ToPeak’s Allay saddle has an inflatable bladder; pump it or let air out to adjust the pressure to your liking.
ToPeak’s Allay saddle has an inflatable bladder; pump it or let air out to adjust the pressure to your liking.
ToPeak’s Allay saddle has an inflatable bladder; pump it or let air out to adjust the pressure to your liking.
Shimano’s WR80 women’s shoe and R220 men’s road shoe are, at $250, each one model down from the top yet still have a heat-molded custom fit. Shimano also offers a do-at-home Custom-Fit insole kit for $35 that can be used in any shoe.
eSoles’ Paraic McGlynn says, “We have the world’s largest database of foot scans.” Therefore eSoles can create custom insoles, modular stock insoles with three different medial arch heights and various metatarsal arch support buttons.
Wilier Triestina’s new CronoCento monocoque time trial bike owes its interesting shape to its design by aero guru John Cobb.
Argon18’s E-114 time trial frame sells for $3750 with brakes, handlebar and seatpost; it is an E-112 frame with a new aero fork system that shields the front of the head tube.
Add parabola-shaped spacers on the front fairing of the fork to change the stem height on the Argon18 E-114 time trial bike.
FSA’s fully carbon aero under-bar bottle drinking system has bendable hoses and two reservoirs for two different drinks. Each reservoir has a big hole to make filling a snap, even in between the handlebars.
A piano hinge rotating on a spoke makes it possible to move the bar strap around easily on the FSA aero under-bar drinking system.
The new $300/pr FSA K-Force brake calipers weigh 137 grams each and feature carbon pad holders, titanium hardware, and thrust bearings. The SL-K brake shares the same design but uses standard materials and weighs 21 grams more per caliper.
Monty’s Travel Blocks are premium wooden travel spacers with skewers to protect your fork and rear dropouts while flying with or shipping your bike.
Thule’s Load-Off folding chair has an integral tarp and a helmet-storage compartment. It allows you to change in style.
3T, the venerable Italian handlebar and stem brand has been re-launched under new ownership, and its new director of product development is Richard McAinsh, who served as head of composite design for the Ferrari Formula One team for eight years.
The Prologo Choice saddle has an interchangeable snap-on cover; the snaps are sunken into recesses in the shell so that you don’t feel them when riding.
You can change the color of your Prologo Choice saddle color to match whatever you happen to be wearing that day. The shells come in three different sizes.
Wesley Sulzberger teamed up with his brother Bernard to overpower Ludewig in the final kilometers.
Wilson keeps his lead
Di Luca's season is over
Spain's Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Epargne) received the yellow jersey from the 2006 Tour de France at a ceremony in Madrid, officially replacing U.S. rider Floyd Landis, who has been stripped of his title for doping. "This is an emotional moment, a day that I will never forget," said Pereiro after Tour director Christian Prudhomme awarded him the jersey. "Finally! It has been long, too long, you are a late winner but a real winner," said Prudhomme. "You have the right to your place among the winners of the Tour, it was on the road that you won.” Pereiro finished 57 seconds behind Landis
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 a long season is winding down… a perfect time to let loose and have a little fun on our ‘cross bikes. Renee Callaway’s “Cyclocross Wisconsin Style” captures the mood of this time of year perfectly. Nice work Renee. 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 take a look at our latest gallery, decide
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,
Nys opens Superprestige series with winSven Nys (Rabobank) won the Superprestige opener on Sunday in Ruddervoorde, Belgium. Fidea teammates Zdenek Stybar and Bart Wellens were second and third at four and eight seconds back, respectively. Americans Jonathan Page (Sunweb) and Ryan Trebon (Kona-YourKey) crossed in 18th and 19th spots at 1:36 back. Nys leads the series with 15 points. Stybar sits second with 14 while Wellens is third with 13. Superprestige Ruudervoorde1. Sven Nys (B), Rabobank, 1:00:432. Zdenek Stybar (Cze), Fidea, at 0:043. Bart Wellens (B), Fidea, at 0:084. Niels Albert
An impressive show of strength brought Matthew Wilson (Unibet.com) opening-day honors and the race lead to boot in the Jayco Herald Sun Tour. As the seven-day stage race began for real Monday in Bendigo, the 2004 Australian road champion launched a bid for victory with 5km remaining. "Coming into town, Baden [Cooke] was telling me he wasn't feeling really good and that I should go for it myself,” Wilson said. “It was so windy so that guys were getting blown off the road; there was a lot of confusion and I just sort of slipped away there... and then, well, I guess the gods were shining
It's been a long and uncertain wait for Pereiro, but it may not be over.
