Buhl and Hill celebrate downhill wins
Buhl and Hill celebrate downhill wins
Buhl and Hill celebrate downhill wins
Reeves is back.
JHK solos for the win
Haywood scores a short-track win
Floyd Landis came one step closer to losing his 2006 Tour de France title when the UCI announced on Saturday that a counter-analysis of an earlier anti-doping control also came back positive. A UCI communiqué* said that analysis of the so-called “B” sample, conducted at France's national anti-doping laboratory at Châtenay-Malabry, confirmed the original “adverse analytical finding” of urine samples taken after Landis’ remarkable Stage 17 victory into Morzine. In keeping with anti-doping procedures, the UCI has formally requested that the USA Cycling open disciplinary action against the
Australia's Graeme Brown (Rabobank) won the fourth stage of the Tour of Germany on Saturday, a 203km leg between Heidenheim and Bad Tolz. Brown won a tense sprint finish against German duo Stefan Schumacher (Gerolsteiner) and Erik Zabel (Milram), finishing in four hours, 34 minutes and 38 seconds. The 36-year-old Zabel took the overall lead from Russian Vladimir Gusev (Discovery Channel). Gusev slipped back to second, seven seconds behind Zabel, with German Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile) third, eight seconds down. "It was my last chance to take the lead before the mountains," Zabel told
Floyd Landis' parents planted a "God Bless, Went Camping" sign in their front yard Saturday, leaving it to friends and neighbors to defend their son against the doping scandal that threatens his Tour de France title. Tammy Martin, one of the Landis' neighbors and closest friends, said Landis has proven his "outstanding skill" as a cyclist and that he ultimately will be exonerated. "All he has accomplished, he has attained through his hard work and discipline," she said at her home in Farmersville, a rural crossroads just outside the borough of Ephrata in eastern
Oscar Pereiro said he felt like the true Tour de France champion Saturday, after confirmation of a drug test for Floyd Landis that is expected to see the American stripped of the title. Pereiro said the fact that he now stands to win the title by default after Landis will likely lose the title for doping, would not diminish his achievement. "Right now I feel like the winner of the Tour de France," Pereiro said at a press conference in Vigo, Spain. The comments are a shift from Pereiro's initial response, when he said he would be reluctant to accept the yellow jersey after a
In preparation for the August 5-6 NORBA National Mountain Bike Series stop at Brian Head, Utah, husband-and-wife duo Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski and Heather Irmiger borrowed the Irmiger family pickup and headed to Winter Park, Colorado, for a quick high-altitude training camp. The regimen included staving off mosquitos, shooting slingshots and a few epic training rides through the Rocky Mountain backcountry. "We just wanted to have fun, and it worked out because the riding was great," Irmiger said. "I had a pretty awesome bonk one day. I broke my derailleur and ran out of water and food. Jeremy
Landis's Stage 17 attack ranks among the most decisive in Tour history. Will it remain so once the hearings are over?
Landis heads to the doping control trailer after his stunning win in Morzine.
Brown exults
Pereiro may end up with the jersey after all
Hi, honey, I'm home
And now, while we wait for our feature presentation, a couple of selected shorts
Team CSC made what’s likely cycling history on Thursday when the team won three races in three different events all on the same day. With ProTour squads boasting enough riders on their roster to run three programs, Team CSC scored an unprecedented “hat-trick” Thursday, taking stage-wins at the Deutschland Tour with Jens Voigt, Tour of Denmark with Fabian Cancellara and Paris-Corrèze with Marcus Ljungqvist. “It’s a very special time for the team,” Team CSC sport director Tristan Hoffman told VeloNews. “We have a good combination of riders on the team who can win races. We have a very good
A prosecutor in northern Italy has asked for an investigation into a group of Spanish cyclists suspected of using doping products during competition in Italy, Spanish daily El Pais reported on Friday. Other investigators have also asked to question Giro d'Italia champion Ivan Basso later this month. According to the paper, the cyclists targeted by a Bergamo prosecutor are Marcos Serrano, Joseba Beloki, Unai Osa and Angel Vicioso. Italian police, according to El Pais, "have received documents sent to them by Spanish police which indicate several Spanish riders used doping products
