Road
Road
Flat route favors Wiggins and Cancellara?
For the first year, the Amgen Tour of California is opening with a dead-flat prologue, a 2.1-mile runway down University Avenue in Palo Alto into Stanford University. World and Olympic individual pursuit champion Bradley Wiggins and world time trial champion Fabian Cancellara are among the favorites. On paper, the sub-five-minute format has Team High Road’s Wiggins written all over it —it’s virtually the same duration as an individual pursuit effort.
Ivanov wins Tour de Langkawi
Ruslan Ivanov, a man who for two years believed his career was over, has resurrected himself with overall victory at the Tour de Langkawi.
Tour of California pre-race gallery
The evening before the prologue of the third annual Amgen Tour of California, mechanics scrambled to assemble the hundreds of bikes that will be raced over the next eight days. VeloNews took a stroll around the parking lot of the race hotel for a perspective on what's happening.
Protest, bike thefts mar inaugural Grosseto tour
The second stage of the inaugural Tour of the Province of Grosseto on Saturday wasn’t exactly a thing of beauty. First, riders refused to contest the final sprint, calling the finishing straight too narrow and dangerous. So instead of barreling headlong down the sprint, the peloton rode at a snail’s pace across the line in protest, leaving Filippo Pozzato (Liquigas) in the leader’s jersey going into Sunday’s third stage.
Duque digs for stage win at Med Tour
The sprinters were back in their element in Saturday’s fourth stage at the Tour Mediterranean with Colombian Leonardo Duque (Cofidis) snagging the victory. Duque is unique that he’s fast in the flats while most of his compatriots do best when the road heads uphill. A day after Alexandre Botcharov (Crédit Agricole) climbed his way into the leader’s jersey atop Mont Faron, Duque out-duked French fast man Jimmy Casper (Agritubel) with Belarussian Yauheni Hutarovich (FDJeux) coming through third in the 152km fourth stage between Saint-Cannat and Marignane.
Sevilla, Botero and Hamilton will not ride
It may be the smallest team to line up for the Amgen Tour of California, but Rock Racing has managed to be the biggest story on the eve of this country’s largest stage race. Team owner Michael Ball announced late Saturday that the team would start only five of the eight riders on the roster he had submitted.
Ball: It’s all or nothing
Rock Racing team owner Michael Ball insisted Saturday that his team will start with all eight of the riders whose names he submitted to race organizers — including Tyler Hamilton, Oscar Sevilla and Santiago Botero — or none at all. “We live as a team, and we’ll die as a team,” Ball said.
Fast and Furious: California hosts best-ever sprint contingent
He’s done it two years running, but scoring a pair of stage wins will be tougher than ever this year for J.J. Haedo. CSC’s big Argentinean sprinter currently holds the record for career Amgen Tour of California stage wins at four. This year he will have no fewer than three current and former world champion sprinters to deal with in the form of Paolo Bettini (2006-07), Tom Boonen (2005) and Oscar Freire (1999, 2001 and 2004).
High Road has high hopes for ’08
At an afternoon event hosted by Phil Liggett in Palo Alto, California, Team High Road presented its entire men’s and women’s 2008 teams. With 29 men and 13 women hailing from 14 different nations, 41 riders in all were presented, in three segments: the women’s team, its under-26 “young guns”, and the team’s elite veterans. The only rider unable to attend was Kate Bates, who was ill. High Road is the only ProTour team to also have a world class women’s component, and with its recent change in designation, it’s now the only U.S.-based ProTour team.
Ivanov tightens grip on Langkawi as Savini takes stage 8
A rider in his ninth year as a pro, a director whose career spans 24 years, and an unified team with the best climber in the race. It was this winning combination that, barring disaster, will grant Moldavian Ruslan Ivanov the best victory of his career Sunday as the Tour de Langkawi concludes in Kuala Lumpur.
