Will Basso be at next year’s Giro?
Will Basso be at next year's Giro?
Will Basso be at next year's Giro?
Thanks to a little cocaine, Freewheeling Franklin and Phineas set a world record for the 40km TT (two stoners, single bike). For the complete cartoon, click here
Mmmm ... beer
Hamilton, seen here before the 2004 Olympic road race in Athens, may have a team for '07.
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission,in cooperation with the manufacturers named below, has announced a voluntaryrecall of the following consmer product. Consumers should stop using recalledproducts immediately unless otherwise instructed.Name of Product: ARC Lithium Ion Bicycle Light BatteriesUnits: About 1,700Light Manufacturer/Battery Reseller: Light & Motion, of Monterey,Calif.Battery Manufacturer: GP Batteries International Ltd., of SingaporeBattery Importer: Gold Peak Industries (North America), Inc.of San Diego, Calif.Hazard: The battery can overheat,
Former Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich on Thursday announced his split from the Swiss cycling federation but maintained that his career is not over. The Swiss-based German star is still fighting off doping allegations which came in the wake of a Spanish doping investigation dubbed Operación Puerto. However Ullrich, who was fired by T-Mobile after the team suspended him before the start of the Tour de France, appears to have some hope of getting back to competing. Ullrich said he may seek a license in his native Germany, instead. "This split from the Swiss federation doesn't mean
Tom Boonen has signed up to take part in a 10-hour endurance race at the wheel of a Porsche 996, the former world cycling champion reported on Thursday. The 25-year-old Quick Step rider is normally known for his prowess in one-day cycling classics and can count the prestigious Paris-Roubaix, Tour of Flanders and world road race crowns among his list of honors. Now with the season drawing to a close Boonen will team up with Belgian pair Bert Longin and Anthony Kumpen, the national touring endurance champion,for the race which will be held at the Zolder race track - which coincidentally
Press Release: Light & Motion announces battery recall
Ullrich, here winning a time trial at this year's Tour of Switzerland, won't be getting a Swiss license in 2007.
Why does my Mavic freehub squeal?
Crunch timeDear Lennard,I have Campagnolo record 10-speed shifters. In fact the componentsare all campy record, except the wheels. I have been having a terribletime with the front shifter. It gets hung up and won't shift or is veryhard to shift and then it makes a terrible crunching noise. I have theCampagnolo triple front derailleur. Two different mechanics have lookedat it, without taking the levers apart, and nether has been able to diagnoseit or fix it. Any suggestions?DebbieDear Debbie,That’s the beauty of Campagnolo Ergo Power; you can fix it if somethinggets jammed inside.
Team CSC and Italian star Ivan Basso cut ties in a mutual agreement Wednesday that releases the 2006 Giro d’Italia champion from the remaining two years of his contract with the Danish team. Basso was forced out of the Tour de France this summer after he was linked to an alleged blood doping ring in Spain. Despite the fact that Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) officials subsequently recommended that he be cleared, the relationship between Basso and Team CSC boss Bjarne Riis appear to have been irreparably soured. “After all that has happened, especially this summer, Team CSC and Ivan Basso
Peña joins Unibet.comMore ex-Phonak riders are finding contracts for next season as the Swiss team begins to shut down. The latest to escape the unemployment line is Colombian Victor Hugo Peña, who penned a two-year deal to join Unibet.com for the 2007-08 seasons. The 32-year-old raced the past two seasons with Phonak, but the team raced its last competition in Saturday’s Giro di Lombardia after the Floyd Landis doping scandal prompted new sponsor iShares to pull out of its sponsorship deal to continue the team. Peña became the first Colombian to wear the maillot jaune during the 2003 Tour
A new book which claims to further lift the lid on some of the dirtier secrets of Lance Armstrong's successful cycling career will go on sale in France on Thursday. The seven-time Tour de France champion is now retired, but a second book by Pierre Ballester and David Walsh - authors of the controversial "L.A. Confidentiel" two and a half years ago - claims to shed new light on their allegations that Armstrong's feats came through the use of doping products. Extracts of "L.A. Officiel," which like the first book has been written only in French, will appear in Thursday's edition
CLIF BAR’s Development Cyclo-Cross Team Starts Global Cooling, Starts Season Boulder, Colorado October, 2006—When the members of the TIAACREF/CLIF BAR Cyclo-Cross Team rolled to the start line in Gloucester, MA for the opening round of the 2006 Crank Brothers US Gran Prix of Cyclo-Cross Series, they not only began the third season for the national-level development program, but also set off on a pioneering environmental sustainability mission. The American Cycling Association’s Junior and Under-23 cyclo-cross development program took inspiration from CLIF BAR’s exemplary sustainability
