Page makes the top 10
Page makes the top 10
Page makes the top 10
The Dutch hosts wasted no time getting on the podium, with a win in the opening Junior Men's race at the Cyclo-cross World Championships in Zeddam. The appropriately named Boy van Poppel dropped the rest of the leaders to solo across the finish line in front of a cheering crowd. Bjorn Selander was the top U.S. finisher in seventh place. The 40-minute race began, as expected, very fast, with eight riders gapping the rest of the field by the halfway point in the opening lap. Van Poppel was there, as was Selander. Others in the lead group included Robert Gavenda (Slo), the leading rider
Zdnek Stybar of the Czech Republic took his second straight world title in the under-23 category at the cyclo-cross world championships on Saturday, outsprinting Lars Boom (Ned) and a bitterly disappointed Niels Albert (Bel), the favourite going into the race. American U-23 champion Troy Wells went down in a crash at the start of the race, cutting open his forehead and nose and eventually finishing a lap down. This was expected to be a race between Stybar, Albert and Boom, and they did not disappoint. Albert opened a lead in the first half lap on the downhill, and had a 10-second lead over
Mayo eyes return to gloryIban Mayo – the once-mighty Basque who seemed to have Lance Armstrong in his sights for two years – is hoping for a return to form in 2006 after an abysmal season last year. In 2005, the dashing Euskaltel-Euskadi rider was a shadow of his former self that saw him surge to a stage victory up Alpe d’Huez in the 2003 Tour de France and later toppled Armstrong en route to the 2004 Dauphine Libere win. But he later abandoned the 2004 Tour in humiliation and limped through the 2005 campaign with poor form and injury, never to rediscover his spark in a frustrating
Van Poppel took advantage of his long stride.
Selander stayed up front throughout
Stybar nips Boom at the line
The lead trio
Stybar on the front
Albert and Boom
The podium
Wells soldiers on despite a gash to the face
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany - Here we go again with Bode Miller. Just as the brash World Cup champion skier decided to skip this weekend‘s events to rest up for the Turin Games and get away from media scrutiny, Miller suggested in an interview with Rolling Stone that Barry Bonds and Lance Armstrong took performance-enhancing drugs. Bonds‘ agent, Jeff Borris, declined to respond to Miller‘s comments. Telephone and email messages left with Armstrong representatives were not immediately returned Thursday. Miller, who competed in 136 straight World Cup races and last missed a race in
Michael Rogers, the promising Australian rider on T-Mobile, said he will hold his Tour de France ambitions in check to help team captain Jan Ullrich try for another maillot jaune. The three-time world time trial champion said the team would rally behind the German captain in his quest to win a second Tour crown. “My goals are the team’s goals,” Rogers said in an interview on the team’s web page. “Jan Ullrich is the leader and the team is 100 percent committed to supporting him.” Rogers has been hailed as a potential Tour winner himself, but has so far struggled to stay with the best
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.Don’t dilute the sport for fad fansEditor:Being an avid cyclist and motorsports fan/participant, I found the recent comparisons between the two interesting. When comparing NASCAR to cycling when it comes to spectator attraction, it is important to understand that NASCAR is successful
"I call 'em as I see 'em, and if I don't see 'em, I make 'em up." — George Carlin as sportscaster Biff Barf One of the bad things about traditional publishing is that once you’ve put something out there, whether it’s a story, a photo or a cartoon, well … you’re stuck with it, for good or ill. But with the Internet, all things are possible. Make a factual error? Fix it. Don’t like being seen in a photo with, say, Jack Abramoff? Make it go away. Got a couple different takes on a cartoon? Give the folks a look at all of them. Tom Toles of The Washington Post may not be the
With the world cyclo-cross championships this weekend in Zeddam, The Netherlands, I can’t help but pull for Canadian Lyne Bessette to bring home a medal. While the elite North American men may not have strong chances to podium this year, Bessette does. After dominating the North American circuit in October and November, Bessette has shown she can ride with the world’s best, taking third behind Daphny Van Den Brand at the January 15 World Cup in France and seventh last weekend at the World Cup final at Hoogerheide, The Netherlands, 1:14 behind repeat winner Van Den Brand. In a quick e-mail
At T-Mobile, Rogers knows he may not get too much podium time for the immediate future.
The first idea ...
... and the last one
Bessette: North America's best shot at an elite 'cross-world's medal this year?