Final World Cup kicks off in Denmark
The final round of the 2007-08 UCI Track World Cup Classics got underway in Copenhagen, Denmark, on Friday as the U.S. contingent collected a pair of bronze medals on opening night of the three-day competition. Sarah Hammer placed third in the women's 3000-meter individual pursuit while countrywoman Theresa Cliff-Ryan claimed her first career World Cup medal with a third-place effort in the women's 10-kilometer scratch race.
Kneller, Atchley win Valley of the Sun kickoff
Ben Kneller (Jittery Joe's) and Lana Atchley (Team Rock) won their respective time trials on Friday to kick off the Valley of the Sun Stage Race in Arizona. Kneller won the flat, out-and-back 22km Trek Time Trial in Buckeye in 29 minutes, 27 seconds. He crossed five seconds up on both Sam Johnson (Hagens Berman Cycling Team) and Karl Bordine (Star WVO). Atchley took a more convincing win, finishing in 32:26, 58 seconds ahead of Emily Zell (Proman Racing) and 1:40 up on Catherine Dickson (Tribe Racing).
High Road says it has been invited to the Giro
Team High Road officials say the team will start May’s Giro d’Italia, despite reports earlier this month that the race’s organizers would ban the U.S.-based team. The team will hold a news conference Friday afternoon in Palo Alto, California, to announce its participation in several events organized by RCS Sport, including the Giro d’Italia. A team press release quotes Angelo Zomegnan, the director general of RCS Sport.
Stage 3: Botcharov takes lead of Tour Mediterranean
Russian Alexandre Botcharov (Credit Agricole) switched places with teammate Thor Hushovd atop the leader board in the 35th Tour Mediterranean after winning alone atop Mont Faron. The towering climb above France’s glittering Cote d’Azur turned the leaderboard upside down as the lean climbers took control of the race away from the dominating sprinters.
Puerto inquiry leaves Basso shattered
Italian Ivan Basso, the sole cyclist to have been sanctioned in the initial stages of the Operación Puerto blood-doping affair, said the inquiry had left him "shattered." Speaking after Thursday's reopening of the Spanish doping inquiry, Basso told El Pais newspaper that the two-year ban he received had left him marooned. "I'm in a sort of hell at the moment: alone, abandoned by everyone and working on in silence," the 30-year-old said. "I made an error, I must pay for that and come back with my head held high."
Docker mellow in yellow while crash ruins finale
Holding a precariously small lead in the overall standings at the Tour de Langkawi for the last six days, Matthieu Sprick finally lost his hold on the maillot jaune Friday in Kuantan. Trying his hardest without result, Drapac-Porsche's young sprinter Mitchell Docker knew time was fast running out to lead the Tour de Langkawi, however briefly that now might be, and that the seventh leg could well be his last chance before Saturday’s queen stage to Fraser Hill.
Third Amgen Tour of California poised as best yet
It’s been the biggest race in North America for the past two years, and the third edition of the 650-mile Amgen Tour of California, held over a north-to-south route from February 17-24, will be no exception. This year’s Tour of California field includes two-time and reigning world champion Paolo Bettini and his Quick Step teammate Tom Boonen, two-time and reigning world time trial champion Fabian Cancellara (CSC), three-time world champion Oscar Freire (Rabobank) and U.S. national champion and defending Tour of California winner Levi Leipheimer in Astana’s U.S. racing debut.
Rock Racing stars absent from ATOC starting list
With AEG’s announcement of the start list for this year’s Amgen Tour of California comes the revelation that Rock Racing, the revamped California-based team that hired several controversial riders in the off-season, will start the race with only five riders. All 16 other participating teams have fielded the maximum of eight riders.
2008 Amgen Tour of California start list
2008 Amgen Tour of California start list
Pro Tour Teams
Astana (Lux)
Levi Leipheimer (USA)
Janez Brajkovic (Slo)
Vladimir Gusev (Rus)
Christopher Horner (USA)
Serguei Ivanov (Rus)
Aaron Kemps (Aus)
Andrey Mizurov (Kz)
José Luis Rubiera (Sp)
Bouygues Telecom (F)
Thomas Voeckler (F)
Dimitri Champion (F)
Perrig Quemeneur (F)
Vincent Jerome (F)
Versus kicks off 2008 cycling schedule with Tour of California
Daily footage of the Amgen Tour of California will kick off Versus’ 2008 cycling coverage, which will again include many of the sport’s biggest events as well as live daily coverage of this year’s Tour de France.
