Tour de France Director Christian Prudhomme (L) and general director of ASO, Patrick Clerc
Tour de France Director Christian Prudhomme (L) and general director of ASO, Patrick Clerc
Tour de France Director Christian Prudhomme (L) and general director of ASO, Patrick Clerc
UCI president Pat McQuaid, in happier times.
Floyd Landis and Tom Danielson battle on Brasstown Bald in the 2006 Tour de Georgia
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you havea comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen incycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write toWebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name andhome town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Writersare encouraged to limit their submissions to one letter per month.The letters published here contain the opinions of the submittingauthors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions, policies or positionsof VeloNews.com, VeloNews magazine or our parent company, InsideCommunications,
Alessandro Petacchi gingerly stepped off the sign-in podium ahead of Wednesday’s second stage at the Volta a Comunidad Valenciana. Even though he says his left knee is close to 100 percent after his disastrous crash in last May’s Giro d’Italia, the Gentleman Sprinter isn’t taking any chances. “My leg isn’t yet 100 percent, but it’s getting better and better,” said Petacchi, who won a long sprint ahead of Spain’s Vicente Reynes. “At [Tour of] Qatar, I couldn’t make the sprints against [Tom] Boonen because my knee hurt, but my condition improved in Algarve and now I am feeling even better
Oscar Sevilla was all smiles at the start of Wednesday’s second stage at the Tour of Valencia in what’s his first race back in action after being kicked out ahead of the Tour de France last July. Sevilla, now 30, was among nine riders not allowed to start the 2006 Tour after his named appeared on the infamous Operación Puerto list. Like all riders implicated in the scandal, Sevilla never received any official bans or sanctions, but that didn’t stop his T-Mobile team from letting him go last year. Sevilla has since penned a deal to join Spanish continental team Relax-GAM for the 2007 season
DBC Events Announces “The Boulder Cup” Television ProgramAirs March 3 on Altitude Sports & EntertainmentFebruary 24 (BOULDER, Colo) DBC Events announced today the broadcastdate of “The Boulder Cup”television program, a recap show of the cyclocross race of the samename held last fall in Boulder, Colo.The 30 minute broadcast will air March 3 at 5:00 pm MT on AltitudeSports & Entertainment.Cyclocross has its roots in racers trying to maintain fitness in thecolder months by riding off-road andrunning over barriers. This niche sport has grown into the fastestgrowing segment of bicycling in
Petacchi is closing in on his old form
Sevilla is back
The season is now fully underway and I now have my first race under my belt: the Tour of California. The race was a triumph for American cycling with massive crowds attending each stage, a world class peloton (likely the best competing at any race in the world at the moment) and a hard fought battle that lasted right up until the penultimate stage. For us, the cyclists, it was a quality event that was well organized, with good hotels, short transfers, and ideal weather. The racing was tough enough for us to gain fitness and progress while not depleting ourselves too much this early in the
Belgian cycling legend Eddie Merckx has paid tribute to embattled German star Jan Ullrich, who announced his retirement from cycling. Ullrich's decision to quit came after he was implicated in an alleged blood-doping network being run by a Spanish doctor, Eufemiano Fuentes, and sacked by his T-Mobile team during last year's Tour de France race. The team said at the time that damaging evidence from Spanish investigators in Madrid prompted the decision to drop its star rider. Announcing his decision Monday, Ullrich, 33, the 1997 Tour de France winner and five-time runner-up, said he
The near-universal reaction to Patrick O’Grady’s latest Foaming Rant about Jan Ullrich was a big thumbs-down, the general sentiment being that if anyone should be dope-tested, vilified and hounded out of the sport forever, it should be our acerbic editor at large. A representative sample follows. Tune in Friday as O’Grady takes on a basket of puppies and kitties with a ball-peen hammer. —Editor Karmically bankruptEditor:Way cold. I hope you're tutoring blind orphans in your spare time because otherwise your karma bank is gonna be way upside down after that number. I'm not an Jan
Any sprint victory with Alessandro Petacchi among protagonists is one worth celebrating, especially when it comes in the run-up to the season’s most important race for Italian sprinters. Daniele Bennati (Lampre) snatched a morale-boosting victory ahead of next month’s Milan-San Remo after he surprised a leg-heavy Petacchi, who was forced to chase back from a puncture with nine kilometers to go in the 162.7km Valenciana opener in Alzira. “I knew the only chance to beat Petacchi was to anticipate his sprint and I did that today just at the right moment,” said Bennati, who held off Petacchi by
Follow this link for full Coverage of the 2007 Amgen Tour of California
Questions, and suggestions, about stuck seatposts, especially carbon posts
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. This week, we kept checking out Jesper HV Lauritsen’s “Fighting uphill,” a picture that captures that intensity of racing one-on-one with the guy who might be beating you for a podium spot or 55th place. Jesper’s shot seemed to tell that story for us. Nice shot, Jesper. 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
Bettini narrowly edges Gerald Ciolek in San Luis Obispo
George led an epic chase... with a broken arm
Merckx says Ullrich's retirement 'a sad way to go out'
Bennati - here winning stage 2 at the Tour of the Mediterranean - is starting his season with a bang.
