How it happened: Live Coverage archive
- 01:25 PM: Good day and welcome
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the 15th stage of the 91st edition of the Giro d'Italia, a tough, tough 153-kilometer race from Arabba to the top of Passo Fedaia, the "Marmolada."
Today's route features six climbs - and about 10 meters of flat ground.
Sella takes a second stage as Contador dons maglia rosa
Under normal conditions, Alberto Contador (Astana) claiming the maglia rosa might bring some certainty to the 91st Giro d’Italia. But there’s nothing predictable about this explosive and unpredictable race with a week still to go. The defending Tour de France champ faltered in Sunday’s six-climb, 154km 15th stage, but had just enough spin in his legs to slink into the overall lead by 33 seconds — a lead that by his own admission might be only temporary.
Veilleux and Gauthier win Baltimore’s Kelly Cup
David Veilleux (Kelly Benefit Strategies) won Saturday's Kelly Cup criterium in Baltimore's Patterson Park. The 20-year-old Canadian outsprinted Colavita's Kyle Wamsley and compatriot Dominque Rollin (Toyota-United). Mid way through the race a seven-man breakaway formed that included Jonny Sundt and Veilluex from Kelly Benefit Strategies/Medifast. But with less than ten laps to go the break split and Sundt returned to the field and Veilleux was left in a four-man break. Veilleux went into the last 100 meters on Rollin's wheel then came around Rollin and held off Wamsley for the win.
Live Coverage – Stage 14 Giro d’Italia
- 01:17 PM: Good day and welcome
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the 14th stage of the Giro d'Italia, a 195-kilometer race from Verona to the top of the Alpe di Pampeago.
The Giro moves into the mountains today and we expect big changes in the GC picture of this race, with a little more than a week remaining in Italy's grand tour.
Ljungskog leads, Arndt still in second overall; the Tour de l’Aude concludes Sunday.
High Road speedster Ina Yoko Teutenberg won her second stage of the Tour de l'Aude on Saturday. Teutenberg was the fastest in a group of some 30 riders that broke away on the hilly eighth stage, starting and finishing in the town of Bram. “I was a bit lucky because I was really tired after getting into the break and it was windy, too.” Teutenberg said. “Another rider went for it on the other side of the road at the finish and I thought it would be close but I finally won by about a bike length.”
Andy Hampsten and the 1988 Pink Jersey: Part 1
How do you define an epic? It’s a noun grossly over-used by sportswriters, particularly those who write about cycling. Through the years, European journalists have described heroic deeds by brave athletes on bicycles with gushing prose that was rarely deserved. They even titled road racing’s formative years The Heroic Era.
Snow forces cancellation of Iron Horse Bicycle Classic
The Iron Horse Bicycle Classic has been canceled for only the second time in its 37-year history due to heavy snow in the San Juan Mountains north of Durango. Race director Gaige Sippy told The Durango Herald that the Colorado State Patrol pulled the plug at 6 a.m. Saturday after five inches of snow fell at Durango Mountain Resort overnight, with a foot of the white stuff burying the finish line in Silverton.
Sella wins in Dolomites; Bosisio takes over lead at Giro d’Italia
Emanuele Sella (CSF-Navigare) swapped tears of frustration for tears of joy Saturday after winning a blockbuster stage as the overall favorites squared off up the grueling 7.7km climb to the Alpe di Pampeago summit in the 91st Giro’s first clash in the Dolomites. The 195km, two-climb stage lived up to expectations to deliver big surprises as Sella pulled away early as part of a 13-man breakaway at 13km that also included Christian Vande Velde (Slipstream-Chipotle).
The National Racing Calendar enters the hot season with Somerville, Leelanau and the Kelly Cup.
The 2008 National Racing Calendar turns a page into the summer season this weekend with a trio of NRC events in New Jersey, Michigan and Maryland.
The three races
Baltimore's Kelly Cup Saturday's Kelly Cup criterium is held on a fast 1-mile course in Baltimore's Patterson Park near the city's Inner Harbor. The race boasts a stellar list of former winners, including Ivan Dominguez, Jonas Carney, Henk Vogels, Lynn Gaggiolo, Tina Pic and Joanne Kiesanowski.VeloNews’ exclusive lab rat reports on his progress the night before a big race.