Puerto case to be reopened
The Operación Puerto blood-doping affair, which erupted in May 2006, will be reopened, Madrid prosecutors said on Thursday. Last year the case ground to a halt when a Spanish judge ordered it closed. Prosecutors asked an appeals court to review that decision, and a ruling is expected on Friday. The prosecutors' announcement, however, is a strong indication that the court will reopen the case.
Steegmans wins Mallorca finale; Gilbert overall
Belgians dominated the roads of Mallorca on a day when home country Spanish riders were still trying to make sense of ASO’s decision to exclude Astana and defending champ Alberto Contador from the Tour de France. Tom Boonen’s leadout man Gert Steegmans (QuickStep) bolted out of the pack with a well-timed late surge to cap a wild and wooly fifth and final stage in the Mallorca Challenge. Filippe Gilbert (FDJeux) held off a challenge from an anger-fueled Toni Colom (Astana) to claim the unofficial overall prize.
At Mallorca, the pro peloton reacts to ASO
Riders and managers reacted with resignation, disbelief and even anger at the news that Astana and reigning Tour de France champion Alberto Contador won’t be allowed to start the Tour and other races organized by ASO. The general feeling prior to the final stage of the Mallorca Challenge in Spain was overwhelmingly in support of favorite son Contador; Spanish newspapers blasted the controversial decision, with editorials across the board demonizing ASO’s decision. Here’s a sampling of the reaction from key riders in the Mallorca peloton:
Michael Barry’s Diary: Going SLO at camp
In reality, a racing season is a full year as we race in three seasons and train hard in the fourth—and, ever-so-slowly we are beginning to race through the entire year as there are an increasing number of races in late October and early January. Fifteen years ago, training camps were where teams gathered for their first rides of the new year having spent a good few months skiing, relaxing and cross training.
Angry Contador vows to win Tour – in 2009
A defiant Alberto Contador promises to return victorious to the Tour de France in 2009. Stunned by Wednesday’s announcement by Tour-organizer ASO to exclude his Astana team from all of its races, Contador put on a brave face on the harsh reality that cycling’s marquee race won’t be part of his July plans.
Le Tour De Langkawi – Stage 6 Gallery
Kurt Jambretz was in Malaysia capturing the action during the sixth stage of Le Tour de Langkawi. Not only did Matthieu Sprick hold his narrow race lead, but the fans were surprised by a sprint win by Colombian climber, Jose Serpa. See the sights and follow the action as it unfolded.
The benefit of foresight: Serpa scores a win
Before the race started, Jose Serpa was tipped to be a serious contender for the overall classification of the 2008 Tour de Langkawi. But with 25 teams and 150-odd riders, controlling the race is near impossible and making the right break is a bit of a lottery. So when things didn't go to plan on Day 1, he decided to tack and change course.
Fresh Korn: The lifeline
Ask me what was at the root of the most stressful afternoon I’ve had in a while and I’d, somewhat ashamed, have to say “The Blackberry.” Even with some crazy life happenings of late, this past afternoon spent in a hotel room in France nearly put me under. What happened you ask? I’m not sure. IT caught a virus; a bug. A glitch in the software reared its ugly head. I downloaded another third-party application IT wasn’t happy with.
AEG’s dilemma: ToC organizer speaks on Astana riff
The exclusion of Astana from any events hosted by the Amaury Sport Organization in 2008, including the Tour de France, put Amgen Tour of California organizer AEG in an unusual situation. This year’s race kicks off Sunday and marks the first U.S. appearance by the new Astana team of defending Tour of California champion Levi Leipheimer.
