on the job
Services slated for Dechau
Passing through Jaen.
Merckx to autograph copies of 'Cycling's Golden Age' at Interbike
The World Anti-Doping Agency can only watch and wait as the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency considers Tour de France champion Floyd Landis' request to have the case against him thrown out, WADA president Dick Pound said Thursday. "I think we have to wait and see what happens," Pound said in a teleconference from Montreal, where the WADA executive committee will meet on Saturday. "We're kind of a monitoring agency in these things. This is a UCI process. Pound said that USA Cycling's "procedure is to punt to the national anti-doping agency, which in this case is USADA. USADA will
Tyler Hamilton, whose two-year ban for blood doping is due to end on September 22, is now facing another investigation, USA Cycling said today (AEST). A statement from the US federation said it has received information from the International Cycling Union (UCI) "regarding Tyler Hamilton and his alleged involvement in 'Operation Puerto', along with a request to move forward with disciplinary action". "Operation Puerto" was the Spanish doping affair that saw 13 riders, including Italy's Ivan Basso, Germany's 1997 Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich and Spain's Francisco
Eddy Merckx to Autograph Copies of Cycling's Golden Age at Interbike Boulder, CO, September 13, 2006 — Cycling legend Eddy Merckx will autograph copies of Cycling's Golden Age: Heroes of the Postwar Era, 1946-1967 at Interbike. Merckx, who wrote the foreword to the book, will sign books on Wednesday, September 27th from 4 p.m. until 5 p.m. at the VeloNews booth # 3359. Featuring previously unpublished vintage photographs, trophies, race-worn jerseys, and other invaluable cycling artifacts from The Horton Collection, Cycling's Golden Age offers a fresh appreciation of the
German authorities secured samples of former Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich's DNA when they raided his Swiss residence Wednesday, according to a report released Thursday. Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung said in an advance release of its Friday edition that authorities plan to compare the German rider's DNA with frozen blood seized at a Madrid clinic as part of a doping investigation that forced Ullrich and eight other riders to withdraw from this year's Tour. Authorities could not immediately be reached to comment on the report. On Thursday, Germany's Federal Crime
Two former members of the U.S. junior national cycling team are settlingfederal lawsuits after contending their coaches injected them with steroidswithout their knowledge.Gregory Strock and Erich Kaiter were completing a settlement agreementwith USA Cycling and former coach Rene Wenzel, a lawyer for the riderssaid in a court filing late Wednesday. U.S. District Judge John Kane onThursday gave both sides until Sept. 27 to file papers dismissing the case.Attorney William Senter, who represents the defendants, confirmed thesettlement but said terms were confidential. John Pineau, an attorney
The one-two Astana punch
Vinokourov added to his advantage over Valverde...
... and was joined by compatriot and teammate Kashechkin
They proved to be a formidable pair...
...putting another 32 seconds into Valverde.
Danielson says if the climb had been longer, he might have made it back up to Vinokourov.
Kaisen leads the escape...
...while Valverde's Caisse d'Epargne boys give chase.
Valverde puts Sastre in the hurt locker
Vino' on the march
The race leader got no help in the hunt
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you have a comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen in cycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write to WebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name and home town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.The truth... the whole truthDear VeloNews,Thanks to Frankie for opening this box, now please find the courageto spill the contents. When did you do it? How often? Other drugs? Whogot them for you? Who else did it? Did the team know? Did Lance know? Wasit encouraged? How much did it help?
Raids were carried out Wednesday in private houses and offices in Germany and abroad in the framework of a crackdown on doping in cycling, the Bonn prosecutor's office announced. "In total, 10 private houses and offices were raided in Germany as well as overseas," the office said. "These raids follow the investigation of a complaint lodged in Bonn for fraud after the investigations by Spanish authorities into people suspected of having had access to banned products to improve their performances in cycling." The German daily Focus reported Wednesday that one raid took place in
Danielson gets the stage . . .