I’m going to go against the norm this week and start with the bad news. Right now I’m sitting in the Steaming Bean coffee shop in rainy Durango, Colorado, one day out from what is supposed to be my first A-priority event of the 2008 season, the Iron Horse Bicycle Classic road race. For those unfamiliar, the Iron Horse is among America’s longest running cycling events, this year celebrating its 37th anniversary.
Rivals to face off in epic Dolomites showdown
Alberto Contador (Astana) is poised to become the first Spanish rider to wear the pink jersey since Juan Carlos Dominguez won the opening prologue in 2002. The only question now seems to be which day it will happen as the defending Tour de France champ enters a trio of tortuous climbing stages across the heart of the Dolomites positioned perfectly for a maglia rosa assault.
High Road’s Mark Cavendish wins the 13th stage of the Giro d’Italia
It’s unlikely that Mark Cavendish will become the peloton’s new gentleman sprinter, but he was gracious enough Friday to say thanks to Daniele Bennati for not closing down the sprint 100 meters shy of his second win in the 91st Giro d’Italia. The High Road sprinter didn’t elaborate on whether or not he also said arrivederci as he burst past his Liquigas rival in what’s fast becoming recognized as the most lethal last-second punch in the peloton.
Bennati takes a close win at Giro
Liquigas's Daniele Bennati won Thursday's 12th stage of the Giro d’Italia, winning a furious sprint by the narrowest of margins over Mark Cavendish (High Road) at the end of a 172-kilometer race from Forli to Carpi. Quick Step's Giovanni Visconti finished in the main field and kept the the maglia rosa of the overall race leader.
Performance food for racing and training
Your pre-ride meal can provide a maximum performance boost.
Bertolini wins a crash-filled stage 11
Italian Alessandro Bertolini (Diquigiovanni) won Wednesday's wild ride into Cesena in the 11th stage at the Giro d'Italia that saw a cascade of crashes in yet another wild day of racing at the corsa rosa. Overnight leader Giovanni Visconti (Quick Step) defended his pink jersey, but only after being dropped twice and overcoming a crash with 30km to go in the 199km, mountainous stage over what were once the training routes of Marco Pantani.
20008 Giro d’Italia: Lennard Zinn looks at time trial tech
Tuesday offered another time trial at the Giro, this time from Pesaro to Urbino. The first half was flat, and its second half climbed about 400 meters, including a 10 percent stretch at midway and a 12 percent section three-quarters of the way through. Riders had to decide if they wanted a full-on TT bike, which would be great for the first half and not so great on the second half, or a road bike with a clip-on that would be sub-par for the first half and shine on the second half?
Police raid Portuguese team
Portuguese police say they found evidence of widespread doping after raids Monday on LA-MSS, a continental team that includes several Operación Puerto “refugees,” wire services reported Tuesday. Police didn’t officially reveal the name of the team, but the Portuguese sport daily, A Bola, reported in its Tuesday edition that Portuguese authorities visited the residences of riders on the LA-MSS team. Authorities said the investigation, which was conducted under the national anti-doping council and the national anti-corruption bureau, is ongoing.
Hushovd wins in Catalunya – again
Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) powered to his second consecutive victory Tuesday to conserve his lead at the 88th Volta a Catalunya in Spain. A winner of Monday’s opening prologue, Hushovd out-kicked Bernard Eisel (High Road) to sprint to victory in the 167.8km stage from Riudellots de la Selva to Banyoles. Hushovd widened his grip on the overall leader’s jersey to second-place George Hincapie (High Road) by 10 seconds thanks to a finish-line bonus.
Lampre’s Bruseghin triumphs, while Contador positions himself for a podium run.
Marzio Bruseghin (Lampre) might raise Italian donkeys, but he rode like a thoroughbred in Tuesday’s rainy and very difficult 39.4-kilometer to upset the favored Andreas Klöden (Astana). The 33-year-old Bruseghin, who has more than a dozen donkeys and grows wine grapes on his farm in Vittorio Veneto, surged to just his third career victory in impressive fashion. The veteran Italian relegated the heavily favored Klöden to third by 40 seconds, but the real surprise was the second-place ride at just eight seconds off the pace by the injured Alberto Contador (Astana).
