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David Millar says Ivan Basso is neither a hero nor a victim
Ivan Basso should not be held up as a model for young riders, Scottish rider David Millar said on Saturday. Millar said that despite 30-year-old Basso — who is allowed to ride competitively again from October 24, 2008, and has agreed a two-year deal with Liquigas — serving a two-year ban for his involvement in the Operation Puerto scandal he was in no way a role model for those aspiring to become professional cyclists.
AG2R’s Cyril Dessel wins at the Four Days of Dunkirk
France's Cyril Dessel, of the AG2R-La Mondiale team, won Saturday's 179.4km fifth stage of the Four Days of Dunkirk cycling race between Calais and Cap Blanc-Nez. Cofidis rider Stephane Auge of France, who won Tuesday's first stage, retained the leader's pink jersey and looks set fair to win the race following Sunday's sixth and final stage, a 128.4km stretch around Dunkirk. Dessel clocked 4:23:48 to finish ahead of Gerald Ciolek of Germany and France's Samuel Dumoulin during this relatively short but tense stage.
Giro TTT: Slipstream’s American Vande Velde in the lead
Christian Vande Velde might have the pink jersey, but it was a team victory in every sense of the word Saturday for Slipstream-Chipotle in the 23.6km team time trial to open the 91st Giro d’Italia. Vande Velde, 31, becomes the first American since Andy Hampsten won the 1988 Giro to don the prized maglia rosa, but he’d love nothing more than to have eight more to pass among his teammates.
Unexpected opportunity: Leipheimer at the Giro
Levi Leipheimer was at home in California when he woke up a week ago with a surprise message. Instead of racing the Volta a Catalunya and the Dauphiné Libéré as planned, he was going to the Giro d’Italia. Leipheimer’s Giro debut in Saturday’s team time trial might have come as a surprise, but the American promises to make the most of the unexpected opportunity. Along with Astana teammates Andreas Klöden and Alberto Contador, the team starts with three options for the podium.
Toyota-United makes donation to paralyzed rider
The Toyota-United Pro Cycling Team has donated $5,000 cash to Fausto Munoz Esparza, the rider who was paralyzed in a high-speed crash in last Sunday’s final stage of the Tour of Gila in New Mexico. The team said the donation consists of the Toyota-United teams riders’ prize money earned at the Tour of Gila, plus staff donations. In addition, Toyota-United will auction off a team jersey signed by all 14 riders. The jersey auction will begin Monday on Bay.
Brasstown Bald in the Spring
Brasstown Bald in the Spring
4 hours into the ride….
4 hours into the ride....
Yesterday, it was 80 degrees Farenheit
Yesterday, it was 80 degrees Farenheit
Pavel crossing Woody Gap all alone
Pavel crossing Woody Gap all alone
A slippery corner at Race The Ridge
A slippery corner at Race The Ridge
The road to the Tour starts with the Giro for Menchov
In Palermo, Italy Rabobank is trying a new approach this year for its quiet but steady Russian GC threat, Denis Menchov. After watching him win two of the past three editions of the Vuelta a España after racing the Tour de France, the team figures three hard weeks of racing is just what Menchov needs ahead of July’s Tour.
Contador: from the beach to the Giro
In Palermo, Italy Alberto Contador was sipping a beer on the beach in Spain last week when he received a phone call from Astana team boss Johan Bruyneel. The news caught the defending Tour de France champion by surprise: Pack your bags, you’re heading to the Giro d’Italia. “I was sitting at a chiringuito on the beach with my girlfriend, now here I am at the Giro!” Contador told VeloNews on Friday. “I wasn’t expecting to be at this Giro, so we’ll see how it goes.”
Lance Armstrong’s new bike shop opens its doors.
Paul Mason had just arrived in Austin, Texas, from his home in Auckland, New Zealand. He owns a “race-bred cyclewear” company called Solo, and he was delivering a first batch of retro racing jerseys to his first retail outlet in the United States. “It couldn’t be better,” Mason told VeloNews Friday afternoon, “than to have my clothing in a shop run by a seven-time Tour de France winner.”
Collegiate Nationals: A Casey Gibson Gallery
The USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships started Friday with the team time trial in northern Colorado. Photographer Casey Gibson was there. With traditional powerhouses shining in Division I and some impressive underdog performances in the Division II race, the University of California-Davis and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology took the lead in the overall team standings.
The Coach(ed) Corner: Using power meters to train for bicycle racing
Greetings. There’s been a lot going on these last two weeks, so I’m going to skip the snappy lead and get to it. Let’s start with some race talk. I managed to get myself to the East Coast at the end of April for the sixth running of the Tour de Georgia. As you all know by now, it was a pretty exciting race, marked by the unexpected emergence of Belarusian Kanstantsin Sivtsov.
