SRAM suspension product manager, Sander Rigney outlines the spec’s of the new SID.
SRAM suspension product manager, Sander Rigney outlines the spec's of the new SID.
SRAM suspension product manager, Sander Rigney outlines the spec's of the new SID.
The Subaru-Gary Fisher mountain bike team participated in the race, ‘Just for Fun’ and listened intently while Rigney gave the low down on the new SID. Sam Schultz and Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski were involved in the development of the new fork.
Chris Eatough got his hands on SID for the first time too.
His number plate has a little extra inspiration for those night laps taped to its back in the form of photos of his daughter.
‘Pilot Production’ means that all of the details are not quite worked out. The stickers on our forks were hand placed; the production forks will have decals under a clear coat.
Bikes wait for the LeMans start of Granny Gear’s 24-hours of Moab.
...and they're off!
What would a SRAM event be without HB? Here Greg Herbold gets a word of advice from Avid product manager, Paul Kantor, who served as HB’s team manager in Moab, before his night lap.
Contador hopes to defend his Tour title with Astana come 2008
Welcome to Bike-a-GoGo!
Your hostesses, the Pedal Queens
Rodeo queen Patricia Peck, a local pediatric dentist, organized the kid's bike rodeo and won the costume contest, scoring a pair of Shimano heat-molding shoes
Veteran New Mexico racer Jennifer Buntz rides to a top-five finish in the slow race
Okay, it's not exactly the North Shore, but it's still fun
Mike Elmer said the Bike-a-GoGo was a great way to promote his touring company, Gran Fondo
A future Pedal Queen tackles the bicycle rodeo
The Lions of Flanders are a fixture at a 'cross race, no matter where it's held.
You have to pay to watch the pro's play.
The snack shack features...
...Belgium’s deep-fried delicacy
Pick your allegiance...
...but be tolerant of other views.
It was a packed house.
The world champ and the rest of the Fidea powerhouse
An early exit from the women's race.
The big race.
Vervecken alone off the back.
Wellens and Nys battle it out in the sand.
Stybar's girlfriend, Ine, was excited to get some flowers
Stybar's other ride. The Czech gets to race on home turf this coming weekend.
McQuaid said the new 'passport' will bring new rigor to testing.
Pound says cycling is heading in the right direction.
Bobby Julich wants another crack at an Olympic medal and has penned a deal to continue with Team CSC through the 2008 season. The veteran all-rounder signed a one-year contract extension with the Danish team, his home since the 2004 season. “I signed after the Tour of Germany for one more year,” Julich told VeloNews in an e-mail. “After missing the Tour de France, I found my morale and really enjoyed helping the team. I am extremely proud to be on the best team in the world for the third year in a row.” Despite missing the 2007 Tour this year after a nasty stomach bug zapped him, Julich
Our latest reader-submitted Photo Gallery is now ready for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of our most recent contest. It’s fall and after a long season of racing, it’s time to go out on a quite ride through a beautiful corner of the world. Geln Johannesson’s “Fall Mountain Ride” has us wanting to step away from the keyboard and hit the hills for that peaceful trip through the woods. Please drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.comto work out the details and we’ll send you a copy of our new Coors Classic DVD. Meanwhile, go ahead and
The Mailbag is a regular department on VeloNews.com. If you have a comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have read in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write to webletters@insideinc.com. Please include your full name, hometown and state or nation. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Writers are encouraged to limit their submissions to one letter per month. The letters published here contain the opinions of the submitting authors and should not be viewed as reflecting the opinions, policies or positions of VeloNews.com, VeloNews magazine or our parent company,
The Spanish cycling federation on Monday cleared Spanish cyclist Iban Mayo, who tested positive for doping during the 2007 Tour de France, after a second test proved negative, his lawyer and the federation said. The federation informed Mayo "that the B sample had come out negative and for this reason it had ended" its inquiry, Mayo's lawyer, Jose Rodriguez, told AFP. The cycling federation confirmed the news and said there had been a mistake with the first sample. Mayo, a specialist climber, tested positive for blood-booster EPO during the Tour on July 24 and could have been suspended
Julich has his eye on another Olympic medal
Fall Mountain Ride
Neither Lyne Bessette (cyclocrossworld.com) nor Greg Reain (Ride withRendal/Colnago/Time) were able to defend their titles at the Canadian Cyclocross Nationals Sunday in Kamloops, British Columbia, despite riding from the front in their respective races. Instead, Mike Garrigan (Jetpower/Epic Ride) took his first ever national title, while Wendy Simms (Kona-Yourkey.com) returned to the top step of the podium for the first time since back-to-back victories in '03 - '04. With very little elevation change to work with, the organizers went for a tight and twisty circuit. The circuit was
Simms celebrates her return to the Canadian championship.