Injured reserves: Slipstream’s Zabriskie, Duggan play the waiting game
Six weeks ago, Slipstream-Chipotle’s Timmy Duggan was slated to be a member of team time trial winning squads at both the Tour de Georgia and the Giro d’Italia. Instead, Duggan went down in a pileup in Georgia the day before the TTT and suffered a brain injury that landed him in an Athens hospital for several days. Duggan hasn’t raced since and his season’s plans are now up in the air.
Giro: All eyes turn to Klöden
After a week of avoiding crashes and keeping a low profile, Andreas Klöden (Astana) will reluctantly step into the spotlight in Tuesday’s 39.4km individual time trial that will be the 91st Giro d’Italia’s first major litmus test. The media-shy Klöden will be favorite for the decisive 10th stage as the main contenders for the maglia rosa step up to show their cards after nine nervous and exciting days of racing.
Zabirova scores win at Aude; Arndt stays in control
Kazakhstan’s Zulfia Zabirova won the third stage of the Tour de l'Aude on Monday, soloing in to victory at the end of 111km race around Corbi Lézignan-res. High Road’s Judith Arndt continues to hold the overall lead in what has grown to be one of the world’s premiere stage races for women.
Hushovd nails prologue at Volta a Catalunya
Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) notched an impressive prologue win in Monday’s opener at the Volta a Catalunya against some pretty impressive company. Hushovd, 30, used his combination of strength and technical skills to claim a six-second victory over George Hincapie (High Road) on the short, but challenging 3.7km course in Lloret de Mar. Spanish rider José Ivan Gutiérrez (Caisse d’Epargne) and Tomas Lovkvist (High Road) tied at seven seconds off the pace with world time trial champion Fabian Cancellara (CSC) stopping the lock nine seconds in arrears.
Giro d’Italia: Contador vows to ride despite fracture
Reigning Tour de France champion Alberto Contador (Astana) has promised to continue riding in the Giro d’Italia, despite learning that he suffered a minor elbow fracture in a crash last Saturday. "Contador's visit to the radiologist today (Monday) revealed a fissure in the radius head of his left elbow," his Astana team said in a statement on Monday. "The fracture without dislocation stems from his Stage 8 crash from Rivisondoli to Tivoli (on Saturday)."
Training: The importance of a mid-season break
Most sports have a distinct off-season. For the super ambitious cyclist, there is a cycling medium for any time of year. Road and mountain bike racing goes all spring and summer, 'cross rages in the fall and winter, and with the sweet indoor ADT velodrome in LA, track goes all year round. I have many athletes finish their road or mountain bike season in September, go right into 'cross, and a few are good enough to make the worlds 'cross team, committing them through the end of January … leaving them a month before the next road/mtb season starts in earnest.
Brave Soldier’s Brave Shave cream
Brave Soldier Brave Shave Price: $15 Size: 6 ounces Web site: www.bravesoldier.com Safe from a razor’s edge. Brave Soldier’s Brave Shave was originally designed for the specific task of body shaving associated with the sports of cycling and swimming. But according to the brand it has proven perfect for the ‘ultimate face shave.’
What goes through the head of a pro cyclist in a five-hour race?
Somebody once made the mistake of asking “What do you think about out there during five hour races? It can’t all be focus, right?” You asked for it! A sampling of my really, really random inner monologue from the second stage at the Four Days of Dunkirk, starting while rolling from the camper to the start: Wow. It’s really nice today. Why are we starting in a dive strip mall parking lot? Lame. I need to pee.
Tour de Toona cuts back to one day
There is one less stage race on the National Racing Calendar as Pennsylvania's Tour de 'Toona has cut back from being a seven-day race to a single-day criterium. The crit will be held July 27th and have a $30,000 prize list. Organizers plan to return to a stage race format in 2009, race director Larry Bilotto said. “This was not an easy call to make; by initiating just a one-year reduction, we feel we can produce an even stronger International Tour de ‘Toona stage race in 2009.”
Tina Pic and Andrew Pinfold charge to Hood River criterium wins; Sutherland and Beveridge lock up the overall titles.
