Wadecki beats Tosatto
Wadecki beats Tosatto
Wadecki beats Tosatto
Van Petegem retains the white jersey
Behind the wheel. Andreu's got a new role.
Bruckner (l) and Jeanson waited to see how far Smith was
Klasna hit the climb with a big advantage.
Wohlberg and McCormack did the lion's share of the work in the break.
The men's peloton
Cooke, Fraser and Blijlevens
Green (L) added to his overall lead Thursday, besting Leipheimer and Horner by more than half-a-minute.
Baden Cooke
Eddy Gragus
Zulle leads up Mont Ventoux
Jeannie Longo
Nicolas Vogondy on the attack
Horner, Green, Leipheimer
Tonkov and Julich climb Ventoux
Fabrizio Guidi leads the Mercury-Viatel chase
An unfortunate ending for Bessette
Jeanson in the leader's jersey
Freedman and Jeanson
The women's field enjoys a perfect SoCal day
Harm Jansen hard at work
Up close and personal
Koerts notched another win for Mercury
The peloton sped along the Rhone
Van Petegem in white
Fraser and Freedman take Highlands road race at Redlands
Freedman and Jeanson, without third-placed Bessette.
Fraser (c) credits Cooke (l) for a winning leadout. Blijlevens had to settle for second.
Dylan Casey
Roland Green passes another rider on his way to the win.
A scenic hillclimb replaced the street sprints prologue
Pam Schuster
David Zabriskie
Heading in to the Redlands Classic, both Mercury-Viatel and Saturn have four riders in the top-10 standings of U.S. Cycling Federations National Calendar point standings, with Mercury's Baden Cooke and Gord Fraser in the 1-2 slots. In the women's standings, Saturn has one of its riders in the top spot (Lyne Bessette) and two others in the top 10. Overall, that squad has a 120-point lead over second place 800.com. Keep reading for complete standings. 2001 NRC RANKINGS(as of March 12, 2001) Men's Individual Rankings Name Team Points1 Baden Cooke Mercury/Viatel 1042 Gord
Van Petegem
Landis and Vaughters lead the break
The race continues toward Nice
Jeanson says she is at Redlands 'to have fun.' Winning is fun.
Greenis wearing Postal colors for the week.
For the second-straight offseason Mary Grigson has dislocated her left shoulder, this time during the first stage of the Tour de Snowy. The injury has left the defending NORBA cross-country champion on the shelf for the opening portion of the 2001 campaign, and there’s a chance it could jeopardize her entire season. "I’m definitely out for Sea Otter and I’d say there’s only a 20 percent chance I’ll be ready for Napa," said the 30-year-old Australian. "Right now I can’t reach my arm over my head. If I go six weeks and the shoulder hasn’t healed, I’ll probably need to have a shoulder
Mattan retains the overall lead
Mattan on the sprint to victory
The 2000 champ, Kloden finished 24 seconds down
In an unsigned statement issued late Thursday, USA Cycling said it would request a review and consider an appeal of a recent Colorado appeals court decision upholding a legal challenge of the organization's attempt to "streamline" its bylaws two years ago. The court ruled that a lawsuit filed by former U.S. Cycling Federation trustee Les Earnest rightly pointed out that USA Cycling's board of directors had not fully justified their use of "emergency" provisions in its attempt to implement 24 pages of bylaw changes without submitting them for review by the membership of its affiliate
Nearly two months after the cancellation of the World Cup stop in Whistler, Canada, the UCI has announced that Grouse Mountain will replace the famed ski area as host site for the year’s first mountain-biking "triple." Downhill/dual Round 3 and cross country Round 4 of the World Cup series will take place July 4-8 at the small ski resort, which is just 15 minutes from downtown Vancouver. The event will be put on by Gestev Inc., the organization behind the numerous World Cup races at Mont-Ste-Anne, Quebec, and last year’s cross country in Mazatlan, Mexico. Grouse Mountain was one of two
Cruz had the legs to hang on in today's mass sprint in Spain.
Nice View: Grouse Mountain overlooks Vancouver
Pantani about Armstrong: 'I really don't like that American way of his.'
Bruckner moved in to the overall lead with a 1:30 margin.