Eric Wallace, sporting a Canadian national jersey at last year's MTB worlds
The mystery team
Lithuanian cyclist Raimondas Rumsas, who finished third in the 2002 Tour de France, was given a four-month suspended prison sentence by a court in the French Alpine village of Bonneville on Thursday. Rumsas and his wife Edita were both convicted on charges of importing prohibited doping substances in connection with a case that began on the final day of the 2002 Tour. Both Rumsas and his wife were given the same suspended sentences and fined 3000 euros ($3675), while Polish doctor Krzysztof Ficek was handed a 12-month suspended sentence for prescribing the drugs. During the trial on
We’re leaving camp at dark-thirty. It is cold; cold like the winter Olympics will be here in two weeks. Oh yeah, they will be. Actually, we had great weather here in Tuscany and given the fact that I am going back to my home in Spain I can’t really complain, especially since some of the others, like Jens Voigt, are heading back to a brutal cold spell in Germany, where it’s been hitting minus 38 degrees. Speaking of Jens, to add insult to injury (no pun intended), he had the screws taken out of his shoulder this morning. Jens is one serious badass and showed some real character gritting
Lithuanian cyclist Raimondas Rumsas, who finished third in the 2002 Tour de France, was given a four-month suspended prison sentence by a court in the French Alpine village of Bonneville on Thursday. Rumsas and his wife, Edita, were both convicted on charges of importing prohibited doping substances in connection with a case that began on the final day of the 2002 Tour. Both Rumsas and his wife were given the same suspended sentences and fined 3000 euros ($3675), while Polish doctor Krzysztof Ficek was handed a 12-month suspended sentence for prescribing the drugs. During the trial on
The Rumsases leave the Bonneville court house in November
Rumsas already knew of the arrest as he stood on the podium in 2002
The Rumsases leave the Bonneville court house in November
In mylast column we discussed proper meal timing around evening training. Many cyclists also train in the early morning hours with little time to eat and drink before heading out on the road. Let’s take a look at some nutritional strategies that address the food and fluid challenges of early morning training. One of the biggest dilemmas confronting morning training is that you wake up in the morning with low liver glycogen stores. A major function of your liver is to maintain a steady level of glucose in the blood. Your liver releases glucose into your bloodstream during exercise and
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.Millar as role model? A bit early, no?Editor:David Millar's comment that he wants to "become an icon for clean cycling as well as an example to young people" is preposterous. Everyone deserves a second chance (and Millar has served his time), but it's a bit premature for him to
Adjustable or disposable?Dear Lennard,Can you tell me if the bottom brackets on the two-piece style Shimano cranks have adjustable bearings, like those used in a hub or pedal or are they a non-adjustable sealed cartridge, like that used in the current Octalink bottom brackets? I don’t see separate bottom bracket bearings being sold for the new style cranks, so I’m guessing they are adjustable rather than disposable, but it’s just not clear. I need new mountain-bike cranks, but I chew through the Octalink bottom brackets pretty quickly, so a non-disposable bottom bracket would probably make
The crown jewel of French sport, the Tour de France, is to start for the first time in London next year, mayor Ken Livingstone confirmed on Tuesday. It will be only the third time that the race has come to England in its 103-year history and the first time that the prestigious Grand Depart will be given on English soil. Livingstone said that London would host the prologue time trial on July 7, 2007 and the first stage of the race the following day. The tour finishes as usual on the Champs-Elysees in central Paris on July 23 after crisscrossing the French countryside from the Atlantic Ocean
Lance Armstrong and Discovery team director John Bruyneel reaffirmed the team’s commitment to fighting for victory at the spring classics, the Giro and the Tour at the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team’s presentation Tuesday morning in Beverly Hills, California. "The Tour de France is still the focus; I am not prepared to not win it," Bruyneel said. "But there are definitely other races. The Giro is an important race, as are the spring classics. There is a new race this year, the Tour of California. There are definitely going to be other races that are important, but for the Tour we have a
Are these bearings serviceable? Nope.