Colavita's national crit champ Tina Pic won her second Mt. Hood Cycling Classic stage on Sunday while 19-year-old Julie Beveridge (Aaron's) locked up the overall title despite a nasty crash in the last corner of the race. Jeanie Longo-Ciprelli (River City Bicycles) grabbed third place in the sprint and took a four-second time bonus that moved her from third to second on GC, passing three-time Mt. Hood winner Leah Goldstein (ValueAct Capital)
Arndt takes lead at Tour de L’Aude
Judith Arndt surged into the overall lead at the Tour de L’Aude on Sunday after her Team High Road squad rode to second in the team time trial in stage 2. The Dutch national team was fastest in the 27km course starting and finishing in Port La Nouvelle, covering the route in 35 minutes, 44 seconds (45.33kph). That wasn’t enough to snag the maillot jaune, however. Ardnt and her High Road teammates finished second in the stage at just six seconds back and allowed the two-time winner Arndt to slip into the leader’s jersey.
Chavanel takes Tour de Picardie
French sprinter Sébastian Chavanel (FDJeux) won the fourth and final stage Sunday to claim the overall title at the Tour de Picardie in France. Chavanel scored time bonuses at intermediate sprints in the afternoon road race of Sunday’s two-part finale to grab the overall crown by a slender, one-second margin.
Bennati wins a photo finish to take Giro d’Italia stage
Paolo Bettini (Quick Step) wants nothing more than to win a stage in the Giro d’Italia wearing the rainbow jersey. “The Cricket” came close but fell short in 2007, and when he successfully defended the world championship last fall in Stuttgart, one of the first things he said he wanted to do was win in Italy wearing the rainbow stripes. Bettini, 34, still has some unfinished business after losing in a photo-finish to Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) in a hotly contested sprint in Sunday’s 218km ninth stage from Civitavecchia to San Vicenzo.
Mt Hood Stage 4: Manion wins stage, Sutherland retains lead
Health Net-Maxxis reeled in a dangerous breakaway on Saturday to preserve Rory Sutherland's overall lead in the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic. The break went away at mile 35 of the 101-mile stage and contained Bissell's Edward King, who was just 1:41 behind Sutherland on GC. The break also contained dangerous climbers Andrew Bajadali (Kelly Benefits), Michael Grabinger (Successful Living) and James Mattis (California Giant Berry), each of whom brought along a teammate. Bissell's King had two teammates.
Elminger taks lead at Picardie
Martin Elmiger (Ag2r-La Mondiale) is the new leader at the Tour de Picardie after winning Saturday’s second stage in an attack-riddled stage from Ribemont to Clérmont-de-l’Oise. Elmiger was part of a late counter-attack that surged away when the day’s main breakaway was caught with about 20km to go. Elmiger stayed clear a few seconds of the chasing lead pack to win the stage and take the leader’s jersey.
Giro d’Italia Stage 8: Live Coverage
- 04:33 AM: Good day and
welcome to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of Stage 8 of the 91st Giro d'Italia, a 206-kilometer ride from Rivisondoli to Tivoli.
The weather today is relatively pleasant, with temperatures at the finish in the mid-70s (25c), partly cloudy skies and winds at around 10mph. The high today is expected to be right around 79 (26c) and humidity at 62%.
Lezyne’s forged alloy tire levers could last a lifetime
Price: $15/pair Weight: 15 grams each Web site: www.lezyne.com Your last levers? Lezyne’s forged, polished aluminum tire levers will likely out last any other composite or plastic tire lever on the market — as long as you don’t lose them.
Health Net’s Rory Sutherland wins Mt. Hood’s time trial stage, takes the overall lead
After two brushes with the top of the podium, Health Net-Maxxis rider Rory Sutherland got the stage win he was looking for Friday in the critical time trial stage of the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic in Oregon. Sutherland won by about 25 seconds over Bissell's Ben Jacques-Maynes and more than 30 seconds over Thursday's stage winner, Darren Lill of BMC. Besides the stage win Sutherland moved into the race lead ahead of Jacques-Maynes and Lill. Sutherland was third in the stage 1 criterium and second in the stage 2 circuit race.
