Local TT stud Drew Miller recovering after his effort, and heading out on the course to check out Tommy D’s ri …
Local TT stud Drew Miller recovering after his effort, and heading out on the course to check out Tommy D’s ride
Local TT stud Drew Miller recovering after his effort, and heading out on the course to check out Tommy D’s ride
Danielson off to a strong start
Kristen lines up
Hall of Fame seeks nominations
With the 2007 Tour de Langkawi now a memory, it’s time to consider the event’s future. Now 12 and counting, Malaysia’s national tour almost didn’t happen this year. Bad debt and the inevitable bad blood that follows had the race on life support for most of 2006. Only an 11th-hour bailout from the government — and some hard work by the Malaysian National Cycling Federation — saved the race from a fate that’s claimed plenty of its brethren over the years. These are expensive propositions that don’t yield the more quantifiable revenue streams of stadium sports. Ask a dozen people whether the
Crédit Agricole’s Anthony Charteau wrapped up the overall victory at the Tour de Langkawi on Sunday as Alberto Loddo added yet another win to his tally, equaling the record of five stage wins in a single year.
Basque climbing sensation Iban Mayo once had the cycling world on edge. With his dramatic stage victory at Alpe d’Huez in the 2003 Tour de France and his impressive victory at Dauphiné Libéré in 2004, Mayo was hyped as potential candidate to dethrone Lance Armstrong at the Tour. But Mayo fell on hard times, abandoning the 2004 Tour in humiliation and struggling through health issues in 2005. He rebounded in 2006 with a stage victory at La Toussuire in the Dauphiné and overall victory at the Tour of Burgos to show glimpses of the former giant-killer This year, the Basque climber is hoping
Langkawi's dedicated crew celebrates another edition
The bike in Malaysia is more tool than anything else...
... and racing is still something of a novelty.
Will he race?
Giant-Asia takes the team prize.
Loddo adds another check to his win column
The final stage takes the peloton through...
The peloton rolls off for an 80km closer to a 10-day tour
... an assortment of Kuala Lampur neighborhoods.
Mayo is sporting a new kit this year
Anthony Charteau is well on his way to winning the Le Tour de Langkawi overall title, following a largely tactical ride from Putrajaya to Seremban on Saturday. Although the ninth – and penultimate – stage of the Tour put the Crédit Agricole rider up against the winding roads of Kuala Klawang, he kept up with the leaders over the course of day’s many climbs to maintain his 1:02 over Jose Serpa (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovannio), who won Thursday’s decisive stage to the Genting Higlands.
While soon-to-be overall winner Anthony Charteau and four-time stage winner Alberto Loddo will be the names most remembered from the 2007 Tour de Langkawi, arguably the most newsworthy accomplishment belongs to the Giant Asia Racing Team. By placing three riders in the top 30 on Saturday, the Taiwan-based squad all but locked up the 10-day race’s team title. And we are not talking about the Asian team title. They are going to beat everyone. Giant Asia entered stage 9 one second back of Charteau’s Crédit Agricole team, but more than made up that deficit during Saturday’s 173km run from
Some of cycling’s biggest names are scheduled to line up Sunday for the opening stage of the five-day Mallorca Challenge, but a breakout of the flu is keeping some top stars away from the annual Spanish season opener. A nasty bout of flu is taking its toll on the European peloton, with such riders as Oscar Pereiro and two-time champ Alejandro Valverde (both Illes Balears) and Gilbert Simoni (Saunier Duval-Prodir) all doubtful for Sunday’s 100km opener along Palma de Mallorca´s historic bay. "Several of our riders have been very sick with the flu and they’ve been sent home," Illes Balears
Elite USA Cycling Coach Presents Base Building Clinics in Santa CruzThomas Chapple will discuss early-season training techniques fromhis new bookBoulder, CO, February, 2007 - This February, elite USA Cyclingand Ultrafit coach Thomas Chapple will discuss the concepts of base trainingin Santa Cruz, CA. Cyclists often think that preparing for next seasonmeans piling on the miles, but long rides at high or even medium intensitiestoo early in the season can actually do more harm than good. In his comprehensiveguide BaseBuilding for Cyclists: A New Foundation for Endurance and Performance,Chapple
Tinkoff gets its first win
Saturday's ride appears to have given the boys from Giant Asia a lock on the team title
No one was conceding anything to Charteau on Saturday.