. . . and Vino' gets the gold
Vino' and Danielson rocket toward the finish
Danielson and Martinez working the earlier break
Paulinho and Danielson in the break
Kash' goes up the road
Valverde attacks
The attorney for Floyd Landis is questioning the accuracy of the positive testosterone tests attributed to the Tour de France winner and asks that doping charges be dismissed. In a letter sent to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, attorney Howard Jacobs disputed the accuracy of the carbon isotope ratio tests performed on Landis' urine sample at a lab in France. Jacobs also argued that the analysis of a different test, the testosterone-epitestosterone analysis, "is replete with fundamental, gross errors," including mismatched sample code numbers. Jacobs said the positive finding on the backup
Stage 2 profile
A year ago Thomas Frischknecht ended one of cycling’s longest streaks, becoming the first foreign rider to triumph at Costa Rica’s famed La Ruta de los Conquistadores mountain bike race. Fast forward 12 months, and the Swiss legend will try to make it two in a row in November when he returns to defend his title at one of the world’s toughest stage races. Among the Swisspower rider’s chief challengers at La Ruta’s 14th rendition will be Colombian Leonardo Páez and American Jeremiah Bishop (Trek-Volkswagen). Páez is currently No. 1 in the UCI’s marathon rankings, while Bishop is coming off a
Stage 3 profile
Following news reports that former U.S. Postal team rider, Frankie Andreu admitted to the use of EPO early in his career, his former teammate Lance Armstrong released the following statement charging the New York Times with efforts to impugn his reputation: Today’s article in the New York Times was a blatant attempt to associateme and implicate me with a former teammate’s admission that he took bannedsubstances during his career. The recycled suggestion that former teammatestook EPO with my knowledge or at my request is categorically false anddistorted sensationalism. My cycling victories are
CSC turns up the heat
Andreu - seen here at Paris-Nice in 2000 - said his brush with EPO use was limited, but wanted to come clean to help the sport.
Martinez is closing in on the climber's jersey.
A sweet, if slightly soggy victory
.. but there was no interest in seeing an early break get anywhere.
Vinokourov is now in second on GC, but that 1:42 might be a tough hurdle.
Landaluze works to bridge the gap...
The climb up the Calar Alto is among Europe's great climbs.
Big win for Euskaltel's new guy.
Danielson is riding back into form - and the top-10
On the way to the Atlantic
Will there be a La Ruta repeat
Bishop was 5th in 2005
Coast-to-coast racing
Cuesta drives hard for Sastre... but they couldn't shed Valverde.
Then, Sastre tried on his own...
Two former U.S. Postal riders admitted taking EPO in preparation for the 1999 Tour de France, the first of seven one by their teammate Lance Armstrong, the New York Times reported Tuesday. In a story posted on its website, the newspaper said Frankie Andreu, a now-retired lieutenant of the U.S. Postal Service team, and another rider who did not want his name disclosed both admitted wrongdoing in interviews with the Times. "Everybody's afraid to talk because they don't want to implicate themselves but there are guys out there who love the sport and who hate doping. They are the guys
...and again.
Following news reports that he admitted to the use of EPO early in hiscareer, former U.S. Postal team, rider Frankie Andreu released the followingstatement explaining his reasons for his admission. Turning the sport around.As hard as it is, sometimes putting something on the line is the onlyway to help. My confession of taking EPO when I was younger is not meantto drag anyone down but to raise awareness of the problems that existedand still exist. I don't have to tell you this because in the last fewyears some big profile names have brought this to all of our attention. I took EPO to help
Stage 1 profile
Tour de France winner Floyd Landis blames his positive doping test on the French laboratory that examined his sample, according to a story in a Pennsylvania newspaper published Sunday. In a story posted on the website of the Intelligencer of suburban Philadelphia, Landis confirmed plans to ask Monday that the result be thrown out because of "contradictions" between his "A" and "B" samples. "On Monday we'll submit a request for the case to be dropped because, based on the 'A' and the 'B' sample, there are too many contradictions for the two to be the same sample," Landis
USA Cycling has announced the elite teams that will represent the United States at the 2006 UCI Road World Championships September 19-24 in Salzburg, Austria. In the elite men’s division, the United States qualified the maximum nine riders in the road race and will field a team consisting of six UCI ProTour veterans and three domestic-based pros. ProTour riders Chris Horner (Bend, Ore./Davitamon-Lotto) Fred Rodriguez (Emeryville, Calif./Davitamon-Lotto), Christian VandeVelde (Boulder, Colo./CSC), Tyler Farrar (Wenatchee, Wash./Cofidis), Patrick McCarty (Allen, Texas/Phonak), and Guido Trenti
Bruyneel is overseeing some big changes at Discovery.
Brajkovic could be the new star of the future.
View from the Bench: Injured Kintner covers World Cup gravity finals
Förster snags the win