Giro jury rules against Leipheimer
Time differences taken at the finish line in Thursday’s sixth stage at the Giro d’Italia stand for now. Members of the race jury ruled Friday after analyzing photos that a crash involving a police motorcycle just under 1km to go “did not cause a time gap” in the rising finish into the fishing village at Peschici. Astana team officials said they would meet Saturday morning with the president of the race jury to further discuss the issue. Other teams have also protested the decision to let the time gaps stand.
Mactier wins Tour de l’Aude kickoff
Australian Katie Mactier won the prologue of the 24th Tour de l'Aude on Friday in the streets of Gruissan. The flat course clearly suited the Australian, despite a swirling wind at the seaside resort. Ellen Van Dijk was second in the 3.9km time trial with American Alison Powers third. Saturday brings the 106 racers a 113km road stage.
Siedler takes Picardie opener
German veteran Sebastian Siedler (Skil-Shimano) survived a finish-line crash to snag the maillot jaune after sprinting to victory in the opening stage of the Tour de Picardie on Friday in France. The 30-year-old Siedler stabbed his bike across the line ahead of Belgian Kenny de Haes (Topsport) and French rider Sébastien Chavanel (FDJeux) in the 179km circuit course from Crécy-en-Ponthieu to Guise.
Milram sacks Petacchi
Milram has sacked its fabled sprinter, Alessandro Petacchi, after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ordered that he serve a year’s suspension for taking more than the authorized dose of salbutamol. “Every breach of our team policy is going to be penalized,” said general manager Gerry van Gerwen. "All infractions of internal rules are the object of a sanction and this is also true for Alessandro Petacchi."
Giro d’Italia 2008 Stage 7: Live Coverage
- 10:43 PM: Good morning . . .
. . . and welcome to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of stage 7 of the 2008 Giro d'Italia, a mountainous 180km leg from Vasto to Pescocostanzo.
- 02:02 PM: Heading for the hills
We have a new race leader in Italian national champion Giovanni Visconti (Quick Step), just in time for the first summit finish of this climb-heavy Giro.
Saunier Duval’s Riccardo Ricco scores another stage win at the Giro d’Italia
Riccardo Riccò (Saunier Duval-Scott) ripped to another dramatic victory in Saturday’s 208km eighth stage to prove he’s top dog in the first week of racing in the 91st Giro d’Italia. Riccò, 24, snagged his second stage in a week by out-kicking world champion Paolo Bettini (Quick Step) at the end of another hilltop finale into Tivoli with Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner) taking third.
Bosisio takes 1st summit finish
It was a battle on three fronts in the first mountain stage of the 91st Giro d’Italia, and a preview of the suffering to come. Up front, Gabriele Bosisio (Team LPR) was the last man standing from a huge mob that peeled away early in the four-climb, 180km romp from Vasto to Pescocostanzo to claim his team’s first Giro stage. In the middle, Danilo Di Luca (LPR), Riccardo Riccò (Saunier Duval) and Alberto Contador (Astana) revealed they’ll be contenders after they attacked a lead group of favorites to carry home a 50-second prize over their GC rivals.
Q&A with Astana’s Sean Yates
Astana is looking to make the most of the unexpected trip to the Giro d’Italia. With its marquee lineup that includes Levi Leipheimer, Alberto Contador and Andreas Kloden, the team would normally be expected to dominate the race. But Astana’s invite didn’t come until a week before the 91st Giro kick-started in Sicily last weekend and the team had less-than-ideal preparation for one of the season’s hardest races.
Crankbrothers’ Cobalt SL headset shaves weight
Price: $130 Weight: 60 grams (cups only); 95 grams (with races, star nut and top-cap) Models: cobalt (cross-country/road); iodine (trail); opium (downhill race);sage (heavy duty freeride) Web site:www.crankbrothers.com Cutting the Fat: crankbrothers' Cobalt SL headset eliminates the redundancy of a standard headset’s cup and outer bearing race by combining the two components: the headset's cup also acts as the bearing’s outer race.
Like Savoldelli at this Giro, Astana director Yates still likes going fast
In every generation, it seems, there is someone in the peloton that all the other riders point to when asked: Who’s the fastest descender? Who’s the man who can race down mountain roads seemingly effortlessly and leave the rest behind?
