Heras followed the wheels
Heras followed the wheels
Heras followed the wheels
Liberty gives chase
Danielson at the finish. He has preserved his top-ten spot.
Vande Velde and Danielson
Devolder leads the first escape
Heras and Beloki make for a formidable pair
Quesada left Mancebo and Gonzalez soon after
Sevilla on the attack
Quick Step’s Paolo Bettini was forced to dig deep to win the 16th stage of the Vuelta a España on Tuesday. The 2004 Olympic champion almost ran out of space as Fassa Bortolo’s feared sprint ace Alessandro Petacchi, who has already won four stages in this year’s Vuelta, came surging up on the outside at the end of the 162.5km stage from Leon to Valladolid in northern Spain. Already the winners of four stages in this year's Vuelta, Petacchi's Fassa Bortolo team lost control of the stage on a slight ascent close to the finish and Bettini made his move 300 meters from the line, narrowly
CYCLING COMMUNITY UNITES TO HELP IN THE WAKE OF HURRICANE KATRINASeptember 9, 2005Boulder, CO - Pro cyclists around the world join VeloNews and 3 CatsPhoto to raise funds for the American Red Cross and Hurricane Katrina.In light of the tremendous tragedy in New Orleans, Mississippi and otherGulf States, cyclists from Ivan Basso to Tim Johnson signed and donatedteam jerseys for an on-line auction on Veloswap.com. Additionally, USACycling has donated an official USA National Champion jersey that is currentlytraversing the USA garnering signatures from Davis Phinney, George Hincapie,Freddie
Heras: ‘Race not over yet’Roberto Heras enters final stretch of the Vuelta a España enjoying his largest lead ever in his three previous victories. Heras and his Liberty Seguros team blew apart the Vuelta in Sunday’s climbing stage, putting the three-time champion back into the driver’s seat with just five days left to go. “I will enter the final week with tranquility, confidence and, above all, humility,” Heras said during Monday’s rest day. “I have a lot of respect for my rivals and, just like we saw when I fell last week, the race is never over until you reach Madrid.” Heras entered
Italian Daniele Bennati (Lampre), won the second stage of the Tour of Poland on Tuesday. Bennati outsprinted compatriots Luca Paolini (Quick Step) and Francesco Chicchi (Fassa Bortolo) to win the 226.5km stage from Tczew to Olsztyn. Paolini took the race leader’s jersey from stage-1 winner Baden Cooke (Française des Jeux), who slipped to second at two seconds back with Bennati third in the same time. Wednesday’s third stage will be held over 212km between Ostroda and Bydgoszcz. Results1. Daniele Bennati (I), Lampre, 226,5km in 5:54:372. Luca Paolini (I), Quick Step, same time3. Francesco
Digital Production ManagerSports Publisher seeks talented/detail-oriented Digital ProductionManager for VeloNews, Inside Triathlon & Ski Racing magazines. Strong project management and publication production experience required.Must have a minimum of 2+ years experience in print production (magazinepreferred). Excellent organizational, time management, multitasking, problemsolving, project management and strong verbal & written communicationskills. Must be able to proof, postscript and PDF all outgoing pages for4+ publications to various printers. Also responsible for layout of
Dutch veteran cyclist Erik Dekker on Tuesday ruled himself out of the world road race championships, which begin in a week, due to an ongoing injury to his collarbone. Dekker, who has won several stages on the Tour de France, fractured his collarbone on August 20 after a crash in the Tour de Rijke. "The lack of competition I've had because of the injury - which isn't fully healed - means I have to rule myself out of selection," said the 35-year-old Rabobank rider. Dekker was supposed to return to the fray at the Tour of Poland on Monday but has flu and a sore throat. The men's
A Canadian mountain biker has been suspended for two years after testing positive for EPO, the Canadian Cycling Association said Tuesday. Chris Sheppard, 32, showed traces of the drug at an out-of-competition urine test at his home in Kamloops, B.C., on May 29, the association said. EPO is a drug that builds endurance by boosting the amount of oxygen-rich red blood cells. It is the same substance that American star Lance Armstrong has been accused of using at the 1999 Tour de France. Armstrong has denied the allegation. Sheppard has competed for Canada internationally and rides
The flat days are misleading in Spain, as I have now learned after racing the Vuelta four times. They are usually in the wide-open countryside and the racing is nervous and not as easy as a bike rider might imagine a flat stage to be. We woke up this morning, ready for a stage without a hill but with about a dozen corners in 160 km and a lot of wind on open stretches of prairie. As we rolled out of Leon, the start town, towards the official start banner on the outskirts, the peloton was already nervous and expecting the race to open up from the gun. It did, and never really relented until
What knee?
