Armstrong and his Discovery Channel teammates reconnoiter Saturday’s time trial course.
Armstrong and his Discovery Channel teammates reconnoiter Saturday's time trial course.
Armstrong and his Discovery Channel teammates reconnoiter Saturday's time trial course.
Hincapie, back on the job
Pereiro would not be denied on Tuesday
The Evans escape
Evans drives the break
Heras, with Vino', tried to salvage something from another disappointing Tour
Course: Following the second rest day (at Pau), this final Pyrenean stage features two of the region’s toughest climbs, the Cat. 1 Marie-Blanque and hors-cat Aubisque. But after the final descent, there’s still 50km of mostly flat roads to negotiate before the finish. History: Pau has hosted 53 stage finishes since first being included on the Tour route in 1930. The last time a stage finished here after scaling the Aubisque was in 1993, when Italian Claudio Chiappucci saved his until-then-failed Tour with a stage win over a small breakaway group. Favorites: This stage is likely to be
In his 78th yellow jersey, Armstrong is now tied with Bernard Hinault for the number of days in the lead of the TdF
Ullrich takes a licking, but keeps on ticking
Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong said he wasn’t quite ready to decide on his post-cycling career path until after he finishes this year’s race and takes “a few years to just relax and really evaluate what I want to do with my life.” Armstrong held a pre-Tour press conference in Challans, France. Thursday, two days before the start of what he has promised will be his final professional race. Armstrong will saddle up on Saturday hoping that the "tough" 19km time trial from Fromentine to Noirmoutier will begin a successful final trek around the country which has been his home every July
Evans goes on the attack
Rasmussen is a lock for the polka-dot jersey, if he makes it to Paris
Less than 48 hours after taking second to George Hincapie atop the hardest mountaintop finish of the 92nd Tour de France, Spanish rider Oscar Pereiro replaced the bitterness of that loss with the biggest victory of his career by winning a four-up sprint into Pau at the end of Tuesday's 180.5km stage 16. "It's a spine that I've taken out of my back," Pereiro said after edging Xabier Zandio (Illes Balears) to claim Phonak's first stage win of the Tour after two second places. "I'm happy with the big win today. It makes me forget the disappointment of Sunday." Tuesday's
Horner was among the day's escapees, but was eventually reeled in by Armstrong and Co.
Evans and Mazzoleni
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Hello,My goal today was to move firmly on to the podium of the Tour de France. I at least wanted to make good time. Unfortunately that didn’t quite work out that way. Oscar Sevilla - the Spaniard here riding with us on this Tour - was really the man we had designated for a stage win today. Oscar wanted to make this “his” stage. It’s no wonder that he made the jump into the day’s break. He did a spectacular job up there today and should be really proud. Oscar is a real asset to this team and it would have been nice to see him take this one, especially. One of the things I admire most about
Jan Ullrich has all but given up on his challenge to Lance Armstrong on this year's Tour de France and admitted he is now fighting Michael Rasmussen for a place on the podium. Germany's 1997 winner and five-time runner-up is nearly six minutes behind his Texan rival in the general classification ahead of next Sunday's race finale on the Champs Élysées - in Tour terms a mammoth deficit which is all but insurmountable. Ullrich, who has finished second to Armstrong three times during the American's six-year reign, admits he is now fighting to make sure he doesn't finish off
Basso to stay with CSC through 2009Team CSC announced Monday that CSC has extended its sponsorship agreement with Riis Cycling through 2009. That ensures that Ivan Basso of Italy, who is currently sitting in second in the general classification, will remain with the Denmark-based team. “We have come far in the last couple of seasons, and no one should have any doubts that our ambitions are sky high,” said CSC sport director Bjarne Riis. “Ivan has not only lived up to our expectations, he has impressed me time after time with his will to improve and take responsibility for himself and his
Lance Armstrong is trying to capture more than just a seventh straight Tour de France title. He wants to win over the French fans, too. So far, it's working. The American cyclist has regularly left the team bus during this year's Tour to greet hordes of people, who push and shove to get a glimpse of him. He recently stopped and rode over to a screaming fan who was calling for him. Armstrong chatted with her while her husband joined the conversation. “Lance, give us your cap,” the man said in broken English, laced with a heavy regional accent. Armstrong handed it over,
Rest day and I need it. Actually I could use another, if it were possible. I mentioned the other day that I’d been sick on the stage to Ax-3-Domaines. Finishing with the grupetto had been hard, just because I’d been throwing up for the first 100k. Yesterday, on the stage to Pla d'Adet, it was worse. My stomach had settled, but I’m still sick with something and it took everything I had just to beat the time cut. I was dropped early in the day, spending probably the last 100 or so kilometers riding on my own… well, I had another guy (Rafael Nuritdinov of, Domina Vacanze), but he was
Ullrich wants to improve on his fourth place from '04
Bruyneel on Hincapie and life without Lance
Magnus Opus: With one eye on Paris...