BMC’s Lill and Tibco’s Kiesanowski win Mt. Hood’s circuit race and take the overall leads.
BMC's South African, Darren Lill, won Thursday's second stage of the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic by peeling away from the remnants of the peloton on the final climb a bit less than a kilometer to go. Lill, who won the fifth stage at Mt. Hood last year, barely held off a late charge by Health Net's Rory Sutherland and Symmetric's Christian Meier. Lill took over the leader's jersey from Toyota-United's Hilton Clarke, who was dropped by the lead group about 8km from the finish of the hilly circuit race.
Bennati’s long road to a custom Super Six
Bike fit is no joking matter for a professional racer. Fit is the single most important aspect of the bike. If the bike doesn’t fit, it really doesn’t matter how light or technologically advanced it is — it’s not going to be very fast. Take the case of Liquigas rider Daniele Bennati. He has short legs, long arms and a long torso. So the team’s bike sponsor, Cannondale, built him a custom SuperSix carbon bike, which he has been racing for two and a half months.
Giro d’Italia 2008 Stage 6: Live Coverage
- 06:10 AM: Good morning . . .
. . . and welcome to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of stage 6 of the 2008 Giro d'Italia.
Visconti seizes lead at Giro as Priamo wins stage 6
For the second day in a row, a breakaway stayed clear of the peloton, with another unsung hero from a smaller team in the form of Matteo Priamo (CSF-Panaria) taking center stage. Unlike yesterday, the attackers had enough rope to end Franco Pellizotti’s four-day run in the pink jersey. Italian national champion Giovanni Visconti (Quick Step) and German Matthias Russ (Gerolsteiner) ended the day tied on time, but Visconti took the maglia rosa based on differences taken in the team time trial.
Colavita’s Tina Pic and Toyota’s Hilton Clarke take crit wins and the overall lead in Portland.
The Mt. Hood Cycling Classic ventured into new territory Wednesday with a new venue for the sixth year of the event: a hilly criterium held in a verdant city park wrapping around a long-extinct volcano. The new event delivered large crowds and down-to-the-wire racing action that saw the mens and womens overall leads switch hands in the final meters of the crits. The fact that Portland was enjoying some of the nicest weather of the spring only helped improve the festive atmosphere in Mt. Tabor Park.
Peloton growing peevish over transfers, travails
Riders are at their wits’ end with the seemingly endless string of transfers, delays and hassles associated with the opening days of the 91st Giro d’Italia. In the first three stages of racing on Sicily, there were no less than 500km of transfers, nearly as much as the peloton has raced. Tensions came to a head following the botched ferry transfer across the Straits of Messina from Sicily to Italy on Monday evening, when what should have been a 20-minute ferry ride turned into a four-hour odyssey.
Giro d’Italia 2008 Stage 5: Live Coverage
- 12:46 AM: Good morning . . .
. . . and welcome to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of stage 5 of the 2008 Giro d'Italia.
Brutt battles to stage-5 win
Tinkoff’s Pavel Brutt feinted and feigned his way to victory in the final kilometers of a five-man breakaway that held off the chasing peloton by 30 seconds in Wednesday’s fifth stage at the 91st Giro d’Italia.
Serotta’s Paint Program lets buyers design their color schemes from home.
Web site: www.serotta.com/paint/index.html Serotta Competition Bicycles offers 26 paint colors, several different carbon clear coat tints and a variety of decal colors and schemes. Now the Saratoga Springs, New York-company is offering buyers (and dreamers) the chance to design their bike's color scheme completely online.[nid:76148] Buyers first pick the frame design they want, then browse more than 700 examples, such as those shown here. Buyers can choose one of the examples or come up with their own.
Kiwi trackies clean up at Mt. Hood opener
A pair of New Zealander track riders — in the States for some summer road racing to tune up before the Olympics — took the first two spots in the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic women's prologue on Tuesday. Joanne Kiesanowski of the Tibco team, a four-time national points race champion who has moved her focus to the road recently, finished less than a second ahead of Alison Shanks of Jazz Apple, a New Zealand-based team. Shanks is a pursuit rider on the track.