Rory Sutherland and Mackenzie Woodring win the Joe Martin Stage Race prologue
Health Net - Maxxis' Rory Sutherland won his second prologue of the 2008 National Racing Calendar on Thursday, setting a course record at the Joe Martin Stage Race's opening Devil's Den Time Trial. The Australian storming through uphill 2 1/2-mile race in 8:14, ten seconds ahead of Anthony Colby (Colavita-Sutter Home). Sutherland also won the prologue at the Redlands Bicycle Classic earlier this spring.
Bouygues Telecom rider Pierrick Fedrigo wins the sprint, while Cofidis’ Stephane Auge holds the lead.
Frenchman Pierrick Fedrigo, riding for the Bouygues Telecom team, claimed victory in the fourth stage of the Four Days of Dunkirk race on Friday. Fedrigo beat home Australian Allan Davis and Spaniard Jose Joaquin Gil Rojas in a sprint finish. Frenchman Stephane Auge, of Cofidis, retained the race leader's jersey after the 193km stage between Wasquehal and Calais.
The 2008 Giro d’Italia: the best field of the year?
With a world champion, winners of all three of last year’s grand tours and a top-notch field of sprinters, does the Giro d’Italia boast the best lineup of the season? If you ask the riders ahead of Saturday’s start of the 91st Giro, they seem to agree. “Without any shadow of a doubt, this year’s Giro has the best field of any race,” said defending champion Danilo Di Luca (LPR). “We have a deep field in the Giro this year. Whoever wins this Giro can be proud of what they achieve.”
Ariel Richeze is withdrawn from 2008 Giro d’Italia start list
Argentinian Ariel Maximiliano Richeze, who rides for CSF, tested positive for doping last month and has been withdrawn from the Giro d'Italia, his team announced Friday. Richeze tested positive for an anabolic steroid during his victory in the fourth stage of the Circuit de la Sarthe on April 11 in the French city of Le Mans. He went on to win the seventh stage of the Tour of Turkey on April 20. His withdrawal on the eve of the Giro means CSF will join the peloton with just eight riders.
The key climbs in the 2008 Giro d’Italia
The principal climbs in the 2008 edition of the Giro d'Italia: Stage 7: Vasto - Pescocostanzo, 180 km Rionero Sannitico: 10 km climb at 6.3 average gradient climb to Pescocostanzo: 2.8 km at 6 Stage 11: Urbania - Cesena, 199 km Monte Carpegna: 6 km at 9.9 Stage 14: Verona - Alpe di Pampeago, 195 km Passo Manghen: 23.4 km at 7.1 climb to summit finish at Alpe di Pampeago: 7.7 km at 9.6 Stage 15: Arabbo - Passo Fedaia, 153 km Passo Pordoi: 9.2 km at 6.9 Passo di San Pellegrino: 11.8 km at 6.4 Passo Giau: 15.7 km at 7.9
Giro Preview: Contador a contender?
Climbers who can keep their time trial losses to a minimum will be among the top contenders for the pink jersey in the Giro d'Italia which clicks into gear Saturday. The 91st edition of the Giro begins with a team time trial, and includes three other, individual, races against the clock as it snakes its way up from Sicily towards the crucial mountains stages in the Dolomites. With five mountain-top finishes in total, including one uphill time trial, the race's top prize is more than likely to be claimed by a master climber.
New England Velodrome opens for season
Saturday June 10 marks the official weekend opening of the New England Velodrome & Cycling Park. After four years in the making, riders finally have the chance to train and race on the weekends. Sunday the 11th will feature our first ever Family Ride Time when everyone is allowed to ride their own bikes (with brakes and gears) on the track. Ride leisurely our 1/5 of a mile track with family and friends. It is a fun and safe way to experience riding on the track.
Twenty cyclists, including one Olympic hopeful, hurt after conflict with irate driver in Australia.
An Australian Olympic cyclist was thrown dazed to the ground when a motorist collided with his elite training pack, scattering dozens of riders over a busy Sydney road and sparking a police call Friday for witnesses. The alleged road rage incident left 20 riders with minor injuries, including Beijing hopeful Ben Kersten. Kersten, whose bike was mangled, was left lying dazed on the road after the driver collided with the 50 cyclists, including former Olympians, on a weekly dawn ride.
Reader Gallery 5/9/08
We've got a brand new batch of reader submitted photos to offset your productivity. It's nice to see so many of our readers out there on the racing scene. Keep up the great work! If you've got photos you want to share, send 'em our way!
