This time, no commissaires were required
This time, no commissaires were required
This time, no commissaires were required
The stage podium
Clocking in and going to work
Another scenic
Basso on the job
The finish-line crowd awaits a show, and a show they got
A musical sendoff
Fit for an angel?
Bettini on the first climb
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. Mike Chilcoat’s “Mike Gann in Sedona,” had us pining for spring. Sure it indicates a bit of geographic bias, but it’s been a tough winter for us here in the Rockies and we’re ready for a bit of warm-weather riding in Arizona. Nice work, Mike. 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 take a lookat our latest
For the second year in a row, American Levi Leipheimer took the podium of the Amgen Tour of California as the race leader in his hometown of Santa Rosa. This year, however, it wasn’t under circumstances the Discovery Channel rider would have chosen. Australian sprinter Graeme Brown (Rabobank) won Monday's Stage 1 after Leipheimer went down in a 50-rider pile-up with two 3-mile laps of a downtown finishing circuit remaining in the 156.4km stage.
The domestic Priority Health team enjoyed a great first day in its first Tour of California, with Ben Jacques-Maynes taking third in the prologue and Brian Sheedy winning the race’s first King of the Mountains jersey. "This whole team is really coming together well," said Jacques-Maynes before Sunday’s prologue. "I think we’re really going to show ourselves. People may not have heard of us before now; we’ve been an upstart team. But people are really going to know us by the end of this tour." Racing the Tour of California last year under Sierra Nevada’s banner, Jacques-Maynes muscled his
Freire wins in RutaOscar Freire drove home the bunch Monday to win the second stage of the Ruta del Sol, a 156.6km stage from Vegas del Genil to Cazorla in southern Spain. The three-time world champion held off Francisco José Ventoso (Saunier Duval-Prodir) in the mass sprint to snag his second win of the 2007 season. The Rabobank sprinter, who just missed victory in Sunday’s opener after Dario Cioni (Predictor-Lotto) held off a long breakaway, clawed within one second of Cioni’s lead thanks to time bonuses. The race continues Tuesday with the third stage. Hamilton satisfied, eyes Georgia
A last-ditch meeting Monday between the UCI and ASO made little headway toward solving the disagreements threatening to push the ProTour league into chaos. The UCI issued a terse statement Monday evening saying it would be reviewing its options on how to deal with the upstart race organizers after being snubbed yet again by officials from ASO, the organizers of such events as the Tour de France, Paris-Roubaix and Paris-Nice. "ASO has staked its position, with contempt of the function and legitimacy of the UCI as an international federation, and plans to substitute it with a destabilizing
Narrow, nervous and windy — that was the report from Stage 1 of the 2007 Amgen Tour of California, which saw more than one rider hit the deck between Sausalito and Santa Rosa. But Casey Gibson's shots remind us that it's not all pain and suffering out there. Take a peek.
Mike Gann in Sedona
Leipheimer drilling it
He'll take the jersey to his hometown of Santa Rosa today
Basso races past Coit Tower
World TT champ Cancellara
The ever-smiling Horner
Julich, back to racing after a tough 2006
O'Grady represents for Oz
Vande Velde
U.S. TT champ Zabriskie
Jacques-Maynes
Leipheimer in an unscarred yellow jersey
Despite crashing on the finishing circuit, Leipheimer retains the yellow jersey
The crash in sequence: Going . . .
. . . going . . .
. . . really going . . .
. . . and gone.
Levi and friends at the start in Sausalito
Hincapie and Zabriskie chat it up before the gun
Rolling out of town
Discovery keeping a tight leash on the bunch
Peterson manages to slip away
Bettini has a chat at the back
Abraham was one of the day's casualties
Fans pack the Coleman Valley KOM
Where did you ride today?
Another scenic
T-Mobile drilling it, right before the big crash
And Levi enjoying another day in yellow
The fast, furious finish
Bettini and Leipheimer chat it up
The long and winding road
More of the same
Oh, let's have a break, whaddaya say?