Don't try this at home, kids . . .
The fans find a cool spot along the climb
Alan Buttlar installs a new chain
The Tour definitely needs bigger trash cans
Your I.D. sir?
Ullrich definitely knows how to suffer, even if it doesn't get him any closer to Armstrong
The Good Lieutenant: Hincapie gets his stage win... and it's a doozie
Never try to pick up a date at a race in the Pyrenees - especially if 'she' has a back that's hairier than yours
.. the day's escape quickly built a nice lead.
Then there were six.
The day had a deceptively mellow start...
Lance Armstrong didn’t take the stage win in the final summit finish of his celebrated Tour de France career, as many had predicted, but on Sunday in the Pyrénées of southern France he did get the next-best thing — a stage win for his close friend and Discovery Channel teammate George Hincapie. Hincapie, the only man to ride with Armstrong in all seven of his post-cancer Tours, took the win atop the Pla d’Adet ski resort out of a 14-man breakaway group that shattered on the Col de Peyresourde, the fourth of six categorized climbs, while Armstrong crossed the line five minutes later with
Armstrong and Ullrich were the only ones to stay with Basso.
Stage Results1. George Hincapie (USA), Discovery Channel, 6:06:382. Oscar Pereiro Sio (Sp), Phonak, 00:063. Pietro Caucchioli (I), Credit Agricole, 00:384. Michael Boogerd (Nl), Rabobank, 00:575. Laurent Brochard (F), Bouygues Telecom, 02:196. Ivan Basso (I), CSC, 05:047. Lance Armstrong (USA), Discovery Channel, 05:048. Oscar Sevilla (Sp), T-Mobile, 06:289. Jan Ullrich (G), T-Mobile, 06:2810. Mickael Rasmussen (Dk), Rabobank, 06:32 11. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), Illes Balears, 06:3212. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), T-Mobile, 07:3313. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Gerolsteiner, 07:5414. Christophe
Ullrich tried to stay aggressive.
What a difference a day makes. Yesterday, I was right up there, ready to fight out the sprint – admittedly, I wasn’t in the top three, but you get the point. I didn’t seem to have the legs to finish the job the boys did for me with the leadout, but I was still feeling pretty good. Today, on the stage from Agde to Ax-3-Domaines, I can only say it was… well, a bit rough. It was a really, really rough day on the bike today. I threw up four times in the first 100 kilometers. I couldn’t eat a thing all day and it was two or two-and-a-half hours before I could even drink a little bit. I don’t
The team rose to the occasion on Sunday.
In Pla d’Adet, France … Hincapie, team leader?Could George Hincapie lead Discovery Channel next year after Lance Armstrong retires at the end of the 2005 Tour de France? That might have seemed a crazy notion three weeks ago, but it’s gaining credibility as Hincapie continues to progress into a solid, all-round rider. Even Armstrong said it’s not such a far-fetched idea. “We always have these dreamers who say they’re going to win the Tour, so why couldn’t George Hincapie be in that position?” Armstrong said. “He’s a complete rider.” Armstrong said he’s already discussed the possibility
The Casartelli monument
You never know what you're going to see on any given day in the Tour. Could be an oblivious fan getting a camera moto's tire tracks up his spinal column; could be a hairy-backed cross-dresser. Our man Casey Gibson didn't snap a shot of the former, but he did get the latter, along with some racing action, the late Fabio Casartelli's family at a memorial in his honor, and much, much more. Check it all out below.
