A team with big men’s and women’s programs riding under the same banner.
A team with big men's and women's programs riding under the same banner.
A team with big men's and women's programs riding under the same banner.
Meet the new boss, not the same as the old boss.
After a bit of a tumble, Millar is back on the road.
Harmony With Nature
The best of '06: Bixby Bridge - Tour of California (BIG FILE)
VeloNews Photo Contest: A new winner, a new gallery and the best of '06
Former Swiss cycling champion Martin Elmiger relaunched his professional career by winning the Tour Down Under after some thrilling final-day drama on Sunday. Australian sprint king Robbie McEwen meanwhile claimed victory in the 81km, 18-lap final stage, extending his record victory tally in the race to 12. McEwen, a three-time winner of the Tour de France green jersey, held off fellow Australian Mark Renshaw, who gestured prior to the finish line about being squeezed into the barriers by the Predictor-Lotto sprinter. McEwen was unapologetic.
American Sarah Hammer’s trophy case could soon need structural reinforcing. The world individual pursuit champion added another gold medal to her stack with a win in her signature event during day two of the track World Cup in Los Angeles. Earlier in the day, Hammer set a new U.S. record of 3:32.058. After the effort Hammer said she would just "put it on cruise" in the evening’s gold-medal match against Germany’s Verena Joos. Sure enough, Hammer quickly made up time against her rival, gaining time with every lap to build such a comfortable lead she sat up well before the line and waved to
The weather in The Netherlands may have been foul, but Belgian Sven Nys (Rabobank) was in a sunny mood following his win at the UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup on Sunday in Hoogerheide. With only a week until the world championships in his home country, Nys scored a decisive win under appalling conditions, a steady cold, driving rain that relented only when it turned into hail. The rain and dropping temperatures created a dynamic race with riders suffering and thriving in turn throughout the entire 60 minutes. While Nys went on to win comfortably, his early race left many in the partisan crowd
Another day, another gold for Sarah Hammer — our man Casey Gibson was on hand and snapping away. Here's what he saw.
Sarah Hammer put to rest any ideas that she’s not a top mass-start racer with a gold medal in the Los Angeles World Cup scratch race, her third win of the three-day event. Hammer won the opening-night points race and followed it up with gold in the individual pursuit. Hammer and American Becky Quinn repeated the tactic that put them one-two at last year’s World Cup scratch race in Los Angeles. Hammer hit the front with a few to go, Quinn battled to get on her wheel, then Hammer dialed up the pace so high no one could come around her. There was no need for the UCI officials to check the photo
That's a wrap — three days of racing, three golds for Sarah Hammer and three cheers for our man Casey Gibson, whose shutter kept clicking from lights on to lights out.
Robbie the Rocket wins ahead of an angry Renshaw.
Elmiger celebrates a solidly tactical victory.
Elmiger stayed close...
and overcame some serious opposition to win the sprint, locking up the overall title in the process.
Menzies' teammates fought to control the pace as they day's first bonus sprint approached.
Elmiger gets a boost going into the European road season.
Hammer likes racing before a hometown crowd
Ukraine comes from behind to take the men's team pursuit
The aggressive Meyer was scoring his first points as a senior
Bauge and Chiappa dueling in the sprint
Nys starts slowly, but finishes first
Kupfernagel shows solid form going into the world's
Sarah Hammer visualizes the win . . .
. . . and then goes out and gets it
Scot Chris Hoy turns in the fastest 200m time
Gideon Massie in the 200
Americans Liz Carlson and Jennie Reed in the women's team sprint final
Mike Creed shows off the new Slipstream kit as he chases in the points race
Roberto Chiappa and Hoy in the prelims of the sprint
Chiappa's legs show the veins of multiple sprints
The Danes started strong in the team pursuit . . .
. . . only to fall apart
Hammer hits the line first with Quinn second
Saluting the home crowd
Reed en route to bronze in the keirin
The Brits took the team sprint
British beef: from left, Hoy, Staff and Crampton
Huff and Creed in the madison prelims
Creed grits his teeth and digs in
Morkov and Rassmussen, Madison winners
Hammer leads the entire field on the last laps
Francois Pervis of France in the team-sprint reride after his crash
The US team sprint led by Gideon Massie
Quinn, Hammer, and Visser on the podium after the scratch race
Bobby Lea chases down the break
It may be the off-season to you, but not to the intrepid Casey Gibson, who has lugged his bag of camera bodies, lenses and computer gear from snowy Colorado to the ADT Event Center in Carson, California, for the UCI track World Cup. Here's a peek at what he sent home.
