Late-spring rain showers punctuated the early part of the day.
Late-spring rain showers punctuated the early part of the day.
Late-spring rain showers punctuated the early part of the day.
Wiggins wants to enjoy the jersey at least until Mt. Ventoux.
Rémi Pauriol and Nicolas Portal make an early break in a long stage... with the predictable result.
Leipheimer is staying relaxed.
Just your average day on the bike in Switzerland
World pursuit champion Bradley Wiggins (Cofidis) tore through the 4.2-kilometer prologue time trial of the 2007 Dauphiné Libéré, narrowly edging out defending Dauphiné champion Levi Leipheimer (Discovery) on Sunday. Wiggins covered the course in 4:50, one second better than Leipheimer and two seconds better than Andrey Kashechkin (Astana). Leipheimer's teammate George Hincapie rounded out the top four, three seconds off of Wiggins' time. The 27-year-old Wiggins is looking to prove his credientials ahead of the Tour de France, with a prologue time trial that begins in London, just a
When a 156-mile race ends in a massive field sprint it’s easy to think that nothing much happened. But that wasn’t the case in the 23rd edition of the Commerce Bank Philadelphia Championship on Sunday. Indeed, there were many subplots behind the final result: a clear victory for Team CSC’s rapid Argentinean J.J. Haedo from his rookie Australian teammate Matt Goss, with T-Mobile’s Bernhard Eisel placing third to easily clinch the Commerce Bank Triple Crown after winning the first two events of Philly Week. It seemed like a logical result, but several factors affected the outcome, including a
Hot racing, steep hills and water-squirting fans — must be the Philly International Championship, the only hors-catégorie pro men's one-day race on this side of the big ditch. Our man Casey Gibson was on hand for that spectacle and the women's Liberty Classic on Sunday, and sent a few snaps home. Here they are.
Despite soggy conditions, Americans and GT teammates Brian Lopes and Jill Kintner won the second round of the Nissan UCI Four cross World Cup, held June 10 in Champéry, Switzerland. The win bumped both Lopes and Kintner into the leaders jersey for the 2007 World Cup. The finals begun after a torrential downpour turned the four-cross track into a muddy quagmire. Large puddles filled the berms, and crashes were many. Lopes, the 2005 world champion, was fastest in the men’s qualifying round, but faced reigning world and World Cup champ, Czech Michal Prokop (Author) in the finals. Prokop,
Wiggins edges Leipheimer by a second
Leipheimer... close, but no leader's jersey today.
Kashechkin grabs third
Hincapie powered in to briefly take the lead and finished fourth on the day
Valverde is fifth
Zabriskie takes sixth
Boonen puts in a strong ride Sunday
Millar may have been hampered by some nasty weather earlier in the day
For the world pursuit champ, a 4.2km TT was almost a perfect distance.
This the first major leader's jersey of Wiggins career.
Teutenberg gets the hat trick and the Triple Crown
Haedo takes Philly – but Eisel wears the crown
The Irish have a go — Power and O'Laughlin
Haedo didn't think he was the man today
Anderson doing the heavy lifting
Powers having a dig
Armstrong punches it
Blaudzun up front
Sutherland
The bunch climbs Lemon Hill
Going up: Men's Triple Crown winner Bernhard Eisel
Ryder Hesjedal attacks on the final trip up Manayunk
Kirk OBee leads the bunch through the start-finish line
Nürnberger cranks up the old choo-choo
Hey, is this a wet T-shirt contest or a bike race?