Gerald Ciolek, of the continental Wiesenhof team won a frantic sprint at the end of the third stage of the Tour of Germany, Friday, a 203.3km race from Witzenhausen to Schweinfurt. The stage was marked by a long 145km solo break by Saunier Duval’s Marco Pinotti, who was eventually reeled in with 25km to go, setting up a fast closing stretch with none of the top sprinters’ teams able to control the field as it rushed through the final kilometers into Schweinfurt. Ciolek - who at 19 is seen as the next great hope of German cycling - clinched his first victory on the ProTour after pipping
San Diego computer entrepreneur Michael Robertson on Thursday offered Tourde France winner Floyd Landis $100,000 to "clear the air" and take a polygraphexamination while addressing charges that he doped on his way to victoryin the Tour.Robertson, who made his fortune off of investments in a host of softwarecompanies - including a Linux-based operating system called "Linspire"and and VOIP system know as SIPphone - is also a former collegiate cyclistand fan of the professional peloton. Robertson sent a fax addressed toLandis on Thursday offering to test the cyclist using a set of
Five North Americans are among a preliminarystart list for the 61st Vuelta a España Released Friday by race officials in Spain, all 20 official teams have outlined their early starting riders and substitutes for the season’s third grand tour, set to start Aug. 26 in Málaga. Getting the nod are Ryder Hesjedal (Phonak), MichaelBarry and TomDanielson (Discovery Channel), ChrisHorner and FredRodriguez (Davitamon-Lotto). AaronOlson (Saunier Duval) is listed as a substitute. Barry will back for his fifth Vuelta start while Danielson is expected to line up as team captain for Discovery Channel
Former T-Mobile rider Jan Ullrich was supplied with a potent cocktail of performance-enhancing drugs by the Spanish doctor accused of running a doping ring that has left the sport in crisis, it was reported here. Former Olympic champion Ullrich, who was barred from competing in this year's Tour de France after being implicated in the scandal, was given EPO, steroids and human growth hormone by Madrid physician Eufemiano Fuentes. The allegations were made by anti-doping campaigner Werner Franke in an interview to be published in Saturday's Hamburg Morning Post. "I've seen a
The 2006 National Mountain Bike Series holds its fifth event of the year this weekend, as the series returns for a second-consecutive year to remote Brian Head, Utah. The venue hosts the full spectrum of NMBS events: cross-country, short track, downhill, dual slalom, Super D and marathon cross-country. Located 200 miles east of Las Vegas, about an hour’s drive from St.George, the Brian Head ski resort rises above 11,000 feet elevation, and towers above the Western Utah town of Parowan. The area is best known for Cedar Breaks, a picturesque system of sedimentary rock canyons whose stratified
Cancellara wins in Denmark
Voight wins in Germany
Big Effort: Ciolek's win wasn't an easy one
The great German hope: At 19 Ciolek certainly has some good years ahead.
The happy couple
A small vial tucked away inside the Châtenay-Malabry laboratory near Paris contains what is probably one of the most-watched batches of urine in recent sports history. Officials are expecting a Saturday conclusion to a counter-analysis of Floyd Landis’ “B” samples, taken after his heroic victory in stage 17 into Morzine during the 2006 Tour de France. Lab technicians began work on the counter-analysis on Thursday. Landis’ own attorneys expect the tests to confirm the unusual T/E ratio, which was confirmed by Landis’ representatives to reflect an 11-to-1 ratio of testosterone to
An unnamed retired Italian sprinter insists that cycling has lost the war on doping and that no one can win major three-week races like the Giro d’Italia without resorting to banned performance-enhancing practices. La Gazzetta dello Sport ran the candid interview with the ex-pro, now retired for five seasons who won “six major races” during his career at the elite level. He now works as a carpenter, but didn’t want his name to be published in the story. “Do I know a racer that wins clean? None. No one can win the Giro without doping. I don’t believe it’s possible,” he said in La Gazzetta
Spanish star Alejandro Valverde will return to competition next weekend for the summer classic Clásica San Sebastián, but isn’t expected to race the weeklong Vuelta a Burgos. Valverde, 26, fractured his clavicle in stage three of the 2006 Tour de France and will use the one-day race on Aug. 12 in northern Spain to prepare for his run at the Vuelta a España title. Illes Balears-Caisse d’Epargne officials said Valverde isn’t quite in condition to race the Burgos tour, set for Aug. 6-10. “As of today he won’t race the Vuelta a Burgos but he will be at the Clásica,” sport director Eusebio