The day's only major break never got more than a minute up the road
Another few meters and...
Once the break was caught, the pace mellowed considerably
Heras: Cautiously optimistic?
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.Armstrong’s jerking chains with comeback taleEditor:Lance Armstrong is not seriously entertaining the notion of riding in the 2006 Tour de France. He is justifiably furious at the French press and the Tour management and is simply jerking their chains. Johan Bruyneel's perpetuation of
Baden Cooke (Française des Jeux) won the opening stage of a glitch-marred Tour of Poland on Monday. The Aussie won a bunch sprint at the end of the 149km stage from Gdansk to Elblag, outkicking Luca Paolini (Quick Step) and Francesco Chicchi (Fassa Bortolo) after more than three hours of racing. The Polish tour, making its debut as part of the UCI ProTour, got off to a dubious start when Alexandre Vinokourov (T-Mobile) - who was only 48 points behind Pro Tour series leader Danilo Di Luca of Italy (Liquigas-Bianchi) in the individual rankings - was one of four riders from Kazakhstan who did
Tom Danielson has one week to go before finishing his first grand tour of his young European career. The Discovery Channel rider is sitting comfortably in the top 10 at eighth overall at 12:05 back. The 27-year-old struggled through a bad stomach in Friday’s stage that nearly took him out of action ahead of this weekend’s epic climbing stages across northern Spain. Danielson struggled through it and now he enters the final week more motivated than ever to finish strongly. VeloNews European correspondent Andrew Hood caught up with Danielson during Monday’s rest day in León. Here are excerpts
MADRID, Spain (AP)- Three cyclists have denied a French newspaper report accusing them of testing positive for EPO during the 1999 Tour de France. Le Journal du Dimanche reported Sunday that Spanish rider Manuel Beltran, Denmark's Bo Hamburger and Colombia's Joaquim Castelblanco are suspected of being among those whose frozen urine samples reportedly tested positive at a French laboratory. Last month, the French sports daily L'Equipe reported that six urine samples provided by Lance Armstrong were among 12 specimens that were positive for EPO during the 1999 race. Armstrong, a
The second rest day has arrived and is now nearly gone. Today however was a real rest day, unlike our last “rest” day where we spent a good portion of the day traveling in the team cars. Yesterday, Liberty Seguros rocked the race and flipped the standings in their favor with Roberto now in gold. Not only did their team dominate the stage but also Roberto completely crushed all of his rivals. It is hard to explain how fast he went uphill, how fast the stages have been the last few days, and how strong the Liberty team has been since the start. Despite crashes and losing a rider, they still
The last rest day, and it is a real rest day this time. No trains, no planes, no automobiles. Just riding the bike for 35 easy miles and then eating and massage. Not such a bad day. But we are in León and (sorry Andy Hood) but this place is in the middle of nowhere. Granted, I am sure that there is more to do than ride and massage, but it doesn't take long before all you can see around here is the horizon. We went to a restaurant last night and we ate and drank everything within sight: Pizza, pasta, tiramisu and some freezing cold table wine. The temp helps it go down better. The
Danielson had to overcome a stomach bug to keep in the hunt
Roberto Heras usually wins when the road turns uphill, but the three-time Vuelta a España champion won Sunday’s rainy epic thanks to a daring attack going downhill. Heras punched the accelerator on the treacherous descent off the day’s penultimate climb with some 45km to go, opening a small gap on overnight leader Denis Menchov (Rabobank). With four Liberty Seguros teammates waiting up the road, that’s all it took to build the winning difference. "We knew it would be hard today, more so with the rain," said Heras, who won in 4 hours, 53 minutes, 53 seconds. "There’s still another week to
Australian Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto) won a sprint victory in the 73rd Grand Prix de Fourmies-La Voix du Nort in Fourmies on Sunday. McEwen outkicked Stefan Van Dijck (MrBookmaker) and Jean-Patrick Nazon (AG2R Prévoyance) to win the 200km race. Results1. Robbie McEwen (Aus), Davitamon-Lotto, 200km in 4:28:02 (45.376 km/h)2. Stefan Van Dijck (Ned), Mr Bookmaker), same time3. Jean-Patrick Nazon (F), AG2R Prévoyance), s.t.4. Anthony Ravard (F), s.t.5. Jean-Luc Delpech (F), s.t. Bronzini, Scholz win NurembergAustralian Oenone Wood (Team Nürnberger) clinched the women’s World Cup on Sunday
In each grand tour, riders are faced with extremes: extreme weather; extremely hard courses; extremely good legs; extremely bad legs; extremely painful road rash and extremely good and bad moral. After three weeks, nearly every rider in the bunch has experienced each of the extremes. Extreme weather conditions are a natural part of three weeks of bicycle racing around a country filled with varied terrain and climatic zones. The first week of the Vuelta was stifling hot and dehydration and heat stroke forced several riders out of the race. Today, it was the cold and rain that caused the
