McCartney nearly did it again
McCartney nearly did it again
McCartney nearly did it again
Riding in the rain
Rodriguez makes his move
Phonak in control, waiting for tomorrow
Zabriskie: Can he attack on Brasstown Bald?
The trio on the run
Spanish rider David Muñoz (Comunidad Valenciana) snatched the third stage of the Giro di Trentino in Italy on Thursday, but Damiano Cunego (Lampre-Fondital) remained safely in the race leader’s jersey. With the win in the 168km stage from Romeno to Tione, Muñoz marks just his second victory of his career to go along with a stage in the 2002 Tour of Portugal. Muñoz escaped with five other riders just 10km into the day’s course and was fastest of the bunch. Cunego, meanwhile, remained safely inside the peloton to retain the race leaders’ jersey. The 2004 Giro d’Italia champion sounded
Dear Bob:I have the good fortune to live in Southern Minnesota where the roadsare in good condition, and relatively free of traffic. Our club ridesare always quite enjoyable and take us on some very pleasant routes throughlocal farmland. Most of the roads we ride on have very minimal traffic,to the point where a car goes past us (in either direction) often onlyonce every 10 or 15 minutes. In general, most motorists are quiteconsiderate, but as always there are a few who feel that bicyclists simplydo not belong on the roads.Minnesota law states that bicyclists are allowed to ride two
For the second time in two years the battle for supremacy at the Tour de Georgia is setting up as a showdown between Americans Floyd Landis and Tom Danielson after they vaulted into the top two places in the overall standings by finishing 1-2 in the Stage 3 individual time trial on Thursday.
Landis races to the stage win and overall lead ...
... setting up a showdown with Danielson
Popovych finished ninth and slipped to sixth overall
U.S. TT champ Baldwin rode to seventh on the day
Danielson gets a boost from fans along the route
Ekimov rode to 15th on the day
When all was said and done, Landis was on top
But if he falters in the hills, Danielson will be waiting
Aussie Stuart O´Grady returned to action in Monday’s Rund um Köln after missing the northern classics with injuries. O´Grady cracked some ribs in a high-speed fall at Tirreno-Adriatico in early March, forcing him to the sidelines for Milan-San Remo and Tour of Flanders, two classics where he’s previously finished on the podium. A healthy O´Grady is back on the bike and looking to rebuild his form for the Tour de France. This year, O´Grady said he'll be at the service of team captain Ivan Basso and won’t be chasing the green jersey. "If it was going to happen, it would have happened by
Spanish riders virtually overran the 70th edition of the Flèche Wallonne classic on Wednesday. Whenever there was a significant break, a Spaniard was in it; and when it came to the stiff finishing climb up the Mur de Huy, one Spaniard after another attacked before Alejandro Valverde surged in the final 200 meters to score his first victory in a ProTour classic.
Yaroslav Popovych sure knows how to impress the boss. With Discovery Channel’s Lance Armstrong looking on for the first time here in Georgia, the rising star from the Ukraine made a late-race escape to win Stage 2 of the 2006 Ford Tour de Georgia on Wednesday.
Cycling legend and Colorado native Davis Phinney was inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame Tuesday night in Denver. The Tour de France stage winner, who racked up 300 wins in his professional career, headed up an inductee class that included longtime University of Colorado women’s basketball coach Ceal Barry and Denver Broncos defensive lineman Dennis Smith. A graduate of Boulder High School, Phinny won a bronze medal at the 1984 Olympic games in the team time trial, as well as two stages of the Tour de France — one in 1986 and another in 1987. In 2000 Phinney was diagnosed with
Check out all the videos from the Tour de Georgia. Exclusive race highlights and interviews. Check out https://www.velonews.com/vntv/
The U.S. Postal Service ain't got nothin' on Casey Gibson when it comes to the "neither rain nor . . . " bit. He was out there on a rainy day in Georgia, bringing it all back home to you. Here it is.
O'Grady - seen here at the 2004 Tour - says that as a member of CSC he has other goals and responsibilities
Valverde kicks into overdrive at the finish
Popovych gets the win
Arrieta and Finot launched the first major break of the day
The podium: Two Spaniards and a Dutchman
Freire and Moos on the attack
Liquigas worked for defending champ Di Luca, to no avail
The Mur de Huy
Extebarria and Valverde sprint for it
And Valverde gets it
He who hesitates is lost
O'Bee clears the KOM
The mid-day train through Georgia (apologies to Gladys Knight and the Pips)
Viatcheslav Ekimov shares a moment with director Johan Bruyneel and a VIP of the Tour-winning persuasion
Attention, France: In Georgia, they stop the train so a bike race can pass
Floyd Landis (Phonak) looks ahead to Thursday's time trial
Davitamon-Lotto looks forward to delivering Fred Rodriguez to a stage win (but not today)
Race leader Lars Michaelsen (CSC) shadowed by teammate Jakob Piil
Alas, Popo' got the stage and the overall lead . . .
