Mariano Friedick on the final descent.
Mariano Friedick on the final descent.
Mariano Friedick on the final descent.
Leipheimer charges off on the final descent
Jens Voight leads the chase after Levi on the descent.
Leipheimer keeps the climber's jersey
The world’s No. 1-ranked rider, Oenone Wood, (Team Nürnberger) has won Australia’s Geelong Tour for the third straight year finishing the four stage three day race five seconds clear of second placed Melissa Holt of New Zealand with Russian Svetlana Bubnenkova taking third. Wood went into Thursday's final stage, a 114km ride out and back from Lara, with a ten second margin over Holt and her defense of the lead was made slightly easier by the withdrawal of Austrian Christiane Soeder who had been ranked second at nine seconds but did not line up for the final stage. "I don't think it
Perfect weather, postcard scenery and a long day in the saddle marked the Amgen Tour of California’s fourth stage, from Monterey to San Luis Obispo, on Thursday. After 131 miles — 140 miles, to be exact, after a 9-mile neutralized parade section through Monterey — Toyota-United’s Argentinean sprinter Juan Jose Haedo, winner of stage 1 in Santa Rosa, proved he’s the man to beat in fast finishes at this tour, crossing the line ahead of Davitamon-Lotto’s Fred Rodriguez.
"Everywhere you look is another great scenic," says photographer Casey Gibson, who is covering the Amgen Tour of California. And today was no exception, as the peloton rolled from Monterey down the California coast and inland to San Luis Obispo. Enjoy.
Haedo outkicks Rodriguez at the end of the queen stage
Peloton meets Pacific
Landis retains the overall lead
Hasta la vista to Monterey's Cannery Row
And hello to the California coastline
Another coastal shot
The break rolls along
Some camera time for Colavita Olive Oil-Sutter Home
McCartney up front
Does Landis look worried?
Not with Phonak on the job
Toyota-United Pro's Haedo does it again . . .
. . . and cools off afterward
Horner wasn't exactly welcome in the break
Gusev and Chadwick
Phonak clocks in
Landis and O'Neill
Showing the flag
The world's No. 1 ranked rider, Oenone Wood, (Team Nurnberger) has taken over the lead in Australia's Geelong Tour after Wednesday's incident-packed third stage at Barwon Heads on Victoria's Surfcoast. Wood, the defending Tour champion, went into the 76km stage - five laps of a scenic coastal circuit - trailing overnight leader, Austrian Christiane Soeder (Univega) by three seconds but with sprint bonuses on offer through four intermediate sprints and for the stage finish, Wood used her speed to snatch the leader's purple jersey from her overseas rival. Wood won the
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.ESPN2 coverage is a bad betEditor:In Houston I waited until 1 a.m. last night to catch the ESPN2 highlights for day two of the Tour of California. After advertisements, I estimate about 40 minutes of actual highlights. What kind of commitment does ESPN call that? I can’t believe that
Five minutes after he crossed the line in a blur, warmed down, pulled up to his Phonak team soigneur for a jacket, and signed some autographs for a couple of fans, Floyd Landis was ready to talk. He was anxious to find out how he had done in the crucial 27km time trial stage of the Amgen Tour of California. "Did I get it?" he asked his team helper. "We’ll find out in a minute," he was told, knowing he had already beaten stage favorite Dave Zabriskie of CSC by half a minute and that Discovery Channel’s race leader George Hincapie was about to finish.
Landis stays aero, even in a tight corner
It wasn't Leipheimer's day, out there in the wind - he finished ninth at 1:16
Rogers, resplendent in the rainbow stripes, finished 26th at 2:18
Danielson, 12th at 1:43
Even when suffering, Horner smiles
Hincapie, fourth at 55 seconds, is still honing his time-trial skills
Zabriskie was second, 26 seconds slower than Landis
On Sunday, just as his Colavita-Sutter Home teammates were starting their 2006 road campaign on the streets of San Francisco in the Tour of California prologue, Jonathan Page was cleaning the last bit of Belgian dirt out of his teeth after the final UCI cyclo-cross race of the 2005-06 season in Oostemalle, Belgium. While Page (who races 'cross for Liberty Seguros-Cérvélo) finished 12th in Oostemalle, the GVA Series finale, his 7th place result from Saturday in the eighth and concluding SuperPrestige Series race in Vorselaar vaulted the former three-time U.S. Elite champion into some
Austrian Christiane Soeder (Univega) claimed opening honors in stage one of the Geelong Tour Tuesday, an 8km time trial at bayside Portarlington. Soeder, who in a former sporting career claimed the German title in 800m and 1500m running and has medaled twice at the World Duathlon Championships, posted a time of 11:07.510c to defeat Russian Svetlana Bubnenkova by five seconds with New Zealand's Melissa Holt third in 11:12.820. Soeder, a qualified doctor, has been in Australia during the summer to take advantage of the good weather and training conditions in her bid to be in top form this
George Hincapie of the Discovery Channel team lit up the Amgen Tour of California stage race on Tuesday with an electrifying sprint win in downtown San Jose. Hincapie’s win came with a 10-second time bonus, which leapfrogged him past race leader Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner) and into the golden race leader’s jersey.