The following is a statement issued by Lance Armstrong on Thursday, October 18, 2006, regardingthe pending publication of "L.A. Officiel," by authors Pierre Ballesterand David Walsh.Predictably, I will be the subject tomorrow of another baselessattack by another French book. The authors, David Walsh and Pierre Ballester,now issue a sequel to an earlier French book that was likewise foundedupon a demonstrably false string of sensational, untrue and fabricatedallegations. This latest attack will be no different than the first- a sensationalized attempt to cash in on my name and sully my
Basso is likely to ride again, but it won't be for Riis.
Basque climbing ace Iban Mayo has penned a two-year deal with Saunier Duval-Prodir that he hopes will spark his return to his best when he was lighting up the roads at the Tour de France. Mayo made the difficult decision to leave his longtime home with Euskaltel-Euskadi, where he raced since turning pro in 2000, to join Saunier Duval in a move he called “a liberation.” “I changed teams with the intention of improving and the reference is the 2003 season. To be close to that level would be fantastic,” Mayo said during a press conference. “I needed to change the airs. Saunier Duval is an
Tour of Missouri Brings World-Class Professional Cycling to the StateST. LOUIS, Mo. (October 17, 2006) ---- Missouri Governor MattBlunt and Lt. Governor Peter Kinder announced today that the state willplay host to the inaugural Tour of Missouri professional cycling race,September 11 – 16, 2007. In its initial year, the Tour of Missouri will be anointed oneof the nation’s top three stage races behind the prestigious Tour of Georgiaand Tour of California races, providing an historic landmark for the sportwith three major domestic stage races on American soil. "Missouri is known as the
Mayo won this year's Dauphine stage from Briancon to La Toussuire, but was dissatisfied with most of his season.
Our latest reader-submitted Photo Gallery is now up for your viewing pleasure. Of course, a new gallery also means the naming of the winner of ourmost recent contest. Take the time to wander through that gallery and see if you agree or disagree with our choice of winner. We found Jeff Fillerup’s “Six a.m. warm-up” to beautifully represent those quiet, contemplative moments before the day’s competition kicks in. Nice work, Jeff. Drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.com to work out the details and we’ll send you a copy of Graham Watson's "Landscapes of Cycling." And while you’re at it,
Alejandro Valverde officially received his overall 2006 ProTour trophy in a special gala Saturday evening in Italy following the Giro di Lombardia despite an ugly catfight between the UCI and race organizers. The Caisse d’Epargne-Illes Balears captain almost skipped the season finale following the ongoing spat between the UCI and race organizers RCS, which didn’t want to allow the UCI to present the ProTour jersey to Valverde on the post-race podium. Riders boycotted the podium, but Valverde received his moment in the spotlight later that evening in an awards ceremony sponsored by the
Lyne Bessette (Cyclocrossworld.com) and Tim Johnson (Cannondale-cyclocrossworld.com) doubled up in Maine on Sunday, winning day two of the Downeast Cyclocross in New Gloucester, Maine, the second round of the Verge New England Championship Cyclo-cross Series. Bessette was well warmed and ready to go for the women's race, having competed in the men's B race just beforehand. After the start and the first tour in the woods, she and Katerina Nash (Luna) reprised Saturday’s battle at the front, leaving the rest of the riders to chase. Unlike Saturday, however, Bessette could not get rid
The Mailbag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you have a comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen in cycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write to WebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name and home town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.Lab’s techniques severely flawedEditor:After having finally reviewed the PowerPoint presentation given by Floyd Landis’s attorney, I am shocked by the audacity of the "accredited" laboratory to call his results positive. The results seem only to indicate that the laboratory cannot perform
Giro d'Italia winner Ivan Basso, looking to race again after the Italian Olympic Committee recommended that doping allegations against him be dropped, says he has been courted by Lance Armstrong's former team, Discovery Channel. ''They made me a concrete proposal but I am open to other solutions,'' the Italian rider said in an interview published Monday by French sports newspaper L'Equipe. Basso gave no details. Discovery has been looking for a replacement for Armstrong, who retired after winning his seventh consecutive Tour de France in 2005. Basso said there
Six a.m. warm-up
Valverde capped of a stellar season on Saturday.