Hushovd wins Med Tour opener
Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) has donned the first yellow jersey of the 35th Tour Méditerranéen after winning the first stage, a 120km run between La Crau and Hyères. The 30-year-old Norwegian, winner of the green jersey in the 2005 Tour de France, outsprinted Italian Liquigas teammates Francesco Chicchi and Alberto Curtolo to take the victory.
Gilbert elbows way to win in Mallorca
With rain clouds threatening to dampen Wednesday’s mountainous fourth stage at the Mallorca Challenge, overnight leader Filippe Gilbert (FDJeux) wasn’t sounding too optimistic about his chances of defending his jersey. “It’s going to be too wet and dangerous. It’s not worth crashing to try to stay with the lead group in this mountainous stage,” Gilbert told VeloNews before the stage. “I already won a stage. That was the main goal for this race, along with getting ready for Milan-San Remo. I will take it easy today.”
Contador: ‘We deserve to be in Tour’
Alberto Contador heard the bad news crackle on his earpiece early in Wednesday’s fourth stage at the Mallorca Challenge and then uncorked a rage-fueled solo attack across the rainy mountains. The 25-year-old yelled with emotion to a Spanish television camera: “Astaná, en el Tour!” he said, defiantly grabbing his jersey. “Astaná, in the Tour!”
Astana barred from ASO events
Amaury Sport Organization, the company that owns the Tour de France announced Wednesday that the Astana team of defending champion Alberto Contador will not be invited to compete in that race or in any other event it organizes in 2008.
Inside Cycling: Playing with fire
When Johan Bruyneel, Alberto Contador, Levi Leipheimer and many of their Discovery Channel colleagues switched allegiance to the Astana team last fall they knew there was a risk that their new team might be excluded from events organized Amaury Sport Organisation — including the 2008 Tour de France. Now that ASO has done just that, we aren’t surprised, but like UCI president Pat McQuaid, we “can’t understand” the logic of ASO bosses Patrice Clerc and Christian Prudhomme’s decision.
Vuelta says Astaná welcome
Alberto Contador and his Astaná teammates might not be racing in July, but Vuelta a España officials were quick to say that the team is welcome in the season’s final grand tour. Vuelta director Victor Cordero told the Spanish wire agency EFE that the Spanish tour will not follow the lead taken by the Giro d’Italia and the Tour to exclude Astaná and said he hopes to see the team for the Vuelta start in Granada on Aug. 30.
High Road, Slipstream earn Paris-Nice bids
Lost amid Wednesday’s headlines was the official release of the invited teams for the upcoming 66th edition of Paris-Nice. The “Race to the Sun” will have a strong American presence with both High Road and Slipstream-Chipotle earning bids. Twenty teams with eight riders each will take the start March 9 with a 4.3km opening prologue in Amilly. The race concludes per recent tradition on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice on March 16. Route details have not been released.
Loddo scores win at Langkawi
He'd won the first three bunch sprints, but each time there had been a breakaway ahead. Nonetheless, Alberto Loddo’s Tinkoff teammates continued to believe in him, so on Tuesday they sacrificed everything for him, only to see him boxed in at the finish. It was all for nothing. By this time last year he'd already won two stages and was on his way to a hat trick.
Training Stress Score (TSS)- defined
Training Stress Score (TSS)- The TSS represents a calculated number that takes into account the duration and intensity of a workout to arrive at a single score of the overall training load and physiological stress created by that session. One hour of functional threshold (as hard as you can go for one hour) = 100 Training Stress Score points.
High Road meets the neighbors in new hometown
The members of Team High Road introduced themselves to their new neighbors over the weekend at Art's Cyclery in San Luis Obispo, California. High Road recently registered its headquarters in the California town, making it the sole American ProTour team this season. High Road manager Bob Stapleton introduced the athletes — some of whom were straight off a training ride as part of a team camp — to a packed crowd at Art's Cyclery. City mayor Dave Romero, also on hand, said he was thrilled to have a team of High Road's caliber based out of his town.
Powering up for the Tour of California
It is often said that races are won - and lost - in the off season. One thing is certain: The rider who steps to the top of the podium on the last day of 2008 Tour of California has surely been training with rock-solid focus over these past few months, and those who haven’t will soon pay the price. The Tour of California is back with a vengeance.
