Hincapie looks for the top of the climb
Hincapie looks for the top of the climb
Hincapie looks for the top of the climb
Course: This is almost identical to the stage in 2000 when Marco Pantani attacked on the first climb (the 15km, 6.4-percent Saisies) and forced Armstrong’s U.S. Postal squad to chase for 100km over the Aravis, Colombière and Châtillon climbs to the foot of the day’s main obstacle: the mighty Col de Joux-Plane (11.7km at 8.7 percent). It was partway up the Joux-Plane that Armstrong bonked and could only watch as Ullrich and others rode away from him, and he conceded almost two minutes by the finish in Morzine. History: Morzine has seen 13 finishes of the Tour, including that one six years
T-Mobile and CSC had to take up the chase after Pereiro's Caisse d'Epargne team evaporated before the Joux Plane.
Chris Horner has fans out there
In one of the most audacious and bravest rides seen in the modern era of the Tour de France, Phonak’s American rider Floyd Landis turned the despair of his stage 16 implosion into a stage-winning breakaway that put him back into the role of favorite to win this extraordinary race. Landis stunned Tour de France observers when he lost more than 10 minutes on the slopes to La Toussuire on Wednesday; but they were floored by his performance in Thursday’s 200.5km stage from St. Jean de Maurienne to Morzine, the last day in the Alps. Heading into the Tour’s three-day finale, Spaniard Oscar
Landis sets off on his own.
Whew! Pereiro holds on to his jersey with 12 seconds to spare
1. Floyd Landis (USA), Phonak, 200.5km in 5:23:362. Carlos Sastre (Sp), CSC, 05:423. Christophe Moreau (F), Ag2r Prevoyance, 05:584. Damiano Cunego (I), Lampre, 06:405. Michael Boogerd (Nl), Rabobank, 07:086. Frank Schleck (Lux), CSC, 07:087. Oscar Pereiro Sio (Sp), Caisse d'Epargne-I.B., 07:088. Andréas Klöden (G), T-Mobile, 07:089. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 07:0810. Cadel Evans (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 07:20 11. Mickael Rasmussen (Dk), Rabobank, 07:2412. Denis Menchov (Rus), Rabobank, 07:2413. Patrik Sinkewitz (G), T-Mobile, 07:2414. Tadej Valjavec (SLO), Lampre,
Pereiro fought valiantly and keeps the jersey another day
What a difference a day makes: Landis, after Wednesday's devastating loss, found new resolve...over a quiet beer with team director John Lelangue
The German winner of the 1997 Tour de France and his Spanish teammate were suspended by their T-Mobile team just before the current Tour after being linked, with more than 50 other cyclists, to the Operation Puerto investigation. The prosecutor's office here, where T-Mobile has its head office, said it had opened its own investigation into the matter in response to a fraud complaint lodged by an academic and former athlete. "The procedure arises following the lodging of a complaint for fraud and breaches of the law concerning medications," said prosecutor Monika Nostadt-Ziegenberg.
Landis nears the top of the Joux Plane
Sastre is 12 seconds out of the lead... with Landis 18 seconds behind.
Dear readers;Last column, in "TheBUI Blues", we had a letter from J.C. in Oregon, who asked about the difference in penalties between a DUI and a BUI. This column, we have more letters from readers about DUIs. It’s gotta be the hot days and cold beers and stiff penalties.Don’t Fence Me InFirst, R.S. wrote from South Dakota to sayWhew! After reading the latest information regarding those poor souls who live in CA and OR, I'm glad our State legislators (South Dakota) have the common sense to realize that BUI is only a threat to the rider, and not to society at large, and is not an crime,
Saturday Time Trial takes on added significance
Halgand emerged at the front of the break... but faltered later when caught and passed by Landis
After the second major shake-up in the overall standings of the Tour de France in as many days, Saturday's 57-kilometer individual time trial from Le Creusot to Montceau les Mines takes on even more importance. Indeed, it could be the most significant Tour de France time trial since the final stage showdown between Laurent Fignon and Greg LeMond in 1989. Perhaps the best indicator of how current race leaders may fare on Saturday is how they performed in Stage 7's 52km TT from St. Gregoire to Rennes. That stage was, of course, won by Sergei Gontchar of T-Mobile, who covered the
Saturday Time Trial takes on added significance
Landis on the Aravis: Still making time on the peloton, with Sinkewitz and O'Grady in tow.
Acclaim was universal for Floyd Landis and his heroic attack across the final hard climbs in the 2006 Tour de France. Everyone agreed it was something unseen in recent Tour history. Here’s a sampling of what some of the key players thought: Juan Fernandez, sport director Phonak“What he did today was make everyone stand on the edge of their seats because it was a tremendous, tremendous demonstration. He knew he wanted to try from the first climb and give everything. If they caught on the Joux-Plane, so be it, but he dared to do something others would be afraid to try. He was riding with
Santa? There were no gifts for anyone on Thursday.