Bessette and Nash duke it out
Bruno Roy and Dickey tussle
Johnson seizes the lead early
McCormack descends
Smith heads for gold in Cow Town
Timmerman bunny-hops his way to victory in Syracuse
Is Basso ready to kiss CSC goodbye?
Saul Raisin continues to defy expectations in remarkable recovery from a life-threatening crash in April that sent him into a coma and put his future as a professional bike racer in doubt. Raisin returned to Europe last week to spend a month in Monaco and to pose for photographs the 2007 team photograph, a sure sign that the Crédit Agricole rider is making solid progress toward a possible comeback perhaps as early as next season. Raisin, 23, can’t guarantee he’ll race in the European peloton again, but he’s going to try. VeloNews European correspondent Andrew Hood recently caught up with
Lyne Bessette (Cyclocrossworld.com) and Tim Johnson (Cannondale-Cyclocrossworld.com) rode to convincing wins on Saturday during day one of the Downeast Cyclocross at Pineland Farms in New Gloucester, Maine. Bessette has been dominating this season, though she is coming off a stinging loss in last week's race in Gloucester, Massachusetts. So it was no surprise that she went off from the gun at the start with Rebecca Wellons (Gearworks) and Mackenzie Dickey. After the first course through the woods, it was Bessette in front with only Melissa Thomas (Maxxis) and Katerina Nash (Luna) on her
Raisin at last month's Palmetto Project Charity Ride.
Bessette over the barriers
Johnson through the mud
Anthony over the Log of Death
Italy's reigning Olympic and world champion Paolo Bettini has given his full support to ProTour champion Alejandro Valverde at the start of Saturday's season-ending Tour of Lombardy. Valverde, one of the most consistent performers this season, is mathematically guaranteed winning the ProTour's white jersey for dominating the season-long series. However, organizers of the one-day Italian classic refused to carry out a podium award ceremony for television purposes at Lake Como where Valverde would have been handed his white jersey prize. The reasons appear to relate to a rift
In Saturday’s Giro di Lombardia, Paolo Bettini discovered the best way to ease the pain of the recent death of his older brother was to win in his name. The recently crowned world champion nearly retired after his brother, Sauro, died in a car crash just days after Bettini won the rainbow jersey Sept. 24 in Salzburg, Austria. Only insistence by Bettini’s father convinced the Quick Step-Innergetic captain to carry on. On Saturday under cool fall skies, an emotional Bettini poured all his anguish into his pedals to win the season final in the 245km Lombardia. “Today I was not pedaling alone,”
Valverde at this year's Vuelta. He won't be at Lombardy
An emotional Bettini claims his second consecutive win at Lombardy
Bettini didn't ride this one alone.
Champions' respect: Bettini was a vocal supporter of Valverde's position.
The lake district
Bettini was aggressive on the Ghisallo,.
The risky descent.
It was an easy day...
...until an all-star break ripped the field apart.
A tenacious Wegmann was one of the few able to stay close to Bettini.
