The Tour’s ‘copter squadron
The Tour's 'copter squadron
The Tour's 'copter squadron
Sculpture in Montelimar
A spectator in Montelimar
You'll excuse us if we take a pass on this corn
Didi Senft is now a Tour de France regular
These guys may become fixtures as well
Well-tended trees
The VeloCrew takes a lunch break
Scenic Provence
Mari Holden, flying her team colors.
Keep the roads cool
Laurent Jalabert looking thoughtful at the start.
... lavender....
... everywhere.
Another beautiful sight at the Tour. Marketa Navratilova of Cor Vos Photo
Casey Gibson spots his retirement home.
Orchards are big business in Provence.
Surface temps were quite high...
... resulting in expected damage to the tarmac.
Commesso leads the break...
... Popovych leads the chase...
and the Tour heads into Gap.
Hincapie joined up with an early break, which never got far down the road.
Verbrugghe got in the right break... though now he probably wishes he hadn't
Pereiro relished his first day in yellow...
... as his team monitored the gap.
Closing the gap, however, fell to other teams.
And the chase almost succeeded.
Stage Stats: Stage 14 by the numbers
Stage Stats: Stage 14 by the numbers
Course: At 230km, this is the longest stage of the race, and together with the likely fast pace and baking hot weather, it could be one of the most grueling, too. It starts at Béziers on the Mediterranean seaboard before cutting across the southeast corner of the Massif Central on winding back roads that are constantly dipping and climbing through the foothills. The critical part of the stage comes with 60km to go, from where the race twists through the spectacular canyons of the Ardèche and Ibie rivers and crests two Cat. 4 climbs before emerging onto the N.102 highway with 25km to go.
The Tour de France saw two more teams, CSC and Caisse d’Épargne-Illes Balers join Discovery Channel in turning around their problem-stricken 2006 campaigns into face-saving celebrations on Saturday’s stage 13. The 230km stage from Béziers to Montélimar, the longest of the race, was won in a two-up sprint by evergreen German Jens Voigt (CSC) while breakaway companion Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Épargne) profited from their half-hour winning margin to take the yellow jersey from American Floyd Landis (Phonak). The outcome, was an incredibly fitting one, coming as it did 24 hours after the
Ryan Trebon has made a name for himself as one of the fastest starters on the NORBA National Mountain Bike Series circuit — the 6-foot, 7-inch rider likes to fire his afterburners early, and then try to hold on. Sometimes the tactic pays off — Trebon took the NMBS No. 3 short track at Mount Snow, Vermont, by soloing off the front early. However, more often than not, Trebon’s early suicide attacks have fizzled out long before the finish line. So when Trebon took a flyer on the first of four 7.9-mile laps during Friday’s national mountain-bike championships at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma,
Good friends, albeit from different teams, took the spoils on Friday in the 87-mile men’s Cascade Lakes Road Race. Burke Swindlehurst (Navigators) won stage 3 of Oregon’s Cascade Cycling Classic while Jeff Louder (Health Net-Maxxis), his Salt Lake City friend and training partner, moved into the overall lead. In the 75-mile women’s race, which was staged at the base of Mount Bachelor, 12 miles down the road from the men’s start, Kristen Armstrong (Lipton) won a sprint finish from Dotsie Bausch (Colavita-Cooking Light) and Mara Abbot (Rio Grande). MenThe action in the men’s race started
1. Jens Voigt (G), CSC, 230km in 5:24:36 (42.513kph)2. Oscar Pereiro Sio (Sp), Caisse d'Epargne-I.B., 00:003. Sylvain Chavanel (F), Cofidis, 00:404. Manuel Quinziato (I), Liquigas-Bianchi, 00:405. Andriy Grivko (Ukr), Milram, 06:246. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 29:577. Bernhard Eisel (A), Francaise des Jeux, 29:578. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Innergetic, 29:579. Carlos Da Cruz (F), Francaise des Jeux, 29:5710. Arnaud Coyot (F), Cofidis, 29:57 11. Marco Velo (I), Milram, 29:5712. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Credit Agricole, 29:5713. Francisco Ventoso (Sp), Saunier Duval, 29:5714. Luca
Victor Hugo Peña had a front-row seat to three of Lance Armstrong’s seven Tour de France victories and now he believes he’s about to witness another with his old U.S. Postal teammate Floyd Landis. Peña rode in support of Armstrong in 2001-03 at U.S. Postal Service and now he’s working to push Landis to his first Tour win. “I believe that Floyd can win this Tour,” Peña told VeloNews before Saturday’s start. “We have to take it day by day and see how things unfold, but the team is motivated to help him win. We believe he can win.” Peña, racing in his fourth Tour, became the first Colombian
What a difference a day made for Discovery Channel. The glum faces following Thursday’s setback in the Pyrenees were replaced with smiles following the victory in Stage 12 by Yaroslav Popovych. VeloNews caught up with Discovery Channel assistant sports director Sean Yates to get the lowdown on the aftermath of Thursday’s Pyrenean meltdown. Here are excerpts from the interview: VeloNews.com: What happened Thursday? The team couldn’t put its top riders into the front group, how much of a surprise was that? Sean Yates:We were hoping we’d have two guys in the selection. We were hoping George,
While you've been enjoying the weekend, firing up the BBQ and maybe downing a brew or three, Casey Gibson was galloping through France alongside le Tour, chronicling the day's action. Here's what he sent back across the pond.