Gontchar drives hard at the front
Leave it to a photographer to put all of us self-styled wordsmiths to shame in a single e-mail. In the frantic rush for post-race superlatives and pithy descriptions of what many regard as one of the most impressive performances in modern Tour de France history, it was photographer Casey Gibson who managed to sum up the past two days most succinctly: "Wow... again," Gibson wrote in the e-mail accompanying the collection photos from today's stage. Like the man said, "Wow... again."
A seemingly idylic day on to Col des Saisies with Mt. Blanc in the background
Menchov lost time on the Joux Plane
American Floyd Landis, who suffered such a spectacular implosion on Wednesday, is once again the yellow-jersey favorite after claiming a first-ever stage victory in the race following a third straight day of drama in the Alps. And Belgian legend Eddy Merckx, whose son Axel rides in Landis's Phonak team, played a part in his resurrection. Landis started the day with a deficit of eight minutes and eight seconds to Caisse d’Epargne’s Oscar Pereiro, having lost the yellow jersey to the Spaniard during his stunning collapse on stage 16. But thanks to some personal faith, and a telephone
Landis knows how to make up for an off day: Follow it with an on day
Stage 17 was not Klöden's best day
Andréas Klöden saw third place in the 2006 Tour de France slip away from him during Thursday's 200.5km stage from St. Jean de Maurienne to Morzine as American Floyd Landis (Phonak) staged an astounding comeback from his collapse of the day before, winning the last Alpine stage and bumping Klöden down into fourth with just three stages remaining. Sebastian Moll caught up with the German T-Mobile rider for a quick chat; here's the transcript. VeloNews: How are you feeling at the end of three weeks of the Tour de France? Andréas Klöden: I'm pretty much at my limit, like everyone
The chase begins
WeatherSunny to partly sunny all day, highs 30-34C Stage winnerFloyd Landis (Phonak), 5h23:36, 37.176kph – Landis soloed to victory and vaulted back into contention overall in one of the most remarkable comebacks in cycling history. Less than 24 hours after tumbling out of the top 10 while bonking in the yellow jersey, the gritty Pennsylvanian refused to give up. Attacking at the base of the Col des Saises, Landis reeled in and then dropped an early break. The others left the chase too late and he soared down the Col de Joux-Plane to win his first career Tour stage, just the ninth American
Landis on a nice little 150km individual TT
Stage 17: St. Jean de Maurienne to Morzine-Avoriaz -200.5km
Menchov was among the day's most notable victims
Stage 17: St. Jean de Maurienne to Morzine-Avoriaz -200.5km
Leipheimer joins the Discovery gang on the final climb to Joux-Plane
Landis punches the air in exultation as he wins the stage and climbs back into third place overall
It was an especially long day in the saddle for some
It was a mountain too far for Floyd Landis in Wednesday’s epic, four-climb stage 16 across the French Alps as the already-crazy 93rd Tour de France dropped more bombshells in an attack-riddled charge up the finishing climb to La Toussuire. The Phonak team captain apparently bonked on the lower flanks of the 18.4km final climb and saw his hopes of overall victory sink after finishing 22nd on the day, losing eight minutes to the other contenders in the final 12km. A rejuvenated Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Épargne-Illes Balears) bounced back into the yellow jersey, while Michael Rasmussen
The Galibier was only the start
Giant's integrated post
The church
1. Mickael Rasmussen (Dk), Rabobank, 182km in 5:36:04 (32.493kph)2. Carlos Sastre (Sp), CSC, 01:413. Oscar Pereiro Sio (Sp), Caisse d'Epargne-I.B., 01:544. Cadel Evans (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 01:565. Andréas Klöden (G), T-Mobile, 01:566. Christophe Moreau (F), Ag2r Prevoyance, 02:377. Pietro Caucchioli (I), Credit Agricole, 02:378. Cyril Dessel (F), Ag2r Prevoyance, 02:379. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Gerolsteiner, 03:2410. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 03:42 11. Denis Menchov (Rus), Rabobank, 03:4212. Michael Rogers (Aus), T-Mobile, 03:4213. Eddy Mazzoleni (I), T-Mobile, 03:4214.
Go figure: Five days ago he was in 46th on GC and 28:50 out of first.