A little of both, seems like
Lehikoinen takes the downhill
Saner tops the women's DH podium
Levi Leipheimer lines up for Sunday’s start of the Dauphiné Libéré as the defending champion with an eye toward the Tour de France. Last year, he came to the important French race to settle the score. Second overall in 2005 when a long breakaway stole away with the leader’s jersey, Leipheimer was determined make the Dauphiné his own. He became the third American to win in seven years with a smashing performance. This year, the 33-year-old enters with Dauphiné with some important results already in the bag (two stages and overall at Tour of California and two stages at Tour de Georgia),
The 60th Dauphiné Libéré lives up to its tradition of serving up a mountainous challenge that continues to serve as the best barometer of fitness ahead of July’s Tour de France. With Mont Ventoux and a seven-climb “queen’s stage” over the Croix de la Fer and the Télégraphe, the eight-day Dauphiné will give a clear indication of where everyone stands less than a month before the Tour’s start. There’s no shortage of candidates, but like every June, it’s sometimes hard to read who’s firing at all cylinders and who’s simply looking to make some tests of fitness ahead of July’s big show. First
The cross-country World Cup moved to Switzerland for the third round of the series, and Swiss men stepped up, with three finishing on the podium, and four in the top ten. Ultimately, however, it was still World Cup leader Julien Absalon (Orbea) of France who took the win after a battle with Christoph Sauser (Specialized). In the women's category, Spaniard Marga Fullana (Spiuk-Tau Ceramica) donned the series leader's jersey after an impressive race-long ride from the front. North American riders also had strong rides, with Marie-Helene Premont (Rocky Mountain-Haywood) finishing third
German telecommunications company T-Mobile announced on Saturday that it wants to withdraw its sponsorship of the Tour de France's television coverage in Germany in a damage-limitation exercise. Cyling's image in Germany has been rocked by several high-profile doping admissions from cyclists competing for the former Team Telekom, now known as Team T-Mobile, and the company is keen to prevent any further damage to its image. But German state broadcasters ARD/ZDF do not want to accept the withdrawal of the Bonn-based team, according to an article to appear in Monday's edition of
A booming thunderstorm cleared out the humid, 95-degree air above Philadelphia Friday night, making way for cooler, breezy weather at this weekend’s climax of the Commerce Bank Triple Crown of Cycling. Also Friday evening, Giant Bicycles hosted a dinner at Maggiano’s Little Italy restaurant, where the mighty T-Mobile team’s general manager Bob Stapleton introduced the eight men and six women who are seeking to give their team a perfect record in this year’s Triple Crown. Already this past week, Austrian Bernhard Eisel and German Ina Teutenberg have notched up victories in Lancaster and
Leipheimer has his eye on July.
For some, the Dauphiné Libéré is the perfect mountainous warm-up for the Tour de France.
Defending champion Levi Leipheimer now captains Discovery
Last year's men's field ascends Lemon Hill
Absalon remains the most dominant force in cross-country
Fullana moves into the World Cup lead
Michael Barry couldn’t figure out why he had trouble breathing nearly all spring. His doctors told him it was likely allergies or perhaps asthma. Like professionals often do in the face of pain or setback, he kept pushing on. His breathing problems became so bad, however, he was forced to abandon the Giro d’Italia after just one stage. He finally went to see a local doctor in his European home in Girona, Spain. The diagnosis: pneumonia. “I got really sick at Paris-Nice and I never really felt normal all spring. I had problems with my breathing,” Barry told VeloNews. “It was about 10 days
Boulder, CO, June 8, 2007 - Two time U.S. Olympian Erin Mirabellawill read her new book for children and families in four midwest locationsthis month. Monday, June 181:30 - 2:30 p.m.Racine Public Library75 Seventh St.Racine, WI 53403262.619.2571Wednesday, June 206:00 - 7:00 p.m.Turin Bicycle1027 Davis StreetEvanston, IL 60201(847) 864-7660Thursday, June 216:30 - 7:30 p.m.Racine Cyclery4615 Washington Ave.Racine, WI 53405(262) 637-7241Friday, June 226:30 - 7:30 p.m.Emery's Bicycle & Super Fitness9929 W. Lisbon Ave.Milwaukee, WI 53222(414) 463-BIKE (2453)Inspired by Mirabella's own
