Indeed, Enrico Franzoi of Italy was the only non-Belgian to crack the too 10
Indeed, Enrico Franzoi of Italy was the only non-Belgian to crack the too 10
Indeed, Enrico Franzoi of Italy was the only non-Belgian to crack the too 10
Jonathan Page crossed 15th and hopes for a better result on Sunday
Please, sir, may I have some more?Editor:Regarding O'Grady: More, please, more! Patrick Craft Abingdon, VAJeez, Patrick, we need a forklift to heft the hate-mail bag as it is. But if you insist on more of the grumbling Gael, you can always visit www.maddogmedia.com. – Editor And now, the counterpointEditor:I'm appalled by your ridiculous, left-wing bias. Tell that sack of swill Patrick O'Grady that Clinton didn't win any awards for smoking pot in Canada during the Vietnam War. Oh, and another thing, It was the Democrats who cut funding and got my friend honorably discharged from the
Mario De Clercq showed them how on Saturday in Belgium
World champ Bart Wellens had to settle for fifth
Bob;I work as a bicycle messenger in Chicago. When we are on the job, thecompany insures us against physical injury and property damage from crashes.Last week, at the end of the day, the dispatcher gave me an envelope todeliver. Because it was after five and the delivery address was near myapartment, the dispatcher told me to drop it off in the morning on my wayto work. As I was riding home, I was smacked by a hit-and-run driver (Idon’t own a car and therefore don’t have coverage for this kind of hit-and-runaccident). I lost a couple days of work and the bike was trashed. Shouldthe messenger
Do what you know; know what you doDear VeloNews;I read your magazine and web page because I love cycling and am anavid, yet middle-of-the-pack sport class mountain-bike racer. I also happento be politically conservative.I was disturbed to read "The2003 O'Grady Awards." The way you bashed and insulted anyone who isnot a liberal was surprising and out of place. Stick with what you know...cycling,and let the Bush administration to do what they do better then any left-wingpresident (see record of Slick Willy Clinton) would or could do...protectour country and it's citizens from terrorists.Stick
Doesn't like our choiceEditors;All the facts and figures I would cite have already been stated inother letters, but it wasn't enough. The collar bone, the 140K break away,Liège, Romandie, and the fact that he's starting a cycling foundationin addition to working with the MS rides should have led you guys to switchyour awards.If it were me, I’d have voted for Tyler as the International Cyclistof the Year and named Lance Armstrong as the North American Male Cyclistof the Year. You gave a detailed account of Lance's achievements as justification (see "InternationalCyclist of the Year: Lance
The O'Grady Awards are back for a fifth consecutive season, ensuring that generations of libel lawyers will continue to disperse their flatulence through silk. Named for the notorious right-wing political commentator Patrick O'Grady - who was compelled to dictate this year's list while strait-jacketed and strapped to a bed in the Raimondas Rumsas Wing of the William J. Bennett Recovery Center Casino & Pharmacy - the awards rear their hideous, hydra-like heads below. BERT LAHR MEMORIAL MEDAL FOR COURAGEMario Cipollini. After crashing out of the Giro d’Italia, takinganother Dorothyesque swat
The 2003 O'Grady Awards
Martinez had a good start with Mapei in 2002.