Stahurskaia
Teutenberg
Mapei’s Michele Bartoli won Saturday's Het Volk semi-classic, a 200km race between Ghent and Lokeren.The Italian champion won a sprint finish to come in ahead of Belgian Hendrik Van Dijck (Lotto) Matthe Pronk (Rabobank). Bartoli, who suffered a serious injury to his right leg after an accident in the 1999 Tour of Germany, is now back in top form following this result in Belgium's season-opening event. At 30, he is now in the kind of shape which saw him top the world rankings at the end of the 90's. The result upstaged Belgian riders who have only been beaten five times in 55
Graham Watson
Schwinn/GT Limited, the European division of Schwinn, has gone into administrative receivership, the British equivalent of an American bankruptcy proceeding. According to the British bicycle industry news service, BikeBiz UK, the company may have as many as 11 containers of bikes held up in port because the company lacked the necessary funds to pay for them. A spokesman for the American division of Schwinn confirmed the European division's dire financial situation, and added that the move would have no impact on the firm's North American operations. However, the willingness to let
Boogerd kept the leader's jersey with his second stage win
World champion Zinaida Stahurskaia adds firepower to GAS
World Cup runner-up Pia Sundstedt will be a one-day force
The ever-secretive UCI still hasn’t tipped its hand on where the cancelled Whistler World Cup is going to end up, but talk out of Vancouver is that the Grouse Mountain bid submitted by Gestev Inc. is just days away from being accepted. "It’s not a done deal, but we’re confident, otherwise we wouldn’t be talking about it," said Stuart McLaughlin, president of Grouse Mountain Resorts. "We should have confirmation in the next week or so, and then we really get to work." It’s expected that the Grouse event will retain World Cup "triple" status — hosting cross country, downhill and dual — and
Boys of spring: Postal riders Christian Vande Velde (r) and George Hincapie tackled one of Valencia's climbs.
Not too many cyclists get things named for them. There's a Sean Kelly Square in Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland; there's streets named after Tour de France heroes; and the Aussies named their Olympic velodrome for the 1930s track racer Dunc Gray. But these things generally happen after the athlete has retired ... or died. So the naming Wednesday at the Nike world headquarters in Beaverton. Oregon, of the Lance Armstrong Sports & Fitness Center is unusual, to say the least. "It makes me feel kinda old," said the 29-year-old Armstrong, who jetted in with his family Tuesday evening from Santa
Boogerd held onto the yellow jersey
Pantani finished well off the pace
Brian Lopes
Will Pantani seek refuge off-road?
After 42 days in the hospital, Fred Mengoni is going home. Friday night will be Mengoni’s last at St. Mary’s Hospital in West Palm Beach, Florida. Saturday a friend will drive him back to his home in New York City. "I am a lucky guy. I could have been dead," said Mengoni, who is considered one of American cycling’s greatest patrons. "For a month I couldn’t even talk. Now I’m walking and talking. I feel great." Back in early January, the 77-year-old Italian born Mengoni crashed his bicycle while trying to avoid an oncoming car. The incident left Mengoni with a broken pelvis, broken ribs,
The tangled legal affairs of Italy's most famous cyclist, Marco Pantani, were further complicated on Thursday by two new developments. Forli Judge Luisa Del Bianco, who presided over the case that ended with the 1998 Tour de France and Tour of Italy winner being convicted and sentenced to a three-month suspended prison term on doping-related charges in December, reopened that inquiry because of the disappearance of the cyclist's medical records. In a separate development investigators from Florence, working under the instruction of Ferrara prosecutor Pierguido Soprani, seized files
French cycling star Laurent Jalabert's immediate career remained in the balance on Thursday, as the rider's release from a Geneva hospital was pushed back, Danish television reported. The 32-year-old leader of Danish team CSC/World Online, fell two meters from a ladder in a freak accident at his home near Geneva last week, fracturing three vertebrae. Team manager, former Tour de France winner Bjarne Riis, said on Thursday he would be travelling to Geneva to discuss plans for Jalabert's physiotherapy and in a bid to rebuild his morale. Jalabert, cycling's world No. 1 for
Problems mounting: Pantani is facing several legal battles.
Winner: Dekker led from stage 2 on.
Good and bad: American Fred Rodriguez was ninth in the final stage but 101st in the overall.
Motoring: Hvastija heads for the win.
Up they go: The Spanish countryside provided pleasant scenery.
Dekker leads the pack.
Alcala de La Real creates a nice backdrop for the Ruta.