Barry's back to training after a bout with pneumonia
Olympic cyclist to read new book for children in Wisconsin and Chicago
A spokesman for Belgian super team Quick Step firmly denied links to doping practices Thursday after police arrested a dozen people following raids which netted large quantities of banned doping products. The regional prosecutor's office, after initially saying the raids were on homes of members of the Quick Step team, refused to name any of those arrested, the team who employed them or the type of products uncovered. Quick Step spokesman Alessandro Tegner claimed none of the team's riders were involved, and that their implication in the investigation is the result of a major
Valverde simply works harderIt seems a day doesn’t go by without someone accusing beleaguered defending ProTour champion Alejandro Valverde of being linked to the Operación Puerto doping investigation. Spanish authorities have never publicly connected Valverde to the alleged blood doping ring orchestrated by Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes, but some are insisting that codenames and bags of blood rounded up in police raids last year correspond to the Spanish phenomenon. The latest was a full-page interview published this week in L’Equipe with Spanish cycling whistleblower Jésus Manzano
Belgium's enfant terrible of professional cycling Frank Vandenbroucke is recovering in a Milan hospital on Thursday after an apparent suicide attempt. Earlier in the day the Italian press agency Ansa reported that the 32-year-old was in grave condition but his Acqua e Sapone team said later that he was "out of danger" and "completely conscious." Vandenbroucke did not start this year's Tour of Italy, which finished on Sunday, after failing to recover quickly enough from a knee operation in February. He was said to have suffered from depression for several years. He had yet to make
T-Mobile’s Bernhard Eisel and Ina Teutenberg are well on their way to clinching the Commerce Bank Triple Crown of Cycling after they both won Thursday afternoon’s Reading Classic in central Pennsylvania. They also won the first leg of the Triple Crown series last Sunday in Lancaster. One big difference between Sunday and Thursday was the weather. Following tropical rainfall that drenched the men in Lancaster, the 172 starters enjoyed sunshine, low humidity and 80-degree temperatures in Reading for the second edition of the Reading Classic. The change in the weather didn’t faze Eisel, the
Prosecutors' spokesman Tom Janssen fields questions about Thursday's raids.
Vandenbroucke's condition has stabilized after suidcide attempt.
Teutenberg goes two for two
Eisel makes an audacious bid for the win — and gets it
The early break
Eisel on the rise
Anderson controls the field for Teutenberg
Jesús Manzano – the former Kelme rider and whistleblower about alleged doping infractions within Spanish cycling – has leveled new allegations against Alejandro Valverde with a month to go before the start of the 2007 Tour de France. Manzano, who blew the whistle in a series of paid interviews in 2004 about the practices of alleged Puerto ringleader Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes, told the French sports daily L’Equipe that “nothing’s changed in Spanish cycling.” The ex-pro continues to push his story that “those incriminated (in doping) continue to do their work” and accused Valverde of being
Dear Monique,In your April 25th column (More prepping for long rides), you mentionweighing before and after a ride. Is the weight differential entirely fluidor food in the stomach? Can you say a bit more about this differential?Should riders shoot for some change, no change, under what circumstances?Thanks,JoelHi Joel,The difference between your weight before and after a training riderepresents the amount of sweat that you did not replace with fluid intakeduring the ride. Even losing 2-percent of your body weight, about 3.5 poundsfor a 165-lb. cyclist can decrease your endurance, particularly
I remember a line from the movie, "The Right Stuff." It went something like this: "There's a demon out there, he lives out there in the thin air, right around Mach One ..." I was thinking about that last Sunday on my second attempt on Squaw Pass Road near Bergen Park. It's not that the road is impossible, plenty of people were doing it, sailing past me like nobody's business, and it's not that it was impossible for me, because, despite grunting and groaning and being overly dramatic about it all, I was doing it as well. Slowly, perhaps, but doing it nonetheless. I had
