The rainbow curse is something that doesn’t exist, says Boonen. Who can argue with that?
The rainbow curse is something that doesn’t exist, says Boonen. Who can argue with that?
The rainbow curse is something that doesn’t exist, says Boonen. Who can argue with that?
Hoste en route to winning the stage and the overall
Bernhard Eisel (FDJeux) made a ferocious sprint Wednesday to win the 227km second stage at the Three Days of De Panne and grabbed the overall lead for the effort. Eisel – who finished second in Tuesday’s opener -- came around Baden Cooke (Unibet.com) and out-kicked Danilo Napolitano (Lampre) to score the emphatic victory and nudged into the leader’s jersey thanks to time bonuses. A three-man break dominated most of the day’s action with Discovery Channel glued at the front of the peloton to protect the jersey for overnight leader Leif Hoste. Lampre, Quick Step and Davitamon-Lotto surged to
T-Mobile’s Tour de France hopeful Jan Ullrich has had to delay the start to his 2006 season as a knee problem has forced him to withdraw from the circuit de la Sarthe in France on April 4. T-Mobile team doctor Andreas Schmid confirmed Wednesday that Ullrich had irritated an old injury to his right knee sustained in early March and was not fit to race at Sarthe. "I was really looking forward to competitive racing," said a disappointed Ullrich. "From now on I will pay more attention to ensure the irritation is fully healed, then I can progressively increase the training load,” he said. "When
There is a chance Petacchi will switch roles with Zabel at Flanders
Team photo
Eisel takes the win and the lead
Dear readers, Back at Christmas, I threw in a letter from a reader claiming that rotating weight makes almost no difference on a wheel – that it takes negligible energy to bring it up to speed, and that the only thing that really matters when climbing is the overall weight of the bike, not how it’s distributed. Since then, I have gottena lot of mail about this, and a trip to France last week piqued my interest in this subject again. Perhaps some of you remember when I did a test in VeloNews seven years ago (in the 6/28/99 issue) of wheel inertia by building a rotational pendulumin my garage.
Leif Hoste (Discovery Channel) shot to victory in Tuesday’s opener at the Three Days of De Panne with a late burst to win a three-up sprint after a 50km breakaway held off the peloton. Hoste sprang with just about 75 meters to go to come around the hard-charging Austrian Berhnard Deisel (FDJeux) and Gert Steegmans (Davitamon-Lotto) to win the 194km stage from Middelkerke to Zottegem under sunny skies that saw many riders in short sleeves. "It was nice to win today after all the second and third places," Hoste told Belgian journalists. "It was very windy today and I’m not yet thinking about
Shimano has taken a back seat to the competition’s barrage of buzz this winter. Eerily quiet until recently, declining to release any 2007 product information, Shimano began testing its new E-Dura-Ace group right as the ProTour season kicked into full swing. Now, less than two weeks away from the Sea Otter Classic, which traditionally opens the domestic mountain-bike season, Shimano has announced preliminary details of its redesigned ’07 XTR group. Though images of the complete group are unavailable (scroll down for photos of other new Shimano goodies), a trained eye can spot bits and pieces
Hoste proves fastest in a three-up sprint
The 105 pedal
The compact crank
105 wheels
Ultegra wheels
Dura-Ace carbon
Ivan Basso’s emphatic victory in this weekend’s Criterium International left no doubt that the Italian is right on target for more important goals later in the season. With the win, Basso joins a growing list of contenders fighting for bragging rights with impressive early season victories. For Basso, his real challenges come in May’s Giro d’Italia and July’s Tour de France, but his win at Criterium International gives clear notice to his rivals that he’ll be ready. “I know that I’m in good shape and it’s very important for my preparation before the Giro and the Tour de France,” Basso said.