Look's setup
No doubt many a weary rider felt ready to check in here
Lance Armstrong is in no mood to forgive Tour de France race director Jean-Marie Leblanc. "The problems and the tension there are so deep," Armstrong said Tuesday. "I'm just not very optimistic." After the seven-time Tour winner retired from cycling last summer, Leblanc heralded a fresh start for cycling, predicting an exciting time for Armstrong's longtime rival Jan Ullrich of Germany and the promising Ivan Basso of Italy. But Basso, the 2005 Tour runner-up and 1997 Tour winner Ullrich were kicked out on the eve of this year's Tour, implicated in a Spanish doping
No one deserves the Polka Dot jersey more than Rasmussen after Wednesday's ride
The Ridley post
After his disastrous climb up La Toussuire on stage 16, fallen yellow jersey Floyd Landis entered his team car at the finish line without a word to the media. Asked by OLN commentator Frankie Andreu if he wanted to explain what happened to the viewers back home, Landis said simply, “No.” But a few hours later, word trickled through the press room that Landis was holding an impromptu press conference at 7:15, just two hours after he’d lost not only the race lead but any hope of winning the Tour de France. The decision was viewed unanimously as a brave move, and one that even his wife Amber
That's all she wrote: When Landis faded, he really faded.
Ag2r's B-Twin
Nothing is settled in this wild and wacky Tour de France. With one mountain stage to go, six riders are still within four minutes of each other: two Spaniards (Oscar Pereiro and Carlos Sastre), a German (Andréas Klöden), a Frenchman (Cyril Dessel), an Australian (Cadel Evans) and a Russian (Denis Menchov). Thursday’s 200.5km stage 17 from St. Jean-de-Maurienne to Morzine is not the hardest mountain stage of the Tour, but coming after almost three weeks of relentless racing, mostly in heat-wave conditions, it will be a terrible test of perseverance and stamina. More than half the peloton is
Leipheimer gives it a go.
Shimano's pedal
Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong was atop La Toussuire, after a day spent watching stage 16 in the Discovery Channel car with team director Johan Bruyneel. Though Armstrong and Floyd Landis had had a strained relationship since Landis left U.S. Postal Service for Phonak at the end of the 2004 season, Armstrong spoke kindly of Landis at a press conference Tuesday evening at L’Alpe d’Huez, less than 24 hours before Landis’s meltdown. “I know Floyd and I have gone through a whole cycle of ‘on the team, off the team,’ friction here and there,” Armstrong said. “But for me
Rasmussen had company... for a while
Evans stayed with the right guys.
While Wednesday's biggest news centered on the implosion of American Floyd Landis on the trip up La Toussuire, there was also a lot to take in on the tech front at the 2006 Tour de France. Over at CSC VeloNews got an up-close look at David Zabriskie's new ride, the Cervélo Soloist Carbon SLC-SL. The frame has all the features of its predecessor – beefed-up bottom bracket for added stiffness, thinned-out head and down tubes for better aerodynamics - but is 200 grams lighter. Of course there's a cost for all this – in this case, $4500 for the frameset, or $1100 more than the
Landis struggles to finish...
Not everyone in France is happy to see the seven-time... uhhhh... Tour winner show up this year.
After a terrific ride in Wednesday’s 16th stage to La Toussiere, Cadel Evans showered, ate a snack and then invited the media to his team hotel to answer questions about how one of the most astonishing finale’s in modern Tour de France unfolded for him and what he expects in the crucial days ahead. VeloNews.com contributor Rupert Guinness was there VeloNews.com: How did you feel today, Cadel? Cadel Evans: Good, today was a much better race for me. Yesterday (stage 15) when we hit the bottom of the climb, you saw the size of the peloton. It wasn’t a very hard race until that point whereas
... and then heads to his hotel when he does.
Landis leads on the Galibier . . .
I am cooked, twice, maybe three times. I am still trying to get my breath back from today’s stage. I'm not joking. Or, maybe it is from the three plates of pasta I just put down. I - we - are all hurting, but tomorrow somebody will attack from kilometer 0. I don't know why and I don't know how it is possible, but some people are stupid. What can I say? We worked hard today and Carlos delivered what we thought he could. The last climb wasn't really steep enough for him to keep the chasers at bay, but tomorrow the last few climbs will be hard, so we still have one more day
Not a pleasant task
. . . only to suffer on the ascent to La Toussuire
It was a disastrous day for Floyd Landis, but a spectacular race nonetheless, and Casey Gibson was there to bring it all home to you.
Lelangue and his team leader admit to having a tough day.
Going backward
Stage 16: Bourg d’Oisans to La Toussuire -182km
Keeping it in perspective
Schleck and Fothen leave the yellow jersey in their wake
Stage 16: Bourg d’Oisans to La Toussuire -182km
David Z's new ride
Leipheimer has a go
The Dane celebrates the end of a long day's work
The view from the driver's seat
What photogs do to pass the time while waiting for the race
A clearly shattered Landis