If you believe Phonak team director John Lelangue, then the events of Saturday’s 230km stage 13 run from Beziers to Montelimar were all part of the master plan. Lelangue brushed off the notion that letting the yellow jersey go was a gamble, reverting to his now-familiar mantra that the only thing that matters is the final outcome. Lelangue claimed that even before the peloton rolled out for another scalding day in the saddle, his team’s hold on the overall GC was not the No. 1 priority. “It was the strategy already in the morning on the bus,” explained the Phonak boss after team captain
WeatherMostly sunny, very hot again, high 35C Stage winnerJens Voigt (CSC), 5h24:36, 42.514kph – The German won his second career Tour stage in trademark panache, attacking in the Tour’s longest stage to win in a breakaway. The five-man breakaway started to dissolve under searing temperatures and counter-attacks late in the stage. Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Epargne) chased a long sprint from Voigt, but the German out-muscled him for the win. Race leaderPereiro, 2,498.6km, 59h50:34 – Spain’s Pereiro becomes the seventh rider to hold the yellow jersey, just one man short of the record eight
In the Tour of California, there was a guy with a sign on the side of the road that read “Jens for president.” After today, I would vote for him. He got the job done. Jens’s campaign would consist of free Play Stations for everyone no matter what age and probably a bit of communism, just because its easier. If you haven't guessed by now, Jens won today 30 minutes in front of the peloton. He pummeled himself into a break away, like he does almost every day and then rode 200km with four other guys on the hottest day of the Tour. He deserved the win today like no other. Jens is a bit
Saturday’s long, hot and laborious stage 13 across the deep south of France was debilitating for everyone at the Tour de France. And it was no surprise that a small group of riders deep in the general classification successfully conducted a breakaway of more than 200km — even though few expected Floyd Landis and his Phonak team to let the break gain half an hour and hand their former teammate, Oscar Pereiro, the yellow jersey. While Pereiro, stage winner Jens Voigt and their companions averaged a solid 42.5 kph on the rolling course between the Mediterranean and Rhône Valley, the peloton,
Stage 13: Béziers to Montélimar - 230km
Stage 13: Béziers to Montélimar - 230km
Voigt edges Pereiro to take his second-ever Tour stage.
Trebon on his own
Gould's visualization pays off
The new leader of the Tour
Meet The Press: Phonak director John Lelangue explains why losing the jersey is no biggie
Phonak at the team introduction on Saturday morning.
Floyd looks serious... and a little bored.
Axel had his fans there.
Leipheimer on his way to the sign-in
Once the break formed, these guys put on some serious time.
A sky-box at le Tour.
Gibson makes a point of not repeating the typical TdF sunflower photo and opts for lavender, instead
Landis may have to store the yellow one for a day or so
Landis wants to wear this into Paris. Who has it before that, doesn't really matter.
Lelange meets reporters after Phonak handed off the jersey
Stage Stats: Stage 13 by the numbers
Stage Stats: Stage 13 by the numbers
Voigt gets the stage; Pereiro gets the jersey
Jens gets in the break...
... and delivers when it counts.
Hincapie - like everyone else in the peloton - had a slow day in the saddle.
Phonak took it slow and easy.
Gontchar doing something many in the peloton did Saturday.
Hot and scenic
Scenic and hot
Landis took a gamble, expecting to take the jersey back in the Alps.
A look ahead: GC battle likely in stormy weather on Sunday
A look ahead: GC battle likely in stormy weather on Sunday
Course: There are no major climbs on this first of three transitional stages between the Pyrénées and Alps, but that doesn’t mean it will be an easy day. Stages like this often give rise to long breakaways that succeed, especially when the weather in this southern part of France is hot and sticky. Any break that develops in the hilly opening two-thirds of the stage will need to get at least a 10-minute lead if it has any chance of holding off the pack on the straighter roads and flatter terrain of the final 70km. History: An almost identical stage from Luchon to Carcassonne in 1962 was won
Discovery Channel earned back some pride Friday with a timely stage win from Yaroslav Popovych just 24 hours after the team’s overall chances for an eighth consecutive Tour de France victory melted in Thursday’s rugged five-climb stage across the Pyrénées. With the odds of a Discovery rider winning in Paris in the realm of fantasy rather than reality, the team pow-wowed before the start of the torrid 211.5km stage 12 from Luchon to Carcassonne to formulate a new strategy for the second half of the Tour. The plan: Get into breakaways and attack for stage wins. The tactic worked superbly,