Cyclocross Wisconsin Style
Nys won Sunday's Ruddervoorde Superprestige, the first Superprestige race of the season.
Wilson gave it everything he had, taking the stage . . .
. . . and the lead
Unibet is now the team to beat
Despite reports to the contrary, the services of American Chris Horner are still very much on the market for the 2008 season. The Predictor-Lotto rider, who placed an impressive fifth Thursday atItaly’s one-day Coppa Sabatini, was rumored to have signed with risingdomestic program RockRacing. Three-time national road champion Freddie Rodriguez, Horner’steammate at Predictor the last two seasons, has already inked a deal withthe team, as has 2003 Tour de France yellow jersey wearer Victor Hugo Peña,but Horner has not. “I’ve seen it posted that I had been picked up, that I’m riding
A delighted Aaron Kemps (Astana) proved the strongest of a nine-man breakaway during the opening day of the Jayco Herald Sun Tour in Bendigo, breaking clear two laps from the finish to claim a popular solo victory over Tom Southam (Drapac-Porsche) and Craig McCartney (Savings & Loans). For the 24-year-old Queenslander, the Jayco Herald Sun Classic was a long-awaited first-season win, whose year has been dogged by ill fortune, courtesy of ex-team-mates Alexander Vinokourov and Andrey Kashechkin, busted for autologous blood doping at the Tour de France. "The last half of the year for me has
Italian sprint ace Alessandro Petacchi (Milram) won the 101st edition of the Paris-Tours classic on Sunday. Led out by his German teammate Eric Zabel, Petacchi edged compatriot Francesco Chicchi in the sprint to claim the victory in the 256km fall classic. It was his second classic victory, after Milan-San Remo in 2005. Former three-time world champion Oscar Freire (Rabobank) was third. The penultimate ProTour race of the season saw several breakaway attempts, the last of which, involving Philippe Gilbert (Française des Jeux), Karsten Kroon (CSC) and Filippo Pozzato (Liquigas), took off
[nid:41019]Lyne Bessette (Cyclocrossworld.com) again outpaced her competition during day two of the Gloucester Grand Prix of Cyclocross on Sunday, while Jesse Anthony (Jamis) came back to claim a win that eluded him the day before. The second round in the 2007 Verge New England Championship Cyclocross Series saw racers battling windier conditions and fatigue left over from Saturday's fierce pace. Fueled by a frustrating opening day, Anthony bore down on the elite men's field with enough pressure to shuck all but a stunningly strong Chris Jones (Nerac).
Horner says he knows his value to a team and expects to be paid accordingly.
Kemps wears the leader's jersey going into Monday's stage
Petacchi wins
The podium
Pozzato, Gilbert and Kroon make a late break
Bessette burning it up
Anthony scores a home-turf win
When the smoke exits from the start gun this Sunday in Bendigo, a bustling rural town about an hour’s drive north of Melbourne, Australia, it will signal the start of the 56th edition of Australia’s oldest stage race, the Jayco Herald Sun Tour. Like the Tour de France, ‘the Sun Tour’ as it is colloquially known, was conceived by a newspaper outlet in an attempt to capture the attention of the parochial Victorian sporting public and in turn boost newspaper sales. This News Corporation-Rupert Murdoch-owned metropolitan daily, the Herald Sun holds the title of being the highest circulation
It’s been a tough few years, but Tom Danielson says it’s still too early to write-off his chances of soon making a big mark on a major tour. “He’s a big natural talent,” Danielson’s soon-to-be team director at Slipstream-Chipotle, Jonathan Vaughters, told the Denver Post this summer. “He went to Discovery and got caught up in the whole ‘next Lance Armstrong’ thing, which he is not. I don’t know whether he’ll be able to recover from day-to-day like Lance did. In a one-day race, it’s not important. He can win a stage of the Tour de France without a doubt.” Danielson doesn’t dispute the
Danielson says he's looking forward to riding with his new team.
After a two-year hiatus, the Gran Prix of Gloucester rejoined the Verge New England Championship Cyclocross Series Saturday with Round 1 of a doubleheader race weekend, with victories by Cylcocrossworld.com’s Jeremy Powers and Lyne Bessette. Fending off attack after attack by a quartet containing Jesse Anthony (Jamis), Germany's Multe Urban (Focus) and Chris Jones (NERAC), it was Powers who outsprinted them all in the final kilometer of the men’s race to win his second Gloucester 'cross.