Swiss racer Martin Elmiger was rewarded for his persistence with the lead of the Tour Down Under after the fourth and penultimate stage on Saturday. On another rain-soaked day in the hills around Adelaide, Elmiger took the ochre jersey from overnight leader Karl Menzies of UniSA after the Australian managed only to finish 11th in the 147 kilometer stage. The 24-year-old Belgian Pieter Ghyllebert won the stage, picking up his maiden professional win and the second in the five-stage race for his Chocolade Jacques outfit. Teammate Steven Caethoven celebrated a fine win on Thursday. A former
World individual pursuit champion Sarah Hammer (Ouch Pro Cycling) set a national record in a qualifying ride on day two of the Los Angeles World Cup. Hammer turned a 3:32.058 on Saturday to beat the old mark of 3:32.865, which she set in October at the 2006 track national championships. The record-breaking ride followed Hammer's victory in the points race the night before. "I really didn’t expect to break the record after doing the points race last night," Hammer said while getting her legs rubbed down after the effort. "It wasn’t a good ride, legs-wise. I was hurting. But the goal
It turns out there is a little something to those rainbow stripes. At the opening night of the Los Angeles Track World Cup, American Sarah Hammer, Brit Chris Hoy and Aussie Anna Meares showed their respective fields just why their biceps are circled with cycling’s most powerful design. Tour de France winner Floyd Landis and his friend, CSC rider Dave Zabriskie, were among the crowd of thousands at the Home Depot Center velodrome. Hammer, a world champion in the individual pursuit, won the January 19 women’s points race with some last-lap assistance from her American teammate Becky Quinn.
Australian cyclist Mark French has been sent home after breaching the national team's code of conduct on Wednesday during a Qantas flight to Los Angeles, where he was to have raced in this weekend's round of the UCI track World Cup series. French, who would not say what happened on the flight, is trying to resurrect his track-racing career, stalled for 18 months following drug allegations that led to a two-year ban in 2004. The Court of Arbitration for Sport overturned the ban on July 2005. While he successfully fought to prove his innocence then, the former world junior champion is
Hammer nails the points race
Ghyllebert grabs a win, but third-placed Elmiger was a big winner, too.
Elmiger moves into the lead, but it's still close.
The weather is still rougher than usual this year.
Brouchard was in the hunt for sprint points
The escapees stayed out for most of the day...
... until the chase began in earnest.
The Nav's lend a hand
Elmiger had hoped to gain time on the climb.
Menzies was not happy with the outcome
Hammer cranking it up
How'd I do, coach?
Hampton in the scratch race . . .
. . . and on the podium
Hoy in the keirin
Another view
Meares in the sprint
Quinn in the points race
Hammer en route to cracking her own U.S. pursuit record
It's Hammer time again
The arrival of Iban Mayo helps bolster Saunier Duval-Prodir as a major player going into the 2007 season and gives the Spanish team more options in the grand tours. With Gilberto Simoni focusing on the Giro d’Italia and rising star José Ángel Goméz Marchante the man for the Vuelta a España, team management can only hope the troubled Basque climber can return to the same heights he enjoyed when winning Alpe d’Huez at the 2003 Tour and the overall at the 2004 Dauphiné Libéré. “Mayo is a major ‘star’ but we have 28 riders on this team who will be able to achieve goals,” said Saunier
The on-again, off-again courtship between Russian businessman Oleg Tinkov and Jan Ullrich may be back on again, if recent press reports are to be believed. Back in November 2006, Tinkoff Credit Systems team manager Omar Piscina told Agence France Presse that title sponsor Tinkoff was "a huge fan" and wanted to sign Ullrich, but that the former Tour de France winner didn’t seem interested. "It has been more than a month since we spoke," Piscina said at the time. On Friday, during a team presentation in Moscow, Tinkov confirmed reports that he had tried to sign Ullrich and said the major
Unibet sprinter Baden Cooke underlined his early season ambitions by claiming a well-deserved victory onthe rain-soaked third stage of the Tour Down Under Friday. Cooke, a former Tour de France green jersey winner, flew first over the finish line of the 128km stage, drenched but happy having stayed true to his morning pledge to claim a win in the early part of the season. Five seconds further back was Australian Chris Jongewaard (UniSA), one of six riders contending the finale, who was initially part of a 19-man breakaway but whose powerful riding left the peloton trailing 14 minutes
Border guard: Your papers, please!Hippie: Sorry, man, all I got is a pipe.—A Child’s Garden of Grass I’ve heard it said that the French love Jerry Lewis movies. But anti-doping chief Pierre Bordry must be a Cheech and Chong fan, because he seems to be modeling his pursuit of cycling cheats on the work of Sgt. Stedenko. If salbutamol could put a wanker on a Tour podium, I’d have won eight or nine of the damn’ things by now because I’ve been an asthmatic since childhood. Alas, my various inhalers failed to land me a berth on the U.S. Olympic swimming team back in the Seventies, and a pro
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