Britannia ruled on Sunday at the World Cup downhill finals in Fort William, Scotland, with Steve Peat (Orange) and Tracy Moseley (Kona-Les Gets) delivering a pair of wins to the partisan crowd of over 10,000. Greg Minnaar (G-Cross Honda) and Sabrina Jonnier (Intense) had already won their respective overall titles, and the top three were pretty much set. But riders still had a lot of desire to win in front of the fanatical downhill fans that Fort William attracts. The 2.46km course runs in an almost straight line down the side of one of the mountains that makes up the Ben Nevis range. With
Heras puts his stamp on the Vuelta
Menchov limps to the line
Scarponi was one of four Liberty riders to make the break
Heras pressures Menchov
Heras on his own
Beloki was in there, too
Scarponi provides the springboard for Heras
Menchov guts it out
Sastre dogs Menchov before eventually dropping him
Minnaar got the air (and the series win)
But Peat got the press (and the day's win)
Moseley scores one for the home folks
Poland's national stage race, the Tour de Pologne which begins on Monday, will make a quantum leap from its original incarnation when it hosts the 24th round of the UCI ProTour. The event began as an amateur race in 1928 but has now risen to the highest echelons of pro cycling. Four of the top 10-ranked riders in the individual ProTour rankings - series leader Danilo Di Luca of Italy (Liquigas), Kazakh Alexandre Vinokourov (T-Mobile), American Bobby Julich (Team CSC), and Italian Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner) -- will be among those on the start line in the northern Polish city of
Way back in the eighth century, King Pelayo won a battle against the attacking Moors at the Lagos de Covadonga that marked the beginning of the Reconquest of Spain, which lasted 700 years. As the Spanish tend to do, they built a huge cathedral marking the spot. Flash forward to 2005 and Saturday’s epic climbing stage high in Spain’s spectacular Picos de Europa, and Roberto Heras unleashed an attack just as the peloton rode past this monument of Spanish fortitude. The three-time champion was hoping - and praying - for a similar turning of the tide in his increasingly vain efforts to shake
Australian Robbie McEwen warmed up for the world road race championships in two weeks time by winning a sprint finish for the Paris-Brussels cycling classic Saturday in Brussels. The Davitamon rider sprinted home ahead of Dutch rider Stefan Van Dijck (MrBookmaker) and Frenchman Jean-Patrick Nazon (AG2R). "It's a team victory," said McEwen, winner here already in 2002. "My teammates, headed by Axel Merckx, put in great work to chase down the leaders. Then Peter (Van Petegem), Nico (Mattan) and Bjorn (Leukemans) put everything in place to fend off attacks." McEwen notched up his 24th
We started with a small team today, four riders. Given the fact that the team is so small, many of the staff have also packed up and headed home as well. It is tough watching them go home and I felt bad for Triki today as he watched us head off to the race without him. On paper, today was one of the toughest days of the Vuelta with several second category climbs and a hard twelve-kilometer climb at the finish. Thankfully, it didn’t turn out to be all that leg crushing as the peloton was somewhat lethargic and let a dozen or so riders get up the road that were not a threat to the
The 2005 mountain-bike World Cup is drawing to a conclusion. Saturday brought the final races in the cross-country and four-cross events at Fort William, Scotland, and while all four events proved anti-climactic, in that the series winners were already known, that did not mean poor racing, with two first-time World Cup winners crowned. Women's cross-country This was the easiest race to pick. World champion and World Cup leader Gunn-Rita Dahle (Multivan Merida) came into the final race with an insurmountable lead - plus she had won the Fort William race the previous two years. The real
Jimenez wins
Menchov sticks to Heras like glue
Jimenez going for the gusto
Charteau leading the escape
Haussler made the break, too
Sastre gave it a shot, but came up short
Scarponi working to launch Heras
Mission accomplished for Danielson
A beautiful day ... for breaking someone's legs in hilly Asturias
Imagine your surprise: Dahle wins the finale
"While I'm absolutely enjoying my time as a retired athlete with Sheryl and the kids, the recent smear campaign out of France has awoken my competitive side.” – Lance Armstrong, quoted on the Discovery Channel team’s website, about the likelihood of a comeback Okay, remember, you heard it here first: Lance comes back, Tyler gets off, and with Tyler’s fabled vanishing twin, Skyler – visible at last thanks to the miracle of modern jurisprudence – they tackle the 2006 Tour. No team, no director, and especially no soigneurs. They grab all the usual jerseys, including a couple nobody ever