Dear Readers,
Welcome to this week's edition of The Prologue, a regular summary of news from the world of competitive cycling by your friends at VeloNews.com.
The Kazakh Cycling Federation formally announced Friday that former Discovery manager Johan Bruyneel will take over the helm of the troubled Astana team starting with the 2008 season. Kazakh officials have vowed to continue an estimated $15 million per year sponsorship, despite doping positives involving star riders Alexander Vinokourov and Andrey Kashechkin, and have hired Bruyneel to usher in a new management team. “As we recall this year some of team’s riders were linked to using performance enhancing drugs. In spite of these issues the KCF firmly decided to move forward, having
Fireworks, bagpipes and cyclocross are three things best enjoyed outdoors, in the opinion of most. But when the New England winter sets in even the hardiest crossnuts would appreciate a little bit of climate-control to take the edge off the season. That’s the thinking from a New Hampshire promoter who’s planning a race inside a 94,000-square-foot sports dome for some time after the new year. It would be perhaps the first indoor cyclocross race held in the U.S., providing further evidence of the growth of the discipline. It also might contribute to shifting the New England cyclocross season
You’ve got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em. — Kenny Rogers, The Gambler Floyd Landis has decided to play one last hand, taking his case to the International Court of Arbitration for Sport. Is it time for some close friend to delicately mention Gambler’s Anonymous? When Big Tex finally cashed in his chips and left the game a winner, the Mennonite kid from Farmersville, Pennsylvania, finally took what seemed to be a well-deserved seat at the high rollers’ table. The deal went his way for a while, but the cards have not been his friends for quite some time now. In fact,
Bruyneel is headed to Astana for the next few years
Welcome to the dome
With a few changes - and a cover over the turf - the dome may turn into the perfect venue for a new event.
There's already a track...
... which local roadies use year-round.
Riders report that you can ride the track at up to 23mph.
Friday's Foaming Rant: The gambler
Roberto Heras - the disgraced Spanish climber who saw his 2005 Vuelta a España victory stripped after he tested positive for EPO – vows to return to the professional peloton. His two-year ban ends October 27 and the 33-year-old insists he will be with a top team next season and wants to be in a host of major races on the international calendar. Heras says he’s considered offers from Spanish and foreign teams. “I am planning to return and there are several teams interested in me,” Heras told the Spanish daily El Mundo. “I never lost the rhythm of training and I never lost the idea that I
Something very strange is in the Rocky Mountain air. No, it’s not the smellof cheap beer and hot dogs still wafting out of Coors Field. It’s the sweetsmell of victory. Yes, I know, it’s hard to believe, but I have won three cyclocross racesthis season. That’s one more win than I have earned in the entirety ofmy 13-year cyclocross career. I’m not going to sugar coat it, these weresmall, local races with out very deep fields, but hey, a win is a win isa win, right? Don’t get me wrong, these races didn’t come too easy, but a true testarrives this weekend as I make my way East for the Ohio
Some might call Ariel Lindsley a throwback from mountain-bike racing’sgolden age, when riders split their time equally between the downhill andcross-country bikes. Others might call him the most versatile mountain-bikeracer in the country. Either way, Lindsley races as a pro in gravity andcross-country events, and the chops to duke it out with the nation’s bestriders in each. Lindsley spent a good amount of 2007 racing on Colorado’sMountain States Cup, and also hit the brand new RockyMountain G3. The latter series brought the stage-race format todownhill racing: riders completed two downhill
The Larry H. Miller Tourof Utah will return in 2008, race organizers announced Thursday. Therace’s chairman, Greg Miller of the Larry H. Miller Group, has appointedveteran Utah bike racer, coach and cycling advocate Terry McGinnis as therace’s Executive Director. Zion’s Bank returns as presenting sponsor. Datesfor the event will be August 13-17. After a successful third year of the event in 2006, won by Health Net-Maxxisrider Scott Moninger, the 2007 Tour of Utah was scheduled from June 30to July 7 but was cancelled due to lack of sponsorship. And while McGinnissaid the race wouldn’t be
Dear Readers;In my last column, "Themthere's fightin' words, boy," we looked at two cases—Chaplinskyv. New Hampshire and Cohen v. California—as backgroundfor revisiting the question of whether “flipping the bird” is constitutionallyprotected speech. To recap briefly, in Chaplinsky, a 1942 case,the Supreme Court carved out a “fighting words” exception to free speech—words“which by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediatebreach of the peace.” Twenty-nine years later, the Supreme Court held in Cohen thatthe words “Fuck the Draft” did not constitute
Sports publisher seeks product and e-commerce consultant for catalog business. Consultant will work closely with manager of the Velo Catalog department in advising on product acquisition and catalog/Velogear.com marketing. Consultation would include product price negotiation, inventory control, budgeting, revenue generation, web and direct mail marketing and catalog production. 5-7 years catalog and e-commerce experience preferred, knowledge of cycling and triathlon industries a plus. Please send cover letter and résumé to: Attn: HR, ICI, 1830 N. 55th St., Boulder, CO 80301-2700 or
Heras, who's seen his share of courtrooms these past two years, is anxious to get back on the road.