Lance Armstrong has reportedly "penciled in" plans to ride in April's Tour de Georgia, race and team officials said. The five-time Tour de France champion has tentative plans to enter the Georgia race as he tunes up for a bid to win the Tour de France a record sixth time, said Tailwind Sports general manager Dan Osipow. "Most (U.S.) races don't fit into his training schedule, but this one does," Osipow said. Armstrong may be attracted to Georgia if part of the April 20-25 race is scheduled in north Georgia's mountains, said Kathleen Hardison, director of marketing for Tour de
Earlier this year Tom Danielson established a collegiate scholarship foundation,and this week the American, who will soon be riding for Fassa Bortolo,is auctioning off a personal collection of bikes and related gear to benefitstudent athletes and collegiate cycling programs."Collegiate cycling provided me with all the tools to be a successfulprofessional cyclist," said the 25-year-old Danielson. "Not only did itgive me cycling opportunities with top notch racing and coaching, but ittaught me how to manage myself. I believe self-management is the key tosuccess. Juggling class, training,
It’s hard to argue with dominance, and when it came to women’s road racingin North America this year, a palpable air of fear could be felt each timea diminutive 22-year-old from Lachine, Québec, rolled to the startline. In only her fourth year of professional racing, RONA-Esker’s GenevièveJeanson has proven to be one of the world’s preeminent climbers — justask the men’s field from the 2003 Mount Washington Hill Climb, all buttwo of whom she beat. Jeanson started her campaign early, winning all three stages of February’sValley of the Sun stage race, followed by another win at the Pomona
Behold, the ligher, improved suspension 2004 Specialized S-Works Epic
The Gravity Dropper remote activated telescoping seatpost
Bad choiceDear VeloNews;Yes Lance is great. (see "InternationalCyclist of the Year: Lance Armstrong") Yes Lance joins the legends in winning five Tours,but c'mon...are you that afraid he wont give you another interview?You pass up Tyler who raced the whole season, fought in the Tour likenobody else and is true sportsman for a repeat of Lance?Lance the guy that said he'd be drinking a beer on a beach soon notthinking of anything else? I know Lance can be a nice guy and I know hetrains like no other freak of nature but Tyler had the year!Lance gave him his best and Tyler beat Lance in the
No matter how you package it, the Wrench Science ad is stillobnoxiousTO: VeloNewsRE: Caitlin Aptowicz letter (seeWeekend mailbag letter"VNis porn")Nice attempt to justify your degrading ads by using a woman's letterto do it.Those ads are degrading and your shots of men, while beautiful, arenot the same thing and we all know it. Your continued running ofthose ads has lost you a bookmark not to mention lost that company a customer.Michele HarrisChange is goodEditors;This one is for Nate Simms (See Weekend mailbag letter "Discbrakes, schmisc brakes") and all the other disc brake naysayersout
The 16th Annual VeloNews Awards issue hits the newsstands this week, naming Lance Armstrong as the 2003 international cyclist of the year. Armstrong, who was selected over other finalists including Alessandro Petacchi and Tyler Hamilton, earned VeloNews's highest award for the third time in his career. Armstrong is the only athlete to have been selected International Cyclist of the Year three times. Other major awards winners in the December 8 edition of VeloNews include Tyler Hamilton as North American Male Cyclist of the Year and Geneviève Jeanson as North American Female Cyclest of the
Still under contract with Bianchi, Ullrich did not want to stir the pot.
Our 16th Annual VeloNews Awards Issue
Wellens went from the gun.
There was some seriious horsepower in the 1st chase group...
.. as well as the second.
Groenendaal took fifth
American Jonathan Page came to Gavere with high hopes...
.. but encountered troubles and did not finish.
Szabo in pursuit
The ditch was a barrier for some
Romans Vainsteins, the 2000 world champion, will race for the Italian team Lampre in 2004, according to sporting director Giuseppe Saronni. Vainsteins rode for the Vini Caldirola squad this season; his results included a sixth place at Paris-Roubaix and 18th at the Tour of Flanders. Sarroni hopes for great things from the pairing of Vainsteins and Gianluca Bortolami, particularly in the northern classics. –Copyright 2003/AFP
Get rid of the adDear VeloNews;I think it is time to move the “Wrench Science” advertisement. I really enjoy reading your web site and your magazine. But it is getting a bit boring to see that sex ad every time I look at your web site.You provide such minimal coverage of women in cycling and that is the only regular photo of a woman on your site.Maura FreemanSeattle, WAVN is pornEditor;The Wrench Science ads are porn for guys, but 99.9 percent of cycling coverage is porn for girls. Three elements contribute to this. First there is the raw material: prime-of-life men with unbelievably hot
Downhill mountain-bike racer Kathi Krause has been handed a one-year suspension after testing positive for a metabolite of marijuana at the NORBA National Championship Series race June 22 in West Dover, Vermont, according to the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA). The Fair Lawn, New Jersey, resident tested positive for tetrahydrocannabinol acid (THC), a substance prohibited under the rules of the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). Krause's suspension began on the date of the positive test, and all results that occurred on or after that date have been declared invalid.
Bart Wellens and Sven Nijs dicing in Hooglede
Wellens off on his own en route to victory ...