Fighting Uphill
Complete Coverage - Amgen Tour of California
The early season Spanish racing calendar continues this week with the five-stage Volta a la Comunidad Valenciana. With riders anxious to put some racing miles in their legs ahead of the approaching spring classics, the race is enjoying a fine field with top sprinters and classics-hunters looking to hone their form. Among preliminary start lists are such heavyweights as Alexandre Vinokourov, making his season debut in Astana colors. The Vuelta a España champion will likely keep a low profile as Vino is betting everything on being prepared for the Tour de France. Caisse d’Epargne will have a
Embattled German cycling star Jan Ullrich, a former winner and five-time runner-up of the Tour de France, announced his retirement from cycling on Monday. Ullrich was one of dozens of cyclists implicated in an alleged doping network in Spain last year, which forced him out of competing in last year's Tour de France along with many other top riders. The 33-year-old, the only German to win the world's most prestigious bike race, claimed Monday he never once cheated in his career. "Today I'm ending my career as a professional cyclist. I never once cheated as a cyclist," said
"Unlike [Lance] Armstrong, [Jan] Ullrich doesn't have the killer instinct. He's not obsessed. It's too bad. Because if you mixed the professionalism of an Erik Zabel with the talent of a Jan Ullrich, you'd have an Eddy Merckx." — T-Mobile team manager Walter Godefroot after the 2004 Tour de France Jan Ullrich has finally hung up his bibs, saying he never cheated despite pernicious rumors to the contrary, most of them coming from the Operación Puerto inquiry, apparently headed by a Spanish graduate of the Inspector Clouseau Close Cover Before Striking School of Earning Big Pay
Valenciana gives the Astana team a chance to try its legs.
Ullrich insists he did nothing wrong
Innocent or guilty, Ullrich closes a spectacular career on a sad note.
Ullrich struggled to stay at fighting weight, providing comedic fodder for a certain cartoonist
Overall 1. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Discovery Channel, 24:57:24 2. Jens Voigt (G), CSC, at 0:21 3. Jason McCartney (USA), Discovery Channel, at 0:54 4. Bobby Julich (USA), CSC, at 1:06 5. Stuart O'Grady (Aus), CSC, at 1:16 6. Christian Vandevelde (USA), CSC, at 1:24 7. Michael Rogers (Aus), T-Mobile, at 1:32 8. Ben Day (Aus), Navigators Insurance, at 1:38 9. Franco Pellizotti (I), Liquigas-Bianchi, at 1:41 10. Ryder Hesjedal (Can), Health Net Maxxis, at 1:57
Shoreline Drive in Long Beach may not be the Champs-Élysées, but just as the Tour de France traditionally ends with a sprinters’ showdown, so the 2007 Amgen Tour of California climaxed Sunday afternoon with a spectacular mass charge to the line. And just as a surprising winner often takes the Tour’s final stage, so Cuban Ivan Dominguez shocked the heavy hitters of the UCI ProTour and give the stage 7 victory to his domestic American team, Toyota-United.
Eusebio Unzué has had a front-row seat to some of the most exciting exploits in cycling. The affable and passionate sport director for Spain’s Navarra region helped guide Pedro Delgado and then Miguel Indurain into the record books during what were the golden years of Spanish cycling in the late 1980s and mid-1990s. As sport director at Caisse d’Epargne-Illes Balears, Unzué is already well into his third decade behind the wheel in Spain’s most consistent and successful team. Unzué, who celebrates his 52nd birthday on Monday, has been the right-hand man to team manager José Miguel Echávvari
Pozzato snags Haut VarItalian Filippo Pozzato snagged an impressive victory Sunday in the 39th Tour du Haut-Var as a warm-up toward defending his Milan-San Remo crown next month. The Liquigas captain edged Simon Gerrans (Ag2r) and Spanish rider Ricardo Serrano (Tinkoff) to win the 200km race in the hilly country around Draguignan that also kick-started the season-long French Cup series. Pozzato, the heavy pre-race favorite, covered an early move that included 22 riders in the open half of the race. Leonardo Giordani was the day’s main protagonist after slipping away in a solo move for some
That's a wrap, as they say in Hollywood (hey, it's Oscar night; so sue us). Here's Casey Gibson's final envelope from the Amgen Tour of California.
