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Enlargement is big enough to set as a desktop background
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Vogels, Klier and Boonen
Vogels, Klier and Boonen
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Vogels: Tough guy at work
Vogels: Tough guy at work
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
The wind broke things apart
The wind broke things apart
Cipollini: Before the fall
Cipollini: Before the fall
Roubaix Map
Roubaix Map
Knaven takes a gamble.
Knaven takes a gamble.
Knaven gets some company
Knaven gets some company
Mid-race stop: riders, race officials and promoters discuss the decision to neutralize the course
Mid-race stop: riders, race officials and promoters discuss the decision to neutralize the course
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Jeanson wins the day’s only real race
Jeanson wins the day's only real race
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Should I stay or should I go? A delay at the men’s start.
Should I stay or should I go? A delay at the men's start.
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Neben and other T-Mobiles fell victim to poor marshalling
Neben and other T-Mobiles fell victim to poor marshalling
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Fraser becomes riders’ spokeman
Fraser becomes riders' spokeman
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
And the ‘winner’ is…
And the 'winner' is...
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Gord Fraser, Vaughters and road race director Terry Tupper discuss safety
Gord Fraser, Vaughters and road race director Terry Tupper discuss safety
Wednesday’s Euro-file: Valverde leads Basque Country; Armstrong out of Sarthe
Another stage at the Vuelta al Pais Vasco and another bunch sprint? Yes, and another photo finish in a race in what's usually a shoot-out between the mountain goats. This time it was Kelme's Alejandro Valverde who had the thicker tires to snatch the win away from Gerolsteiner's Davide Rebellin in Wednesday's 191km stage from Plentzia to Vitoria. Gerolsteiner's Fabian Wegmann was already pumping his arm in celebration, thinking that Rebellin had won when Valverde came from six riders back to score his second win this season. "We went all day thinking it would come down to a sprint, so I was
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Vaughters’ view: Safety first!
I'm sure there are going to be two very different points of view regarding what happened in Wednesday's opening stage of the Sea Otter Classic. Some will say that a bunch of whiney professional cyclists just ruined the sport, and alienated sponsors by protesting a so-called “dangerous” course. Others, meanwhile, will say that the riders finally put aside their differences and acted in a unified fashion by standing up to race promoters who have little regard to riders’ safety, and only want to impress sponsors. Well, as a whiney professional, here’s my take on the matter. The problem today
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files – 2005
Flanders/Ghent/Roubaix Image Files - 2005
Tales from the gutter: Mark gets 6th and UCI racing explained
The weather in Belgium has turned more seasonable. In other words, if it hasn’t been raining, it’s been really windy, and sometimes both. The north wind cuts through every fabric know to man; chilling me to the bone. This morning I rode in a Windtex thermal jacket with a Windtex thermal vest over the top. I was still cold! For those of you that saw the Tour of Flanders live (I was not lucky enough to see it), you have an idea of what the weather has been like. The irony of this climate is that in training one must always wear thermal clothing, but only shorts and jersey in races. I do not
Tuesday’s Euro-File: Ullrich’s back; Vicioso wins at Basque; Cipo’ says no repeat
FDJeux.com’s Carlos Da Cruz won a sprint finish to take the first stage of a star-studded Circuit de la Sarthe in Fontenay le Comte, France, on Tuesday. In a race featuring American four-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong and Germany's Jan Ullrich, Da Cruz stole the limelight after 188km ride from Nantes, taking the leader's jersey in the process. The 28-year-old Frenchman crossed the line in 5:10:13, beating Russian Alexei Sivakov in a sprint to the line. The rest of the main peloton arrived almost six minutes later, with Ullrich placing 22nd at 5:52, and Armstrong finishing
Tuesday’s mail bag
Editor:To Scott Moninger: You are a champion, you have always been a champion,and this decision just proves even "clean" champions can get screwed. Howmuch proof do you have to present and demonstrate your absolute innocence?How ironic that someone who has always strongly supported drug testingand USADA should be the one who is shafted by the very organization hehas championed (see "Moningergets one-year suspension.") Keep your head high; you have been wronged, and those of us who followcycling know it. We want to see you back on the course. S. Lee Yay, UCI; boo, USADAEditor:Mandatory
Vicioso takes Stage 2 at Basque
Vicioso takes Stage 2 at Basque
He’s back in the saddle again…
He's back in the saddle again...
Armstrong is coming on form… Ullrich will trail for a while.
Armstrong is coming on form... Ullrich will trail for a while.
Monday’s Euro-file: Mayo scores win at Pais Vasco: Ullrich gets okay to ride
Iban Mayo ended Euskaltel's drought after he won the opening stage of the 43rd Vuelta al Pais Vasco in northern Spain on Monday while CSC's Tyler Hamilton finished third. It's the first win of the season for Mayo and the first for his Euskaltel-Euskadi team, still hoping to earn a wild-card bid to race in the 2003 Tour de France. The usually high-flying Euskaltel team has been quiet this spring, out-classed by other teams hoping for a Tour bid such as Domina Vacanze, Ag2r, Milaneza-MSS and Brioches La Boulangere. One win won't get the orange-clad Basques into the Tour, but a solid week at
Vaughters’ view: Nice guys finish… uh… fourth?
I don't know what to say. I guess I should just stick my head in a hole and not say anything. But, I'll blabber, just for you. How in the world I could just let 1-2-3 Saturn combo ride away must seem a mystery to the velo world? No, I'm not so stupid as to just let them go away thinking they'd come back in time for dinner. It went like this: Our first objective was to get David Clinger in secure in the KOM jersey. All he needed was to win the first KOM to wrap it up 100 percent. Our second objective was to win the stage. This was most likely to be Clinger or Danny Pate. So, off I went
Vaughters’ view: Nice guys finish… uh… fourth?
