Durand and Oriol stayed away for more than 100km
Durand and Oriol stayed away for more than 100km
Durand and Oriol stayed away for more than 100km
Durand and Oriol stayed away for more than 100km
Race officials forced the peloton to stop for a couple of minutes
Millar, sporting the prologue abrasions
6:00p.m. (local time) Telekom's Erik Zabel is celebrating his stage win and Festina's Christophe Moreau retains the overall leader's yellow jersey. Today's top five:1. Erik Zabel (Deutsche Telekom)2. Romans Vainsteins (Domo-Farm Frites)3. Jimmy Casper (Française Des Jeux)4. Jens Voigt (Credit Agricole)5. Jaan Kirsipuu (Ag2R) Check back for complete results, a stage wrap-up from VeloNews Senior Writer Bryan Jew, commentary and preview from VeloNews editorial director John Wilcockson and compelling images from this first stage by VeloNews photographers Graham Watson and Casey
Freddy R's bike, with its post-Philly paint
Postal's Heras
Heavy rain blew in from the English Channel overnight, and the 189 starters in Saturday’s prologue will likely have a damp opening to this 88th Tour de France. A wet course for the 8.2km prologue will certainly put caution at the top of everyone’s mind, particularly race favorite Lance Armstrong, who will be happy to concede a few seconds of overall time in exchange for a safe ride. The Dunkirk course has one short stretch of cobblestones, on a chicane outside the medieval-style city hall, just 1.6km into the race. There’s another chicane as the course turns onto the seafront for the final
Lawyers probably won't allow this model at September's InterBike in Las Vegas.
Heavy rain blew in from the English Channel overnight, and the 189 starters in Saturday’s prologue will likely have a damp opening to this 88th Tour de France. A wet course for the 8.2km prologue will certainly put caution at the top of everyone’s mind, particularly race favorite Lance Armstrong, who will be happy to concede a few seconds of overall time in exchange for a safe ride. The Dunkirk course has one short stretch of cobblestones, on a chicane outside the medieval-style city hall, just 1.6km into the race. There’s another chicane as the course turns onto the seafront for the final
Postal's brain trust
The prologue of any three-week tour is unlike any of the other stages. On Saturday, the Tour de France’s 21 teams were cloistered together in the parking lot of the municipal swimming pool in Dunkirk, with riders spending most of their day hanging around the team buses, warming up, shuttling back and forth from team hotels, and smiling for the media. Crowds gather around each team’s area, which is marked off by police tape. And judging by the masses gathered around the U.S. Postal and Telekom camps, there are two overwhelming favorites for this year’s Tour: American Lance Armstrong and German
Getting ready for the team cars
Getting underway at the Tour de France is always a nerve-wracking ordeal. Having to arrive early for health exams and the team presentation means we all spend the final days leading up the start cooped up in our hotel rooms. And although this probably forces us to rest like we should, it also leaves us with lots of time to consider the job ahead. And with this being my fifth start, I know all too well the pressure and the pain that lies ahead. But every challenge worth facing starts off a bit daunting I guess - so I'm hoping the contemplation is a good sign. The team presentation was a
Barel on his way to the win.
Despite heavy rains overnight, riders had basically dry roads for the 8.2km prologue on July 7 in Dunkirk. No matter the weather, the fans turned out in force.
Chausson won her third straight downhill of 2001.
If Mario Cipollini were riding this Tour de France -- as he and his Saeco team should have been -- he would be rubbing his hands with glee right now. He would have done well in Saturday’s prologue, as it was just the type of time trial he likes: enough turns to make use of his turn of speed, and long straightaways where a big rider like him could churn a big gear with great effect. Indeed, going into Sunday’s second stage, the Lion King would have been within a few seconds of race leader Christophe Moreau, and ready to take over the yellow jersey with a 20-second stage-win bonus. Cipollini
Huge crowds showed up at Grouse to take in the downhill.