Disco' drilling it
Curb to curb
The stage podium
One of the world champ's many fans
After a several months of training we are now ready, and eager to race. The last few weeks the eight-man T-Mobile Tour of California squad has been in Buellton, California training and fine-tuning for the coming season. Storm after storm blew through Boulder every weekend during the last months of 2006 and the first months of 2007 and after spending a few good weeks in the sun in Mallorca, I wasn’t too keen to train outdoors in the snow or indoors on the trainer, so I made the decision to head to the California for some sun and time in the saddle. Prior to our team camp I rode alone in
The 2006 season was not a good one to be a cycling doctor, but the string of doping scandals that traumatized cycling last year could have a positive effect on the sport. In the wake of the departure of franchise rider Jan Ullrich, T-Mobile has instituted a groundbreaking monitoring program it says will guarantee that its riders are not cheating. And in the process, they hope to help rebuild the credibility of the sport in the eyes of fans and media. Dr. Lothar Heinrich has been a T-Mobile doctor since 1995. But he nearly quit cycling following the revelations that came out of the Operación
VeloNews Play Action hosted by Charles PelkeyTo View VeloNews Play Action using your mobile device:From your mobile device set your browser to the URL https://www.velonews.com/live_mobileThe current stage will load with real time updates. To end the Live Coverage feature close your mobile device browser. *Note- Pages are set to refresh every 3 minutes to stay with the current play action. If your browser does not refresh after a minute you may have to manually refresh it. Contact your mobile device subscription provider if you have concerns about additional charges that can be applied to this
The world’s top cycling team in 2006, Team CSC, spent the first two weeks of February at a training camp in Gilroy, California. Team director Bjarne Riis didn’t pick the self-proclaimed "Garlic Capital of the World" for its plethora of pungent produce, but for its farm roads swooping into and around the Santa Cruz Mountains, which provide an ideal training ground. Plus Gilroy sits a short spin away from roads that will be the battleground for the first half of the Amgen Tour of California, which begins today in San Francisco. CSC has lofty goals in California, as demonstrated by the depth of
Embattled 2006 Tour de France winner Floyd Landis struck out at UCI president Pat McQuaid on Sunday, accusing cycling's top official of subjecting him to a trial by media as he prepares for an arbitration hearing before the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. Landis was reacting to a story in the San Jose Mercury News in which McQuaid was quoted as saying that Landis’s defense against a positive doping test from stage 17 of last year’s Tour is simply damage control at an "epic" level. "Every athlete who tests positive blames the system and somebody else," said McQuaid. "Floyd's no different.
A thousand cyclists marched through the Spanish city of Vigo on Sunday to demand that Oscar Pereiro be declared the winner of the 2006 Tour de France. "It's great to see the people support me," said the Caisse d'Epargne rider, who finished second to Floyd Landis in last year’s Tour. The American subsequently tested positive for a skewed testosterone-epitestosterone level and faces arbitration before the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. Sunday’s protest was dubbed the "yellow march" in reference to the color of the winner's jersey in the Tour. Organizers say they will now send a
Defying an increasing wind that saw the likes of world time-trial champion Fabian Cancellara (CSC) fall out of contention, Levi Leipheimer stormed to the Amgen Tour of California prologue win on Sunday atop Telegraph Hill in San Francisco. The last rider to leave the starting house, Leipheimer flew down the flat one-mile stretch of The Embarcadero along the water before turning onto the steep Telegraph Hill climb towards Coit Tower with pitches as steep as 22 percent.
It was a short race, but a dramatic one, with a former trash-truck driver holding off some of the best riders in the world — until defending prologue winner Levi Leipheimer clocked in and went to work. Casey Gibson was there to capture it all; here's what he sent home.
The ever-stylish Bettini
Just check out those shoes
Talk about your golden slippers
Tim Johnson's footwear is a tad understated by comparison
A Quick Step wrench on the job
Vogels gets his game face on
Heinrich hopes to help rebuild cycling's credibility
Julich is ready to race again after a disappointing 2006
Instead of warming up for the Tour of California prologue and a title defense, Landis was riding around San Francisco this morning
Leipheimer does it again
The upstart Donald nearly pulled off the win
World TT champ Cancellara finished fifth
Zabriskie was sanguine: 'That’s just the way cycling is'
Leipheimer takes the podium
Never before has there been such a plethora of leading time trialists on display in an American stage race as fans will see this Sunday and next Friday at the Amgen Tour of California. Three of the top four from last year’s world TT championships will be competing — gold and silver medalists Fabian Cancellara and Dave Zabriskie of CSC, and their former teammate Brian Vandborg, now with Discovery Channel — along with the top two from the Tour de France prologue, Thor Hushovd of Crédit Agricole and George Hincapie of Discovery. Joining them are such powerful riders against the clock as CSC’s