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 ourlast contest. Take the time to wander through that gallery and see if you agree or disagree with our choice of winner. We felt especially good about “Passing the torch,” a photo Mike Jacoubowsky took at the 2003 Tour de France. Nice work. Congratulations Mike! 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."Go ahead and take a look at our latest
We received the following letter this morning. - EditorWe are deeply saddened to inform you of the tragic passing of Bill Corliss, Director of Development for Specialty Electronics, for Bell Specialty. Bill was riding his bike with 7 other cyclists on Saturday morning near his home in Park City, Utah. A sudden stop by other cyclists led to a collision and ultimately Bill was fatally hit by oncoming traffic. Greg Shapleigh describes Bill this way: “He was a passionate and dedicated cyclist, and raced at a National level. Like many of us, cycling was the thread that connected all the
At the Redlands Bicycle Classic road race Sunday, Amber Neben (SC Velo), Health Net-Maxxis and Toyota-United demonstrated three of the myriad ways to win. In the 100km women’s race, Neben launched a solo attack on the second of nine technical laps and never looked back. In the 148km men’s competition, Health Net-Maxxis used its full team to successfully defend Nathan O’Neill overall lead. And Toyota-United’s Juan Jose Haedo — well, he just sprinted like hell. Scroll down for a gallery of Casey Gibson photos The road race began on Saturday’s criterium course, then climbed up out of
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. Rogers is an entertaining storytellerEditor:Kudos to Neal Rogers and his latest "Neighborhood" piece. That he has earned the trust and respect of professional riders is apparent, as is his innate ability to tell a story, share an experience, and entertain the cycling reader/websurfer.
Cycling's world governing body has reinstated the doctor who admitted supplyingdocuments to a journalist who used them in anarticle to accuse Lance Armstrong of doping.Doctor Mario Zorzoli, who works as a manager at the medical serviceof the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), was reinstated in his postMonday. Zorzoli had been provisionally suspended at the end of Februaryafter admitting he had unwittingly given the results of doping controlsto a journalist from the French sports daily L'Equipe.The journalist used them to illustrate a damning article in August 2005which alleged that
Basso finished second in Sunday's time trial, good enough to seal the deal after winning the morning's road stage.
Passing the Torch
Neben's bold move pays off
Haedo got a second chance and made the most of it
Armstrong and Neben make nice early on
Neben goes it alone
Armstrong found herself outgunned
O'Neill, in contrast, was well protected
The Health Net-Maxxis chain gang
TIAA-CREF on the chase
Toyota working it for Haedo
The final jerseys
Tour de France hopeful Floyd Landis has ruled out competing in the Giro d'Italia as part of his preparation to bid for the yellow jersey in July. Recent Paris-Nice winner Landis, who finished ninth overall on the Tour de France last year, had planned to compete in the three-week Giro (May 6-28) to fine tune his form. Phonak team manager John Lelangue said Sunday there had been a change of plans for July's big race. "Floyd has had a great start to the season so it's better that he has a more relaxed approach to the Tour," said Lelangue, who affirmed however that Phonak would not
Ivan Basso (CSC) grabbed his first victories of the 2006 season with an impressive display in this weekend’s Criterium International, winning Sunday’s morning road race and sewing up the overall title with a strong afternoon time trial. Only Alberto Martinez (Agritubel) could best Basso in the 8.3km time trial to conclude the three-stage, two-day test under cloudy skies in northern France. For Basso, one of the favorites for July’s Tour de France, the victory is a positive shot of morale going into larger goals coming this season. “I know that I’m in good shape and it’s very important for
Basso's showing good form.
Basso made things tough on Dekker in the morning
World road champion Tom Boonen (Quick Step-Innergetic) outsprinted breakaway companion Alessandro Ballan (Lampre-Fondital) to win his third consecutive E3 Prijs Vlaanderen Saturday in Harelbeke , Belgium. Boonen, 25, claimed his 11th victory of the season a little over a week before he will bid to claim his second consecutive Tour of Flanders crown. He thus becomes just the third rider, after Belgian great Rik Van Looy and Dutch great Jan Raas, to win the Harelbeke race three times in a row. Since his stock went sky high last season, Boonen has often been unstoppable when it comes to
Dutch veteran Erik Dekker rekindled his acquaintance with victory by winning the first of the three stages that make up the Critérium International Saturday in Charleville-Mezieres. The Rabobank stalwart, who has struggled for form of late due to injury, outsprinted Italy's Tour de France hopeful Ivan Basso (CSC) and Ukrainian Andriy Grivko (Milram) — both of whom had been earlier breakaway companions — after Spaniard Igor Astarloa (Barloworld) lost control and crashed on the slippery conditions home straight. Astarloa was credited with the same time as the lead group. Basso, the
Health Net-Maxxis successfully defended Nathan O’Neill’s lead in the Redlands Bicycle Classic criterium Saturday, taking the stage and the sprinter’s jersey in the process. With four competitors less than 30 seconds behind O’Neill after Friday’s time trial — and 44 seconds of bonuses up for grabs — Health Net-Maxxis had one objective in the 90-minute competition: defend. And defend the team did, riding as a compact eight-man unit at or near the front for nearly the entire race, taking most of the inter-race time bonuses and handily reeling in all attacks. And once the defensive objective
Dekker returns to form in France
Voigt in an early break
Voigt and CSC kept busy in the miserable conditions
Schleck and Sastre in an escape
Landis looks like he'd prefer to be elsewhere
The bunch rolls along
The Basso-Astarloa group
Zaballa and Gutierrez
Dekker and Sastre
Dekker on the podium
Menzies en route to winning two sprints and the crit
Did I really get it? Say, where is everybody?