Watch for Aussie champ Matt Lloyd at the Giro
Editor’s note: Watch for John Wilcockson’s Friday morning column on a regular basis, taking you inside the world of cycling. This week he introduces one of the young, unsung heroes of the European peloton. Matt Lloyd loves racing in Italy. So when he lines up Saturday with his Silence-Lotto team at the Giro d’Italia he’ll feel right at home.
Bettini hungry for a win at the Giro
Paolo Bettini sees his best chance to end his winless streak that dates back to last year’s world championships in Sunday’s second stage of the Giro d'Italia, a race into Agrigento that traces the course from the 1994 worlds. The final 13.2km of the 207km stage from Cerfalù to Agrigento covers the circuit used for the 1994 worlds and the reigning two-time world champ can’t think of a better place to notch his first win of the year.
Fi’zi:k is offering six new two-color team replica saddles, along with a new saddle design.
Retail:$199 (saddle and bar tape) Weight:199 grams Web site:www.fizik.it Fi'zi:k is releasing a new saddle model, the Arione CX, in six team replica colors, sold with matching fi'zi:k microtex handlebar tape. The Arione CX has a new foam formulation to reduce the weight by 30 grams. The foam is higher density and requires less bulk, reducing weight and producing a lower and sleeker saddle than the Arione.
U of Vermont leads in to the DH
U of Vermont leads in to the DH
Amy Cycling The Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge
Amy Cycling The Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge
Masters Race, Charleston, SC
Masters Race, Charleston, SC
Fear The Stash
Fear The Stash
team astana leads the race past hearst castle in the tour de california – february 21, 2008
team astana leads the race past hearst castle in the tour de california - february 21, 2008
Casey Gibson at work on Brasstown Bald
Casey Gibson at work on Brasstown Bald
2008 Cat’s Hill Criterium, Pro-1-2
2008 Cat's Hill Criterium, Pro-1-2
Legally Speaking with Bob Mionske – Rights and responsibilities
Bob,
I just got done reading your April 24th column on the Arizona Shootout Bike Ride . Let me say right off, that the Pima County Sheriff's deputy's actions were completely wrong. It's just dangerous, reckless, and plain dumb to drive a car directly at a group of approaching cyclists. But I guess that I'm in the minority of avid cyclists who feel that most of the problems experienced by cyclists are caused by cyclists.
GENR8 announces “Banned Substances-free Assurance Policy”
GENR8, an evidence-based performance nutrition company, announced the certification of all versions of its first performance nutrition product, Vitargo®S2™, as being free of banned substances. The certifying organization orchestrating the analyses on each of the Vitargo S2 products, Banned Substances Control Group (http://www.bscg.org/GENR8.php), uses a laboratory certified by CAP (The College of American Pathologists) and CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments), and is a World Anti-Doping Association (WADA) experienced laboratory.
Trips for Kids nets proceeds at Sea Otter Marketplace Expo
While attending this year's Sea Otter Marketplace Expo in Monterey, California, Trips for Kids (TFK) made a profit selling surplus merchandise from the Re-Cyclery Bike Thrift Shop and met up with the bicycle industry to raise awareness of TFK programs. "Because Sea Otter attracts a lot of racers, families and out-of-town visitors, it's a wonderful opportunity to shine the spotlight on our local programs and our national expansion," said Marilyn Price, founder and director of Trips for Kids. "I talked to several attendees who are interested in starting a TFK chapter!"
Technical FAQ: Fixing a noisy freehub
What can I do about a noisy Mavic freehub?
Teams from more than 60 colleges are expected at this weekend’s collegiate cycling championships in Colorado.
More than 60 colleges and universities are sending teams to the USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships in Fort Collins, Colorado this weekend. The three-day event is being hosted by Colorado State University, this year's Rocky Mountain Collegiate Cycling Conference DI champions.
VIP tickets available for Triple Crown
The world’s best men and women professional cyclists are preparing to wage a three-race battle on the streets of southeastern Pennsylvania next month in the Commerce Bank Triple Crown of Cycling. Don’t want to miss any of the action? Then you need to be a VIP for an up-close and personal vantage point of the sport’s international elite.
91st Giro d’Italia: Another American in pink?
In Palermo, Italy Perhaps it’s only appropriate that during the 20th anniversary year of Andy Hampsten’s historic 1988 Giro d’Italia victory that another American rider could recapture the maglia rosa. While it’s too early to say if one of six U.S. riders from three teams starting the 91st Giro can survive the grueling Dolomites with a shot for final victory, there’s a very real possibility that one of them could grab pink jersey in Saturday’s team time trial.