Rojas wins, Gilbert takes lead
Steep climbs couldn’t slow down the peloton in Tuesday’s third stage at the Mallorca Challenge. Despite tackling some of the steepest roads in Mallorca’s dazzling Tramuntana range, the peloton came through for another mass sprint in the 168.4km stage from Pollença to Alcúdia.
Hondo back on track in Batu Pahat; Sprick’s lead narrows to a second
A forced time-out can sometimes be a good thing. As long as you're allowed to return to what you did before, have the strength to come back and deal with the consequences, it can make you a better rider. Perhaps even a better man.
Anticipation grows ahead of Paris-Nice selections
Teams are on edge this week with growing uncertainty about who will be invited to the 2008 Tour de France. Amaury Sports Organisation is heightening that anxiety ahead of Wednesday’s expected release of Paris-Nice invitations in what’s seen as the clearest signal for things to come ahead of the Tour.
Technical Q&A with Lennard Zinn – Questions of standards and compatibility
Dear Lennard,
I'm confused about the BB30 design. How do they increase the spindle diameter from 24mm to 30mm and put the same sized bearings inside the BB shell? Is a larger diameter BB shell the design change the article mentions?
James
Dear James,
Yes, the bottom bracket shell is larger. Here are specs: www.bb30standard.com.
Lennard
Road Warriors: Bissell takes on title-sponsor role
There’s a new title sponsor in domestic road racing this year, one that has already built a growing legacy in the sport. Bissell, the Grand Rapids, Michigan-based floor-care products company, enters its sixth year in pro-cycling sponsorship. Bissell's support for the sport began in 2003 with the U.S. Postal Service team. From 2005 to 2007 the company co-sponsored Discovery Channel, and last year it co-sponsored the Priority Health continental team. When that company scaled back its commitment, Bissell stepped in as title sponsor.
Brown wins in Mallorca, takes lead
This time the sprinters got it right. A day after Philippe Gilbert (Francaise des Jeux) upset the peloton’s fastest men with a late-stage attack, the sprinters got it back on track Monday in the second stage at the Mallorca Challenge in Spain’s Balearic islands. A heavily bearded Graeme Brown (Rabobank) won easily ahead of Denis Flahaut (Saunier Duval) and Gert Steegmans (QuickStep) in an eight-up sprint that saw the bunch splinter in the late going in the 162.7km rolling stage across eastern Mallorca from Cala Millor to Son Servera.
Stars shine at Handmade Show
The North American Handmade Bicycle Show was quite a draw this year for boutique frame builders and their fans — including Lance Armstrong, Brian Lopes and Robin Williams.
Korean makes history at Langkawi
From now on, February 11, 2008, will be known as a significant milestone in the globalization of cycling. It saw an successful all-Asian breakaway that lasted some 150km, and the first Korean winner in the Tour de Langkawi. Cycling is no longer a sport that excites only those in Europe, or attracts fans interested only in European racing. One of a quintet of riders who escaped on the longest leg of the race, Won Jae Lee (Seoul Cycling) wasn't the favorite - that was Meitan Hompo's Koji Fukushima, who initiated the move on his own after 60km before being caught 20km down the road.
Trofimov takes Bessèges overall
Yury Trofimov (Bouygues Telecom) sewed up overall victory in the 38th Etoile de Bessèges on Sunday. The Russian won the five-day French race after finishing safely in the bunch behind Borut Bozic (Cycle Collstrop) in Sunday’s 145km finale into Bessè. The 24-year-old Trofimov took the jersey in the third stage and then followed the sprinters into his biggest win of his career. Mike Friedman fought into the day’s main breakaway for Slipstream-Chipotle and was only reeled in with less than 5km to go to set up the mass gallop.
Gilbert wins Mallorca opener
Philippe Gilbert (Française des Jeux) uncorked a late-race solo attack and surprised the sprinters to win Sunday's opening of the five-day Mallorca Challenge. Sprinters typically hold court in the 100km circuit race, run on a flat, out-and-back circuit along Palma’s stunning seaside promenade anchored by the towering Gothic cathedral. But Gilbert had something else in mind.