Vaughters' view: Nice guys finish... uh... fourth?
Camenzind: Out for three weeks
Camenzind: Out for three weeks
Solo win… with lots of back-up
Solo win... with lots of back-up
Grishkine gets big win for Navs’
Russian Oleg Grishkine delivered a huge win for the Navigators in Sunday's 25th GP Rennes in France. Griskhine held off Andris Naudzus (CCC Polsat) and Jeremy Hunt (Oktos) to win the first race in Europe this year for the Navs. Griskhine's win also serves as a repeat for the Navigators, who won GP Rennes last year with Kirk O'Bee. The 157.5km circuit course ended in a bunch sprint and the Russian scored the victory for Navigators, now on their second tour of Europe this spring. Teammate Henk Vogels came across seventh after just missing victory in Friday's Route Adelie. The GP Rennes was
JHK takes Moab cross-country
The red-hot run of Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski continued on a sunny Sunday in Moab, Utah, as the RLX Ralph Lauren rider picked up his second straight win of the 2003 mountain bike season, taking the cross country at the Tour of Canyonlands. In the women’s pro race it was SoBe-Cannondale’s Kerry Barnholt grabbing a runaway victory, besting her nearest competitor by almost six minutes. Two weeks removed from his stage race win at the Nova Desert Classic in Arizona, Horgan-Kobelski shot down a field that included reigning U.S. national short track champion Todd Wells, and the Specialized duo of Jay
Primed and ready: Fans turn out in mass for the Tour of Flanders
Primed and ready: Fans turn out in mass for the Tour of Flanders
Some day this is gonna work. Durand goes on the attack
Some day this is gonna work. Durand goes on the attack
Bettini gives chase
Bettini gives chase
Eki’ in pursuit
Eki' in pursuit
Building an insurmountable lead
Building an insurmountable lead
Jeanson on a long training ride… er… solo break
Jeanson on a long training ride... er... solo break
Noxt exciting, but really impressive
Noxt exciting, but really impressive
Ina strikes a familiar pose
Ina strikes a familiar pose
Jeanson still leads by a comfortable margin
Jeanson still leads by a comfortable margin
A team victory
A team victory
Saturday’s Eurofile: Kessler wins GP Indurain; Jan wins bigger prize
German Matthias Kessler (Telekom) won Saturday's GP Miguel Indurain in a hotly contested race that took race judges a long time to figure out who won. Kessler finished barely ahead of defending champion Angel Vicioso (ONCE) and David Etxebarria (Euskaltel) in a bunch sprint out of a lead group of 34 riders and judges scoured the photo-finish to decide who actually won. Three riders -- Pedro Díaz Lobato (Paternina), Alberto Martínez (Euskaltel) and Benjamín Noval (Fuenlabrada) - attacked with about 35km to go, but were reeled in one-by-one with less than 5km to go. GP Miguel Indurain,
Tour of Flanders Preview: Can Museeuw do it?
On Saturday, the eve of the 87th Tour of Flanders, some of Johan Museeuw’s fans had already taken to the rough streets that define the gritty spring classic race in northern Belgium. On hallowed climbs including the Old Kwaremont and the infamous 22-percent Koppenberg, the buzz had already begun. The crisp, sunny day brought out scores of supporters wearing their favorite team jerseys and riding their own bikes on the same cobblestone roads that will decide round 2 of the UCI World Cup on Sunday. Many had the same question on their minds: Can Museeuw win Flanders for a fourth time?
Gracia, Dahlager earn downhill wins in Moab
It’s not the biggest series in the country, or the most prestigious. But with stops in legendary fat-tire towns like Crested Butte and Moab, plus high-alpine beauties like Steamboat Springs and Snowmass, the nine-race Mountain States Cup certainly holds its own. This year’s series, which is actually a merger of the old Spirit of the Rockies and Mountain States Cup, got rolling Saturday just outside Moab, Utah, with day one of the Tour of Canyonlands. That brought the downhill, contested on the rocky slopes of the Moab Rim Trail, a 1.5-mile track that’s more slickrock than dirt. The day’s pro
Tour of Flanders Preview: Can Museeuw do it?
Tour of Flanders Preview: Can Museeuw do it?
Ullrich’s priorities may soon change
Ullrich's priorities may soon change
Take off on the Moab Rim trail.
Take off on the Moab Rim trail.
Gracia uses all his suspension.
Gracia uses all his suspension.
These guys shouldn’t have any problems securing sponsors.
These guys shouldn't have any problems securing sponsors.
Kivilev died March 12 from injuries sustained in a crash the day before
Kivilev died March 12 from injuries sustained in a crash the day before
Living up to its name: Panorama Point
Living up to its name: Panorama Point
The final break takes on the final hill: Klasna, Pate, Mitchell, Lieswyn, Swindlehurst and Clinger.
The final break takes on the final hill: Klasna, Pate, Mitchell, Lieswyn, Swindlehurst and Clinger.
John Lieswyn
John Lieswyn
Jeanson on the attack
Jeanson on the attack
Vaughters’ view: No replacement for displacement
Vaughters' view: No replacement for displacement
Friday’s Euro-file: Vogels takes second at GP Adelie
Henk Vogels nearly delivered a big result for the Navigators during its second European sorjourn of the 2003 season. Vogels finished second, just two seconds behind winner Sebastien Joly (Jean Delatour), in Friday's GP Adelie in Vitre, France. Joly came across the line in 4 hours, 34 minutes, 38 seconds, while the Australian won the bunch sprint ahead of such names as Laurent Brochard (Ag2r), winner of the Criterium International last weekend. Cedric Vasseur (Cofidis) and Jens Voigt (Credit Agricole) came across the line fourth and fifth, respectively. The GP Adelie was the fourth stop in