Ivan Basso – cleared by Italian officials of doping allegations on Thursday – will not race in Saturday’s Giro di Lombardia. Basso spoke with Team CSC manager Bjarne Riis and decided not to take part in the season finale despite being cleared to race after Italian officials ruled there wasn’t enough evidence to open an investigation into whether the 2006 Giro d’Italia champion was linked to an alleged doping ring in Spain. “I am a free man but Riis decided it would be better if I don’t race Lombardia,” Basso told La Gazzetta dello Sport. “Bjarne told me it was not an ethics-driven decision
Passions were running high in Mendrisio, Switzerland on Friday 24 hours before the UCI ProTour comes to its climax in the 100th edition of the Tour of Lombardy. First, a “reprieved” Ivan Basso said he wasn’t going to make a dramatic return to racing at the Italian classic. ProTour leader Alejandro Valverde then scratched from the list of starters to protest the organizers’ decision not to present the ProTour champion’s jersey on the winners’ podium. And defending champion Paolo Bettini gave an emotional press conference following the death last week of his older brother. Basso looks like
RhabdomyolysisA common disorder which may result from a large variety ofdiseases, trauma, or toxic insults to skeletal muscle. It may be definedas a clinical and biochemical syndrome resulting from an injury which damagesthe integrity of the sarcolemma of skeletal muscle, leading to the releaseof potentially toxic muscle cell components into the circulation.(1,2,3)This may result in potential life-threatening complications including myoglobinuricacute renal failure, hyperkalaemia and cardiac arrest, disseminated intravascularcoagulation, and more locally, compartment syndrome.Craig Gordon
Jonathan Page faces surgery and months of rehabilitation after dislocating his left shoulder and tearing his rotator cuff while warming up at the October 1 World Cup in Aigle, Switzerland. In a posting on his website, www.thejonathanpage.com, Page wrote that he tore his left rotator cuff "completely off the bone." Surgery is scheduled for October 16, followed by three weeks in a brace and physical therapy. "I couldn't wait to do the surgery until after the season because each day that goes by now, the detached tendon retracts further, and so each day is doing more harm and each day
Basso wins the 8th stage of the 2006 Giro d'Italia
Bettini wants to repeat at Lombardy
More than a slight cramp: Gordon did some damage
After riding for 24 hours, Gordon was on his way to the hospital for 48
Dear Bob,Your September 7 column on crosswalks (See "CrossingGuard") hit close to home here in Minnesota. Under Minnesota law andas discussed by the MUTCD (Manual on Uniform Traffic Devices}, mid-blockcrossings can (and of course do) exist. The MUTCD explicitly states thatwhen crosswalk paint is applied to the roadway, the crossing is legallydeemed a crosswalk. But what happens if the city decides to remove thecrosswalk striping completely, put up signs that state "This is not a crosswalk,"yet leave in place advance warning signs that announce the trail, and atrail sign right at the crossing
After Steve Johnson wrapped up his first six months at the helm of USA Cycling, we sent VeloNews.com's Jason Sumner to Colorado Springs to meet with the national governing body's newest chief executive officer and review the past few months and the organization's plans for the future.We posted the first part of the full interview on Wednesday. We now offer the second half of a wide-ranging interview with the head of USA Cycling. VeloNews: Can you envision a day when there is a ProTour event in the United States? And if so what do you think it’s going to take to make that happen?
