Voeckler lays down the law
Voeckler lays down the law
Voeckler lays down the law
Paulinho in the escape
Danielson and Disco' get busy breaking legs
Contador attacks
Grinding it out and taking time
Sanchez chases
Horner lends a hand in the pursuit
The final podium
Toyota tops the podium
Despite the confusion, de Goede takes the win.
[nid:37790]The Spanish armada threw down an attack in Saturday’s brutal 200km sixth stage at Paris-Nice, but Davide Rebellin stood firm to retain the overall lead with one stage to go. Climbing sensation Alberto Contador (Discovery Channel) unleashed a brutal acceleration on the last of nine rated climbs, the Col du Tanneron with 20km to go, to gap the Gerolsteiner leader by 25 seconds. Rebellin never panicked and found some friends in the lead pack to check the aggression with less than 2km to go to retain his six-second grip on the maillot jaune.
Italian Riccardo Ricco (Saunier Duval) claimed his second consecutive victory in Tirreno-Adriatico by winning the fourth stage of the race, held over 158.3 km between Pievobigliana and here Saturday. Ricco also took over the race lead from Russian Alexander Areekev (Acqua e Sapone), who had claimed his own double on Thursday by winning the stage and claiming the lead. Italian star Ivan Basso, meanwhile, was forced to pull out of the event, known as the "Race of the two seas", during Saturday's stage. The Discovery Channel team leader had started despite injuring his left wrist in a
Ben Jacques-Maynes (Priority Health-Bissell) chalked up yet another win Saturday in the 30km Exeter Time Trial that opened this weekend's Quad Knopf Sequoia Cycling Classic in Central California, while Alison Powers (Colavita/Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light) took her first win of the season. Two-time national time trial champion Chris Baldwin (Toyota-United) trailed Jacques-Maynes by 34 seconds, while Anthony Colby (Colavita/Sutter Home), Chris Wherry (Toyota-United), and Canadian Eric Wohlberg (Symmetrics), rounded out the top five. Having just returned Tuesday from racing in
Sanchez takes the win
Sanchez wins
Rebellin's tired — but so are a lot of folks
Sanchez savors the moment
Danielson and Leipheimer in the break
Gerolsteiner chases
Contador on the march
Rebellin chasing
Contador and Sanchez working it
Dear Bob,I always enjoy reading your column. Lately though, I haven’t seen your column, which has been kind of disappointing for me. Where have you been? Are you still writing your column? I hope so.Anyway, last weekend, I had the pleasant surprise of seeing you speak at the Seattle Bike Expo. During your talk, you mentioned something about traffic citations while riding your bike counting against your driver’s license. Can you explain more about this? I find it hard to believe that I could lose my driver’s license for something I do while riding my bike.D.R.Seattle, WashingtonDear
It’s obvious Yaroslav Popovych enjoys life. The Ukraine attacker usually has a smile on his face and is quick with a joke, except when he’s on his bike. Then he’s everyone else’s worst nightmare. Popovych dropped the ax with 30km to go on the last of four rated climbs in Friday’s intense 178km fifth stage from Sorgues to Manosque to motor away from a breakaway that included Dave Zabriskie (CSC) and sent a panic jolt through the peloton.
Italian Riccardo Ricco (Saunier Duval) won Friday’s third stage of Tirreno-Adriatico, a 213km leg between Marsciano and Macerata. Russian Alexander Areekev (Acqua e Sapone), winner of stage 2, retains the overall lead. Meanwhile, Italian Ivan Basso (Discovery Channel) crashed and injured his left wrist, according to Gazzetta dello Sport. He finished the stage, but subsequently was taken to hospital for X-rays. No fracture was found, according to press reports, but there was some question as to whether Basso would start Saturday's fourth stage. World and Olympic champion Paolo Bettini
Legally Speaking - with Bob Mionske: Points is Points
Popo' hangs on to win by 14 seconds over the raging pursuit
Grabsch leads the break
Rebellin had to fight to keep the jersey
Gerolsteiner on the job
Zabriskie takes a pull
Horner and Predictor-Lotto lend a hand to the chase
Popo' was the leader on the road at one point
For the second time in two weeks, Alberto Contador delivered a big win in the 2007 season ahead of some pretty heady company. Last month at the Tour of Valencia, he beat Spanish sensation Alejandro Valverde at the key climbing stage up Alto de Campello. Contador hit the repeat button Thursday in the explosive 169.5km fourth stage at Paris-Nice. The new Discovery Channel recruit dropped the likes of L’Alpe d’Huez winner Frank Schleck and Tour de France candidate Cadel Evans on the short but steep summit finish to La Croix-Neuve to take an impressive win.