Sporting his familiar muttonchops and earring, Mountain Bike Hall of Famer Travis Brown was in Vail, Colorado, for the 2007 Teva Mountain Games. The May 31-June 3 event is an annual gathering of mountain sports, and features competitions for rock climbing, cycling, fly fishing, running, kayaking and even dog jumping.The 38-year-old Brown competed in the 21-mile cross-country race on June 2, where he squared off against a field of Colorado’s best off-road talent. Also present was embattled Tour de France champion Floyd Landis, who made his return to cycling since testing positive for a skewed
The T-Mobile team has opted not to select Ukrainian time trial specialist Sergei Honchar for next month's Tour de France following a suspicious blood test last month. Honchar, the winner of two time trial stages in last year's Tour, was sidelined from T-Mobile’s Giro d'Italia squad last month after a blood test showed “abnormalities,” suggesting that he had doped. T-Mobile manager Bob Stapleton said the one-time Soviet rider, who will turn 37 four days before the July 7 start of the Tour, will not race for the team next season. "A blood health check showed abnormalities four
The T-Mobile team has opted not to select Ukrainian time trial specialist Sergei Honchar for next month's Tour de France following a suspicious blood test last month. Honchar, the winner of two time trial stages in last year's Tour, was sidelined from T-Mobile’s Giro d'Italia squad last month after a blood test showed “abnormalities,” suggesting that he had doped. T-Mobile manager Bob Stapleton said the one-time Soviet rider, who will turn 37 four days before the July 7 start of the Tour, will not race for the team next season. "A blood health check showed abnormalities four
Manzano says cycling has lost its appeal.
Brown has doubts about whether roadies can adapt successfully to off-road racing
Following the string of revelations from former Telekom riders that they used banned performance-enhancing products during the team’s heyday in the mid-1990s, former team manager Walter Godefroot has denied having a role in the doping bonanza. Godefroot, who was the Telekom’s team manager from 1992 before retiring in 2005, held a press conference Tuesday in Ghent, Belgium, to refute speculations that the team had systematic doping. Seven former Telekom riders, including 1996 Tour de France champion Bjarne Riis, have admitted to doping following the revelations of a former soigneur, Jeff
“If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”Henry FordIn a move surely destined to strike fear into the hearts of high-end seatpost manufacturers, Trek unveiled its new Madone road bike at a gathering of Trek dealers and cycling media on May 31. Under the soaring white trusses and glass of the stunningly beautiful Milwaukee Art Museum, Lance Armstrong joined Trek president John Burke in introducing a bike that is could alter the direction of bicycle design in a number of ways. To start, the new frame has no threads in a very unique 90mm bottom bracket
German cyclist Erik Zabel, fresh from admitting he took EPO (erythropoietin) in 1996, announced on Tuesday that he will not compete in the road race at next year's Beijing Olympic Games. Zabel, 36, met with the president of the German Olympic committee (DOSB), Thomas Bach, and DOSB general secretary Michael Vesper in Frankfurt on Tuesday before announcing his decision. The six-time winner of the Tour de France green jersey confessed he took the banned blood-booster EPO in 1996 - one of seven former Telekom cyclists, including 1996 Tour winner Bjarne Riis, who have admitted to using
Godefroot vehemently denies involvement in the Telekom doping program.
The newest Madone from Trek
A new approach to bottom bracket shell design
The new Madone fork crown and oversized bottom steerer section
Bonding on the last of the five main molded parts forming a Madone frame
For those who didn’t know him before last year’s Tour de France, David de la Fuente was just another Spanish journeyman who happily did the unglamorous work of a domestique with the occasional breakaway thrown in for good measure. No one could have guessed that the son of a butcher would be one of the main protagonists, winning the most agressiver rider prize and giving climbing king Michael Rasmussen a run for his money in the hunt for the polka-dot best climber’s jersey. De la Fuente gained his 15 minutes of fame last year in the Tour’s second stage, when the Saunier Duval-Prodir rider