Dear Bob,I live in the Minneapolis, Minnesota metro area. The city of Minneapolis has had for several years a 10mph speed limit on city trails. In some areas this limit does make sense such as around the chain of inner city lakes where the density of people, skaters and bikes is very high. Being that we can and do ride the adjacent roads and have no problem with traffic, it is not a big deal. By law in Minnesota a bike is classified as a vehicle and must obey the traffic laws when on the road. So far so good, we have state wide residential speed limit of 30mph. So as a cyclist we have a nice
German CSC rider Jens Voigt on Thursday won the second stage of the Tour of Germany over 181.5km between Mindent and Goslar ahead of Italian Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner) and Kazakh Andrey Kaschechkin (Astana). The German CSC rider clinched victory after mounting a bold attack on the final climb before outpacing Rebellin and Kaschechkin in a sprint finish at the end of the 181.5km stage. Voigt, 35, a stage winner at this month's Tour de France and a yellow jersey holder during the 2001 and 2005 editions of cycling's most prestigious event, was delighted with his victory. "To
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.It was good, but it was believableDear Editor,Never having the occasion of doping with anything other than caffeineand ephedrine I cannot actually attest to what it might feel like to supplementtestosterone. (I reckon it works good however).But having twenty years in the "game" I do
Fields have been announced for the two biggest races on the North American road-racing calendar, the Bank of America Invitational Criterium and the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah. With the Tour of Utah beginning just 36 hours after the Charlotte, North Carolina, B of A Criterium ends — and with the August 13 Tour of Elk Grove Criterium, held near Chicago, taking place the day after Utah ends — it’s a good bet that the North American peloton will be split into two, with sprinters looking to bring home cash from the calendar’s biggest prize lists. The Bank of America Invitational Criterium,
La Gazzetta dello Sport for Thursday, August 3, 2006
ProTour leader Valverde crashed out of the third stage Tour.
Voigt wins one at home
Sastre unsure as Vuelta expects heavy Spanish accentWith the “Puerto Nine” not welcome and a host of foreign stars expected to skip the season’s final grand tour, Vuelta a España organizers are putting a heavy Spanish accent of the 2006 edition. Race organizers revealed a preliminary start list Tuesday that’s laden with Spanish stars and lean on foreign riders. Defending champion Denis Menchov and his Danish climbing Rabobank counterpart Michael Rasmussen are the biggest foreign stars expected for the Aug. 26 start in Málaga. Confirmed Spanish riders include Tour de France runner-up Oscar
Kazakh rider Assan Bazayev gave the Astana team a much needed boost as he landed the first stage of the Tour of Germany ProTour cycling race, over 198.2km between Dusseldorf and Bielefeld, on Wednesday. The 25-year-old beat home Lampre's Danilo Napolitano and veteran Germansprint specialist Erik Zabel (Milram) to give the team its first victory under its new sponsor. The win lifted some of the gloom surrounding the squad since the team was unceremoniously thrown out of the Tour de France on the eve of the race because several of their proposed line-up had been implicated in a doping
Sastre finishes Tour de France stage 17 in Morzine
The 25-year-old Bazayev beat some experienced sprinters into Bielefeld.
The head of a leading international anti-doping laboratory on Tuesday called for a complete change in the strategy used to fight illicit testosterone use in sport, warning that current detection methods were inadequate. Martial Saugy, the head of the Swiss anti-doping laboratory in Lausanne, said the science of detection had fallen behind because of fears of legal wrangling, while testosterone doping methods had become more sophisticated. Doses used when the approved testing methods were set up in 1982 were "massive", he explained in interviews with Swiss radio RSR. "We are no longer in
Spanish authorities are investigating links between Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes – the central figure of the ongoing “Operación Puerto” investigation – and possible connections to doping networks in Germany and Italy. According to reports in the Spanish daily El País, members of the anti-doping brigade are working with Italian and German officials to follow up on alleged connections between Fuentes and sources of doping products in those respective countries. Some police investigators believe there could be a large, pan-European network of alliances between doping rings in Spain, Italy