Alexander Areekev (Acqua e Sapone) won the second stage of Tirreno-Adriatico on Thursday to take the overall lead of the weeklong stage race. The 24-year-old Russian took the 202km leg from Civitavecchia to Marciano ahead of Italy's Daniele Contrini (Tinkoff Credit Systems). German Sven Krauss (Gerolsteiner) was third. Areekev now leads Contrini by 32 seconds with Krauss third, a further three seconds back. Spanish rider Ivan Gutierrez (Caisse d’Epargne), who crashed during the bunch sprint, was taken to hospital with chest injuries. Gutierrez will be under observation for 48 hours;
The former directeur sportif of the old Belgian Lotto team is one of 19 connected with the now disbanded outfit due in court later this month on charges ranging from fraud to doping. Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke and his wife, Lotto's secretary in 1997, could face fraud charges in connection with “irregularities” in accounts detailing the distribution of sponsorship monies from the Belgian national lottery, a judicial source revealed on Thursday. Frederique Barbich, spokesman for the local magistrate's court, confirmed that several may be facing criminal charges in the case. "The 19
VeloGear teamed up with VeloNews magazine illustrator David Brintonto create LesHéros du Vélo, a large-format wall calendar of Brinton'sillustrations for 2007. The illustrations are Brinton's personal tributeto the legends of cycling and feature twelve great riders of the twentiethcentury, including The Cannibal, the Badger, and the Eagle of Toledo. Thecalendar is now on sale for just $9.95 at VeloGear.com. In December, VeloGear asked cyclists to submit photos as part of a contestto promote the 2007 Les Héros du Vélo calendar. The contestbrought in more
A weary Contador exults in victory
The man to beat?
Thierry Marichal is being investigated for using and selling Pot Belge the volatile mixture of heroin and amphetamines.
Beautiful scenery, but a tough day in the saddle
Boonen loads up for the day's work
Danielson, meanwhile, was sweating on behalf of Contador and Leipheimer
And Pellizotti? He was watching that jersey slip off his shoulders
Moinard and Casar shelled Muravyev going over the Cote de Chabrits
Then it was Valjavec, Contador and Rebellin fighting it out for the win
Contador gets it
Megan and Gu
The artist currently known as Brintoni
Our latest reader-submitted PhotoGallery is now ready for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of our most recent contest. Like this week, we received a wealth of images from the Tour of California, among them a great shot of George Hincapie riding at the front of the peloton as the race works its way up Balcom Canyon. C. Starr Hathaway’s “Wristy Business” captures the heroic effort put in by one the hardest-working men in the peloton, as Hincapie rides nearly 100 miles with a broken wrist. Congratulations, C. Starr. Please drop us a note
You can’t blame Tom Boonen if he shot his arms up in triumph thinking that he had won a hard-fought, rising sprint into Maurs at the end of the lumpy 215.5km third stage at Paris-Nice. When he heard over his course radio that Russian rouleur Alexandr Kolobnev -- the lone holdout from the day’s four-man breakaway -- was dangling 20 seconds off the front with 7km to go, he assumed like everyone else his Quick Step henchmen would finish off the job to set up the mass gallop.
