Lots of horsepower and plenty of motivation
Lots of horsepower and plenty of motivation
Lots of horsepower and plenty of motivation
Stage 5 map
Perez back in yellow
Lieswyn takes third
Stage 4 map
Fraser holds the points jersey
Dancers provide a send-off
Saying 'I do' on the podium
Stage 3 map
Before the storm: Lancaster led from km36.
Health Net leads the chase
Gord' gets the points jersey
Perez loses lead
Stage 2 map
Page 2 news in my local paper yesterday was the story of the 11 Cubans who tried to sail to the U.S. in a 1959 Buick. They had sealed shut the car’s doors and added a double bottom, bow and propeller. However, they were intercepted on their 90-mile journey to Florida by a U.S. Coast Guard vessel, and it was unclear whether they would be allowed to stay in the U.S. or be returned to Cuba. This wasn’t the first attempt for some of them. Some members of the group were intercepted by the Coast Guard last July, trying to make the journey in a 1951 Chevy pickup converted into a boat with
Stage 1 map
Health Net takes the front ... only to find traffic on the circuit
The peloton wrapped up the first stage in parade fashion
Division 3 squad Pagcor-Casino Filipino has Merculio Ramos in the leader's jersey ... sort of
Saturn was tops last year
Organizers of California’s annual spring bike bash, the Sea Otter Classic, have announced that they have signed a title sponsorship agreement with Hyundai Motor America. This year’s Hyundai Sea Otter Classic Cycling Festival is scheduled for April 15-18 at Laguna Seca Recreation Area in Monterey, California. Hyundai has long been an active sports-related sponsor. Its recent partnership with the Mongoose mountain bike team marked the brand's entry into the cycling category. “Hyundai Motor America’s sports related sponsorships have proved an effective medium to promote the Hyundai Santa
Tuesday's EuroFile: Cooke at GP Marseillaise; Valverde in Mallorca; Boonen in Qatar
If bikes are outlawed...Editors,Bravo to Selz and Magas for seeing the case in Trotwood to the end(see "LegallySpeaking - with Bob Mionske: You gotta fight for your right to slooooowdown"). I've long since lost track of how many times I've explainedto non-cycling friends that it is not illegal for me to rideon the road at a slower pace than cars, as long as I don't break the lawsregarding impeding traffic (such as by holding up a line of five or morecars unnecessarily).Darcy AdamsCovington, Washington...only (really slow) outlaws will have bikesDear VeloNewsThank you for publishing Steve
Jean-François Lamour outside of Interpol Headquarters on Monday
Monday's EuroFile: Freire in Mallorca; Ventoso in Qatar; Zülle keen on Hamilton
Knapp turned in a strong performance
French women go 1-2 at ’cross world’s
Pontoni leads Dlask. The Italian was the only non-Belgian to break into the top six
Page and Jacques-Maynes (front)
A familiar sight
Kupfernagel sure wasn't getting any help from Salvetat
Leboucher wanted to win at home
UCI president Hein Verbruggen, road committee chief Pat McQuaid and cyclo-cross committee chair Sylvia Schenk emerged from an all-day session of the UCI management committee on Friday evening to reveal large-scale changes to both the world road-racing and cyclo-cross calendars, while Verbruggen made a scathing appraisal of the current doping situation in cycling. The most far-reaching proposals concern the much-trumpeted UCI Pro Tour that will start in 2005. McQuaid confirmed that only 20 teams will compete on this circuit, which replaces both the UCI World Cup and UCI world rankings system.
Gil, Pauwels and Zlamanik (l-r) took a rough and tumble U23 race.
The U23 men's race got off to a rough start
Niels Albert
Lhotellerie
Driscoll, tops for U.S. in 22nd
Mario DeClercq was getting extra practice in on Friday ...
... but Bart Wellens has to be the favorite to defend his title
Chris Kovarik: Intense, Haro – or sidelined?
Aussie Niki Gudex has signed up with Intense
Alison Dunlap is ready to race, come rain or shine
Dear Readers,In this weeks column I have chosen to highlight a critical bicycle rights case handled by fellow “bike attorney” Steve Magas. I am including Steve’s personal account of this important case for cyclists throughout the U.S. in its entirety.Enjoy,BobDear Bob,In the summer of 1999 I was asked to become involved in the case ofa young man who had received a traffic ticket for “impeding traffic” inTrotwood, Ohio. Little did I know that the case would ultimately garnerinternational intention, cause countless e-mails to be sent to the Cityof Trotwood, and generate an appellate court
There’s plenty happening around VeloNews headquarters in Boulder, Colorado, as our editorial crew ramps up for the upcoming season. We’re just midway through production of issue No. 2, a packed preview of the international road season, but already production has begun on issue No. 3, our Buyer’s Guide. Good thing those Buyer’s Guide pages will be glossy, my friends, because you’re guaranteed to be drooling over the gear splashed across the pages. Carbon, titanium, aluminum – oh my! Myself, I’m trying to get all my ducks in a row, finishing up assignments for both issues while preparing for
With the race calendar about to kick off, it’s season preview time here at VeloNews. Over the next couple of issues, the print magazine will feature previews of the European road season, the European and U.S. mountain-bike seasons, and the domestic North American road season. We’ll have first looks at the new teams, all the key players and the races. Since that territory will be covered ad nauseam, I thought that this week I’d present a season preview from a little different perspective. So, without further explanation, here’s the Notes from the road “to do” list for the upcoming year: Get
Surfer dudes Chris Wherry and Walker Ferguson at the Health Net camp
T-Mobile's lineup
Landis meets the press
Demonic possession? No, it's just Creed being Creed
Photo Editor Galen Nathanson and Stylist-To-The-Stars Miguel Santana rig-up another bike
Nathanson lines 'em up, and knocks 'em down
Former Cofidis pro Marek Rutkiewicz has been suspended by the Polish Cycling Federation over his alleged role in the ongoing drugs scandal in France, it was revealed on Wednesday.The 23-year-old was arrested on January 12 by French police along with compatriot and Cofidis soigneur Bogdan Madejak after former team member Robert Sassone, who won a world track title in 2001, was placed under judicial investigation when a cache of drugs were found in his home during a police search."Marek Rutkiewicz has been suspended until his part in the Cofidis affair has been clarified," said federation
McGee storms Paris in 2003
WADA president Dick Pound is once more taking UCI president Hein Verbruggen to task in the wake of the Cofidis doping controversy, France’s Le Monde newspaper reported on Tuesday. World Anti-Doping Agency boss Pound of Canada has continually been focusing on cycling as a problem area and Verbruggen, the world's top cycling official, is once more in his sights. "Even the UCI president must admit there is a problem in cycling and that it has been going on for a 100 years," Pound was quoted in Le Monde as saying. "To eliminate doping is a challenge generally but cycling is a sport where the
Gaumont contends cycling is still a dirty sport
The Clif bar duo of Jackson Stewart and Andy Jacques-Maynes
A full field in the warm-up for world's
Another Belgian Sweep
Cooke and McEwen - a familiar battle
81km in Adelaide
Jonker glides into retirement
Wellens chases after mechanical