The Mosque at Putrajaya
Serpa and Rujano keeping cool
Lange took a flyer in the last kilometer.
Anthony Charteau maintened his hold on the jersey Saturday.
Charteau closing in on Langkawi title as Tinkoff gets its first-ever win
Charteau closing in on Langkawi title as Tinkoff gets its first-ever win
The Tinkoff boys were active all day
Dean leads the chase
Press Release - Base Building Clinics in Santa Cruz
For the second time in as many years Jose Serpa was first man across the line at the top of the hors categorie Genting Highlands stage, but the Colombian Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni rider couldn’t make up enough time to unseat the overall race leader Anthony Charteau.
French media have reported that American Floyd Landis has declined a U.S.Anti-Doping Agency request to release remaining urine samples from lastsummer’s Tour de France for additional testing. Landis, who is scheduled to appear before a USADA panel in May, hadbeen asked to permit the release of remaining B-samples for tests to detectthe presence of exogenous testosterone. Landis tested positive for an elevated testosterone/epitestosteroneratio following his spectacular come-from-behind stage17 victory at the Tour. The win ensured his overall title at the Tour,but that win was called into
Due to a quality issue with the titanium alloy used in the mountingbolt of a limited number of the new Force road group’s front brakes, SRAMhas issued a voluntary recall to consumers in possession of the brakes.Roughly 10 have failed. SRAM asks consumers discontinue riding until the front Force brake caliperhas been replaced.According to SRAM' media manager, Michael Zellmann, the problem was identifiedthrough SRAM’s internal quality process. A small number of the titaniummounting bolts failed during the installation process. There have beenno injuries associated with the defect. Affected
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,
USA Today reported Friday that the Discovery Channel is expected to drop its title sponsorship of the cycling team that bears its name at the end of the 2007 season. The decision not to renew the team’s contract at the end of a three-year contract comes only days after the firing of company CEO Billy Campbell, a strong advocate of the team sponsorship, on Monday of this week. Campbell, who helped push the television network’s initial co-sponsorship in 2004, also pushed the company to assume full title sponsorship in 2005, when the U.S. Postal Service ended its support for the team. The
Floyd Landis blasted the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) on Friday regarding the agency’s efforts to subject cleared doping samples from last Tour de France to additional testing. Landis tested positive for an elevated testosterone/epitestosterone ratio after winning stage 17 of the Tour last July but has challenged the handling of the sample and testing conditions at the French national anti-doping laboratory (LNDD) at Châtenay-Malabry, which processed the dope test. In a statement issued Friday, Landis said he was responding to a report in the French sports newspaper l'Equipe
Serpa likes the climb at Genting, although he might have appreciated it more had it been longer.
Gianni Savio congratulates the day's winner and vows to keep fighting
Walter Pedraza stayed with Serpa as long as he could
Serpa recovers and watches the clock
A short stage, with a killer finish
Up, up and away....
Serpa and new Asian GC leader Ghader Mizbani
'I try to go as long as I can until I blow,' explained Duggan
Charteau keeps the jersey
Serpa wins at Genting, but Charteau battles to hold Langkawi lead
Landis, on his way to doping control after his stage 17 win
SRAM issues road brake recall
Hincapie may wear stars-and-stripes again in '08, but the globe won't be there.
Wearing thick gloves, long tights and hats beneath their helmets, New Mexican cyclists of all ages crowded the parking lot of the Anderson-Abruzzo Balloon Museum in Albuquerque on a brisk Saturday morning on February 3. They awaited the arrival of the Navigators Insurance and Lipton professional cycling teams, both of which had come to Albuquerque for a winter training camp. When both squads rolled up, accompanied by riders from the neo-pro Cycling Center team, the entire group of 200 hit the streets for a group ride. It isn’t often that professional cycling teams spin alongside locals
Japan’s Shinichi Fukusima proved that persistence and hard work are the key to success as he became the first Asian to win a stage in this year’s Tour de Langkawi following a strong 174km ride from Kuantan to Karak. The stage win for the rider from the Nippo-Meitan Hompo team was only the third stage victory for an Asian rider in the 12-year history of the tour, following wins by Wong Kam Po in 2000 and Koji – the younger brother of Shinichi – Fukushima in 2005.
