The bull wants his side of the road
The bull wants his side of the road
The bull wants his side of the road
ONE OF THE great metaphors inspired by the Tour de France is that of the race as a road to Calvary. Le calvaire has been routinely used throughout the 100 years since the great race was born to describe the process of a cyclist continuing in the face of great affliction, be it injury, or illness, or the mental agony that follows the death of a close relative. Tyler Hamilton has put all the past century of two-wheeled battles against pain into a new perspective over the past two weeks. He has ridden on in spite of a broken collarbone, holding a high place overall as the race entered the
Vinokourov will not give up...
We had just cleared the 1069-meter summit of the Col de Portet d’Aspet when the memories of July 18, 1995 came flooding back. They were of Italian Olympic road champion Fabio Casartelli and his fatal crash on the Pyrénéan mountain’s descent in the Tour de France. Since then, the Tour has frequently returned to the forested mountainside where, incredibly, the concrete bollards that Casartelli hit his head on still menacingly line the sinewy descent. But today seemed different. Maybe it was because Samuel Abt of the New York Times was sitting beside me in the back seat. The last time he did
... and neither will Ullrich.
Tactics, timing and tenacity should all come into play on Monday at what should be the most gripping stage yet of this astonishing Tour de France. For the past two days in the Pyrénées, Lance Armstrong’s U.S. Postal-Berry Floor team and Jan Ullrich’s Bianchi team have played a delicate tactical battle in addition to the overt one between the two stars. Each day, Postal has sent a rider off in the stage’s long break (José Luis Rubiera Saturday, Manuel Beltran Sunday), which has allowed Armstrong’s team to follow rather than lead the peloton; on Sunday, Bianchi led for much of the last 100km.
Simoni's spider theme
Lauri Aus at Paris-Nice in 2000
It is difficult to produce a television documentary that is both incisive and probing when every 12 minutes one is interrupted by 12 dancing rabbits singing about toilet paper. – Rod Serling Wouldn’t you know, this would be the year I decide to do without TV for the Tour. It seemed like a good idea at the time, when we left Westcliffe for Colorado Springs. We’d had satellite TV on Mount Dog – HBO, OLN, the works – but the signal-to-noise ratio got way out of balance in late 2001, and we thought that we could spend the $50 a month on something that offered a little more return on the
Sacchi gets his own custom job
Hamilton attacks on l'Alpe d'Huez
Simoni edges Dufaux and Virenque for the win
Deda's Alanera - no flashy graphics, but...
Green drops out of the 'Heart of Darkness.'
Simoni gets a win, Virenque adds to his KOM lead
Armstrong still in yellow, but it is close
Premont smooth and in control
At the highest levels of competition, there isn’t that much separating a great day from a bad one. We’re not talking about a huge change in power output or overall performance. At this level, being better or worse by a few percentage points can lead to either minutes gained or minutes lost. Lance Armstrong lost about 6 kilograms of fluid weight between yesterday morning and the end of the stage-12 time trial, and also lost 1:36 to Jan Ullrich during that same time period. Losing 2 percent of your body weight due to dehydration leads to a 10-15 percent drop in performance, and Lance lost 8
The last survivor: Rubiera was the last one of the original 10 to be caught.
For the first time in four years, Lance Armstrong is not the favorite to win the Tour de France, the London bookmakers William Hill said on Saturday. They now make Germany's Jan Ullrich the 4-6 favorite with Armstrong at 11-10 and Kazakh Alexander Vinokourov at 14-1.
Some difficulty for Hamilton
Find that landing.
Ullrich makes his move
A war of seconds
Off the wall.
Sastre honors his family with a win
First Vino' went... then Ullrich charged
It was a packed house at Whistler on Saturday.
Traffic jam from hell in Ax-Les-Thermes. The team buses were stuck as well.
Sastre's win adds to CSC's lead in team standings
Lance Armstrong made it through an epic day in the Pyrénées Saturday, but he only just kept the race leader's yellow jersey on his back after a frantic finale to the 197.5km stage 13 of the 2003 Tour de France. The four-time Tour champion was attacked from all sides on the grinding, 9.1km climb to the Ax-3 Domaines ski area high in the French Pyrénées, but hung on to finish fourth and retain the maillot jaune by a scant 15 seconds over Bianchi’s Jan Ullrich. Armstrong admitted that he was fatigued from the efforts in Friday's individual time trial and tried to limit his losses when Ullrich
Tour supplies for a day on the mountain. No wonder they are so excited when the race comes through
Sprinter Robbie McEwen's bid to win a second successive Tour de France green jersey was not going quite to plan, the Australian admitted on Saturday. McEwen won the jersey last year with victory on the Champs-Elysees on the race's final day. This year, he led the points competition from stage one to five, but dropped to third behind Italian Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo) and Australia's Baden Cooke (fdjeux.com) after crashing on the sixth stage. Petacchi abandoned the race on the seventh stage to leave McEwen second in the standings, eight points behind Cooke. Speaking before the
Lance's bike is buckled into the car for the start.
Stage 13 Individual Results1. Carlos Sastre (Sp), CSC, 5:16:082. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, 01:013. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 01:034. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 01:085. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, 01:186. Ivan Basso (I), Fassa Bortolo, 01:207. Mercado Juan Miguel (Sp), iBanesto.com, 01:248. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 01:599. Christophe Moreau (F), Credit Agricole, 02:3210. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, 02:3411. Laurent Dufaux (Swi), Alessio, 03:0612. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, 03:0913. Richard Virenque (F), Quick Step-Davitamon, 03:4614.
Very French father and daughter at the start.