Mt. Hood: the prologue to the Prologue
There are few active racers who can be described as a legend with no dispute. Jeannie Longo-Ciprelli, who has won 51 French and world championships, is at the top of the list. When Longo, a last-minute entrant at the Mt. Hood Cycling Classic, arrived at race headquarters Tuesday, many of the other women racers lost their pre-race cool, looking more star-struck than intimidated by Longo's racing ability. "I'm just in awe," said Flavia Oliveira, who will join Longo on the River City Racing composite team. "I just want to bask in all of her knowledge."
Giro d’Italia 2008 Stage 4: Live Coverage
- 10:12 PM: Good morning . . .
. . . and welcome to VeloNews.com's live coverage of stage 4 of the 2008 Giro d'Italia, a 183km dash north from Pizzo Calabro to Catanzaro-Lungomare.
Cavendish rockets to stage-4 win
High Road's Mark Cavendish survived another chaotic dash to the line to win stage 4 of the Giro d'Italia on Tuesday. Gerolsteiner's Robert Forster crossed second and Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) third. Franco Pellozotti (Liquigas) retained the overall lead. "This is my finest victory," said Cavendish, whose teammates escorted him back to the front after a climb split the bunch with 20km to go. "It was the result of my team's work which kept me surrounded over the last 20km. The wind was blowing hard and Bennati went off at a good time, but I was able to follow him and overtake him.
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Wangsgard, Haedo take Joe Martin final
Nichole Wangsgard and Lucas Sebastian Haedo — both of Colavita-Sutter Home — scored criterium wins in the final stage of Arkansas’ May stage race. Health Net's Rory Sutherland and Cheerwine's Robin Farina took the overall. Action Images photographer Kurt Jambretz was there to capture all the action.
2008 Mt. Hood Cycling Classic boasts top lineup
Lingering snows in the high country have forced organizers to re-route a key stage of Mt. Hood Cycling Classic, but they promise the improvised route for stage 5 is just as challenging — maybe even more so. The six-day stage race gets underway Tuesday with a 1.7-mile prologue. The race is now in its sixth year and appears to be picking up steam: the 2008 edition boasts the strongest fields it has ever attracted.
Men's line-up
On the men's side, Rock Racing, Toyota-United, Health Net-Maxxis, Bissell, BMC and Symmetrics lead the charge.Giro d’Italia 2008 Stage 3: Live Coverage
- 12:32 AM: Good morning . . .
. . . and welcome to VeloNews' Live Coverage of the third stage of the 2008 Giro d' Italia.
Bennati survives carnage to win stage 3
Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) survived to win a crash-laden 222km third stage at the Giro d’Italia on Monday that saw scores of riders hit the deck in a nervous, technical race around the flanks of Mt. Etna. While Europe’s most active volcano remained quiet, there was plenty of action on the road as wind and light rain thrashed the peloton in what was one of the few chances for sprinters in this climb-heavy edition of the Giro.
Dirty Words with Adam Craig: a Madrid World Cup report
American cross-country mountain bike racer Adam Craig has his sights set on the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. That means for the next few months he will be battling it out on the World Cup and National Mountain Bike Series with his fellow Americans for a slot on the U.S. team. In between races, Craig skis, kayaks and is the rally car co-driver for his Giant teammate Carl Decker. VeloNews.com is along for the ride. —Editor
Titus Cycles enters the cyclocross market with three new frame models.
Retail: $1895 (steel Exogrid) Sizes: Five standard plus custom Availability: August Web site: www.titusti.com Titus Cycles is introducing three new cyclocross frames this year, the company's first venture into the 'cross market. Two of the frames feature Titus' Exogrid tubing technology, in which two materials are fused together, with the heavier material thinned or cut away in a grid pattern in the middle of the tube, to reduce weight.
Lees-McRae riders ace their finals
Tiny Lees-McRae College in Banner Elk, North Carolina, can finally say it owns the best collegiate road cycling team in the United States. After a series of near misses at collegiate cycling’s biggest race, the Bobcats finally grabbed the coveted Division I team omnium, squeaking by Fort Lewis College, 473-424. The Bobcats’ Andrew Talansky and Carla Swart also took home the Division I individual omnium titles — another first for the school of 900 students.