The overall lead changed hands at the Tour of California on Tuesday as George Hincapie and his Discovery Channel teammates took command of the95-mile stage to San Jose, at precisely the point most would have predicted. Designated as the make-or-break mark in the stage, the steep climb up Sierra Road rose 1800 feet in just 3.8 miles for an average pitch of 10 percent, with a couple of points along the way hitting 16 percent. As always, photographer Casey Gibson was there to record the action from start to finish. Yesterday's Gallery
It's been a great year for Page.
Hincapie proves fastest in the finale
The Discovery Channel captain takes the overall lead from Gerolsteiner's Levi Leipheimer
Kaggestad, Creed and Jacques-Maynes launched an early break
Creed leads
Savoldelli working on Hincapie's behalf
There are worse places to race your bicycle
Kohl, Leipheimer and Landis, going up ...
... and the same trio rolling it toward San Jose
Leipheimer gave no ground on the hills
Credit Agricole's Saul Raisin signs an autograph for a fan
Freddie Rodriguez takes a look up the climb and doesn't like what he sees.
Man of many talents: CSC director Bjarne Riis does a little bit of everything. Here he pushes Cancellara back into the race after an early crash.
Discovery's Tom Danielson leads the climbers above San Jose.
Hincapie suffering to stay with the leaders and get to the finishing sprint...
Nicely recovered, Hincapie makes his move in the final meters...
... and takes the stage and the leader's jersey.
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 especially liked “Tennessee District RR,” By Bill Parsons.” Yeah sure, the guy was bound to be caught, but we appreciate and empathize with the desire to make the break. Congratulations Bill! Once you thaw out, drop us a note at Rosters@InsideInc.com to work out the details and we’ll send you a copy of Graham
Havana - Cuba's longserving president Fidel Castro won't be able to excuse himself from physical exercise after he was given a bike by Belgian cycling legend Eddy Merckx on Monday. Castro, who will be 80 in August, was given the bike by the five-time Tour de France winner for his promotion of the sport in the country. Merckx, known as the 'Cannibal' during his bicycling days and who was anointed best cyclist of the 20th century by the sport's governing body the UCI, presented the blue Merckx, adorned with two small Cuban flags, to the President of the Cuban Olympic
It didn’t take long for the upstart Toyota-United team to make an impact on the American road-racing scene. Just a couple of weeks after announcing its team name and roster, Toyota-United’s four-time Argentinean champion, Juan Jose Haedo, scored the biggest win of his career in Monday’s opening road stage at the Amgen Tour of California, an 81.5-mile jaunt north from Sausalito to Santa Rosa.
Boulder, CO, February 20, 2006 — Discovery Channel rider Michael Barry and Graham Watson, the internationally known cycling photographer, will autograph copies of their books on the last day of the Amgen Tour of California. On Sunday, February 26, both authors will meet fans and autograph their books at the VeloNews booth in the expo area, which is near the stage finish in Redondo Beach, CA. Barry wrote Inside the Postal Bus about his experience riding with Lance Armstrong and the U.S. Postal Cycling Team during the 2004 season. Barry will meet fans and autograph copies of Inside the Postal
Boulder, CO, February 20, 2006 — Specialized Bicycle Components will host a benefit reception featuring a bike fit demonstration by VeloPress author, Andrew Pruitt. VeloPress has published Pruitt’s new book, Andy Pruitt’s Complete Medical Guide for Cyclists. Following the conclusion of Stage 2 of the Tour of California on February 21, Specialized is hosting a reception at the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation benefiting the California Bicycle Coalition and Paul David Clark Bicycle Safety Fund. The event will give cyclists, fans and special guests the opportunity to learn about the
Sunshine and blue skies marked Sunday's finale to the 14th annual John Earley Memorial Valley of the Sun Stage Race, the Landis Cyclery Downtown Capital Criterium in Phoenix. Attacks and breaks were the order of the day in both men’s and women’s races, run on a 1.6km, figure-eight course at Wesley Bolen Plaza, but nothing stuck. In the 70-minute men’s crit, Neil Shirley (Jittery Joe’s) proved best of the bunch, taking the win ahead of Emile Abraham (AEG-Toshiba-JetNet) and Wes Hartman (Targetraining). The 40-minute women’s crit went to Laura Downey (America’s Dairyland), who outkicked
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.Fox covers fishing and poker, but cycling? NahEditor:I wasn't able to watch the taped coverage of the Tour of California last night and assumed I'd be able to catch up on it this morning. I was at the Fox News web site and thought for sure they'd have something on it. Their
The Tour of California hit the roads north of San Francisco on Monday, heading out of Sausalito to cover a scemic route up the coast and into Santa Rosa, in Sonoma County. Toyota-United's four-time Argentinean champion, Juan Jose Haedo savored his new team's first-ever victory. By winning Sunday's prologue time trial, local star Levi Leipheimer made certain that he would be dressed perfectly as he rode into his home town. Photographer Casey Gibson was there from start to finish.
Tennessee District RR
Haedo scores a big win for the brand-new Toyota-United Pro team
The men's podium
Downey and Webb duking it out
Leipheimer salutes the hometown crowd
Leipheimer basks in the glow of his hometown support
Rolling along the coast
Julich dances on the pedals
Another type of wheeled transportation altogether
Gerolsteiner keeps a short leash on the bunch
The hometown hero
A modest Haedo downplayed his stage victory
The peloton rides past seaside fans.
Coming down to Muir Beach
Gerolsteiner was there to protect the race leader