Lance Armstrong has not yet won his fifth Tour de France, but Saturday marked his 52nd day in the race leader's yellow jersey – beating the total of five-times Tour champion Jacques Anquetil. Frenchman Anquetil sported the yellow jersey for 51 days between 1957 and 1964 as he became the first rider to win the Tour five times. Armstrong, winner of the last four Tours, is still a long way behind Belgian Eddy Merckx, who led the Tour for 96 days, while France's Bernard Hinault was the race leader for 78 days and Spaniard Miguel Indurain for 60 days.
Euskatel fans push a struggling rider.
To see how Stage 13 of the Tour unfolded live, just go to our Live Update window and follow the action all the way to the finish.
The Tour de France of Danish team CSC looked to be over before it had even begun when leader Tyler Hamilton crashed and broke his collarbone on the very first stage. But two weeks later, the brave American is still in the race, lying fifth, four minutes and 25 seconds behind overall leader Lance Armstrong, and his teammates have now won two stages. Spaniard Carlos Sastre, 10th in the Tour last year, nearly became the team's leader when it was at first thought that Hamilton would be forced out. But he resumed his team duties until Saturday, when the Spaniard asked Hamilton permission to try
Mavic car, but going straight.
DH winner Dumaresq.
It was a big day in the Tour de France today. And there are still more to come, with the race hanging on the thread of 15 seconds between Lance Armstrong and Jan Ullrich. With one of four days in the Pyrénées down, all I am really thinking about now is making it to the finish in Paris – and making the best of next Saturday’s time trial along the way. If you were in the bus – the laughing group – like I was today, there was one thing very funny about today’s 13th stage: hearing the Italians crying as we tackled the major climbs. You could hear them. Crying. Why? They just thought we were
TV camera and fans stakeout the Postal Bus, hoping for a glimpse of Lance.
Jones celebrates his national title.
Lone straggler
Off the box.
It wasn’t only in the top overall placings of the Tour de France that important changes came about in Saturday’s first Pyrenean stage. If you cast your finger down to the end of the right column of the second page of the results sheet — or dragged your cursor to the last place — you’d notice a change that will have gone largely unnoticed. For the first time since stage 9, Belgian rider Hans De Clercq (Lotto-Domo) is no longer the Tour’s lanterne rouge — officially, the last placed rider on overall standings. De Clercq will most probably have taken his move up from last place to 161st at 2
Replenishment motos on the front of the race.
Dropping in.
Despite again losing time to Jan Ullrich on Saturday’s stage, Lance Armstrong is still in the yellow jersey and seems confident of winning his fifth Tour. Before stage 13 started in Toulouse, he happily signed a number of yellow jerseys as souvenirs for local VIPs and then shook hands with a line of local teenage cyclists who waited for him on the presentation stage. He signed more yellow jerseys after the finish, and happily answered questions in French for the France 2 network, which covers the Tour live. Then, after being held up during the chaos of finishing another stage in a small ski
Brochard leads the early break
Berrecloth shows his skills.
Sastre and Mercado off on the chase
3-2-1 lift off.
Friday's stage of the 2003 Tour de France delivered yet more shocks in what has been a Tour of full of drama. The shock of the day was Jan Ullrich turning 47 kilometers of French asphalt into a personal road to redemption, by scoring his first Tour stage victory since 1998 and pushing his longtime rival Lance Armstrong to an unfamiliar second place in a Tour time trial. Armstrong said he ran out of water and suffered with the heat, which again shot into the humid-90s. Armstrong was dealt his worst Tour time trial defeat since his 1999 comeback to the race after overcoming cancer. Indeed,
All good things come to an end, and my days of Tour tech coverage are now but a pleasant memory. I just got back to VeloNews headquarters this morning and had to follow today's time trial the way everyone else does – via www.velonews.com and OLN. I’ve received a ton of questions regarding the time-trial bikes used this year. While access was tight (but possible) with the "daily driver" bikes of the peloton, team mechanics were downright militant about refusing to show their riders' TT bikes. Perhaps the teams didn't want to lose any last-minute tech advantage to the competition, or maybe
Adam Craig getting ready to (free) ride.
Things have certainly changed for the Italian Fassa Bortolo team on the Tour de France - and its experienced manager Giancarlo Ferretti admits he’s feeling rather short-handed. Ferretti, who was on cloud nine in the first week of the Tour as 29-year-old sprinter Alessandro Petacchi added four impressive stage wins to the six he won in the Tour of Italy, has fallen back to earth after a virus decimated his team. Fassa Bortolo have been operating with only three of their nine riders for the past six days - a peculiar but worrying situation which has left plenty of room on the team bus but
Ullrich flew
Men's XC favorite Hesjedal sporting a new look.
1. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, at 58:322. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, at 01:363. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, at 02:064. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 02:405. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, at 02:436. Uwe Peschel (G), Gerolsteiner, at 03:267. David Millar (GB), Cofidis, at 03:558. Inigo Chaurreau (Sp), Ag2R Prevoyance, at 04:019. David Plaza (Sp), Bianchi, at 04:3710. Santiago Botero (Col), Telekom, at 05:0011. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, at 05:0012. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 05:0313. Georg Totschnig (A), Gerolsteiner, at 05:0614. Denis
Who is that mysterous mullet-man?
Saint derailleur.
In a recent Sports Illustrated column, Rick Reilly says to his daughter that besides spending two hours writing his weekly column, what he does the rest of the time is “worry about those two hours.” Well, here at bike-geek central, none of us has the luxury of being a full-time, once-a-week columnist, seeing as how our staff is about the size of the Fassa Bortolo squad after a week at the Tour. That being the case, we generally leave it a little late when it comes to our weekly Web columns, which can make for some, um, interesting topics. This week, for example, Neal Rogers found it in
Euskatel rider Zubeldia rides to take the fourth place