Contador: No ‘Plan B’ — he wants the Tour
Alberto Contador never dreamed he would win the Tour de France last year. But he did, thanks in part to Michael Rasmussen’s tangle of lies, and now the Spanish climber is intent on proving to the world that he’s a worthy champion. But there are dark clouds on the horizon in Contador’s otherwise-sunny post-Tour world — the possibility that Tour organizers might follow the lead taken by the Giro d’Italia and leave Astana sitting on the sidelines. Contador, 25, simply says that he cannot imagine being left out of the Tour.
Handmade Show: A photo gallery
A half hour before the doors opened for day two of the North American Handmade Bicycle Show in Portland, the crowds piled into the Oregon Convention Center’s lobby to wait. Each had paid $18 for a day’s worth of access to more than 150 of North America’s finest small- and medium-sized frame builders, as well as a few big-time component manufacturers.
Hunt takes stage, Sprick leads Langkawi
After the dramatic events of Saturday, the sprinters' teams decided there would be none of the same Sunday in Sitiawan. However, a disorganized chase in the final kilometers led to chaos — but thriving in chaos was Jeremy Hunt, who showed that at age 33, he's still got the legs to beat the best. Without a lead-out train in sight and sensing a lack of unity, the veteran Briton, who switched teams this year to Crédit Agricole, found himself in a 10-man move that skipped clear of the peloton 5km from the finish.
Frenchman Sprick grabs win in Langkawi opener
After just one day in the saddle, the Tour de Langkawi finds itself in an intriguing position. On a stifling Saturday afternoon in the mainland's far north, a select breakaway group charged to the finish in Kepala Batas way ahead of schedule and more than 20 minutes clear of the rest of the field. And in one fell swoop, it's likely to have changed the race for overall honors into a 19 horse race.
North American Handmade Bike Show kicks off in Portland
The 2008 North American Handmade Bike Show kicked off Friday in Portland, Oregon, with more than 152 exhibitors ranging from solitary tradesmen to the giants of the industry.
UCI seeks two-year ban for Rasmussen
Beleaguered climbing specialist Michael Rasmussen could be slapped with a two-year ban if the UCI has its way. Cycling’s governing body announced Friday it is asking Monaco’s cycling federation to open disciplinary proceedings against the Danish rider, who holds his racing license in the principality. Rasmussen, 33, has been the center of a media firestorm since last year’s Tour de France when it was revealed that he missed out-of-competition tests in a lead-up to the 2007 edition.
ASO acquisition of Vuelta rumored
Organizers of the world's biggest bike race, the Tour de France, are poised to take over the three-week Vuelta a España, according to Spanish press reports on Friday. “Rumors of an agreement between ASO (Amaury Sports Organisation) and Unipublic have been circling for about a year," the Spanish sports daily Marca reported Friday. The paper said that talks between ASO, the Tour's parent company, which also own a host of other major sporting events, and UniPublic, which runs the Vuelta, "have been ongoing for several weeks."
Malaysia readies for Tour de Langkawi
Corruption, scandal, missing prize money, beauty, bravery, tragedy and of course, triumph have all been elements of past Tours de Langkawi, still one of the biggest races outside Europe. Though without doubt, “survival” has been a constant theme in each of those 12 editions, and survival is what brings us to Lucky #13 in the Chinese Year of the Rat.
Spanish court to consider Puerto case
A Spanish appeals court is set to consider the fate of the Operación Puerto doping scandal Friday in a decision that will have major implications for cycling’s fight to clean up the sport. Three judges in Madrid’s Audiencia Province are expected to consider whether to reopen the investigation or take no action and leave the case permanently closed. With the slow hands of Spanish justice, it’s unclear how soon a decision will be released.
