Mary McConneloug
Mary McConneloug
Mary McConneloug
Kabush is sitting on top of the world (rankings)
LeMond said he was surprised when Landis called him last August.
Landis listens to LeMond's testimony on Thursday.
Landis's attorney quickly fired Geoghegan after the business manager admitted making the call.
Three-time Tour winner Greg LeMond said he was threatened by a member of the Landis team on Wednesday night.
Claire Frelat
Antonio Gallegos
The defense focused on Frelat's handling of samples, but...
...Ayotte said Landis's sample would have been positive, no matter where it was tested.
Danilo Di Luca repeated his victory atop the Montevergine climb from 2001 in Wednesday’s rainy and crash-marred fourth stage, but things have changed a lot for “The Killer” since those heady days six years ago. Back then, Di Luca was the hot, emerging star who everyone predicted would one day win the Giro d’Italia. Other than come close with fourth overall in 2005, Di Luca has never delivered on that promise.
On a day when the International Tennis Federation announced it would send drug test samples taken from the upcoming French Open to the WADA accredited lab in Montreal instead of the Laboratoire National du Dépistage du Dopage outside Paris, the LNDD’s credibility faced more harsh scrutiny on the other side of the Atlantic as the Floyd Landis arbitration hearing rolled on in Malibu, California. While the ITF claimed its decision to swap labs was a question of finances — and not of competence — the Landis defense team continued to make its case that the LNDD wasn’t fit to test samples from
Di Luca wins back the jersey, too.
The Amalfi Coast, beautiful and getting there was half the fun
Narrow roads kept the pace low early in the stage... or maybe they were just checkin' out the view
Di Luca credits his team's big effort.
Bettini fought back and stayed in the race.
Popovych lost 34 seconds... not insurmountable
Brutt was on the attack again.
Pérez Cuapio went with 8km to go...
... the attack caused Piepoli and others to give chase.
Di Luca shows who's boss
Saoldelli lost nearly a minute
Mongongu spent most of Wednesday on the stand
LNDD director Jacques de Ceaurriz with analysts Claire Frelat and Cynthia Mongongu
Can I use the same brake pads on my aluminum and carbon rims?
What can I do about saddle soreness?
Why does my bike shimmy at high speed?
Editor’s Note: Denver-based attorney Antonio Gallegos is in Malibu,California, this week to observe the Floyd Landis arbitration hearing.Gallegos works for the firm of Holland and Hart, concentrating in commerciallitigation and government investigation. He is also an avid cyclist andis developing a sports law practice. At the end of each day Gallegos willbe providing VeloNews.com with analysis on what happened and why. Here’shis take on day one of the arbitration hearing that is expected to lastup to 10 days.General impressionsWhat we saw today is USADA trying to make its case that the
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The Italian Olympic Committee's (CONI) anti-doping prosecutor Ettore Torri hit out Tuesday at the people putting pressure on disgraced cyclist Ivan Basso to clam up. The Giro d’Italia champion had been collaborating with CONI after admitting to having been involved in “an attempt to dope,” but Torri said that Basso has now suddenly stopped helping them with their inquiries. "The results from the first phase (of the inquiry) are a little less brilliant than we were hoping for," Torri told a press conference in Rome on Monday. "After a completely negative first interview (on May 2),
Day two of the Floyd Landis hearing brought further clarification as to who each side may call to testify before the arbitration panel during the upcoming week. Most of the potential witnesses come from the scientific world, but there are a few names more familiar to cycling fans. Among them is Greg LeMond, the first American to win the Tour de France, and a vocal critic of doping in cycling. LeMond won the Tour title in 1986, and then two more times in 1989 and ’90. He was listed on the USADA side of the ledger, one spot above former pro cyclist Joe Papp. On Monday, USADA lead counsel
Defense attorneys continued to attack the credibility of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s case against Floyd Landis, as the Tour de France winner entered the second day of the arbitration hearing regarding his alleged synthetic testosterone positive doping test that could cost him a win in the world’s most prestigious bike race. Tuesday’s hearing was punctuated by charges of questionable methods on the part of the French national anti-doping laboratory, and the very public dismissal of a French-English interpreter. Following the conclusion of USADA witness J. Thomas Brenna’s testimony, the
Editor’s Note: Denver-based attorney Antonio Gallegos is in Malibu,California, this week to observe the Floyd Landis arbitration hearing.Gallegos works for the firm of Holland and Hart, concentrating in commerciallitigation and government investigation. He is also an avid cyclist andis developing a sports law practice. At the end of each day Gallegos willbe providing VeloNews.com with analysis on what happened and why. Here’shis take on day one of the arbitration hearing that is expected to lastup to 10 days.There were three key points during the cross-examination of USADA witness Dr. J.
Landis spent another day in a lawyer's kit... an unwelcome and uncomfortable uniform for this time of year.
You could almost hear the “delete” buttons being tapped in the Giro d’Italia pressroom in Cagliari on the Island of Sardinia on Monday. All of those stories about how Milram’s Alessandro Petacchi was a washed-up version of yesterday’s news were sent to the trash can as the man known as Ale-Jet scored his 20th Giro stage win at the end of a largely flat, 181-kilometer stage from Barumini to Cagliari.