. . . and you know what that means
We’ve posted the submissions of our reader-submitted Sea Otter Photo Gallery and encourage you to take a look. Take the time to wander through and see if anything strikes your fancy. Let us know what you think by dropping us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.com and we’ll take your views into account when we name a winner later this week. This also gives us the opportunity to announce our second event-specific contest here at VeloNews.com and encourage viewers to send in new photos from this week’s Tour de Georgia. Again, our rules are slightly different than our usual contest, so be sure to
Rebellin dreams of one moreTwo years ago, Davide Rebellin was riding the best wave of his career, surging to an incredible treble that included a sweep of the Ardennes classics with back-to-back wins at Amstel Gold Race, Fleche Wallone and Liege-Bastogne-Liege. This year, a banged-up Rebellin is dreaming of winning just one. A crash at the Tour of the Basque Country earlier this month left the Gerolsteiner captain with some injuries to his ribs, but it´s not stopping him of aiming for more Ardennes glory. “I´d love to win another, because it would serve as a kind of confirmation,” Rebellin
Like a good real-estate agent, Lars Michaelsen knows that location is everything – especially when it comes to the waning moments of a bunch sprint. While some of the race's top sprinters were missing from the end game, the longtime CSC pro outgunned American Fred Rodriguez (Davitamon-Lotto) and Aussie Caleb Manion (Jelly Belly) on Tuesday to win the 128.9-mile gallop from Augusta to Macon on day one of the 2006 Ford Tour de Georgia.
With its shorter distance and steeper finish, the Flèche Wallonne is a perfect transition from last Sunday’s Amstel Gold Race and next Sunday’s Liège-Bastogne-Liège. The Flèche is only 202km, compared with the Amstel’s 253km and Liège’s 262km, and that shorter distance sometimes gives early breaks a better chance of survival, but the finish on the infamous Mur de Huy (a kilometer at 9.5 percent, with two bends topping 19 percent in the middle) gives the Flèche its defining feature. The past two years, Amstel winners Danilo Di Luca (2005) and Davide Rebellin (2004) have also won the Flèche,
It’s been nearly six years since former junior national team rider Greg Strock charged that his coach and other team officials had doped him without his consent in the early 1990s, and it will be at least a few more months before a jury hears arguments in the case. On Tuesday, the matter made its first appearance in a courtroom as a U.S. District Court judge heard arguments on defense motions to dismiss. Strock, now a medical doctor and a member of the faculty at the University of Indiana Medical School, joined former teammate and fellow plaintiff Erich Kaiter in Denver as attorneys argued
Ace shooter Casey Gibson was on hand Tuesday as the Ford Tour de Georgia kicked off in Augusta ... here's what he sent home.
Rebellin had a great run in '04
Race Finish
Greg Strock (r) consults with a member of his legal team outside the Federal Court House in Denver
Wenzel (c) with attorney Reid Kelly (r) and USAC attorney William Senter speak to reporters outside the Federal Court House in Denver
Olson on his own
Michaelsen on the podium
What could rival an autograph from Discovery Channel's Viatcheslav Ekimov?
How about James Brown?
The peloton marches through Georgia
Tom Danielson (Discovery Channel) and Floyd Landis (Phonak) mind each other
Jackson Stewart (Kodakgallery.com-Sierra Nevada) gets a little face time for the sponsor
Janez Brajkovic (Discovery Channel) gets some lunch
Chris Baldwin (Toyota United) chases
J.J. Haedo (Toyota United) is a blur when he lights it up
It’s almost difficult to believe that a year has passed since last year’sTour de Georgia, which will be remembered not only for an aggressive raceseparated by nine seconds between Americans Floyd Landis, Levi Leipheimerand overall winner Tom Danielson, but also for the pre-race press conferencethat brought the world the news that Lance Armstrong would retire after attempting a historic seventh Tour de France victory. In Armstrong’s swan song American race appearance, the defending 2004Tour de Georgia champion had an admittedly sub-par time trial and rodein support of his young teammate
Danielson looking to repeat without the world's best domestique at his side
Tour de Georgia: Top Americans looking for victory on home soil
Tour de Georgia: Top Americans looking for victory on home soil
The road up Brasstown Bald will again be decisive
Stage 4 - From Dalton to Dahlonega
Theo Bos made it look easy in a daring showdown against Craig MacLean to win his second match sprint world title in three years. MacLean’s brawn was no match for Bos’s pounce. The big Dutchman sprang away from the Scot after a cat-and-mouse game in two heats to win the men’s sprint title in Sunday’s final day of action at the world track cycling championships in Bordeaux, France. "This world title comes at a high level because all the riders coming off the Commonwealth are in really good shape, so this means a lot for me," said Bos, who’s been nicknamed by the Dutch press as the "Boss of
Many experts predicted that Sunday’s Amstel Gold Race would end in a bunchsprint up the climb to the finish on the infamous Cauberg hill in Valkenberg.The experts were wrong, and after a blizzard of attacks in the final 60km,CSC’s Frank Schleck emerged from a 10-man break with 10km to go and scoredhis first-ever classics victory. “It never hurts to attack,” said Schleck, who is the first rider fromLuxembourg to win a classic in more than 50 years. “I saw that [Sergei]Ivanov attacked, I saw that [Paolo] Bettini attacked, so I decided to takemy chance.”
Friedman and Huff get a trial by fire in the Madison
Schleck picked the right time to attack
Bos does it again
It was Bettini's chase of Wesseman that set Schleck for the win
Michael Boogerd and his Rabobank teammates missed the bus this time.
Wesseman managed to hold on for second.