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Davis dashes to stage win Down Under
The finish may still be three days away, but there's every possibility the 10th edition of the Tour Down Under will come down to the wire. And get this: The winner may well be the sprinter who can climb best.
Oscar Freire and Rabobank trainning in the south of Spain (Mojacar, Almeria)
Oscar Freire and Rabobank trainning in the south of Spain (Mojacar, Almeria)
AT&T signs on as presenting sponsor for Tour de Georgia
AT&T Inc. has signed on as the presenting sponsor for the 2008 Tour de Georgia, race organizers announced Wednesday. As presenting sponsor, AT&T will own exclusive rights for communications services during the race, scheduled April 21-27. Last year, AT&T was one of the race’s “founding partner” sponsors. Its support included naming rights to the overall leader’s jersey awarded after each stage. That will continue in 2008. “AT&T is pleased to continue its involvement with the Tour de Georgia this year,” said Sylvia E. Anderson, president of AT&T Georgia.
Injured, ailing Trebon bails on ‘cross worlds
Kona-Yourkey.com rider Ryan Trebon, the 2006 national champion and three-time Crank Brothers USGP of Cyclocross series winner, has withdrawn from this weekend’s world cyclocross championship in Treviso, Italy.
Amgen Tour, USA Cycling, USADA team up for rigorous drug-testing regimen
The 2008 Amgen Tour of California will boast the most comprehensive anti-doping protocol in competitive cycling, organizers proclaimed on Tuesday. The announcement comes one year after the premier U.S. stage race drew criticism for pursuing a relaxed testing campaign. “We believe that an aggressive approach to having a clean and fair race is essential to restore the credibility of top-tier bicycle racing,” said Andrew Messick, president of AEG Sports, during a press conference at the ADT Event Center velodrome in Carson, California.
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood: Phinney on Phinney
Taylor Phinney’s pursuit win at the UCI World Cup in Los Angeles over the weekend sure makes us look smart for putting him and Danny Summerhill on our awards-issue cover. Thanks, Taylor.
USA Cycling names potential Olympians
USA Cycling has named the 35 cyclists eligible to represent the United States at the 2008 Olympic Games. The national governing body has selected a Long Team of eligible athletes in men's and women's mountain bike and women's road cycling. Its Talent Pool of track athletes will serve as a list of riders from which the Olympic team will named. Five women road racers met automatic nomination criteria while two were discretionary selections. Automatically named to the Long Team include Kristin Armstrong, Amber Neben, Tina Mayolo-Pic, Mara Abbott and Christine Thorburn.
Brown leads Down Under
So far, it's a Tour Down Under like we've never seen before. In years past, after two stages there's been only a handful of riders left in contention. But this year is clearly different: After Andre Greipel's scintillating stage victory in Hahndorf, three riders have the same time overall - all of them sprinters.
Steels to call it quits
Four-time former Belgian champion Tom Steels begins what will be his last season before retiring at the end of this year with Landbouwkrediet. A winner of nine stages at the Tour de France, the 36-year-old Steels was the top draw in the team’s official presentation Tuesday in Brussels. The Belgian continental team is hoping Steels can go out on a winning note and will include a heavy spring schedule for Steels, once one of the most fearsome sprinters in the bunch.
Two years for Mazzoleni
Italian racer Eddy Mazzoleni could be slapped with a two-year racing ban for his role in the “Oil for Drugs” doping investigation if Italian authorities have their way. Prosecutors from the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) also recommended a life ban for journeyman rider Domenico Quagliariello in what are the toughest disciplinary rulings to come down surrounding the doping probe that dates back to 2004. The 34-year-old Mazzoleni -- third overall in the 2007 Giro d’Italia -- was dropped by the Astana team last summer after links to the ongoing investigation were revealed.
Vandenbroucke’s back?
It seems Frank Vandenbroucke has more cycling lives than a cat. The oft-injured, often scandalized “enfant terrible” of cycling is making yet another comeback, this time with the small Mitsubishi team that was born out of the former Jartazi squad. Now 33, the once-mighty Belgian is determined to keep racing even if the small team is a far cry from Europe’s most important teams he once ruled with victories in the 1998 Paris-Nice and the 1999 Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
Yes we do race bicycles (and trucks) here in the Middle East
Yes we do race bicycles (and trucks) here in the Middle East
What!!? Im trying to concentrate here.