2008 Giro d’Italia, stage 2: Live Coverage
- 01:47 PM: Good day and welcome
to VeloNews.com's Live Updates from the second stage of the 2008 Giro d'Italia, a 207km race from Cefalu to Agrigente. This stage features two climbs, the Category 2 Gatteri, at 26km and then the Cat. 3 Polizzello at 112km. This is not a simple and easy flat sprinters' stage typical of the early days in the grand tours. This is the sort of stage that may favor a strong all-arounder, like Paolo Bettini ...
Vande Velde’s day in pink
Christian Vande Velde stepped off the Slipstream-Chipotle team bus Sunday morning along the beach at Cerfalù with a big smile on his face. Proudly decked out in the maglia rosa, Vande Velde was clearly enjoying his moment as the first American since Andy Hampsten won the 1988 Giro to wear the Giro’s leader’s jersey. “We hope today goes just like yesterday, but we know it’s a complicated stage,” Vande Velde said. “To win yesterday’s stage was our big goal, everything else is just icing on the cake at this point.”
Blue Cycles’ Ryan Barnett is recovering from a serious accident in Atlanta.
Category 1 racer Ryan Barnett is recovering in an Atlanta hospital from a collision with a car on May 3. Barnett, who is the marketing manager for Blue Competition Cycles, was out for a quick spin prior to Sunday's Sandy Springs Classic criterium when the accident occurred, said Blue's Brady Rogers. Barnett fractured his skull, broke ribs and his pelvis and fractured his back in the T3 and T4 vertebrae area, Rogers said. He said Barnett has some paralysis from the waist down.
Zabriskie crashes out of Giro
VeloNews staff and wire reports David Zabriskie’s 2008 Giro d’Italia ended Sunday when he was caught at a pileup with about 55km to go in the 207km second stage from Cerfalù to Agrigento. Zabriskie, 29, went down with several other riders as the peloton approached a railroad crossing. Zabriskie, who started the day second overall, was knocked off his bike and was unable to rejoin the pack. Doctors immediately attended to the reigning U.S. time trial champion and transported him to a local hospital.
Zajicek, Abbott win Colorado series kickoff
Phil Zajicek (Health Net-Maxxis) and Mara Abbott (Team High Road) won the kickoff to the 2008 Tour of Colorado race series on Saturday in Boulder. The 9.14-mile Excel Sports Sunshine Hill Climb up Sunshine Canyon served up 3226 feet in elevation gain with a maximum grade of 23 percent. Conditions didn’t make the climb any easier, with temperatures in the low 40s under cloudy skies at the start and mid-30s with snow at the finish.
Stephane Auge wins the Four Days of Dunkirk, as Hushovd wins the final stage.
Cofidis rider Stephane Auge of France claimed overall victory in the Four Days of Dunkirk cycling race on Sunday. Norwegian Thor Hushovd, riding for the Credit Agricole team, won Sunday's sixth and final 128.4km stage between Coudekerque and Dunkirk in a sprint finish. Please check back soon for results.
2008 Giro d’Italia: Pellizotti in pink after Ricco wins stage 2
Riccardo Riccò (Saunier Duval-Scott) uncorked a tremendous sprint in the final 100 meters to win Sunday’s exciting 207km second stage, but Franco Pellizotti (Liquigas) snuck into fourth to short circuit Christian Vande Velde’s run in the maglia rosa by just one second.
Lees-McRae riders snap up wins in the Div. 1 men’s and women’s road races.
Carla Swart clung to the back of the elite seven-woman breakaway in the waning minutes of the 2008 Division I women’s road championship, held Saturday in Fort Collins, Colorado. Outnumbered and without teammates, the Lees-McRae sophomore didn’t appear to have the numbers or legs to win. Looks, however, can be deceiving.
‘Baby’ Haedo takes Joe Martin stage — An Action Images Gallery
Lucas Sebastian Haedo (Colavita-Sutter Home) took the stage 2 sprint win at the Joe Martin Stage Race in Arkansas. Action Images photographer Kurt Jambretz was there to catch all the action.