Bäckstedt, Bovay recovering from Qatar injuries
Slipstream-Chipotle’s Magnus Bäckstedt has gotten back on his indoor trainer after suffering a broken collarbone at the Tour of Qatar. Meanwhile, BMC rider Steve Bovay had surgery Wednesday to repair damage from the same injury at the same race. Bäckstedt crashed on stage 5 of the Tour of Qatar, and flew home to the United Kingdom for surgery immediately thereafter. After having his collarbone bolted back together, Bäckstedt got back on the trainer Monday.
Petacchi readies for season kick-off
Italian sprinter Alessandro Petacchi (Milram) makes his season debut this weekend at the 13th GP Costa degli Etruschi as he faces an appeal in the Court of Arbitration for Sport next month over elevated levels of Salbutamol dating back to last year’s Giro d’Italia.
ProTour teams demand talks with race organizers
Nine ProTour teams have demanded immediate talks with the organizers of cycling's three grand tours after the Giro d’Italia denied entry to four of their number. Though the 18 ProTour teams are supposed to be included in the season's major races, Astana, Team High Road, Bouygues Telecom and Crédit Agricole all were denied invitations to the Giro in the wake of a dispute between major race organizers and the UCI.
Nuyens: ‘We’ll miss Farrar in Classics’
Budding Belgian classics star Nick Nuyens says he’ll miss the steady presence of American Tyler Farrar as he enters the 2008 season. Farrar was one of Nuyens’ right-hand men at Cofidis last year as the Belgian moved into the role as team captain for the French team’s classics push. With Farrar donning argyle this season at Slipstream-Chipotle, Nuyens said the team will notice his absence.
Road Warriors: Health Net readies for ’08
When you’re on top, there’s only one thing to do — do your best to stay there. It’s something the riders and staff of Health Net-Maxxis, the number one team in USA Cycling’s National Calendar Rankings for four years running, know all too well. Entering the 2008 season with a scaled-down roster means the team will be facing its biggest challenge yet as it tries to maintain a hold on that No. 1 position.
Caldwell breaks hip, Kuyckx takes Bessèges lead
The injury report keeps growing for Slipstream-Chipotle early in the 2008 season. First it was Magnus Backstedt cracking his right clavicle in the Tour of Qatar last week. On Wednesday, Blake Caldwell went down in a crash in the opening stage of the Étoile de Bessèges in France to fracture his hip. The team is reporting he should be sidelined for about three weeks. Despite Caldwell’s bad luck, Slipstream-Chipotle snuck two riders into the top 10, with Mike Friedman taking ninth and Jason Donald slotting in for 10th.
Duvendeck eyes sprint in Beijing
Santa Barbara, California’s Adam Duvendeck turned heads with his eighth-place finish in the men’s sprint at the Los Angeles round of the World Cup, held January 17-20 in Carson City, California. The result stood as the top finish by an American male sprinter throughout the entire meet, and set the 26-year-old Duvendeck up as a strong candidate to represent the United States at the Beijing Games.
Contador has ‘plan B’ in case of Tour snub
With speculation running high that the Tour de France will follow the lead taken by the Giro d’Italia and leave Astana sidelined for the 2008 edition, defending Tour champ Alberto Contador says he’s already making alternative plans. Contador, set to make his season debut Sunday at the Mallorca Challenge in Spain, said he would look toward other goals if Tour organizers overlook Astana when it issues invitations in the coming weeks.
Bessèges, Mallorca open Euro calendar
The European stage-race calendar kicks off this week with the Étoile de Bessèges in France on Wednesday and the Mallorca Challenge in Spain on Sunday. Both races are attracting top fields as cycling rolls into a new season keen to push the doping scandals and controversies that have plagued the sport the past two years into the rear-view mirror. Scores of top French riders headline Besseges, which starts Wednedsay with a 154km circuit course in Le Grau-du-Roi, just east of Montpellier.
High Road shifts registration to the U.S.
The UCI has approved Team High Road's request to change its country of registration from Germany to the U.S. "The team is now registered as a U.S. team," team spokeswoman Kristy Scrymgeor told VeloNews. "So in effect, it is currently the only U.S. ProTour team." The team has officially moved its headquarters to San Luis Obispo, California, after Tuesday's UCI approval of a request by team director and owner Bob Stapleton.
