Pendleton celebrates
Pendleton celebrates
Pendleton celebrates
Meares and her coach celebrate Australia's first gold of this year's championships
She collected a bronze in the sprint to go with it
French coach Florian Rousseau has blasted the race tactics of Australian Mark French, who was disqualified from the men's keirin at the track world championships in Palma de Majorca, Spain. French was disqualified by race officials at the world track cycling championships Friday after a potentially dangerous maneuver that effectively ended the medal hopes of Rousseau's star keirin rider Kevin Sireau. Eventual gold medalist Chris Hoy of Great Britain won the second-round heat, in which the top three go through to the finals, ahead of defending Dutch champion Theo Bos and another
Llaneras blazes towards the points-race gold
The Bulls celebrate their victory.
Creed was still suffering the effects of a bad cold and didn't make the medal round
Meares rips the 500, beating her own world record
Bourgain advanced in the sprint
Pollack celebrates his first victory of 2007
Chiappa didn't
A sloppy, scary sprint
Pendleton prepares herself for another run at gold
Quinn thought she had made the right move to get the medal
Lining up for the points race
Meares burning up the boards
Kabush wrangles the holeshot in the men's event
The podium after Stage 7
The gold went to a happy Hoy
Hammer wins her second consecutive world title
There's power for you: The top six legs in the keirin
Celebrating on the podium
The winning British pursuit team had fans in the Spanish stands
Reed wound up 15th in the sprint and now looks ahead to the keirin
Third place Rafal Ratajczyk regrets not chasing Kam-Po Wong in the scratch race
The podium
But not as much as these guys regret laying it down on the unsanded boards
Britain blazed the team-pursuit qualifier and then won gold in the final
The men's podium, sans Schnell and Craig
Hammer focuses pre-ride
JHK took a brief detour through the cactus
And off she goes
The women's podium
Did we miss something?
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you havea comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen incycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write toWebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name andhome town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Writersare encouraged to limit their submissions to one letter per month.The letters published here contain the opinions of the submittingauthors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions, policies or positionsof VeloNews.com, VeloNews magazine or our parent company, InsideCommunications,
Celebrating with coach and manager Andy Sparks
The 2007 Tour of Utah will be canceled due to a lack of sponsorship, and its executive director has stepped down, the race’s board of directors announced Friday in Salt Lake City. The six-day, six-stage, 400-mile race had been scheduled for July 2-7. “In assessing our current staff, meeting personally with community stakeholders and business leaders, and observing the Tour of California bicycle race, I believe that we have the foundation in place to build a well-respected and successful event,” said board chairman Greg Miller. “We hit the ground running in January, and after getting up to
Huff racing in his scratch-race heat
Organizers on Friday released the list of 21 teams slated to race the U.S. Open Cycling Championships April 7 in Virginia. The 112-mile men’s race, a stop on the UCI Americas Tour (UCI 1.1) and the national USA Cycling Pro Tour, starts in Williamsburg and finishes in Richmond. A nine-lap women’s race in Richmond will use the western section of the men’s course. Among the athletes bound for Virginia are Ivan Dominquez and Henk Vogels (Toyota-United); Svein Tuft (Symmetrics); Fausto Marcelino Muñoz (Tecos de la Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara); and Danny Pate
Henderson racing his heat
Wiggins leads the British pursuit squad as it charges to a sub-4:00 qualifier.
Hoy takes the keirin
Having played a major role in Felicia Ballanger's five-year win streak, Daniel Morelon is now helping China establish a program.
Wong powers away, carnage in his wake
Guo's 11.149 in Friday’s qualifying round was the best of the day
The national anthem plays
Hammer races into the gold-medal round
Bos in the keirin prelims
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Czech fans celebrate their first track gold medal ever.
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
French coach encourages the French team to victory.
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Greg Bauge celebrates the upset Team Sprint victory.
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Wiggins in the pursuit.
Flat tires suck, for sure, but at least it offers a chance to get some rest.
Wiggins is quite comfortable on the podium. He's done this before.
Stage 6 finished at a tractor museum in Villiersdorp
Press awaits the British Women's sprint team.
...dreaming of lunch
Riding the omnium, Huff takes on the points race...
Millar - seen here in the yellow jersey at Paris-Nice - says that doping reform will only happen if teams get serious.
... and the pursuit.
Our boy Fred eventually recovered.
The media room is there to keep track of all of it.
Wiggins beat Bartko in the final
The track in Mallorca is the world's newest
Sarah Hammer burst onto the international scene last year with her breakthrough gold medal in the women’s individual pursuit. It was a surprise to everyone except Hammer, who was quietly confident she could mine the first U.S. gold medal in a decade and calmly delivered the goods. The 23-year-old no longer enjoys the benefit of being the unknown American and will be in the crosshairs this weekend as she takes aim for two gold medals, first in the pursuit on Friday and the points race on Sunday. VeloNews.com sat down with Hammer after her Thursday afternoon training session on the track to
James' Cannondale: He liked it so much, he bought the company... at least part of it.
The author shows great enthusiasm at the start... he'd get over it soon enough.
Hammer won the pursuit title in Bordeaux in '06
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Huff podiums despite a cold, the trots and 'bad legs'
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Huff grits his teeth and guts it out in the points race
The 'easiest' stage: a Cape Epic diary
Huff starts the pursuit
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you havea comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen incycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write toWebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name andhome town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Writersare encouraged to limit their submissions to one letter per month.The letters published here contain the opinions of the submittingauthors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions, policies or positionsof VeloNews.com, VeloNews magazine or our parent company, InsideCommunications,