Damiano Cunego has marked two very clear goals for his 2007 racing. Cunego, who said he enjoyed “excellent” winter training, is motivated to have a strong run at the Giro d’Italia podium and shine in the spring classics. “Compared to 2006, it’s true there are less difficult stages but I don’t agree with those who said it’s less difficult,” Cunego told the Italian web page cicloweb.it. “It’s a balanced course with a few decisive days.” Cunego won the 2004 Giro in spectacular fashion, but suffered through media pressure and health issues in 2005 only to bounce back with a solid campaign last
Making the leap from top-flight amateur to ProTour neo pro is never easy. But throw in a continent’s worth of distance from cycling’s European epicenter and the task becomes exponentially harder. That’s the challenge that faces South African Daryl Impey, one of the top national team riders at this year’s Tour de Langkawi. Through seven stages, the 22-year-old from Johannesburg has scored three top 10 finishes in the five bunch sprint finishes, and he is one of only two riders to sprint ahead of the race’s dominant force, four-time stage winner Alberto Loddo (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni). On
Floyd Landis says he will not defend his Tour de France title following an agreement he has made with the French Anti-Doping Agency (AFLD). In return the agency agreed to postpone its hearing into the failed doping test that Landis returned after winning the race last July. The French proceedings could result in him being banned from racing again in France. Landis, who tested positive for an elevated testosterone/epitestosterone ratio after his triumph in Paris, had already made it clear that he would not attend Thursday's AFLD hearing in Paris. He is due to appear before the U.S.
After a spending a day in their normal team kits, riders from the Belgian-Swedish Unibet.com team were forced back into their distinctive question-marked jerseys Thursday at the Etoile de Bessèges. Oddly enough, the team resumed its winning ways with the switch, as Unibet’s Baden Cooke easily won the sprint at the end of the 155km second stage from Nîmes to Saint-Ambroix. The team was once again required to wear jerseys sans the name of its title sponsor because French authorities said the team – sponsored by an online betting site - was promoting gambling and “lotteries,” which are banned
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (February 8, 2007) - State and local officialsplus race organizers announced the cities that will play host to startsand finishes for the inaugural world-class professional cycling race, theTour of Missouri, September 11-16, 2007. Patterned after the famous Tour de France, the race will featurepoint to point racing in six stages, as more than 120 world-class cyclistswill traverse west to south to east through more than 600 miles of theShow Me State. The cities of Kansas City, Clinton, Springfield, Branson, Lebanon, Columbia,Jefferson City, St. Charles, and St. Louis have
Chilly as it was this year, Albuquerque serves as an ideal training camp, says Beamon
A big crowd of locales welcomed the pros for a group ride.
VeloPort: The concept is there - voters will decide if the money will be.
Wide-open roads - One big advantage the Rocky Mountain West has over California
This year, the team has skipped Langkawi to focus on a single training camp for the entire squad.
They must like cycling in Albuquerque: No one at the hotel even complained about this.
Lipton will focus on defending its national team title...
...but will spend time in Europe as well.
With his stage win, Fukusima moves into second on GC
Loddo's presence in the break ensured its success
Charteau and crew were content to monitor the gap... and worry about Thursday.
The jerey holders: Loddo, Fukusima and Charteau
Cunego won the white jersey at the '06 Tour, but may focus on regaining his pink jersey from 2004
Impy is developing into a solid all-rounder
Fukushima hopes to be smiling on Thursday, too.
The press corps at Langkawi
Do you think Unibet.com is still getting publicity from all of this?
Press Release - Tour of Missouri organizers release race details
Press Release - Tour of Missouri organizers release race details
The man is on a streak. Alberto Loddo scored his fourth win at the Tour de Langkawi Wednesday, again frustrating Ceramiche Panaria’s Maximiliano Richeze in a charge to the line at the end of a 137-kilometer ride from Kuala Terengganu to Cukai. Loddo (Selle Italia-Serramenti) charged across the line ahead of the main field, which included Crédit Agricole’s Anthony Charteau, the overall race leader who was more than content to finish in 59th place, secure in the knowledge that he holds a four-minute buffer with Friday’s short, but decisive, ride to the Genting Highlands ahead.
Dear Monique:I have read your column in VeloNews for a while and have bothenjoyed and appreciated the knowledge. I have a questions about weightloss and it’s effect on the immune system.For the past few years I have been competing in the sport of triathlon.This year I decided to race bikes for the first six months. I knew thatbecause of the importance of the power to weight ratio, I would need tolose both “after season” weight from last year and some additional bodyfat to be competitive in the climbs.I set out to lose most of the weight (was 180 lb.) during the first12 weeks. I wrote down