Matthew Wilson was at a loss for words when, after seven of the most challenging days in his sporting life, it was finally announced he was the winner of the 2007 Jayco Herald Sun Tour. "I don't know what to say... It's the best feeling... I've only had a few victories in my career, and they're all special for different reasons, but this one goes down as probably the best," said the Unibet pro, overjoyed with his victory but also relieved a turbulent week was finally over. From the first stage to the last, won by Astana's Aaron Kemps from a three-man breakaway that
The unseasonably hot weather that has afflicted the East Coast cyclocross season continued at the first Verge MAC event of 2007, Delaware’s UCI C1 Granogue ‘Cross. But it did not keep Tim Johnson and Kerry Barnholt from winning their first-ever Granogue titles by huge margins, and taking home the unique pink-flamingo trophies and a lot of cash.
It’s no secret that cycling is near and dear to the heart of Belgium. No other nation equals this tiny European country’s passion for two-wheeled pursuits, and no other race taps into that love affair like the Tour of Flanders. The annual spring-classic romp around the rolling hills and cobbled roads of northwest Belgium is one of the hardest and most prestigious one-day races on the ProTour calendar. The race is so revered there’s even a museum dedicated to the people and events that have helped shape its 91-year history. The two-story, multi-room display resides in a nondescript,
Save for a botched national-anthem selection during the podium ceremony, Sunday was a perfect day for rising cyclocross star Zdenek Stybar. The first-year pro from the Czech Republic launched a bold attack early in the second of 11 laps at the World Cup opener in Kalmthout, Belgium, and held his lead all the way to the finish. It was the second major victory for the 21-year-old Fidea rider, who also won the under-23 race at the 2006 world championships. Belgian Sven Nys (Rabobank) was a distant second, 33 seconds back of Stybar, with Frenchman Francis Mourey (Française de Jeux) winning a
Johnson takes his first Granouge 'cross victory
Wilson wins the overall
Kemps collects the final stage
That's Johan Bruyneel crawling out of a ditch
A caravan car of yesteryear
The café display
They occasionally fell down back then, too
De Koppenberg's stats
Eddy's piece of the rock
Jerseys then and now
A map of Flanders chaos
The museum sits along the race route
It takes a lot of pasta to win the Ronde
A relic of the past
The Flanders wall of fame
What it's really all about
Stybar rippin' it through the sand
Page got caught in traffic
Stybar on the run
The women's podium
Stybar takes the win
With just one stage to go, Matthew Wilson of Unibet.com is poised to take the biggest victory of his career in the Jayco Herald Sun Tour, riding what may well have been a race-saving, race-winning time trial Saturday in Melbourne. Though the margin is small: a superlative performance against the clock saw Steve Morabito the fastest rider around the short but testing 8.6 kilometer course, his time of 11:32 moving the Astana all-rounder within three seconds of Wilson by the day's end. Right now, however, the yellow jersey appears to have all the confidence in the world in what has been a
A day after the ProTour season finished up at Italy’s Giro di Lombardia, the 2007-08 cyclocross World Cup gets underway Sunday in Kalmthout, Belgium. Junior and under-23 races take up the morning schedule, with the elite women rolling out at 1:30 p.m. and the men following at 3. Among the Americans taking the startline in the day’s final race will be reigning world championship silver medalist Jonathan Page. The New Englander will be making his big time debut in the predominantly yellow jersey of his new Sunweb-Pro Job team. After several years struggling to make ends meet, Page’s
Wilson was the picture of concentration as he readied to defend his jersey
The in-form Steve Morabito (Astana) in the start house, before went on to win his second stage.
Stuart O'Grady (Jayco) did the entire course without a recon - and still finished with the fifth best time of the day.
Cunego easily beats Ricco to the line.
That silver medal has helped Page get back on his feet in many ways.
The Page clan-Jonathan, Cori, Milo and Emma
The new team
Evans takes the ProTour title to cap off an impressive season
October at Lake Como. Can you top that?
Fränk Schleck ran into trouble in the run to the finish.
Cunego played his cards right.