Many pros traveled to warmer environs early this in 2007 for early seasonteam training camps and plenty of quality miles on the open road. You mayalso have your own travel plans sometime over the next few weeks, in orderto train and get a jumpstart on your own race preparation. Chances arethat this cycling vacation includes plenty of restaurant eating, includingthe fast food, diners, and a variety of ethnic cuisines. Like the proswho have plenty of roadside eating experience, you too can make good foodchoices and prevent greasy platter predicaments that would normally thwartyour body
Australian Robbie McEwen held off two of his biggest rivals to win the first stage of Tirreno-Adriatico Wednesday in Civitavecchia, Italy. Predictor-Lotto’s 34-year-old sprint specialist, winner of 11 stages in the Tour de France, pulled clear of Oscar Freire (Rabobank) and Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) on the last curve with one of his trademark bursts of speed to win the 160km race in 4 hours, 38 minutes and 24 seconds. Freire, a former three-time world champion, crossed second with the Norwegian Hushovd third. McEwen said he called on his experience of two years ago to help him win the
The ongoing Spanish doping investigation, Operación Puerto, entered a new phase on Wednesday when a Madrid magistrate's court lodged an appeal against the case's dismissal. The inquiry, which came to light in May 2006 when police raids discovered an alleged blood-doping network run by the Madrid-based Dr Eufemiano Fuentes, considered to be the mastermind behind the network, was thrown out due to a lack of evidence. The probe uncovered an alleged doping network said to involve 58 cyclists out of some 200 athletes being treated by the doctor. Nonetheless, on Monday presiding
North American pro road racers and team staff, as well as racing fansaround the country, can breath a collective sigh of relief as officialsfrom both the Tourde Georgia and the U.S. Open Cycling Championships have confirmed that their respective events are all systems go. As reportedtwo weeks ago both events, the second and third on the USA CyclingPro Tour calendar, were without title sponsorship and facing large financialhurdles with their respective start dates quickly approaching. And whileneither race organizer has announced a high-dollar title sponsor, bothsay they are confident their
Hincapie-Wristy Business in Balcom Canyon
Kolobnev guts it out for the stage win
Baldato leads the four escapees
The Dordogne River
A long line through the meadows
Liquigas in pursuit
Kolobnev in full flight
Pellizotti gets to keep yellow for another day
And Kolobnev gets to celebrate a narrow, narrow triumph
It's gonna happen, after all.
I spent a couple of days last week in Las Vegas, with Paul Lew, ridingand inspecting his new superlight Pro VT-1 wheels. The pair I rode weighedless than – get this - 850 grams for the set. That’s not a claimed weight, either. I pulled the tires off after theride, checked the scale by using my standard calibration unit (otherwiseknown as a good old American quarter) and then measured the front at 350.5grams and the rear at 501.1. Keep in mind that includes what I’d guessto be about 10-15 grams of rim cement on the wheels. Now here comes the hard part. The wheels cost $5000 a pair with
[nid:37751]The 177km second stage of the eight-day Paris-Nice started with a lot of high hopes. David Millar was talking a wire-to-wire yellow jersey run. Thomas Voekler almost held off the peloton to steal a dramatic breakaway win. Everyone else was looking at Daniele Bennati and Tom Boonen. No one was looking at Franco Pellizotti.
Italian cyclist Danilo Di Luca has been ruled out of the Tirreno-Adriatico one-week stage race, his Liquigas team announced Tuesday. The 31-year-old rider, a former winner of the ProTour series, has been ruled out after he and teammate Leonardo Bertagnolli came down with flu. Their places will go to Francesco Failli and Finn Kjell Carlstrom. The team will be captained by Filippo Pozzato, the recent winner of the Het Volk semi-classic last week. Di Luca signaled his early season form by winning the Milan-Turin one-day semi-classic earlier this month. His best season was in 2005 when he won
A 501.1-gram rear wheel
It is very tough to cut boron fiber – and don't get any of the splinters in your fingers.
Zinn feels really comfortable in a hotel that welcomes bikes in the lobby
Zinn and Paul Lew take the Pro VT-1s out for a test ride.
Pellizotti takes stage, lead at Paris-Nice
Pellizotti takes the stage and the lead
Fischer takes his turn at the front of the break
Fischer and Voeckler soldier on
Saunier Duval chases
Lampre lends a hand
Millar sees that yellow jersey slip off his shoulders . . .