... and by Jove, there Wellens is again, making it look easy
Nico Mattan finished outside the top five
... but Erwin Vervecken 'crossed into fifth place
Vervecken punched in and on the job
Men's winner Jonathan Baker
With the 40th anniversary of the John F. Kennedy assassination on Saturday, there will be endless discussion of the “defining moments” of each generation. That event, the Challenger explosion and 9/11 will all surely be brought up. I wasn’t thinking about any of that the other morning, but still got to wondering about how certain sports figures and events will be remembered and measured a few years down the road. The thoughts began to swirl as I was paging through “The Salt in his Shoes,” a children’s book that came packaged with a box of cereal a few months back. It’s the story of a young
Help Floridians get bike lane on A1AEditor:As an avid cyclist and long time reader of your publication, I am writing toask for your help in generating awareness about an important issue in PalmBeach County, Florida. Recently, a group of wealthy homeowners have banded together to form anorganization to prevent the installation of a bike lane on a state roadthough their town. This seaside road, State Road A1A, is by far the mostpopular road in the entire region with cyclists of all types - from familieson the way to the beach, to Olympic-caliber cyclists out training. The organization of
Bobby Julich has signed a one-year deal with CSC, according to the team’s website. The 32-year-old American was the second American to make the Tour de France podium, placing third in 1998, but since has suffered through a couple of less-than-stellar seasons. Still, team director Bjarne Riis says “we can get more out of him than he has shown in the previous years.” “Our team will give him the opportunities he needs, and I look forward to seeing him getting back to the level that he used to have," Riis says. "He is an experienced stage-race rider, and I think that he will be able to benefit
Bobby Julich must've liked Nicolas Jalabert's CSC jersey – because now he has one of his own
The former head coach of Finland's nordic ski team, Kari-Pekka Kyroe, was charged Thursday with smuggling illegal performance-enhancing drugs used by his athletes during the world championships in Lahti two years ago. Six of the host country's skiers, including renowned veteran Harri Kirvesniemi and triple Olympic champion Mika Myllyla, were caught illegally using hydroxyethyl (HES), a plasma-expanding compound. A report into the matter said that the skiers may have used the drug in an effort to mask their use of the stamina-boosting Erythropoietin (EPO). State prosecutor Pekka Koponen
Bob;Until a few days ago, I worked at a bicycle related business. I thinkI was fired, but the company says I quit.I ride at noon and am often late returning to my desk. My old supervisorrecognized that I worked more hours than my fellow employees and allowedme to be a bit late returning from the noon ride. I would take an hour-and-a-halftotal and then work through all my breaks, to make up for it.That worked well for my old supervisor, but his replacement was notas understanding. Anyway, I no longer have a job.Is it true that if I quit I am not eligible for unemployment, but ifI was fired, I
Dear VeloNews;I saw Andy Lee’s response to my diatribe yesterday (see O'Brien's letter, "I see no improvement," and Lee's response in Tuesday's mail bag) on the VN site this morning. Yes, he supplied a direct link to the “Forms and Applications” page, but I also clicked on the USA Cycling home page link he listed to look for a way to find that same page and … well, at the risk of appearing even less “computer savvy” than yesterday, I suggest that you try to find it off of the front page.It ain’t there.His patronizing, “everyone in the world is an idiot except us” attitude is what got the
“I’m hungry. I’m a determined man. I’m going to rip some legs off next year. If you see me in the leader’s jersey next year at ‘Toona… you’d better stay out my way.”Nathan O’Neill This quote of the week comes courtesy of Saturn’s Nathan O’Neill, whohad one hell of a rollercoaster 2003 but is currently without a team for2004. A four-time Australian national time trial champion, O’Neill had competedat both the Giro d’Italia and the Vuelta de España riding with theItalian Panaria squad before heading to the States to sign with Saturnlate last year. In his first season of domestic racing, he
O'Neill, with Jittery Joe's team director Micah Rice
Mr. Rogers' neighborhood: That's one angry Aussie
It’s time for a little good news about women’s cycling -- some very successfulgrassroots programs are out there -- programs that are making the sportaccessible to hundreds of new women racers every year. The varietyof these programs is impressive -- successful clubs, clinics, rides andseminars, all focused on getting more women involved with racing. Some of these are programs for women only and some are part of existing co-ed programs.At the 2nd Yoplait Women’s Cycling Summit held on October 13th, a taskforce was formed to identify these successful programs and to help developsimilar
She's innocent until…Dear VeloNews;Geneviève Jeanson took drugs (see “Jeansondenies EPO use”) well at least we think she did, so now we aregoing to cast a long dark shadow over her and give her no chance to proveher innocence.Hmmmm, what about the right to defend yourself, the right to face youraccusers, the right to counsel? Okay, I know these are principles of Americanjurisprudence, but there has to be a standard by which athletes are judgeddomestic or internationally.As it stands now the athlete's future is dependent on the whim of what ever Kangaroo panel wants to point a finger. Doesn't
Minnaar during his final run at world's...
... and Minnaar after his final run at world's
Drink enough of 'the good stuff' and win one of these.