The final leg of the 2005 Tour of Britain used a one-mile circuit in Central London that took in Trafalgar Square, Nothumberland Avenue, Victoria Embankment and Parliament Square
Armstrong may be in civvies, but he still has a role with the team
Danielson will be one of Discovery's go-to guys in the Tour of California
Retired? Not hardly. Armstrong will advise the team, work with Discovery Channel and continue his fight against cancer
Discovery 2006
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.Remember the Wheat Thins series?Editor:The concept of cycling events on short, spectator-friendly courses in major cities is hardly new - anyone remember the Wheat Thins Mayors Cup Series? It had major corporate sponsorship (Nabisco) in big-city downtowns, short, fast circuits, and lots
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with Syntace USA, has announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed. Name of Product: F99 (Force 99) Bicycle Handlebar Stems Units: About 2,300 Distributor: Syntace USA, of Olney, Ill. Hazard: The recalled bicycle stems can crack or break under normal conditions, causing the rider to fall and suffer serious injury. Incidents/Injuries: No incidents or injuries have been reported. Description: The recalled bicycle
The 2007 Tour de France will begin in London next year following an agreement by city mayor Ken Livingstone and race organizers ASO, the Lettre de l'Expansion economic journal reported on Monday. The most prestigious cycling race in the world has never started in London, though it twice visited England, in 1974 and 1994. In 1998, the tour started in Dublin before immediately going back to France. Tour de France organizers, questioned by AFP, did not comment. T-Mobile names five to Tour teamT-Mobile has named five of its nine riders for the 2006 Tour de France, with Jan Ullrich
Off-season cyclists, spin fanatics, and exercise bicyclists can keep their New Year's resolutions and get in stronger shape for the spring with a new book from VeloPress - "Workouts in a Binder for Indoor Cycling" by Dirk Friel and Wes Hobson. Spending time on the trainer can get a little stale. "Workouts in a Binder for Indoor Cycling" will rescue indoor rides. Riders can choose from 60 workouts. Each one tackles a different training objective with enough variety to keep indoor sessions fun and productive. Athletes can follow one of six training plans in the book or pepper workouts
Australian sprinter Robbie McEwen says the UCI’s ProTour was put into practice without fine-tuning and has left pro riders "caught in the middle" of a dispute between the world governing body and the organizers of some of the sport’s most prestigious events. McEwen, the 33-year-old Davitamon-Lotto sprinter who has twice won the Tour de France green points jersey, told AFP that the ProTour concept - inviting the best teams to the best races in order to promote the sport more effectively at a global level – should be reviewed. "The Pro Tour came in with a bang, and it was too quick and
PRESS RELEASE: 'Workouts in a Binder for Indoor Cycling' rescues indoor rides
Adelaide, Australia - Up-and-coming Australian cyclist Simon Gerrans was celebrating his second stage race win inside three months Sunday after winning the Tour Down Under, the last stage of which was won by Allan Davis. Davis, who is set to be the Australian team leader for the Commonwealth Games road race in March, grabbed his second win of the five-stage race after pipping compatriot Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto) at the finish line of the 90km downtown Adelaide circuit.
Round three of the UCI Track World Cup closed Sunday in Los Angeles with Argentina, Australia, Belarus, France, Russia and the United States each collecting multiple gold medals over the weekend. In the women’s 40-lap scratch final, American Sarah Hammer, already having earned gold the day before in the individual pursuit, rode squarely at the front for eight laps - the last eight - and won. Ostensibly leading out fellow American Becky Quinn of the Spike pro team, Hammer gradually wound up the pace from 2k out, with Quinn glued to her wheel. But coming around the final corner, Hammer was
Davis gets another win, this time beating Robbie the Rocket to the line.
Start-to-finish: Gerrans defied the odds and kept the jersey all the way
Barredo on the attack
It was a tight finish between McEwen and Davis.
Gerrans job was just to stay out of trouble
Summer in Adelaide
Paolini and Bodrigi try to escape.
Sarah Hammer and Becky Quinn at the start of the Scratch race.
Sarah Hammer leads Becky Quinn with one to go in the women's Scratch race.
Hammer wins it...
...and makes the top spot on the podium again.
TIAA-CREF Madison team of Chad Hartley and Michael Friedman go down during an exchange.
But Friedman still uses the damaged bike to finish up the event.
Colby Pearce keeps an eye on events in the Madison.
Jenny Reed leads out the women's kierin.
Barczewski leads out the Spike team sprint for fourth place.
Adelaide, Australia — Australian Simon Gerrans (AG2R) endured his toughest test yet as a cycling professional on Saturday but emerged smiling after the fourth and penultimate stage of the Tour Down Under, won by Russel Van Hout (UniSA-Australia). Gerrans had to dig deep to defend his seven-second lead in the general classification over last year's winner, Luis Leon Sanchez (Liberty Seguros-Wurth), in the race's hardest stage — featuring the feared Willunga climb, 20km from the finish of the 147km stage. Sanchez attacked on the 3km climb, whose gradient is 7 percent, but Gerrans was
In the second night of Track World Cup competition in Los Angeles, riders in five events laid it on the line for victory — and qualifying positions for the April 13-16 world championships in Bordeaux, France. American Sarah Hammer took gold in the women’s pursuit, following a morning qualifying ride of 3:37.799 — a track record. More than 200 athletes from 36 countries are racing in Los Angeles over the three-day weekend. A standing-room-only crowd of 3000 people filled the ADT Event Center Saturday evening at The Home Depot Center, banging on the upper boards and ringing bells throughout
Van Hout and Crake cross hand in hand
Sanchez takes a dig
Arrieta found it sweaty going
The beach only looked cool - the day's temps topped 104
Crake and Van Hout working it
AG2R played it cool despite the heat
Done to a turn: Gerrans at the finish
A fine day for the Aussies
Sarah Hammer wins the women's pursuit
The Russians handled the team pursuit with ease
Blatchford had a good day.
Blatchford wins a medal, while Britain's Staff apparently tried to award him a helmet