UCI president Hein Verbruggen said Friday no action would be taken against Lance Armstrong following the recent allegations of doping against the American cyclist. Armstrong, who retired after his seventh consecutive Tour de France victory in July, has been accused of using banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) by French sports daily L'Equipe in an article two weeks ago which showed details of 1999 drugs tests. Armstrong has vehemently denied the allegations, and said he is prepared to make a comeback from retirement just to spite the French organizers of the world's toughest
It’s one thing to celebrate a win too early at the finish line, but it’s something else entirely to celebrate 100 yards from the tape. Maurico Ardila (Davitamon-Lotto) looked to have the attack-laden 13th stage in the bag when he threw his hands up in victory ahead of Oscar Pereiro (Phonak) and Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi). The only problem was, his victory gesture came as he rode under the day’s King of the Mountains banner atop the category-three finish. There was still another 100 yards or so of asphalt to the finish line and the ever-attentive Sánchez shot past the confused
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.‘Piss off the French’ by ignoring TourEditor:If Lance Armstrong wants to "piss off the French,” he should consider riding the Giro and the Vuelta in 2006, bypassing the Tour de France completely. Given the massive media coverage the follows him on and off the bike, the other two grand
Tom Danielson wrapped up his second week in the Vuelta a España solidly in sixth place overall, a result that’s impressed Discovery Channel team boss Johan Bruyneel. “He’s still up there in the GC. After two weeks, he’s done a lot better than we expected,” Bruyneel said after Friday’s stage. “We’re very satisfied with how he’s ridden so far.” Danielson couldn’t quite follow the favorites up the final ramps of the category-three finish on Friday, ceding 44 seconds to the top five but retained his sixth place, now at 5:47 back. Bruyneel said Danielson came into the Vuelta without any
Quebec's reigning road champion Charles Dionne has inked a two-year deal with the ProTour team Saunier Duval-Prodir team for 2006 and 2007. Dionne, winner of the San Francisco Grand Prix in 2002 and 2004, said he initially began talking with the Spanish team after his win in ’04. He put the final signature on his contract only 10 minutes before this year’s race in San Francisco on September 4. “This is the realization of one of my biggest dreams,” Dionne said from his home in St. Redempteur, Quebec. “It took a couple more years than what I thought it would take to get [to race in
09/09/2005: UCI DECLARATION : 1999 Tour de France samples analysisAs we announced on Monday, August 29, 2005, the Union Cycliste Internationale(“UCI”) is undertaking an investigation into the recent press reports fromFrance. The article published by the French newspaper L’Equipe concernedtesting apparently conducted by a French laboratory of urine samples fromthe 1999 Tour de France. Our initial investigation has identified a greatmany issues and we are in the process of gathering the information we need.The UCI is currently unable to express any judgement on these cases, asit does not have
Sadly, we are now down to four riders. The bus seemed empty this morning when we had our meeting before the start; we only had five riders on the start line. Tomorrow it will be even worse as Triki had to abandon today as a result of the knee injuries he sustained in yesterday’s crash. The speed was high, very high right from the start. We rode at about 60 kph for the first 25 kilometers. It actually never really slowed down a whole lot as we averaged 49.5 kph for 191km. At one point I heard one of the Fassa riders comment to another that we weren’t bicycle racing but motorbike racing.
Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong celebrated a legal victory and a UCI statement of support Friday, capping a busy week that included his engagement and hints at a 2006 comeback. A UCI statement said no action would be taken against Armstrong over claims by the French sports daily L'Equipe that his 1999 urine samples tested positive for the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin). "Lance is encouraged," said Bill Stapleton, an attorney for Armstrong. "They seem to be conducting a meaningful investigation and they seem to be asking the right questions." The UCI
All right, so in hindsight maybe my last entry wasn’t exactly spot on. Maybe you could even say that I put a hex on Jakob and myself. But, as they say, hindsight is 20-20 and I am not looking back. I found myself on the deck for the third time. Jakob was so bad that he had to stop the race and spend the night in the hospital. The maids there had some nice souvenirs. We left brand new helmets (broken), a pair of glasses (broken) and some gels (full) and a cap (in great shape!) for good measure. It was a huge pile up and there were more than a few injuries. It always puts things into
Sanchez celebrates
Baranowski and Steels hit the deck
It was all she wrote for Steels
Horrillo had to pay a visit to the doctor, too
Heras soldiered on with a heavily bandaged knee
Ardila leads
Lara has a go