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Farrar happy with Giro
Sometimes you don’t have to win to make a strong impression. That’s certainly the case for Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Slipstream), who proved that he’s reached a new level in the rough-and-tumble world of field sprints. With two seconds and one third, Farrar came close to the elusive breakthrough victory. The team was more than satisfied with Farrar’s performances and he all but assured himself a ticket to the Tour de France in July as the team’s top sprinter.
Cervelo’s Gerrans wins at San Luca in classic style
Danilo Di Luca (LPR) missed a chance to jump back into the pink jersey at the Giro d’Italia in Saturday’s hilltop finish up the fiercely steep climb to the San Luca church that was tailor-made for his explosive style. Instead of battling for a vital 20-second time bonus that might have come with a stage victory, LPR botched the chase in the 172km 14th stage and let most of a 14-man breakaway stay clear to gobble up the time bonuses.
Shriver named interim director/ head coach at Fort Lewis College
PRESS RELEASE
The Fort Lewis College Cycling Program and Director of Athletics Kelly Higgins are proud to announce Matt Shriver as the Interim Director/Head Coach of FLC Cycling. Shriver has stepped up from his current position as Men’s Road Coach to become the Director of the FLC Skyhawks cycling program at the college located in Durango, Colorado.Taylor Phinney falls to sixth at the Fleche du Sud
Trek-Livestrong's Taylor Phinney fell to sixth overall at the Fleche du Sud stage race in Luxembourg on Friday, losing the leader's jersey he took in the prologue. Phinney finished 16th on the stage, 1:10 behind race winner Simon Zahners of the Swiss team, Bürgis Cycling. Zahners outsprinted three breakaway companions, while Phinney finished in the field. Zahner now leads the GC, 12 seconds ahead of Dutch rider Maint Berkenbosch. Phinney continues to lead the best young rider competition by three seconds over German Marcel Kittel, the winner of stage 1.
NRC loses another event as the Tour de ‘Toona won’t be held this year
Pennsylvania's Tour de 'Toona won't be held this year, because of a lack of sponsorship, organizers announced Friday. The race was to have been held July 13-19, returning to a stage race format after holding a one-day race last year. But lack of sponsorship forced organizers to postpone the event to 2010, spokesman Bob Leverknight said in an email to VeloNews. "We weighed a lot of factors. The lack of sponsors, sponsors that cut their commitments, and the general economic climate caused the race to be put off for a year," he said.
Vos wins again as Hausler holds the lead at L’Aude
Marianne Vos on Friday won her second stage of this year's Tour De L'Aude Feminin, after another hilly day in France. Vos finished nine seconds ahead of race leader Claudia Hausler (Cervelo TestTeam), who maintained her lead. Trixi Worrack (Nurnberger Versicherung) was another 22 seconds back in third. Americans Kristin Armstrong (Cervelo) and Amber Neben (Nurnberger Versicherung) finished in a group of about 20 riders that came in about three minutes behind Worrack.
Leipheimer: ‘I will attack’
Just moments after the dust settled from Thursday’s decisive time trial that saw him lose the maglia rosa, Danilo Di Luca said he wants it back as soon as possible. The 2007 winner said aggressive tactics can still win the Giro, but just as quickly added that he didn’t expect to see that from Levi Leipheimer. “I’ve never seen Leipheimer attack,” Di Luca said on RAI television. “He’s going to have to now if he wants to win this Giro.”
Giro’s 13th stage is lucky for Cavendish
Mark Cavendish (Columbia-Highroad) carved another masterpiece Friday on the fast road to Florence, dashing to his third sprint victory in five stages before taking an early exit from the Giro d’Italia. Within shot of the towering duomo, Cavendish made easy work of Italian star Alessandro Petacchi (LPR) to claim his 11th win on the season. [nid:92327] In post-race comments, Cavendish hinted that he would leave the Giro. A press release from his team a few hours later confirmed his early departure.