What!!? Im trying to concentrate here.
Concentration! Or is it nausea?
Concentration! Or is it nausea?
André Greipel takes the 2008 Down Under Classic
André Greipel takes the 2008 Down Under Classic
Technical Q&A: Clamp sizes, modifications and more
Dear Lennard,
I'm interested in buying the Deda Zero 100 stem you recently reviewed. However I noticed that the clamp size is listed as 31.7mm. The bar I wanted to use is the FSA K-Wing Carbon which has a clamp size listed as 31.8mm. Will the 0.1mm difference in size make this combination incompatible?
Steve
Dear Steve,
Renshaw claims TDU opener
It's been four years coming, but on a baking hot Tuesday in Angaston, Mark Renshaw finally delivered on what he'd long set out to do. Maybe it was the hours spent behind a motorbike over the Australian summer, paced by his father over the dead roads of Bathurst in country New South Wales. Maybe it was the added strength that comes with three full seasons as a professional, under the wise-old wings of team manager Roger Legeay.
Jenny Reed attacks with one lap to go
Jenny Reed attacks with one lap to go
Renshaw nails it at the Tour Down Under opener
Renshaw nails it at the Tour Down Under opener
McEwen not worried about Evans’ Tour run
Sprinter ace Robbie McEwen says he won’t be jealous come July about Cadel Evans’ rising prominence on Silence-Lotto for the 2008 season. With Evans bucking for the Tour de France overall, McEwen will take a back seat on the Belgian team where he’s enjoyed marquee status for the past decade en route to winning three green points jerseys.
UCI’s ProTour: ‘Gradual globalization’ or imminent collapse?
The UCI is putting a positive spin on its beleaguered ProTour series as the 2008 racing season starts Tuesday with the six-day Tour Down Under just as some heavy hitters are calling it a “failure.” Now in its fourth year, the ProTour series makes its first foray beyond Europe this week in a move that’s being hailed by UCI leaders as the first of a “gradual globalization” effort that could include major stage races in Russia and China as soon as next year.
Skins(TM) USA Announces Official Supplier Agreement With Five Professional Cycling Teams
BOULDER, Colo., Jan. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Skins(TM), the global leader in the development and manufacture of engineered gradient compression technology, announced today it has been named an Official Supplier to Team Inferno, Team Bissell, Team Flexpoint, Kelly Benefit Strategies/Medifast Pro Cycling and Skins/Summit Six Racing Team. The product will be supplied for use to all team members, and will be worn for enhanced training, faster recovery and travel.
Reed scores gold in LA
American Jenny Reed owns a trophy case full of World Cup medals — 17 to be exact. But before Sunday night, only one of them was gold. The 29-year-old Reed doubled that Sunday night by winning the keirin, holding off a hard charging Willy Kanis of the Netherlands in the finals. “With the keirin I’ve always had a good level of confidence,” said the Momentum Cycling ace, who took her other World Cup gold in the keirin at the Manchester World Cup in 2004. “But when I know my sprint is going good, that bumps my confidence up even more.”
Q&A: Pat McDonough
Pat McDonough has faced his share of ups and downs since taking control of the U.S. track program after the 2004 Olympics in Athens. The lowest of the low came at the 2005 world championship, where the U.S. earned no medals at its home track, the ADT Event’s Center in Los Angeles. That failure was followed by another loss, when Australian coach Gary West — whom McDonough had chosen to rebuild the program — quit after only a few months on the job.
Winter Bike League: Athens’ finest!
Winter Bike League: Athens' finest!
Take that, podium girl! (or, the mild-mannered Savoldelli shows his dark side)
Take that, podium girl! (or, the mild-mannered Savoldelli shows his dark side)
Perusing photos is now easier than ever — just click anywhere on the picture to advance the slideshow.
Perusing photos is now easier than ever — just click anywhere on the picture to advance the slideshow.
Matt Pacocha and Lennard Zinn have their own page.
Matt Pacocha and Lennard Zinn have their own page.
Now you can jump right to the photos or results before you read the story.
Now you can jump right to the photos or results before you read the story.
The new look and feel of VeloNews.com
The new look and feel of VeloNews.com