To the winner...
...come the spoils.
Daddy, I want one of those!
The local 'cross crowd packs the Boulder Theater.
New Challenge tires for Ohio!
After the races, it's journal writing time.
Ariel Lindsley
North American News and Notes: Tour of Utah is back; Single-speed world's
Legally Speaking - with Bob Mionske: Free Bird
T-Mobile phenom’ Mark Cavendish confirmed his arrival to the big leagues over the weekend by reaching his pre-season target of 11 victories on the year. The 22-year-old Brit surged to victory in Saturday’s stage at the Circuit Franco-Belge to put an exclamation point on what’s been a dazzling rookie season. “I’ve reached my target and I’m about delighted about that,” Cavendish said on T-Mobile’s web page. “We miscalculated things a bit in the sprint yesterday and that cost me, but things ran so smoothly today.” Cavendish opened the year with an eye-catching second at the Etoile des
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,
Dear readers, VeloNews.com recently experienced an unexpected technical problem with one of several servers used to host a large portion of our video content. As a result, several videos from this year’s Tour de France, Tour of Missouri and other feature items are not currently available. Our technical staff is working on the problem and we are currently re-loading many of those items using back-up files. Missing videos will gradually reappear on our site over the next few days. We apologize for the lapse and appreciate your patience as we work to resolve those
Calling for "an overhaul" of national and international anti-doping enforcement systems, Floyd Landis announced Wednesday that he has filed an appeal of the ruling that resulted in the stripping of his Tour de France title. Landis filed an appeal with the International Court of Arbitration for Sport ahead of Thursday's deadline for challenging the decision of a three-member U.S. arbitration panel that resulted in the 2006 Tour title being awarded to Oscar Pereiro. “Knowing that the accusations against me are simply wrong, and having risked all my energy and resources – including those
Cavendish earned his 11th win of the season this week.
Petacchi's Salbutamol case is far from over.
Landis during last May's hearing at Pepperdine.
George Hincapie is hoping a switch to T-Mobile will bring him closer to winning an elusive Classics victory. After racing from 1997-2007 at U.S. Postal Service/Discovery Channel, the 34-year-old had a feeling that a change would do him some good. Hincapie said new teammates and a innovative philosophy under the leadership of Bob Stapleton will help keep him motivated as he enters a two-year deal with the German team looking to increase its North American profile. A few years ago, a switch to rival T-Mobile would have been seen as a major controversy, but times change and Hincapie’s
Jon Baker is living the dream. That is, if you consider spending fourmonths chasing some of the world’s fastest cyclocross racers around mud-and manure-filled European fields in sub-zero temperatures. The dream? Luckily he looks at it that way. Up until about a month ago the 33-year-old Baker was leading an averageAmerican life, happily married to Cyndi with two kids, Leah, 9, and Axel,1. He was a software engineer for BEA Systems, and he balanced his passionfor cycling with his family life and a full-time career, as most of usdo. He was a weekend warrior, albeit a darn good one. Baker
Caisse d’Epargne’s Oscar Pereiro will receive his yellow jersey as the retrospective winner of the 2006 Tour de France next Monday in Madrid, organizers announced Tuesday. The 2006 runner-up has been moved up to first position after American Floyd Landis was stripped of the title for doping. Pereiro finished the 2006 edition 57 seconds behind Landis, but the American tested positive for testosterone following his 17th stage win at Morzine, three days before the finish in Paris. Landis is the first winner in the history of the Tour to be stripped of the title for doping. The top three