Eisel on the rise
Eisel on the rise
Eisel on the rise
Anderson controls the field for Teutenberg
A spokesman for Belgian super team Quick Step firmly denied links to doping practices Thursday after police arrested a dozen people following raids which netted large quantities of banned doping products. The regional prosecutor's office, after initially saying the raids were on homes of members of the Quick Step team, refused to name any of those arrested, the team who employed them or the type of products uncovered. Quick Step spokesman Alessandro Tegner claimed none of the team's riders were involved, and that their implication in the investigation is the result of a major
Belgium's enfant terrible of professional cycling Frank Vandenbroucke is recovering in a Milan hospital on Thursday after an apparent suicide attempt. Earlier in the day the Italian press agency Ansa reported that the 32-year-old was in grave condition but his Acqua e Sapone team said later that he was "out of danger" and "completely conscious." Vandenbroucke did not start this year's Tour of Italy, which finished on Sunday, after failing to recover quickly enough from a knee operation in February. He was said to have suffered from depression for several years. He had yet to make
Prosecutors' spokesman Tom Janssen fields questions about Thursday's raids.
Vandenbroucke's condition has stabilized after suidcide attempt.
The T-Mobile team has opted not to select Ukrainian time trial specialist Sergei Honchar for next month's Tour de France following a suspicious blood test last month. Honchar, the winner of two time trial stages in last year's Tour, was sidelined from T-Mobile’s Giro d'Italia squad last month after a blood test showed “abnormalities,” suggesting that he had doped. T-Mobile manager Bob Stapleton said the one-time Soviet rider, who will turn 37 four days before the July 7 start of the Tour, will not race for the team next season. "A blood health check showed abnormalities four
Manzano says cycling has lost its appeal.
Brown has doubts about whether roadies can adapt successfully to off-road racing
German cyclist Erik Zabel, fresh from admitting he took EPO (erythropoietin) in 1996, announced on Tuesday that he will not compete in the road race at next year's Beijing Olympic Games. Zabel, 36, met with the president of the German Olympic committee (DOSB), Thomas Bach, and DOSB general secretary Michael Vesper in Frankfurt on Tuesday before announcing his decision. The six-time winner of the Tour de France green jersey confessed he took the banned blood-booster EPO in 1996 - one of seven former Telekom cyclists, including 1996 Tour winner Bjarne Riis, who have admitted to using
Godefroot vehemently denies involvement in the Telekom doping program.
The newest Madone from Trek
A new approach to bottom bracket shell design
The new Madone fork crown and oversized bottom steerer section
Bonding on the last of the five main molded parts forming a Madone frame
VeloNews Photo Contest: A new winner and a new gallery
Landis' appearance drew a lot of attention
At 51, Overend shows no interest in slowing down
Our latest reader-submitted Photo Gallery is now ready for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of our most recent contest. We get a lot of bike-commuting pictures – especially for a racing mag’ – and we’ve even picked a few as winners. None has captured the imagination as has Fred Hall’s “Commuter Parking – Train Station, Malmo, Sweden.” Wow… not a car in sight. How civilized can you get? Nice work Fred! Please drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.comto work out the details and we’ll send you a copy of our new Coors Classic DVD.
Jonathan Vaughters says the future of Slipstream-Chipotle is secure for the 2008-09 seasons. While Vaughters and Slipstream Sports chairman Doug Ellis currently shop for a title sponsor, the team has guaranteed funding to continue with their ambitious goal of pushing the U.S. squad into the Tour de France and the ProTour league within two years. “We have cash in hand to continue through 2008-09 no matter what,” Vaughters said. “Whether we find a big sponsor or not, we’re around next year and the next.” Unlike most cycling teams, which require a major title sponsor to pony up a large
David de la Fuente made the most of his Tour in '06.
Di Luca had a relaxed ride into Milan
At last, the prize
The engineer and his train
The champ finishes
Eisel takes a soggy win
And just think — the weather only got worse
Lagutin up front
The men's podium
O'Neill had to defend from the front
The women's break . . .
. . . and the narrow victory
Teutenberg won the women's race
The peloton in the park
Still in the spot-light.
Landis toes the line for the first time in many months
Petacchi wins his fifth stage of the 2007 Giro
Toyota United's Stevic hoped to pull off the win, but a miscue cost him the V
Luperini takes the win
O'Neill remains in yellow going into Sunday's finale
Goldstein, a former Israeli soldier and kickboxing champ, took a pummeling
Abbott rides to second in her first international race
The men's break
Health Net masses at the front of the bunch
Olympic chief Jacques Rogge said Saturday that former Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich could be stripped of his Olympic gold and silver medals from the Games in 2000. Ullrich won the men's Olympic road race in Sydney, where riders from his Telekom team also took the silver and bronze medals, and also claimed silver in the time trial. However, the German is among several top cyclists on whom suspicion has fallen in the wake of a series of doping confessions and revelations from former doctors, trainers and cyclists with links to the Telekom cycling team. Although Ullrich, now retired,
Lill was clearly the strongest
Savoldelli rides to victory in Verona.
The women's break
Mazzoleni slots in for a 1-2 Astana finish
Gomez guts it out to the win
Zabriskie makes the podium in third
Gomez congratulates a 'very, very tough' Goldstein
Di Luca rode a respectable race to defend his maglia rosa
Navigators powers the break through the feed zone
And to the victor (well, come Sunday, anyway) go the spoils
The race's namesake looms in the background
Schleck rode the ITT of his life
Bahati saw his chance and jumped at it
CSC was running its train toward the finish, hoping to set up Haedo
Riis's confession might be good for the soul, but how does it affect the bottom line? Only his American sponsor knows for sure.
O'Neill wins, as expected
Jacques-Maynes prefers a flatter course
Zajieck: Little drag, big power
Goldstein rips it
Harper slots into second
Mactier rides into third, sans sunglasses
Two decades of American presence in the European peloton are under threat by cycling’s credibility crisis in the face of a non-stop barrage of doping scandals. For the first time since 7-Eleven paved the way with its pioneering start in the 1985 Giro d’Italia, there is a very real possibility there will not be a U.S.-sponsored team in the ProTour European peloton next season. Why? Because U.S. corporations seem less willing to take a multi-million risk on cycling’s bad-boy doping image. Two major American teams are scrambling to find sponsors for the 2008 season, and both are finding a
Mayo's win capped off an aggressive ride.
Safely tucked in the peloton, Di Luca rode one stage closer to an overall Giro title.
This early dig had just a little too much horsepower for some people's taste.
Liquigas had one job... protect the guy in pink.
Losada and Mayo form a temporary alliance.
Petrov chases the two escapees.
Just keep the gap small... and try to stay dry.
Mactier's teammates doing the domestique thing
Louder navigates the twisty backside descent
The yellow jersey gets personally involved in the pursuit
Top three on the stage
Jacques-Maynes retains the leader's jersey