Some of the testosterone found in Tour de France winner Floyd Landis' "A" sample is from an external source and not his body's, The New York Times reported on Tuesday, quoting an unidentified UCI official. The carbon isotope test on the first of Landis' two urine samples taken after his 17th stage win in last month's Tour indicates the presence of synthetic testosterone, said the official with knowledge of the results from France's Châtenay-Malabry anti-doping laboratory. The UCI said Tuesday that Châtenay-Malabry laboratory has agreed to extend its normal operating
Levi Leipheimer lines up as defending champion Tuesday at the nine-day Tour of Germany with hopes of erasing a disappointing Tour de France. The 33-year-old Gerolsteiner captain will be looking to redeem himself after finishing a distant 13th overall at the Tour, the first time he’s not been among the Tour’s top 10 in four arrivals on the Champs Élysées. This could be Leipheimer’s last major race for Gerolsteiner, after penning a deal to join Discovery Channel for 2007. The Californian won last year’s Deutschland Tour after a strong performance in a brutal climbing stage in Austria and
Discovery Channel's Vladimir Gusev won the 5.5km prologue of the Tour of Germany in Dusseldorf on Tuesday. The 24-year-old time-trial specialist timed 6minutes 42.61seconds and finished ahead of Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile) and German national time trial champion Sebastian Lang (Gerolsteiner). Defending Tour of Germany winner Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner) finished in 111th place, 42 seconds off the Russian's pace, though he raced cautiously because of the persistent rain and strong winds. Gusev, who has been a professional since 2004 and joined the Discovery team at the beginning
Landis faces questions at a press conference in Madrid last Friday
Leipheimer made his mark on the brutal climb to Sölden in Austria
Gusev defied slick conditions and earned the win
Gusev gets the jersey
Comunidad Valenciana – the continental team which has taken more licks than most in the fallout of “Operación Puerto” – received some good news late last week from the Spanish courts. The team was notified that none of 13 riders supposedly implicated in the ongoing police investigation have any pending legal action against them, essentially clearing them of allegations that have dogged the team since mid-May. Thirteen riders were cleared after a court secretary notified the team with an official document dated July 28. The riders cleared include: Vicente Ballesteros, David Bernabéu, David
Marga Fullana scored a big victory over the seemingly unbeatable Gunn-Rita Dahle by taking gold in Sunday’s European mountain bike championships in Italy. The rail-thin Spanish rider from Mallorca took 1:31 out of the Norwegian dominator to claim her biggest win in years. “I dedicate this win to all those who kept believing in me,” said Fullana, who scored silver at the Sydney Olympic Games, but faded out of the picture following a string of personal problems. “I have demonstrated that I am still here, that I have fully recovered and have confidence I can return to be on the highest steps of
Don’t expect any quick resolutions in the Floyd Landis doping case if his counter-analysis comes back as positive. The counter-analysis for the follow-up “B” sample is expected as early as this week, but the entire disciplinary and appeal process could last until late this year, meaning Landis will likely officially retain his Tour de France crown until that process is completed. According to the UCI, the process is well-defined if the 30-year-old returns a positive counter-analysis from samples taken after Stage 17 into Morzine of the Tour de France. Because Landis races with an American
The Union Cycliste Internationale demanded on Monday the “B” sample of Tour de France winner Floyd Landis be tested so that the doping scandal could be resolved sooner rather than later. The 30-year-old American is facing the loss of his title and a two year ban after he returned a positive test for abnormal levels of testosterone following his win in the 17th stage of the Tour earlier this month. However while Landis has protested his innocence the UCI moved on Monday to hasten up the process - by asking the laboratory Châtenay-Malabry to go ahead and test the “B” sample as Landis has
Madrid, Spain (AP) -- Tour de France champion Floyd Landis officially requested the testing of his backup urine sample Monday in an effort to clear his name of doping allegations. "We've sent the fax to the UCI this afternoon," said Jose Maria Buxeda, one of Landis's two Spanish lawyers. "Now we'll have to adjust to their calendar." Landis tested positive for an unusual testosterone/epitestosterone ratio following the 17th stage of the Tour de France, where he made a stunning solo breakaway in the Alps to put himself back into contention for victory after a poor performance the
The team has been cleared but not until after Belda's year had been ruined.
