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Fresh Korn: Mourn the fallen, then return to battle
After Michael Barry’s most recent diary the Tour of Qatar took a distinctly different turn. As most of you have surely read, the morning after Mark Cavendish convincingly won his first of two stages, a young rider on the Topsport-Flanders team was found dead in his hotel room. It was a tragedy in the truest definition of the word, and I can only imagine what it must have been like for his roommate and his family, far away in Belgium; life-changing, to say the least.
No Giro for Evans: It’s all about the Tour
Australian cyclist Cadel Evans announced on Monday that he would not compete in the Giro d'Italia this season because he was determined to win the Tour de France in July. The 31-year-old, who was second in last year's Tour, explained that while he would have liked to compete in the Giro it simply did not fit into his plans as he prepares to take on Alberto Contador and seven-time winner Lance Armstrong. "There has been a lot of talk about the Giro in the press," said the Silence team leader.
Versus to air additional weekend coverage of the Tour of California
The Versus network will now air live coverage of the Tour of California weekend stages in addition to its live weekday coverage.
Reader letters: Compton rules, Mionske will be missed and the towering Trek-Livestrong team
Do you want to contribute to Mailbag, a regular feature of VeloNews.com? Here's how:
Compton rules!
USA Cycling’s Austin Carroll and Guy East win the U.I.V. Talent Cup Amateur Six-Day series
USA Cycling National Development Team riders Austin Carroll and Guy East become the first American Madison pair to win the U.I.V. Talent Cup Amateur Six-Day competition, which wrapped up with this weekend in Alkmaar, Netherlands. The duo is now guaranteed a professional contract for competition in two UIV Professional Six-day events during the 2010-11 season.
A Wild ride in Qatar
Eva Lutz (Nürnberger) won stage 2 of the Women’s Tour of Qatar on Monday. Veronicca Andreason (Bigla Cycling Team) took second in the 100km stage with Rochelle Gilmore (Lotto-Belison) third at 14 seconds back in a group that included Kirsten Wild (Cervélo TestTeam) and race leader Giorgia Bronzini (Italy). Wild took the leader’s jersey from Bronzini and now holds a five-second advantage over her with Kirtsy Broun (Australia) third at 12 seconds. Stage 1. Eva Lutz (G), Nürnberger, 110km in 2:49:56 (38.839 km/h)
McEwen takes stage, lead in Mallorca Challenge
Katusha made it two in a row Monday at the Mallorca Challenge, with Robbie McEwen darting clear for his first European win in 2009. A day after setting up Katusha teammate Gert Steegmans for the victory, McEwen out-kicked compatriot Graeme Brown (Rabobank) in the 176.5km stage, which started and finished in Cala Millor.
VeloNews.com wins Hitwise US #1 Site Award for October – December 2008.
Boulder, CO, February 9, 2009 — VeloNews.com has ranked #1 in the Sports-Cycling industry based on the market share of U.S. visits it has received for the quarter ending October- December 2008. The Hitwise US Top 10 Awards Program celebrates the most successful U.S. Web sites in 160+ online industries. As Hitwise reports on the anonymous online usage and search behavior of more than 10 million US Internet users — the largest online sample of its kind — this unique awards program recognizes excellence in online performance through public popularity.
Gavazzi wins first stage of Malaysia’s Tour de Langkawi
Italian Mattia Gavazzi (Diquigiovanni-Androni) won the first stage of the Tour de Langkawi cycling race in Malaysia's administrative capital of Putrajaya on Monday. Australian Chris Sutton from Garmin Slipstream took second place.[nid:87467] Gavazzi won the 133.8 kilometre (83.14 mile) stage in three hours, six minutes and 42 seconds. The seven-stage race began in Putrajaya, south of Kuala Lumpur on Monday and heads south to the tourist town of Malacca, then north to the Genting Highlands, before ending on February 15 in the capital Kuala Lumpur.
