Eatough signing posters for fans
Eatough signing posters for fans
Eatough signing posters for fans
A Fred’s Eye View: Chris Eatough, movie star
Up close and personal: Camera crews often trailed Eatough on course.
Bäckstedt has had a tough year.
Unwanted hardware: Bäckstedt just recently had this stuff removed from his shoulder
Leipheimer rides to the stage win
Brajkovic time-trialed well enough to move into the overall lead
Zabriskie zipped into second on the day
Must be 5 o'clock somewhere
Millar enjoyed the course, despite riding it blind
Baldwin was crowded out of his course preview
O'Neill knows the course well, and has the scars to prove it
The new race leader
[nid:38252]Janez Brajkovic wasn’t even supposed to be at the Tour de Georgia. Originally the lithe Slovenian climber was slotted to race Pays Basque for Discovery Channel, while Tour de France veteran Jose Rubiera was coming to America.
Britain's Mark Cavendish claimed his biggest road race win to date by outsprinting Australian ace Robbie McEwen into Schoten, Belgium, in the Scheldeprijs Vlaanderen semi-classic on Wednesday. T-Mobile's Cavendish thus succeeds Belgium's former world champion TomBoonen as the Scheldeprijs champion on the 100th anniversary of the Flemish semi-classic. The 21-year-old from the Isle of Man, who won Commonwealth Games track gold in the men's scratch race in Melbourne last year, inched past McEwen in the closing meters of the largely flat 197km race to seal a surprise
Georgia's on his mind
Cruz at Roubaix - happy to be back.
Meersman collects his first pro win
And suddenly Brajkovic looks like a contender
Brajkovic leads the break
Remember these guys? They're 29 minutes back
Louder rips a descent
Your race leader
Johnson taking his pulls
It’s a sign of the times. It used to be that the 29-inch mountain-bike was the thing of the fringe elements of the cycling world. No more… at least if the tech expo at Sea Otter was any indication. Major labels – Mavic, Hutchinson and Manitou among them – have recently embraced the concept and have rolled out a host of products including tubeless 29er wheel and tire sets and new long-travel 29er forks. Another theme is that of the event itself as well as many of the products promoted at it being ever more green. Clif Bar ran all of its vehicles for the event on recycled-cooking-oil Bio
Last Friday afternoon, under dark gray skies that made the moment feel as if night were about to fall, I stepped aboard our team bus, gingerly, and sat down. The bus was empty except for one soigneur who pulled out a washcloth and lotion and began scrubbing the grime off of my tender legs. Moments later Axel and Scott stepped on the bus, neither smiling, and sat down, legs outstretched, leaning way back in the chairs waiting their turn to get cleaned up. They looked beat, and if I could have seen my own face I would imagine it was just the same. Beat, but relieved. The last road stage of a
Last Friday afternoon, under dark gray skies that made the moment feel as if night were about to fall, I stepped aboard our team bus, gingerly, and sat down. The bus was empty except for one soigneur who pulled out a washcloth and lotion and began scrubbing the grime off of my tender legs. Moments later Axel and Scott stepped on the bus, neither smiling, and sat down, legs outstretched, leaning way back in the chairs waiting their turn to get cleaned up. They looked beat, and if I could have seen my own face I would imagine it was just the same. Beat, but relieved. The last road stage of a
After a frustrating finish to Monday’s opener, Toyota-United was rejoicing on Tuesday as Ivan Stevic sprinted to victory in stage 2 of the 2007 Tour de Georgia. J.J. Haedo (Team CSC) and Freddie Rodriguez (Predictor-Lotto) crossed second and third, while Daniele Contrini (Tinkoff Credit Systems) retained the leader’s jersey after a 135-mile day filled with crosswinds, crashes and a long, three-man break that wasn’t mopped until the peloton began marching on Rome. Complete results
Slipstream earns wild-card for CataluynaTeam Slipstream earned an important wild-card bid for next month’s 87th Volta a Catalunya race in Spain. The U.S. team’s invitation was among five issued Tuesday by organizers for the ProTour race set for May 21-27 in Spain’s Catalunya region. Other teams earning nods to join the 20 ProTour teams are Spanish teams Andalucia-Caja Sur, Relax-Gam, Fuerteventura-Canarias and Karpin-Galicia. Slipstream’s European base in nearby Girona, Spain, probably helped the squad to obtain the important invite. Earlier this year, Slipstream earned a berth in the
Stage 2 of the Tour de Georgia was a long one, and Casey Gibson was there from start to finish. Here's a sampler of what he saw in the middle.
Bike Friday's Jeff Linder shows off that the Tikit has a cover so your neighbor in the next seat on the subway won't cringe at your greasy bike near their designer jeans. It will roll when folded (and covered) making getting on and off subway
... and is quickly ready to roll for a commute
Mavic C29SSMAX tubeless wheels and Hutchinson Python 29 X 2.1 Tubeless Ready tires save a lot of 29-inch rotating weight. The wheels weigh 1745 grams/pair and sell for $775, while the tires weigh 645 grams and sell for $50 apiece.
Since through-axle forks have appeared on lighter and lighter bikes, it makes no sense to limit 20mm through-axle hubs to Shimano's freeride Saint and Hone groups, since some riders want ever-lighter big-hit bikes; enter the XTR through-axle fron
SRAM and SRM co-designed the Powermeter Pro carbon crank. It has a 12-spline system calibrated for SRM's strain gauges and adds 200 grams to the bike.