His family, just before the memorial ceremony
George Hincapie has been a loyal, selfless and dedicated teammate during Lance Armstrong's six Tour de France titles. On Sunday, he picked the Tour's toughest stretch to make a statement of his own. Hincapie broke away early and held on to win the 15th stage through the Pyrenees, beating Phonak's Oscar Pereiro in a sprint to the line for his first stage win at cycling's premier event. “This ride is so hard. In training I almost didn't arrive at the top because I was so tired,” the 32-year-old Hincapie said. “It took us seven hours in training. I just can't
'Yo, 'scuse me, but I'm just gonna drop it down a couplea cogs and win the stage here'
Hincapie wins his first Tour stage
Chris Horner is still having fun at the end of four Cat. 1 climbs and an HC grinder
Armstrong and Basso put the screws to Ullrich
Levi, on the other hand, looks a touch spent
. . . this guy is clearly a professional
The peloton in the Pyrenees
Hello,Well, I think you saw that as a team we pushed it all the way to the limit, today. To his credit, Lance fended off every single one of the attacks in the manner of a true patron of the peloton. For that, all I can say is congratulations to him and that he has my respect. This morning, the mood at the breakfast table was not quite as relaxed as was the case in the Alps. Hardly anyone said a word… and if they did, the answers were short. It wasn’t a bad sign. More accurately, it was just an indication that everyone was just very, very focused on the task at hand. The one thing we didn’t
Armstrong and Basso take the final corner together
After out-climbing his main rivals on Saturday to finish second on the first of two mighty stages in the Pyrénées, Lance Armstrong said it was “incredibly, incredibly hot.” Then he predicted that Sunday’s stage 15 will be “the hardest stage of the Tour.” He then talked to journalists at the Ax-3 Domaines ski resort Saturday night about his preparations for the upcoming stage. “It’s just a question of getting out of here as fast as possible, starting to hydrate, starting to eat, starting to rest and recover,” he said. “We had a very early start to the day once again, an hour-and-a-half in the
Leipheimer on the climb
Garzelli and Beneteau
One of the most frequent tactical questions I get is “What do you do when one team dominates a race?” Well, for one thing, you have to try harder and take a few risks. On stage 14 from Agde to Ax-3-Domaines, the T-Mobile team finally decided to do something about the dominating control of the Discovery Team. Typically, Discovery has followed the same pattern it did back in the Postal days, namely go to the front and set a pace on the climbs that was suitable for them and slowly burn off the riders in the field. When you control the front of pack, you control the pace. You get to decide
Totschnig en route to his first Tour stage win
Evans and Kasheschkin
Stage 14 - Agde to Ax-3-Domaines -- 220.5km
Vinokourov paid the price today
Leipheimer: In good position for the podium?
Stage 14 - Agde to Ax-3-Domaines -- 220.5km
It's time to either fight or run away
Craig lights it up early
Totschnig wins his first Tour stage
Totschnig is glad he didn't go home
Killeen on the fire-road climb
Whuttup with Bobby and those rings?
Basso's feeling better than he did in the Alps
The women hit the rock garden
Cañada takes a similar approach
Basso felt better in the Pyrenees than in the Alps - but not Ullrich
Course: This stage could be a killer. After riding for morethan four hours on mostly hilly back roads under a (probably) burning sun,the riders face two of the toughest climbs in the Pyrénées:the 15km, 8-percent Port de Pailhères (that’s finally been givenan hors-catégorie rating) and the 9km, 7.3-percent climb to theAx-3-Domaines summit finish. History: The Pailhères-Ax-3-Domaines combo has been usedonly once before, in 2003, when it saw a dehydrated Armstrong almost cedehis yellow jersey to Ullrich. CSC’s Carlos Sastre took that stage. Favorites: After a two-day “break,” the main
Garzelli forces himself to work on his stroke when training.
It's showtime
Under a glaring sun and searing summer heat the 92nd Tour de France entered the Pyrénées of southern France Saturday, and though the general classification didn’t quite blow apart, a handful of the race’s central characters certainly melted from the pressure. After the hors-catégorie ascent of the Port de Pailhères, the 220.5km stage ended atop the Cat. 1 climb to the ski resort at Ax-3 Domaines with six-time Tour champion Lance Armstrong (Discovery Channel) holding an even firmer grip on the race leader’s jersey. He’s now 1:41 ahead of Dane Michael Rasmussen (Rabobank),while CSC’s Italian