Cycling Economics 101: Hard times call for hard racing
We didn’t exactly trigger a torrent of responses with last week’s story about membership numbers at a trio of U.S. cycling organizations, in which we asked whether the stuttering economy might affect your racing and bike-shopping plans. This could be a function of our Web site’s design; stories slip off the homepage faster than Mark Cavendish ditching a lead group in the final 200 meters. Or it could reflect the utter insanity of the premise. “Cut back on racing? You bet — just as soon as they pry my Madone 6.9 Pro from my cold, dead fingers!”
Raña road debut ends with crash; Valverde back
The road racing debut of former world triathlon champion Iván Raña couldn’t have started worse. Raña crashed in his first road race with Xacobeo-Galicia in Sunday’s high-speed circuit course at the Mallorca Challenge in Spain. Initial reports indicated a broken clavicle, but team officials are reporting a dislocated shoulder, which means only a two-week recovery period.
TIPS From Qatar
Check out CyclingTips's author page.
The scoop on the new shades being sported by Armstrong and friends.
The questions came in to us here at VeloNews after stage 5 of the Tour Down Under: What sunglasses did Lance have on? The answer: Oakley’s new sports spec, called Jawbone.
Hour record? Armstrong tests bikes at LA’s ADT velodrome
Lance Armstrong may have his eye on yet another record: the hour. Armstrong made a visit to the ADT Event Center velodrome Sunday to conduct tests on two different bikes. He was accompanied by Johan Bruyneel, Steve Hed, Chris Carmichael, a video crew with boom mike and a still photographer, among others. He made a half-dozen runs of roughly ten laps each, first on a nearly stock Trek F1 track bike equipped with 28-spoke wheels, drop bars and, of course, an SRM power meter.
Northwave Devine S.B.S.
Colors: Pearl white with light blue details Sizes: 36 to 43; half sizes 39.5 to 42.5 Price: $170 Web site: www.northwave.com The Devine S.B.S. is Northwave’s high-end women’s road shoe. It is the women’s specific equivalent road shoe to the men’s Typhoon S.B.S. Northwave says that its lower heel and forefoot volume is more accommodating to a woman’s foot.
Italy’s Giorgia Bronzini opens the first Women’s Tour of Qatar with a win
Two days after the end of the men's Tour of Qatar, the first women's event began with a 94-kilometer stage that started at the Islamic Art Museum in Doha and finished at Doha Shafallah. Italian national team member Giorgia Bronzini won by outsprinting Dutch riders Kirsten Wild and Ellen Van Dijk. The silver points’ jersey went to Wild while Van Dijk becomes the best young rider of the event. [nid:87443]
Thomas Voeckler claims the overall victory at Besseges
Frenchman Thomas Voeckler of Bouygues Telecom claimed overall victory in the Etoile de Besseges stage race, formerly the traditional season-opener, here Sunday. Voeckler, who famously battled the advances of Lance Armstrong to keep hold of the Tour de France yellow jersey in 2004, finished comfortably ahead of Slovenian Jure Kocjan and Russian Yuri Trofimov, last year's winner, in the general classification. Another Frenchman, Jean-Eudes Demaret of Cofidis, won the fifth and final stage after 145 km of racing between Gagnieres and Besseges. [nid:87402]
Ben Day wins as Landis returns to racing at the snowy Boulevard road race
Fly V Australia rider Ben Day won a snowy and rainy Boulevard road race in east San Diego County Saturday while Floyd Landis used the hilly 90-mile hometown event to quietly return to racing after a two-year suspension. Landis’ Canadian OUCH teammate Cameron Evans took second while Fly V Australia riders and Amgen Tour of California invitees David Kemp, Charles Dionne, and Bernard Sulzberger rounded out the third through fifth. The race rolled out in a driving snowstorm that had barreled into the mountains 60 miles east of downtown San Diego the morning of the event. [nid:87423]
Diquigiovanni is favored to repeat at the Tour de Langkawi
Defending champions Diquigiovanni-Androni from Venezuela are favourites to claim the yellow jersey once again in this year's Tour de Langkawi, which begins Monday. Twenty teams are competing in the seven-stage event, which takes in some of Malaysia's top tourist spots over the 1,031.7 kilometer (641 mile) route — scaled down from nine stages last year.