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Todd Wells heading to Specialized for ’09
Two-time Olympian Todd Wells is heading back to his roots for 2009, leaving GT Bicycles to join the Specialized factory mountain bike team. Wells, 32, raced for Specialized as a semi pro and neo pro from 1996-1998, riding alongside Ned Overend, Steve Tilford, Shaun Palmer and Bart Brentjens. After taking a break from racing, Wells rode with Pacific Cycles from 2001-2008, for the company’s Mongoose brand from 2001-2004 and then for the GT Bicycles brand from 2004-2008.
Armstrong ‘optimistic’ about Tour Down Under
Lance Armstrong is hoping that a difference of 10 days to comply with UCI rules doesn’t derail his planned comeback at the Tour Down Under in Australia, January 20-25.
The seven-time Tour de France winner expressed optimism Monday that cycling’s governing body would apply common sense when interpreting rules that require a retired rider to register in the UCI’s anti-doping program six months before returning to competition.
Armstrong, 37, confirmed that he officially enrolled with the U.S.
Roulston completes his comeback from a heart condition to sign with Cervelo for 2009.
Olympic individual pursuit silver medalist Hayden Roulston of New Zealand capped his stunning return to top-class cycling from a heart condition by signing with the Canadian team Cervelo on Monday. Roulston, 27, who also won a bronze medal in Beijing as a member of the New Zealand pursuit team, rode with Cofidis (2003/04) and with Discovery (2005) until the heart condition known as arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia sidelined him in 2006. It left him short of breath, pushed his heart rate to dangerous levels, and put him at risk of dying every time he got on his bike.
End of the road for smiling Bettini
Handing his coveted world title to countryman Alessandro Ballan was the second-best send-off Italian great Paolo Bettini could have wished for, he admitted here Sunday. The only thing better would have been to keeping the rainbow jersey he won in 2006 and 2007, thus becoming only the fifth rider in history to win the world title three times. Ballan, a tall and lanky 28-year-old who won last year's Tour of Flanders, succeeded the diminutive Bettini as the new world champion after a thrilling 260.2km race which proved to be the 34-year-old Bettini's swansong.
CONI seeks 20-month ban for Ricco
Prosecutors at the anti-doping tribunal of the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) have asked that rider Riccardo Ricco be handed a 20-month ban after he tested positive for a new variant of EPO during the Tour de France. Ricco, 24, was suspended from riding by CONI in July after admitting to using the banned blood-booster. He was kicked off the Tour de France and sacked by his Saunier Duval-Scott team after testing positive following the fourth stage time-trial. The team itself subsequently lost both of its title sponsors.
Jonathan Page doubles at the Jonathan Page Planet Bike Cup in Wisconsin
Saturday and Sunday's Jonathan Page Planet Bike Cup elite men's race had a stacked field with Jonathan Page (Planet Bike), Todd Wells (GT), Bjorn Selander (Ridley), Troy Wells (Clif Bar) and on Sunday Tim Johnson (Cyclocrossworld.com-Cannondale) in Wisconsin for the race. Add to this three Swiss riders, a Canadian and riders from throughout the US and the racing action was relentless on both days.
House and Liske win Wolf River Rendezvous
The Wolf River Rendezvous, 11th race in the 2008 Wisconsin Off Road Series, was the stage for two prodigious victories this Sunday as Cole House and Holly Liske took top honors. Before joining the U23 Development Team, House was a regular WORS series racer (2002 - 2005). Though he was closely followed throughout the five-lap race by teammates Chris Peariso (Adventure 212; 1:34:11) and Thomas Bender (Adventure 212 / Specialized; 1:34:17), House (1:34:10) maintained his lead for the top spot on the podium, which he last occupied in 2004, at the age of 16. [nid:83848]
Bradley McGee will take a director position with CSC-Saxo Bank
Brad McGee, will retire from racing at the end of this season for a new career as a team director with the CSC-Blaxo Bank team, according to a press release from the Australian cycling federation. "A quick look back now on my cycling career and it is nothing but smiles, even the tough bits," said McGee who started racing a bike when he was ten years old. "You just grow with it and I'm sure it will give me the strength to get through this next chapter of my life."
Winfield, Schempf tops at Sander ‘cross
Dee Dee Winfield (Velo Bella/Kona) and Wes Schempf (C3-Sollay.com) scored impressive wins in Sunday’s Ed Sander Memorial Cyclocross in Buckeystown, Maryland.
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Spain laments lost opportunity
Italy will be the toast of Europe tomorrow, but back in Spain, the national team is going to get roasted. Spain was favored to win gold Sunday and complete the season sweep that’s included victories in all three grand tours and the Olympic Games, but anger and frustration poured out of Spanish riders at the end of Sunday’s race that will forever be remembered as a lost opportunity. “We really blew it today,” said Spanish national coach Paco Antequera. “We should have had one of our big riders in that group. We let the world title slip away.”