The big Cuban pulls it off
Unzué is optimistic regarding Valverde's Tour chances
The big Cuban scores the only victory by a non-ProTour rider in this year's race
The break built a lead of three minutes and change
But once the chase was on, the escapees were pulled back
Leipheimer finished in the bunch to take the final overall title
The pace wasn't exactly killer
Leipheimer takes the overall
And away we go
Basso leads Discovery on the circuits
Danielson and Basso lead Leipheimer up Ocean Boulevard
Bettini at the back, enjoying the view
The break nearly went all the way
But it was Dominguez who took the stage and the podium, in front of family and friends
Leipheimer finished a little later
His biggest problem to date: a balky champagne bottle
The top three overall
And who's this? Homeland Security? Hey, wait a minute . . . .
[nid:37650]When people look back at the developing history of the Amgen Tour of California they will say that the race came of age on stage 6 of the 2007 edition. Even though Saturday’s 105.4-mile stage from Santa Barbara ended in a mass sprint in sunny Santa Clarita, won by Team CSC’s J.J. Haedo from T-Mobile’s Greg Henderson and Quick Step’s world champion Paolo Bettini, this was no parade.
Professional teams caught up in a mounting feud between cycling's world ruling body and major race organizers have announced they will not boycott the first major race of the season next week. The UCI ruled last week that teams aiming to take part in the Paris-Nice stage race would be doing so against the rules of the ProTour, which the UCI introduced more than two years ago. Paris-Nice organizer Amaury Sports Organization (ASO), which also runs the Tour de France, recently declared that it would remove the event from the ProTour calendar and conduct it under the auspices of the French
You can’t mention the words "mountain biking" and "USA Cycling" without dropping the name Matt Cramer. Cramer heads up USA Cycling’s mountain-bike development team of Sam Jurekovic, Collin Cares and newcomer Tad Elliot, and helps keep elite athletes informed on the ever-changing rules, regulations and policies governing fat-tire racing in America. With the 2008 Olympics in Beijing looming on the horizon, Cramer will be an integral cog in USA Cycling’s machine for picking the America’s Olympic cross-country team. VeloNews readers may remember that USA Cycling’s lack of action led to much
Olympic champion Bradley Wiggins returned to the track with a winning individual-pursuit ride on Friday during the final round of the 2006-07 UCI Track World Cup series in Manchester, Great Britain. In his first individual pursuit since winning gold in Athens in 2004, the 26-year-old beat Russia's Alexander Serov in a time of 4 minutes, 17.864 seconds while Australia's Brad McGee was almost five seconds slower. "To do that in a first competitive race - I'm really pleased," said Wiggins. "Because you can go as hard as you like in training but you never know until you get on the
It was one for the books today — CSC's Stuart O'Grady nearly pulled off a race-changing break, Discovery's George Hincapie was one of the main engines in the successful pursuit, despite a broken arm, and record crowds saw it all happen. So did Casey Gibson, and he was taking pictures. Here they are.
Wiggins ripping it up
Haedo takes another win
The audacious break
Another day, another jersey
Leipheimer and Voigt, mano a mano
Hincapie and Cruz hit the deck
Back in the battle
And leading the chase
Discovery gets some backup from Health Net
Glad this day's over with
Rolling out of Santa Barbara
But not before official Carla Geyer does a little donut business off the back of her moto
Lagutin meets the fans
And O'Grady drives the break
Disco' chases
Leipheimer pitched in, too
Johnson gets in on the action for Health Net
But it was CSC's Haedo doing all the celebrating at the line
As for Hincapie, his reward was a visit to the race doc, who diagnosed a broken arm
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you havea comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen incycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write toWebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name andhome town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Writersare encouraged to limit their submissions to one letter per month.The letters published here contain the opinions of the submittingauthors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions, policies or positionsof VeloNews.com, VeloNews magazine or our parent company, InsideCommunications,
[nid:37630]Seconds after Discovery Channel’s Levi Leipheimer hurtled across the finish line in Solvang to win Friday’s time-trial stage of the Amgen Tour of California, he repeatedly punched the air and let out a guttural scream of excitement. The thousands of fans lining the finishing straight roared their approval for his stunning performance, realizing that it virtually wraps up his overall victory in the eight-day race.
The UCI fired back at rebel race organizers Friday and officially banned ProTour and second-tier continental teams from starting next month’s Paris-Nice race in France. The stern ruling threatens to throw the cycling into turmoil at the start of the 2007 season and marks a definitive split between cycling’s governing body and Amaury Sports Organization, the powerful media conglomerate that also owns such events as the Tour de France and Paris-Roubaix. In a tersely written statement issued Friday afternoon, cycling’s governing body said “teams holding a UCI ProTour license and UCI