Lance Armstrong and Roberto Heras arrived on scene in a special Postal team car, rear windows tinted black, and the two stars were quickly ushered out, past the crowds, and into the Postal team bus parked at the prologue start in Dunkirk. A classic, rock-star arrival. Meanwhile, just a few meters away, Fassa Bortolo’s former world No. 1 rider, Francesco Casagrande, would later warm up for the race practically unnoticed, just one young fan poised against the Italian outfit’s taped-off team area. That was all just part of the curious scene in front of the Piscine Municipale Paul Asseman, the
Lopes pulls away from Carter in the dual finals.
US Postal Service1. Lance Armstrong (USA) 2. Roberto Heras (Sp) 3. Viatjeslav Ekimov (Rus) 4. Tyler Hamilton (USA) 5. George Hincapie (USA) 6. Steffen Kjaergaard (Nor) 7. Victor Hugo Peña (Col) 8. Jose Luis Rubiera (Sp) 9. Christian Vandevelde (USA) Telekom11. Jan Ullrich (G) 12. Udo Bölts (G) 13. Giuseppe Guerini (I) 14. Jens Heppner (G) 15. Andreas Klöden (G) 16. Kevin Livingston (USA) 17. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz) 18. Steffen Wesemann (G) 19. Erik Zabel (G) ONCE 21. Joseba Beloki (Sp) 22. Santos González (Sp) 23. Alvaro González de Galdeano (Sp) 24. Igor González de Galdeano (Sp) 25.
Donovan picked up the first dual win of her career.
Tour de France: ready to roll
The rock-star ride
Tour de France: ready to roll
Armstrong was relaxed and confident.
The Telekom compound
The offending post.
Casagrande
Armstrong was relaxed and confident.
Postal's Vande Velde
Beloki (center)
Rain? Lingering drug allegations? It doesn't matter to these folks!
Downhillers walk the course, looking for the fastest way to the bottom.
Final Countdown
Armstrong at Thursday's press conference
Armstrong at Thursday's press conference
The wait is over. the 2001 Tour de France starts in just one day, with the race favorites trying to ride safe until the first big tests in the mountains: L'Alpe d'Huez and the uphill time trial to Chamrousse. Here's a look at how the final-month preparations panned out for the top guns, as well as a look at some faces that will be missing from this year's race. Lance Armstrong (U.S. Postal Service) No crashes, no new media accusations and twin babies on the way (Kristin Armstrong is expecting in December); everything seemed to be going right for the Postal Service boss as he headed toward
Just two days before the start of the 2001 Tour de France, two-time defending champion Lance Armstrong (U.S. Postal Service) met the media at the start in Dunkirk, on the northern tip of France, along the North Sea. In his press conference on Thursday, the American assessed his competition, as well as his own form, while stating that he’ll be starting this year’s race with "the strongest team I’ve come to the Tour with." On the heels of his overall victory at the Tour of Switzerland last week, Armstrong said he was pleased with his form coming into the Tour de France, and was confident that
Moving up: The Costa Ricans have shown they can compete with the top teams.
Just two days before the start of the 2001 Tour de France, two-time defending champion Lance Armstrong (U.S. Postal Service) met the media at the start in Dunkirk, on the northern tip of France, along the North Sea. In his press conference on Thursday, the American assessed his competition, as well as his own form, while stating that he’ll be starting this year’s race with "the strongest team I’ve come to the Tour with." On the heels of his overall victory at the Tour of Switzerland last week, Armstrong said he was pleased with his form coming into the Tour de France, and was confident that
Freddie's diary: Reminders of the Tour
Hello Tdf Fans: The days are long, the weather is warm, the riders are fit, and the excitement is in the air. Yes, it’s time again for the Tour de France. It just really hit me when I arrived in France last night that there are only two days remaining before the start of the Tour. On the one hand, I’ve been anxiously awaiting its arrival for some time, and on the other, I can’t believe it is already here. June and July are my favorite racing months of the year. I always seem to overcome the slight drag weighing on my overall fitness that seems to hang around for a fair share of the spring.
