Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from ‘Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Tech Report with Lennard Zinn: More from 'Vegas
Show me the money
The Mail Bag 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. Rody Kickham was a decent fellow… is O’Grady?Dear editor,Well, you asked! To me, reading Patrick O'Grady's rant this week (see"Friday'sfoaming rant: Trick or treat") reminds me of inadvertently sittingnext to a schizophrenic on public transit.You know what I mean. The guy is obviously
Photo files - do not delete
Big Daddy Page
Cunego takes the World Cup finale
Tiralongo, Flecha and Quinziato in an early break
Basso, Evans and Boogerd on the Madonna del Ghisallo
Bettini wasn't letting Rebellin go anywhere without him
Nozal has a dig
There are worse places to wrap up a World Cup than around Lake Como
The champ enjoys a moment on the podium
Vanthourenhout puts the hurt on the field on Saturday
McConneloug in her first real 'cross ride of the season
McCormack has returned running to his training regimen
Our editor at large dressed up as a journalist at Interbike ... a bit early for Halloween, it's true, but he drew cheers anyway
The Mail Bag 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.Is a DNA test too ‘CSI’ for cycling?Editor:If the claim is that Tyler doped with someone else's blood, seems like the lab could extract the DNA of the other person from the blood samples and prove it conclusively. Then again, maybe I have seen too many episodes of “CSI” on TV. Larry
All things on earth point home in old October: sailors to sea, travelers to walls and fences, hunters to field and hollow and the long voice of the hounds, the lover to the love he has forsaken.–Thomas Wolfe, Of Time and the River It’s finally October, and like you I’m hoping for a few treats come Halloween, because we’ve already gotten more than enough tricks this racing season. Actually, the entire year has had a costume-party air to it, with dope fiends dressed up as pro bicycle racers, George W. Bush masquerading as the president of the United States and Iraq all tricked out like
The past two months haven’t been easy for Phil Zajicek. On August 18, threeweeks after the easygoing 25-year-old Tucson, Arizona, resident took thebiggest stage race win in the 12-year history of the Navigators Insurancecycling team when he won the overall at the UCI 2.3 Tour of Qinghai Lake,Zajicek received word that he had failed a drug test after stage 6, onJuly 22, while wearing the leader’s jersey. No, Zajicek didn’t test positive for the red-blood cell boosting Erythropoietin(EPO). It wasn’t Human Growth Hormone (HGH), anabolic steroids or a diureticmasking agent, either. Zajicek
In this week’s column we explore Part 1 of a two-part answer to a reader’s question about professional sports contracts. While the analysis is a bit in-depth, should make for good and informative reading now that a lot of you are on break.Dear Bob,How is it that racers can negotiate deals for the following seasonwhen they are under contract with a team for the current season. When arider is thinking about jumping to another team it can't make for the bestteam chemistry.In professional leagues there rules against this, aren't there?J.R.New HampshireDear J.R,Yes, there are rules against it in
Wearing the leader's jersey at the Tour of Qinghai Lake
Specialized’s Kevin Franks gives a sneak peek at at 2005 1/2 S-Works Roubaix which is said to weigh in at less than 1000 grams (for a 56cm).
Want lighter? Sub 10 pound project bikes were the rage this year-note the carbon chainrings on this Litespeed
Chistophe Sauser’s 20.5 pound raceable full suspension Scalpel
Cedric Gracia’s pink team issue Prophet
JHK’s Olympic Tomac Buckshot, complete with fresh Athens dirt
Geoff Kabush’s custom Turner Nitrous
Jullien Absalon's gold medal rig
Who said the carbon trend is getting out of hand? You’re telling me you don’t need a carbon (or white carbon) razor?!?!?!
Schwartz skirts the edge of the sand to avoid a traffic jam in mid-pit
The Mail Bag 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.How about amnesty followed by lifetime bans?Editor:While it may never be possible to eliminate the use of performance-enhancing illegal substances in sports in general, and cycling in particular, perhaps we need a clean start. Anyone who confesses that he or she has used banned
Stung by criticism of its action, a high school district has reversed a decision to disqualify cross country runners for wearing Lance Armstrong LiveStrong wristbands. The decision was reversed because “adequate prior notice had not been given to the participants,” Bruce Biehl, Kellam High School's principal and chairman of Beach District cross country, said in a statement released Tuesday. More than 20 runners were declared ineligible in a meet last Wednesday for wearing the popular LiveStrong bands, sold for $1 apiece. Proceeds go to the Lance Armstrong Foundation, which provides
Johnson negotiates the deeper sandpit
The Mail Bag 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.Tell us, TylerEditor:It’s easy — Tyler Hamilton should simply say that he has never had a blood transfusion, using these words: “I did not have a transfusion of blood. I did not and do not cheat. Not by yesterday’s rules, today’s rules or tomorrow’s rules!” We all cheer the American
Verbruggen
The chase is on.
Cofidis in pursuit
Adam Craig gets away
Kabush leads on the run-up
Craig, Hall victorious in Tacoma 'cross
Even in white, everyone stayed clean in these conditions
Zdenek Mlynar
Mlynar went down, too, but managed to chase back
Dekker holds them off
Bettini had a lot at stake.
Dekker was in the early break, too
Both men have made the podium quite often this season
Knapp fights her way up through the mud
Decker and Wicks
Pontoni on the run-up
Kabush takes the early lead
The sun broke through right after the elite men's race
The men's podium
Interbike: Well worth the effort
Interbike: Well worth the effort
(Lehigh Valley, PA) — The Northwestern Mortgage Corporation announced today that it will be the Title Sponsor of an Elite track endurance team for the 2005 season. The team will consist of six elite men/women riders and six developmental/junior, men/women riders. The team will have 12 riders total that will be focused on track endurance and some NRC races for 2005. The Northwestern Mortgage Cycling Team will be under the direction of two time Olympiad Jame Carney, who currently rides for Northwestern Mortgage Corp. Jame Carney will serve as coach and rider for the team. The team will be
Tell the world what you think
Interbike: Well worth the effort
Get them out on the road!
Light and beautiful
“That last shot turned out like crap,” the shop owner from Ohio said. “Can we take another one?” Towering over the shop owner and his mechanic, Magnus Bäckstedt rested his arms over the shoulders of the two men and smiled. “Thank you! And congratulations on Paris-Roubaix!” “Thank you,” Bäckstedt said and waved. “You know, I’m just not used to this,” he said, ducking out of a booth at the Interbike Trade Show in Las Vegas. “It’s great, but I’m not even too sure how I’m supposed to respond when they tell me what a great rider I am.” Bäckstedt said he has been somewhat overwhelmed by this,
Bäckstedt was surprised at the reception he's received in the U.S.