Perhaps more than anyone, Óscar Pereiro will be watching Monday's start of the Floyd Landis disciplinary hearing with keen interest. The 31-year-old Spanish rider has the most to gain if Landis loses in his bid to clear his name of allegations that he cheated his way to the 2006 Tour de France victory. Pereiro finished second to Landis and would be awarded the 2006 maillot jaune if things don’t swing Landis’s way. VeloNews caught up with Pereiro earlier this year to gauge his feelings on the Landis case, his own brush with scandal and what he was thinking when he jumped right back into
Floyd Landis moved a step closer to finding out whether his name will go down in Tour de France history or infamy. Landis’s scheduled 10-day arbitration hearing to determine whether he used synthetic testosterone to win the 2006 Tour commenced in the moot-courtroom of the Pepperdine University Law School in Malibu, California, with science — not cycling — taking center stage. If he wins the case he’ll avoid becoming the first Tour champion in 100 years to be stripped of his title. If Landis loses the win is no more, and he faces a two-year racing ban, and an additional two-year exclusion
Not to be denied: You just knew Petacchi had to win one of these days again.
Di Luca says he's cool with it.
A great day for the Giro's final stage on Sardinia.
The day's escape formed early
Ignatiev and Visconti go on their own...
The chase got serious with 50km to go.
Liquigas just wanted to protect the jersey.
They almost made it.
Ouch! Hushovd apparently suffered only cuts and bruises. He'll ride again on Wednesday.
Landis and wife Amber arrive at Pepperdine Law School
Christopher Campbell (L), President Patrice Brunet (C) and Richard McLaren listen during the Landis hearing.
Landis attorneys Howard Jacobs (L) and Maurice Suh listen during the hearing on the doping allegations against the 2006 Tour de France champion.
It was weekend devoted to road racing at the USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships in Perry, Kansas, Saturday and Sunday. In addition to hundreds of riders, our guy, Casey Gibson, was there to record it all for posterity.
Robbie McEwen doesn’t speak much Italian, but he knows enough to tell TV reporters at the finish line in a hot and challenging 205km second stage along the west coast of Sardinia that was he was tickled pink with his 12th career Giro d’Italia stage victory. The Australian pocket rocket bolted past a wilting Alessandro Petacchi (Milram) and held off a late burst by Paolo Bettini (QuickStep) to notch his 153rd career victory.
More than nine months after Floyd Landis was crowned 2006 Tour de France champion — and subsequently charged with illegal doping — the American will attempt to clear his name when his arbitration hearing begins Monday at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. The stakes are simple — and very high. If Landis and his attorneys can convince at least two members of the three-person arbitration panel that he did not use synthetic testosterone to win the ’06 Tour, he’ll retain his title and could re-commence his racing career. But if the U.S. Anti Doping Agency successfully prosecutes its
British cyclist Chris Hoy broke the high-altitude 500-meter world record at the outdoor velodrome in La Paz, Bolivia, on Sunday. Clocking a time of 24.758sec, Hoy's time knocked a massive 1.092 seconds off the previous record set by Frenchman Arnaud Duble at the same Alto Irpavi velodrome venue in 2001. Hoy had earlier failed for the second day in succession to beat the high altitude one kilometer record set by another Frenchman, Arnaud Tournant, seven years ago. Hoy, the Olympic and world kilometer champion, clocked 0:58.880, missing out on that record by just 0.005 of a second. It
Stanford University claimed the Division I road racing national championship this weekend in Lawrence, Kansas, while Western Washington University took the Division II crown at the 2007 USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships. After three days of racing, May 11-13, Stanford didn’t win any of the individual events – the team time trial, road race nor criterium – but instead won the Division I championship by the virtue of the consistency of its finishes. “We finally had the depth in both men and women to do it,” Stanford’s Devin Flaherty said. “Usually it’s one or the other, but
Mara Abbott, truly the hitman of Whitman.
Abbott scored her third-straight stars-and-stripes jersey, winning the women's Div. II road race
Boyd nails the men's Div. I title...
... and Dad's there to share the moment.
The view from the back of the D1 race
The dirt road, 1.5 miles of crushed limestone, certainly made it interesting. Over 100 flats, by some counts.
That's got to hurt. The chase group in the D2 men's race piles it up on the gravel.
Larson wins the Division I women's race,
Marzot wins the sprint for D2 Men's Road champ.
...and celebrates the moment in style.
Why so many flats? Crushed limestone and light tires don't mix.
Three of the best and McEwen emerges on top
McEwen phones home with the news
Di Luca takes the jersey
Spectacular scenery
Early escape, lots of work... and the inevitable catch.
Popovych is a bit sore, but 'okay,' says Discovery
First, the Villanova Monterleone trimmed the group to three...
... then Brutt tried his luck.
The peloton starts to pick up the pace...
Rebellin, Bettini and Gasparotto.
McEwen tears it up.
The Landis case enters a new phase on Monday