Armstrong assumes the women's lead
Pic wasn't at all excited about winning the crit
Health Net working it . . .
. . . in defense of O'Neill's lead
Haedo lookin' good before laying it down
Jelly Belly on the front
The men roll through the start-finish
Sayers and Baldwin
Van Gilder leads
They worship this race here in Redlands
Alexandre Vinokourov’s road to the Tour de France won’t be going through Georgia this year. Vinokourov’s Liberty Seguros team isn’t making the trek next month for the Tour de Georgia, and Vinokourov – who won the final stage and the overall at the Vuelta a Castilla y León - will instead defend his title at Liège-Bastogne-Liège. “This year I am preparing everything for the Tour and we are planning to have no pressure before that,” Vinokourov told VeloNews in an interview this week. “I think I can return to the Tour podium.” The battling Kazakh – third overall in the 2003 Tour and fifth last
Australia's women are poised to take over where their all-conquering men left off when the two road racing events are run through Melbourne's picturesque Botanic Gardens on Sunday. But the men's competition remains open with South Africa, New Zealand, Canada and the British riders all in with a chance of usurping the host nation. Even the Isle of Man could spring a surprise. The Australian men crushed their rivals at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester when European-based professionals Stuart O'Grady, Cadel Evans and Baden Cooke allowed their opponents to take the lead
Belgian police raided the homes of a dozen professional racers Thursday, turning up such banned doping products as EPO, clenbuterol, nandrolone and a mix of human growth hormones and insulin. Police refused to release the names of the riders whose homes were searched, but the Belgian daily Gazet van Antwerpen printed the names of pros from such teams as Unibet.com, Rabobank, Fidea, Skil-Shimano and Palmans. Officials from Unibet.com later confirmed that team rider Geert Omloop, the Belgian national champion in 2003, was among those who received an unscheduled visit from Belgian
Editor’s note: We don’t hear from editor at large Patrick O’Grady as often as we once did, and we had become accustomed to not seeing black Crown Vics full of gray suits and black sunglasses in our rear-view mirror. So imagine our surprise at receiving a "diary" of sorts purporting to be the work of our peripatetic foaming rantist. It appeared to have been scrawled in No. 3B pencil on the sort of coarse paper one finds in rest-area toilets, and thus we can only hope that the copious stains involve mishaps with a coffee cup. A transcription follows. February 5 — On the road to Arizona via
Despite having a good excuse for a bad ride, Health Net-Maxxis’s Nathan O’Neill put in the day’s best performance in the opening 5km time trial of the Redlands Bicycle Classic. Fresh off a plane from Australia, where he won the Commonwealth Games time trial, O’Neill smoked the opening section of the 680-vertical-foot course and kept a big gear going over the steeper final part for the winning time of 9:17.82. It may have been California, but it wasn’t exactly a day at the beach — not after that long flight from Oz, right after winning a 40km time trial. "I got off the bike 10 meters after
Vinokourov wants to be on the podium in Paris
Our intrepid foaming rantist, about to go batty, bids his bride adieu before flapping off alone on a sorely needed road trip
The ultra-swank Mad Dog Media spring training camp headquarters
When Windshield Trim Attacks: O'Grady's favorite bike dodges a bullet
Not even jet lag after a flight from Australia could slow O'Neill
Neben wasn't feeling 100 percent, either, but still found a way to win
Men's runner-up Baldwin
Women's runner-up Armstrong
Two-time Redlands winner Moninger, who took third
Defending women's champ Thorburn, third on the day