While Floyd Landis traveled back to the United States this weekend, his fate and the outcome of his counter-analysis are still pending in Europe. The test results of the “B” sample could be known as early as Monday, but a bank holiday in France could delay the test another day or two if it already hasn’t been carried out. Landis’s lawyers said in a Saturday press conference that they don’t expect any changes in the counter-analysis. “We’re expecting that [counter-analysis] will return positive because he produced it,” said José María Buxeda, one of two Spanish attorneys Landis has
T-Mobile said Sunday it would part company with manager Olaf Ludwig as it seeks to clean up the team's image following the drugs scandal that embroiled sacked rider Jan Ullrich. T-Mobile said in a statement that it would terminate its contract with Ludwig's OLC company, which is responsible for its men's cycling team, one year ahead of schedule after a loss of confidence in the organisation. "After long discussions before and after the Tour de France, we have decided to terminate our contract with OLC from October 31 this year," T-Mobile said in a statement. The contract had
Some of Oscar Freire’s biggest wins have come at the expense of one man: That perennial German warrior Erik Zabel. The Spanish sprinter took his third world title in 2004 in Verona in Italy with Zabel taking second, a win that came months after Freire out-stabbed Zabel on the Via Roma to win Milan-San Remo that spring. In Sunday’s Vattenfall Cyclassics, Freire once again revealed he has one of the best bike stabs in the game, sneaking away with a photo-finish mass sprint with Zabel getting the worse end of the bargain. Last year’s winner Filippo Pozzato came through third.FULLRESULTS “I
Sao Paolo, Brazil (July 29, 2006)—The United States Cycling Team capturedthree world championships and added four more medals to its medal countSaturday as the 2006 UCI BMX World Championships continued with cruiserclass competition.Donny Robinson (Napa, Calif.) and Danny Caluag (Chino, Calif.) providedthe highlight of the day for Team USA as the duo threw a 1-2 punch in theelite men’s race to capture a world title and a silver medal respectively. Amanda Geving (Largo, Fla.) rode to a gold medal in the junior women’scategory and Joe Sowers III (Glendale, Ariz.) won the junior men’s
Normally, the final stage of a stage race is supposed to be more of a celebratory parade than a decisive day in the saddle. But that's never been the case at the International Tour de Toona. Coming into the final stage, the top-2 men overall - Sergey Lagutin (Navigators Insurance) and Chris Baldwin (Toyota United) - were separated by only 3 seconds on general classification with 52-seconds of time bonuses up for grabs. Any one individual could win a maximum of 30-seconds. Kyle Wamsley (Colavita - Sutter Homes) would take the stage win, but the battle for yellow continued throughout the
One year after he was forced to pull out because of gastro-intestinal issues and exhaustion, Chris Eatough (Trek-Volkswagen) claimed the solo National 24-hour Championship, beating second-place Nat Ross (Subaru-Gary Fisher) by one lap. Held at the 24-Hours of Nine Mile in Wasau, Wisconsin, organizers had to call the race after 22 and 1/2 hours because of severe thunderstorms. Eatough had lapped the field by that time, and was declared the winner. Taking the women’s race was Rebecca Rusch. Check back for a complete report from VeloNews.com's Fred Dreier. 2006 NORBA NATIONAL 24 HOUR
Landis faces the press in Madrid
Mass Gallop: Freire takes a close one in Hamburg
The Waseberg was the day's major hurdle.
Gilbert and Wegmann give it a go.
Rebellin on the attack
The usual suspects
Armstrong and Lagutin wrap up 'Toona titles
Armstrong and Lagutin wrap up 'Toona titles
Floyd Landis, fighting a doping scandal that could cost him the Tour de France crown, made his case on US television on Friday and received a vote of confidence from seven-time Tour winner Lance Armstrong. Landis, appearing on CNN's "Larry King Live" programme from Madrid, reiterated that his positive test for an abnormal testosterone-to-epitestosterone level "was a shock as much to me as anyone else." He said he would do everything he could to clear his name. "I'm going to do my best to defend my dignity and my innocence," said the American who rides for the Swiss-based Phonak
CNN’s Larry King LiveInterview with Floyd LandisJuly 28, 2006 LARRY KING, CNN HOST: Last Sunday American Floyd Landis won cycling’s biggest race, the Tour de France. He did it after one of the most dramatic comebacks in the history of the event but a doping test which showed an abnormality has cast a major doubt over the victory and today in his first public appearance since the controversy broke, Landis proclaimed his innocence and he joins me now from Madrid. Was all this, Floyd, a shock to you? FLOYD LANDIS, BICYCLIST: Good evening, Larry, and yes, it was a shock as much to me as to
T-Mobile boss Olaf Ludwig on Saturday denied speculation his cycling team's sponsors had demanded his dismissal for his apparent defense of tainted star rider Jan Ullrich. "There has been no sacking or breaking of contract," Ludwig said before a meeting of sporting directors on the eve of the HEW Cyclassics in Hamburg. "There have been discussions and there will be more in the days to come." The former professional cyclist, the team's owner via his OLC company, has a contract until 2008 with phone company T-Mobile. But Ludwig angered the sponsors by suggesting things could
Saturday's epic 145.9km point-to-point road race was all it was cracked up to be - causing a decisive shift in the men's overall classification, although not without controversy. Sergey Lagutin (Navigators Insurance) won the race from a 6-man group sprint, snatching a 20-second time bonus and the yellow jersey along with it. Chris Baldwin (Toyota United) finished second, taking a 15-second time bonus, and putting him into second overall. Baldwin now trails Lagutin by only 3 seconds in general classification going into tomorrow's criterium, which has a total of 52 seconds of time
Landis at a Friday press conference in Madrid
Lagutin wins