Big bamboo: Craig Calfee's new bamboo mountain bike is wrapped with hemp at the joints (sorry).
It is light, stiff, strong, and was getting a lot of test rides at Sea Otter.
The bright red Ellsworth limited-edition (#18 of 500 total that will be made) $4,000 NuVinci CVT-equipped cruiser has a very cool fork. The fat carbon fork legs continue through the double-clamp crown and neck down to form the handlebars.
The inchworm on the indicator of the Nuvinci continuously-variable rear hub transmission on its twist-grip lever shows you where in the range you are. The gear ratio ramps up and down smoothly with no discreet jumps.
The Manitou Minute 29er through-axle fork now joins the White Bros. BW 1.3 as a long- travel fork for a 29-inch wheel with a 20mm through-axle hub.
The 23-pound, 80mm-travel Niner Jet 9 with carbon Pace 29er fork breaks through a new weight barrier for full-suspension 29ers.
Stevic gets his closeup en route to victory
Ian McKissick of BMC laid it down in Rome; happily, despite the nasty crash, he was reported to be okay
Stevic wins it with room to spare
The early break
Toyota in control
Jacques-Maynes goes for the KOM
Toyota-United's Baldwin and Wherry discuss strategy
Chadwick has a dig
As does King
Haedo in the bunch
Discovery motoring along
Hamilton with one to go
The fans turn out
A peachy banner
As the countdown to the fifth edition of the Tour de Georgia hit its final hours, riders in need of a one last spin had to endure a blustery, damp Sunday in Peachtree City. But Monday’s forecast calls for clearing skies and temperatures in mid 60s, good news considering that already the event’s team presentation had to be scrapped because of rain. They did manage to hold a pre-race conference Saturday, where a mix of media, VIPs and team officials were treated to video presentation featuring marquee moments from the race’s first four years. Highlights included Mario Cipollini strutting his
Daniele Contrini (Tinkoff Credit Systems) won stage 1 of the 2007 Tour de Georgia on Monday, leaping away from a breakaway to cross the line alone in downtown Macon. The 33-year-old Italian made his move during a series of finishing circuits, using a brick climb to spring away from Ben Day (Navigators Insurance), Doug Ollerenshaw (Health Net-Maxxis) and Mike Sayers (BMC) to win the 98.5-mile stage from Peachtree City to Macon. Full results
Tyler Hamilton’s long absence from top-level racing in the U.S. finally came to an end Monday during the first stage of the Tour de Georgia. Following a five-plus year absence from UCI racing in the States, the 36-year-old finished safely in the bunch (56th for the record) on the 98.5-mile run from Peachtree City to Macon. Afterwards, Hamilton, who recently finished a two-year ban for blood doping, said it was an extraordinary day for him. “It was really emotional seeing [Daniele] Contrini there at the finish line,” said Hamilton of his Tinkoff teammate who took the stage 1 victory. “It was
The late King of Soul, James Brown, was there last year.
Contrini opens Tinkoff's U.S. account
Hamilton at the start in Peachtree City
Kirk O'Bee (Health Net) and Viktor Rapinsky (Navigators) have a dig
Ollerenshaw leads
Toyota waited until too late to join the chase
The leaders with two laps to go
Contrini rips it
It’s not often a rider enters the Roubaix velodrome alone, and an Australian has never done it in the 105-year history of cycling’s hardest one-day race. Stuart O’Grady did both Sunday in an emotional and powerful victory to become the first Aussie to win Paris-Roubaix in the hottest “Hell of the North” as far as anyone can remember.
Extra pix Roubaix
It could be an option if California officials ever have to find a solution to a drought. Hold an edition of the Sea Otter Classic and then just wait for rain. This year the rains came on Saturday, just in time for a weekend of serious racing. The rain came quickly and biblically, temporarily shutting down the dual slalom and ending the women’s road circuit race prematurely. The heavy rain also sent the cross-country racers scrambling for the right tire for the short-track event. Thomas Frischknecht (Swisspower) pulled out a special weapon for the race; a pair of 26-inch Dugast Rhino tubular
Sunday’s Sea Otter downhill race served as the gravity season’s opener. While the cross-country competitors had a chance to dust of the cobwebs at the NOVA National in Fountain Hills, Arizona, a couple of weeks ago, the gravity crew had yet to meet up. The short two-and-a-half minute course produced a surprise win for Brit Rachel Atherton (Animal-Commençal), while Nathan Rennie (Santa Cruz Syndicate) took his third Sea Otter downhill win. Saturday’s rain exacted chaos over the road, short-track and dual slalom races. The latter was postponed four hours — gravity riders finally took to the
Canadian Geoff Kabush and American Georgia Gould continued their strong early season run in cross-country events by winning at the Sea Otter Classic on Sunday. The two won their respective races in different fashion — Kabush in a sprint and Gould in a breakaway. Both riders left the Sea Otter Classic with an elevated sense of confidence heading into next week’s World Cup opener in Houffalize, Beligium. Unlike previous years, the 2007 Sea Otter Classic’s cross-country race was not part of a multi-day stage race, but the event held extra importance for cross-country riders looking to qualify
O'Grady takes a solo victory on the Roubaix velodrome
Extra pix Roubaix
Extra pix Roubaix
O'Grady cruising the cobbles
The victor and the spoils
Boonen left it a little too late
An emotional triumph
The sprint for second