I am glad last week is over. I had a sinus infection, flatted four timeson three separate training rides, forgot to call my mom on her birthday,failed to pre-register for the UCI races in Gloucester and raced like Iwas carrying two 30-pound sand bags on my back. Now, may I have some cheese with my whine? Don’t get me wrong, I had a great trip to the beautiful Northeast forthe first round of the Crank Brothers Gran Prix of Cyclocross in Gloucester,Massachusetts, but to be honest it didn’t really go according to plan.Not to worry though, everyone has a bad race now and then and there arestill
The Italian Olympic Committee recommended Thursday that doping charges be dropped against Giro d'Italia winner Ivan Basso, one of nine riders barred from this summer's Tour de France. The committee's anti-doping commission said it will make the recommendation to the disciplinary body of the Italian Cycling Federation, which can decide whether to try the rider or dismiss the case. Basso and 1997 Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich were among those excluded from the Tour after being implicated in a Spanish doping investigation. Basso, one of the prerace favorites, denied the
Tour de France winner Floyd Landis has released a detailed online presentationwhich he says proves his innocence after he tested positive for testosteroneduring this year's Tour.The American, who tested positive for an 11-1 testosterone-epitestosteroneIMPORTANT NOTEIf you have difficulty logging on to Landis's site, please try to accesscopies of those same documents hosted here on VeloNews.comThe Landis Slide Show.Landis presentation to the USADA review board. ratio after the race's 17th stage, has always protested his innocenceand is hoping the several hundreds of pages of
Liquigas Chooses Cannondale for 2007 and BeyondBETHEL, CT USA OCT 11, 2007— Liquigas Pro Tour Cycling Team,including Cannondale alumni and winner of the inaugural Pro Tour DaniloDi Luca, has chosen Cannondale bicycles as technical bicycle sponsor ina multi-year partnership beginning in 2007. The agreement securesa long-term partnership with the high profile and highly sought-after worldclass Liquigas team. Both parties are enthusiastic about the spiritof partnership and the many important victories to come.“Liquigas has the breadth of talent to showcase and win with world
Hey Horner, wait for me!
Ben Turner get his team's rigs ready to race.
Pedros' Chris Zigmont get the kid's cross race ready to roll.
PURE SWEET HELL filmmaker Brian Vernor makes a fan say, Cheese.
Start 'em young.
Like I said, Start 'em young.
With Puerto unraveling, Basso may race Lombardia
It’s only been six months since Steve Johnson took over the reins at USA Cycling, but already the new CEO is dreaming big. Among the items on his wish list: a nation where obesity and an over-dependence on gas guzzling cars are wiped out by the new dawn of the bicycle. Johnson believes “the time of the automobile is rapidly drawing to a close, and I see the bike as a wonderful vehicle for transportation, health and fitness, and everything else that is wrong with America.” That might be just a tad overly optimistic, but some of Johnson’s other visions seem very attainable. He’s looking to
Beijing - - China has to sharply increase the number of anti-doping tests performed ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency said Tuesday. China does about 7,000 tests per year on its athletes, compared with 8,000 carried out by the much smaller Australia, said Dick Pound, who was in Beijing to meet Chinese sports officials. “They've got to increase the number of their tests,” he said at a news conference. “That's an imbalance that is not commensurate with the size of this country.” Pound said he couldn't give a figure for how many tests
American veteran Tony Cruz and Danish TT specialist Brian Vandborg are the latest additions for Discovery Channel as the team continues to reload in the post-Lance Armstrong era. Cruz, who raced with the team from 2001-05, returns to Discovery Channel after riding one season with Toyota-United while Vandborg, fresh off finishing fourth in the world time trial championships, joins the squad after three seasons with Team CSC. “Brian and Tony both come to our Team with a high-level of professionalism and a proven history. I know that we will be able to count on these guys throughout the
With less than three days before the 14th edition of La Ruta de los Conquistadores commences, organizers of the three-day mountain bike race across Costa Rica unveiled final 2006 course details on Tuesday. As usual the numbers are mind numbing.Total distance: 176.4 miles.Total climbing: 28,858 feet.Total maximum finish time: 35 hours.“It’s going to be an interesting three days,” said American Adam Craig, who was joined by Jeremiah Bishop and Colombian Leonardo Paez at the pre-race press conference held at the San Jose Hampton Inn on the outskirts of the Central American country’s sprawling
His six-month review: Part one of a two-part conversation with Steve Johnson
Despite the stalled Puerto investigation, Ullrich's future remains uncertain.