Quick, name the only team to place three riders in the top 21 of the men’s cross country at NORBA national No. 1. Here’s a hint: It’s not Trek-Volkswagen, Subaru-Gary Fisher, Giant, GT, RLX Polo Sport or any of the other big-time teams you’re probably thinking of. The answer is Café de Costa Rica, the squad of mountain men from Central America. Before you start thinking "fluke," consider this: The guys from Costa Rica also placed two riders in the top 25 in the short track — including one on the podium — and had four riders in the top 15 at the Iron Horse cross-country. So who are these guys
Start times for the prologue of the 2001 Tour de France, an 8.2km course in Dunkirk, France.Individual competitors will start at one-minute intervals, with 2000 Tour winner Lance Armstrong scheduled to start last. (All times U.S. Eastern Daylight Time). 10:00: Talabardon 10:01: Knaven 10:02: Durand 10:03: Bertogliati 10:04: Chavanel 10:05: Vidal 10:06: Trastour 10:07: Blaudzun 10:08: Botcharov 10:09: Del Olmo 10:10: Hushovd 10:11: Odriozola 10:12: Leysen 10:13: Atienza 10:14: Van Hyfte 10:15: De Groot 10:16: Pozzi 10:17: Perez 10:18: S.
The race officially starts tomorrow, but Tour hype can happen any time of year. It builds, of course, to the team presentations the day before the opening stage. Riders face a host of requirements in the week leading up to the start: medical exams, team meetings, swarming fans, and those pesky people wearing the press credentials.
Hamilton (front) and Hincapie
Armstrong faces the pack
Casagrande
Party crasher? Wordin's Mercury-Viatel team hoped for a Tour invite -- but had to settle for spectating for 2001.
The bottom end of the downhill opens up to reveal a panoramic view of the city below.
Shandro looks for the winning line.
For Colorado native Jonathan Vaughters, the plan was simple enough leading into this year’s Tour de France: Hang on for the first week and a half of the three-week race, and then see how the legs feel. The first indications would likely come on the 10th stage, from Aix-les-Bains to L’Alpe d’Huez, but the stage that really stuck out in Vaughters’s mind would come the following day. "[The Tour] has an uphill time trial for the first time in five or six years, and I’m just keeping my fingers crossed," he said two-and-a-half weeks before the start of the Tour, from his summer home in Spain. "The
A champion needs more than strength
With the countdown to the Tour de France officially on, we are all thinking about one thing: a three-peat. It suddenly feels as though the spring season has flown by and the big show is about to start. This is usually the time of year when I ask myself, "Man, weren’t we just in Paris?" As I write this, Tiger Woods is battling to capture the U.S. Open and his fifth consecutive major. Seeing a champion like Tiger nine strokes behind heading into the final round reminds us all that there are no sure things in sport. Even unprecedented favorites sometimes face challenges. When it comes down to
Rising Stock: The Canadian-based Intersports team was up to No. 3 in NRC standings heading into June.
The wait is nearly over. In two more days the 2001 Tour de France will be underway, with the race favorites trying to ride safe until the first big tests in the mountains: L'Alpe d'Huez and the uphill time trial to Chamrousse. Here's a look at how the final-month preparations panned out for the top guns, as well as a look at some faces that will be missing from this year's race. Lance Armstrong (U.S. Postal Service) No crashes, no new media accusations and twin babies on the way (Kristin Armstrong is expecting in December); everything seemed to be going right for the
Putting it all together
On a bright, sunny New Mexico day in early May, David Cathcart stood on the side of the road at the Tour of the Gila criterium. As he watched his riders, split between the chase group and the main field, Cathcart barked orders into his hand-held radio. The Canadian team director switched back and forth fluidly between French and English each time his riders climbed the stiff hill on the back side of the Silver City course. Of course, the language skills come as no surprise, considering the makeup of his Intersports team. Based in Canada, Intersports is home to its fair share of
Peat’s bike, complete with the latest offering from RockShox, will go unused this weekend.
Inspiration Tyler looks to champions like Tiger Woods and Ray Bourque for his.
The ride to the top of Grouse Mountain involves a 10-minute trip on the Skyride and breathtaking views in every direction.
Bust a Move: Vaughters plans to stay cool until stage 11, then shoot for the podium with a stage win or two.
Inspiration: Tyler looks to champions like Tiger Woods and Ray Bourque for his.
Casagrande