Boonen California bound
After sweeping through the Tour of Qatar, “Tornado” Tom Boonen is setting his sights on the Tour of California. The 27-year-old said he’d be happy with a stage victory or two in his California adventure, because from here to April, it’s all about the spring classics.
Astana disappointed by Giro decision
Not surprisingly, Astana team brass have reacted with disappointment after being left out of 2008 Giro d’Italia. Astana was among four ProTour squads not issued invitations last week by Giro organizer RCS in a controversial decision that continues to ripple through the peloton. In a team communiqué, Astana general manager Johan Bruyneel said the team will not make a formal complaint over the snub.
Tech Report: More from the SICI Symposium
Before moving on to less important matters, I’d like to acknowledge the passing on Monday of Sheldon Brown, one of the giants of bicycle maintenance, technology and general bicycle mechanical understanding. He will be sorely missed, particularly for those seeking simple, straightforward answers to a vast array of bicycle-related questions. His white bearded visage with eagle-adorned helmet has long been the online face of Harris Cyclery in West Newton, Massachusetts.
Tech Report: A detailed look at Astana’s discs
If you look closely at the disc wheels on Astana’s time trial bikes, you may notice striations running from the hub to rim; much like those on a Lightweight Disc wheel. Well, there’s a reason for that. Despite the Bontrager branding, Astana is riding on Lightweight Disc wheels. Even though the wheel sports a large Bontrager logo, the wheel is actually the 850-gram DT Swiss equipped disc is made by Carbon Sports who sells the wheels under the name Lightweight.
Blackgrove, Holcomb bomb Boulevard
Heath Blackgrove (Toyota-United) and Janel Holcomb (Webcor Builders) won Saturday’s Boulevard Road Race in Crestwood, California. The eighth annual race was run by the University of California San Diego cycling team. The 90-mile men’s race was a sweep for the Toyota-United squad, which put Blackgrove on the top step of the podium followed by teammates Ben Day second and Jonnie Clarke third. Holcomb took the 67-mile women’s race ahead of Leah Guloien (CA Pools Racing) and Cara Gillis (Team Vegan).
Slipstream kick starts season on positive note
The “argyle gang” erased any doubt over the weekend that the new-look Slipstream-Chipotle was going to be competitive on the international stage with a strong start to the 2008 season. Racing on three fronts, the team scored a spot on the podium in Sunday’s GP La Marseillaise to open the European calendar with Ryder Hesjedal in third. Chris Sutton, meanwhile, took fourth overall in the Tour of Qatar and others on the squad dominated at the Tour of the Bahamas with victories in all three stages.
A conversation with Christian Prudhomme
Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme says it’s too early to talk about which teams will be in the 2008 Tour. There’s no guarantee that Tour champ Alberto Contador will be back to defend his title. VeloNews sat down with Prudhomme last week during a break at the Tour of Qatar to discuss Astana, Slipstream-Chipotle and how the Tour is seriously considering a grand depart in Qatar. Here are excerpts from the interview: VeloNews: What is the status of selection teams for the 2008 Tour?
Astana Camp: Horner Q&A
American Chris Horner has been to a training camp or two in his time. This year, he’s happy to be on a ProTour team that will likely go to the Tour de France, and yet has its training camp in the U.S., where he can drive himself to Subway. In Albuquerque, VeloNews sat down with the rider who finished 15th in last year’s Tour while riding in support of teammate Cadel Evans.
Teams grapple with Giro rejection
Managers of the four ProTour teams excluded from the Giro d’Italia are still in disbelief. Citing a selection process based on “ethics and quality,” Giro organizer RCS told Astana, Bouygues Telecom, Crédit Agricole and High Road they were not invited to the May 10 – June 1 event. While decision seems partly based on doping controversy from the 2007 season — Astana and High Road (formerly T-Mobile) certainly experienced their share — the motivation to shut out Bouygues Telecom and Crédit Agricole is less clear.