Cozza leads young U.S. team
Steven Cozza had never raced anything longer than 230km and he had never raced against the big boys in a world championships. Now the 23-year-old can tick both of those off his list. Cozza led the five-man U.S. worlds squad with a very solid 23rd at 1:40 back of winner Alessandro Ballan as part of the first chase group in a very successful men’s elite world’s debut.
Ballan powers to gold
Alessandro Ballan started Sunday’s men’s elite road race as a helper for the team’s biggest stars but ended the day world champion. Ballan attacked in each of the last three laps, but it was his move with about three kilometers to go to drop a leading group of about a dozen riders that included two Italian teammates that sealed Italy’s third straight rainbow jersey. It was a drag race to the finish, but the 2007 Tour of Flanders champion held on to win the world title on home roads.
Riis defends Schleck as doping rumors swirl
CSC team manager Bjarne Riis has spoken out against recent doping suspicions over one of his top riders, Luxembourger Frank Schleck, calling for the case to be judged on "the facts.” The Dane, who confessed last year to using banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) during his career, also refuted rumors that he, too, is linked to the Opera?ion Puerto affair. Schleck wore the Tour de France yellow jersey for two days in July but has become the latest big name cyclist to be linked to the Puerto affair which erupted in Spain in May 2006.
Armstrong’s “passport” may be invalid for Oz
The UCI has raised doubts over whether Lance Armstrong will be allowed to compete at January's Tour Down Under in Australia. Armstrong, the seven-time Tour de France winner, has targeted the first ProTour race of the season as his comeback race after a three-year absence from the professional peloton. However the international ruling body, said Armstrong would have to show that he has complied UCI's “biological passport” rule demanding that athletes must be registered with an anti-doping program for at least six months six months prior to competing.
Australia’s Wood and Bates set to retire
Two of Australia's champion cyclists Oenone Wood and Natalie Bates raced their final event today at the World Championships in Italy bringing to an end careers both can be proud of. "I feel pretty good actually," said Wood after stepping off the bike after today's elite women's road race in Varese. "It was probably hard to make the decision initially but I think it's the right decision to make."
Bettini will retire after worlds road race
Two-time defending world champion Paolo Bettini of Italy confirmed on Saturday he will retire after the final race of the world road race championships. The 34-year-old Italian, a favorite to win gold in the men's road race here on Sunday, was emotional as he said the men's road race on Sunday would be the last race of his career. "I've had a lot to reflect about the past few months and the idea has just grown in my head," said Bettini. "I've decided, in all serenity, to end my career."
The Bettini, Freire show on Sunday?
If cycling team coaches were like their brethren in American football they would be studying tapes of all the races that have been held on the 17.35km Varese road race circuit this year. What they would find is a pattern that has flowed through the world under-23 men’s and elite women’s championships the past two days, along with last month’s Three Varesine Valleys race and the finale of stage 18 of this year’ s Giro d’Italia.
Cooke strikes gold again
Nicole Cooke’s perfect season just got better. Just six weeks after winning the Olympic gold medal in Beijing, the 24-year-old Welshwoman executed seamless tactics Saturday in a thrilling final lap to win her first world title. Cooke followed her instinct to make a final-stage attack by arch-rival Marianne Vos and then pipped her at the line to relegate the Dutch rider to silver with Judith Arndt collected her second bronze medal in the Varese world championships.
McQuaid: ProTour lives despite peace deal
The much-maligned ProTour series will continue despite a peace treaty hammered out this week between the UCI and the grand tour race organizers. UCI president Pat McQuaid said a reduced ProTour series will exist alongside Europe’s biggest races as part of a new world calendar that will mark a cease-fire between cycling warring parties.
McQuaid: ‘Schleck can race’
UCI president Pat McQuaid says cycling’s governing body is powerless to stop Frank Schleck from starting Sunday’s elite men’s road race. The Luxembourg rider, who wore the yellow jersey in this year’s Tour de France, has been linked to the Operación Puerto blood doping ring via supposed bank documents that reveal he paid nearly 7,000 euros in the spring of 2006 to the ring-leader Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes. “At this moment in time, he’ll race,” McQuaid told journalists on Saturday. “We have no evidence to stop him.”
Schleck under scrutiny at worlds
Luxembourg's plans for success in the men's road race at the world championships have been hampered by a police raid on the team’s hotel, and a damning newspaper report on one of the country's top riders. According to journalists staying with the team at the same hotel police carried out a raid late on Friday evening. Around 15 of Italy's NAS (anti-doping) brigade searched bedrooms occupied by the Luxembourg team, taking particular interest in a hypobaric chamber which is designed to artificially simulate conditions at altitude.