Germans rejoice! SRAM triggers are now legal in the homeland.
Insisting that she has “never taken any banned substance,” Canadian cyclist Geneviève Jeanson confirmed Monday that she was the elite cyclist mentioned in charges against Montreal orthopedic surgeon Dr. Maurice Duquette, but denied that he had given her EPO. Jeanson had a called a news conference to ask that a publication ban against use of her name in connection with the case be lifted in order to allow her to publicly assert her innocence. Duquette recently pleaded guilty to a number of charges brought against him by the Quebec College of Physicians, most of them dealing with the
Jeanson with attorney Alain Barrette
Anderson case wasn’t relevant to real dopingEditor:Bryan Jew tries to compare drug abuse in cycling to the "major" U.S. sports (see "Notes from the road"). While I agree that cyclists and track athletes are given an unfair amount of the bad press for using performance-enhancing drugs, using Mike Anderson as the bad example for football is a poor comparison. There are plenty of examples of NFL and major college football players using performance-enhancing drugs, but Anderson was suspended for detection of marijuana (and in an amount that suggests it was second-hand smoke). Unless he is riding
Spain's Joseba Beloki is already basking in his new role as leader of the La Boulangere cycling team - which he hopes will provide him with the ammunition to challenge Lance Armstrong on the Tour de France. Beloki, who has spent the past four years fighting Armstrong for cycling's main prize as the leader of the ONCE team, created general surprise by signing with the little-known French team on Thursday. The 30-year-old Basque has claimed three podium finishes in the past four years on the world's biggest bike race, and, with five-time runner-up Jan Ullrich, was one of Armstrong's main
Some random thoughts on some random stories in the world of sports this week: Item No. 1: Kelme’s Javier Pascual Llorente, who tested positive for EPO at this year’s Tour de France, gets an 18-month suspension. Item No. 2: Four Americans and one British track and field athletes test positive for the newly discovered steroid THG, and face two-year bans by track and field’s governing body, the IAAF. Item No. 3: Major League Baseball announces that between 5 to 7 percent of anonymous drug tests of major league players in 2003 were positive for steroids, meaning that testing with penalties
“Save the ‘Drome ‘Cross Madness,” a fund-raiser for the endangered Ed Rudolph Velodrome in Northbrook, Illinois, kicks off on Sunday, November 23, at the Anets Golf Course. The velodrome may be forced to close after the 2004 season if improvements are not made. The Northbrook Park District, which owns the facility, has offered to fund half the project, if the local cycling community can raise approximately $150,000. The November 23 fund-raiser kicks off at 9 a.m. with a “steeple ‘cross” running race that will use the same course as the subsequent cyclo-cross races, which begin at 10 a.m.
Jimena Florit and Tyler Hamilton are among the cycling stars who have donated items for the International Mountain Bicycling Association’s 15th-anniversary auction on eBay, which begins today. More than 100 donated items are available, including: Florit's NORBA winning Tomac Buckshot (full bike)New Specialized Epic FRS Pro (full bike)A Hamilton-autographed photo and Tour de France race numberNew Yeti Scandium mountain frameFox suspension forksMavic Crossmax wheelsWestern Spirit mountain bike adventureRockShox Duke Race forkCrank Brothers pedalsCool mountain bike artworkOriginal Dirt Rag
Back in Deutschland...
Beloki has big plans for '04
A few minutes after the slide show celebrating the season of the 5280 development team, Jonathan Vaughters addressed the small group of attendees at Denver’s Adega restaurant on Sunday evening. “The 5280 team is the main focus of the evening,” Vaughters said, “but I also have a ‘surprise’ announcement to make … one that most of you already know about, since I’m such a blabbermouth. I’m using tonight to also announce my retirement from professional cycling.” And at that, the 30-year-old Prime Alliance man put a formal end to his career as a pro. “I’d really already made the decision this
Bob,I was hit by a beverage truck in late 1999 here in Connecticut. Itwas the driver's fault, as he pulled out of a parking lot just as I passedby in the bike lane. I hit the side of his truck and broke my collarboneand hurt my knee. His insurance company paid for the bike. I had healthinsurance and that covered my ER visit. I was going to let the matter go,but in the last sixweeks, the knee injury has started to hurt so much Icannot ride. Is it too late to do anything about this case?T.S.ConnecticutDear T.S.,The good news is that you are not a “cold one.” The bad news is thatit is almost
In yellow at the '99 Dauphine, Vaughters had some pretty impressive support.