A conversation with Garmin-Slipstream’s Lucas Euser
Twenty-six-year old Garmin-Slipstream pro Lucas Euser got his start racing mountain bikes while in high school in California’s Napa Valley. He turned to the road as an undergraduate at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo on California’s central coast, and is now in his third year racing in Europe. VeloNews caught up with the 5’7”, 130-pound rider at his home in Girona, Spain, where he is on crutches recovering from a May 14 run-in with a car. VeloNews: Last week you had an accident. What happened?
MTB News and Notes
High school champs crowned in California
California’s NorCal and SoCal high school mountain bike leagues converged on Boggs Mountain state park outside of Calistoga on May 17 for the 2009 state championship cross-country race. The final event for both the leagues attracted 374 high school racers to battle in four categories: Varsity, Junior Varsity, Sophomore and Freshman. Schools competed in both the Division I and II, meaning in total, eight individual and two team championship prizes were awarded.Colorado’s Iron Horse Classic ready to roll
The 2000-plus bicycle racers descending on Durango, Colorado, for this weekend’s 38th Iron Horse Bicycle Classic are all begging Mother Nature for sunshine. And no snow. It was one year ago that a spring snowstorm forced the cancellation of the road race, which debuted in 1972. After an unseasonably wet 2008 winter, snow clouds gathered over Durango three days before the event. By race day, the 47-mile course, which includes two summits over 10,000 feet, was covered in six to 10 inches of the white stuff.
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I am Ted King: Cinque Terra TT in hindsight
I'm going to start by tooting my horn a bit here and saying that I'm a fairly handy time trialist. Furthermore, I'm lucky enough to be riding the finest, fastest, and one of the most heavily sought after time trial machines on the market, the Cervélo P3. That might stir up a lot of questions to the tune of, "Hey when are you going to get the P4?!" Well that's for me to know and you to find out.
Cyclists organize rides to remember Steve Larsen
The cycling community in Bend, Oregon, is organizing two bike rides as memorials to multi-sport legend Steve Larsen, who died Tuesday. A memorial service is planned for Saturday at 1 pm in Bend. The first ride is the regular Saturday morning hammer ride, leaving from Hutch's East Side bike shop at 820 NE 3rd Street, Bend. A friend said "the ride will hammer as usual. Steve would want it that way." The second ride will meet at 12:30 p.m., at the Drake Park Stage. The group will parade from there to the memorial service. All bikes and riders are welcome.
Trek-Livestrong’s Phinney holds his lead in the Fleche du Sud
Taylor Phinney will get to wear the white leader's jersey of the Fleche du Sud another day, as he defended it in Thursday's first stage of the Luxembourg race. The American track champion won the prologue Wednesday, his first win in the Trek-Livestrong colors. Stage 1 went to Germany's Marcel Kittel, who was second in the prologue, at three seconds. But Phinney sprinted to third place on the stage, finishing in the same time as Kittel. Luxembourg's Cyrille Heymans was second.
Kristin Armstrong in second after three-woman break gains six minutes on the field
American Kristin Armstrong moved into second overall at the Tour De L'Aude Feminin on Thursday, after finishing with a three-woman break that came in more than six minutes ahead of the field. Armstrong finished third in the break, 14 seconds behind stage winner Trixi Worrack (Nurnberger Versicherung) and five seconds behind Armstrong's Cervelo TestTeam teammate, Claudia Hausler. Dutchwoman Marianne Vos (Dsb Bank) led in the field for fourth place, 6:14 behind Armstrong.
Menchov meets the press
Denis Menchov (Rabobank) became the first Russian since Pavel Tonkov to don the maglia rosa after his impressive performance in Thursday’s 60.6km time trial along the Cinque Terre. The 31-year-old is already a winner of two editions of the Vuelta a España and takes a slender, 20-second lead to Levi Leipheimer (Astana) going into the decisive second half of the 2009 Giro d’Italia. Menchov spoke to the assembled Giro media following his victory. Here are excerpts from the press conference: Question: Were the time differences as you expected?