Zabriskie dons the first yellow jersey of the 2005 Tour
Zabriskie dons the first yellow jersey of the 2005 Tour
Zabriskie dons the first yellow jersey of the 2005 Tour
Vinokourov may be T-Mobile's leader, after all.
Landis expanded the U.S. presence in the top 10, crossing sixth
Hincapie rides into fourth place
Horner finished more than two minutes off of Zabriskie's pace
Leipheimer
Is Ullrich seeing this Tour ride away from him, too?
T-Mobile has another serious threat in Vinokourov
The Lampre-Caffita bikes sport a third brake lever, like Zabriskie's
Um, now, about that wheel fairing . . .
A little detail on that brake lever.
Photo Files - TDF05
Photo Files - TDF05
Photo Files - TDF05
Viaduc de Millau
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So here we are - the Tour de France starts Saturday. It’s almost hard to believe that after all the hype and buildup the race is actually set to begin. All the racers, team staff, officials, work crews, media and fans have been looking forward to this for months, and the start day is finally around the corner. I know we at VeloNews worked hard on our Tour de France guide, even if some of our readers’ pets don’t appreciate our efforts. Anyhow, buckle up, I think it’s going to be a good one this year. With the exception of the unforgettable 2003 Tour, it seems as though for the past five
Jan Ullrich's bid to upstage six-time champion Lance Armstrong at the Tour de France got off to a bad start Friday when the T-Mobile rider crashed into a team car during training. The 1997 Tour winner was training with his team when he failed to spot a warning to brake and slammed into the car's back window. The five-time runner-up sustained minor cuts and scratches to his neck, but will start Saturday's time trial from Fromentine to Noirmoutier-en-l'Ile. “He did not see the special sign we make when the car has to brake,” T-Mobile press officer Luuc Eisenga said by
Yellow-jersey contender Ivan Basso is not new to the idea of hoping to win the Tour de France, and the Italian affirmed here Friday he is ready to give Lance Armstrong a run for his money. Basso, who has already won the race's white jersey for the best-placed rider age 25 years or under, was the only rider to really threaten Armstrong in the Pyrenees last year. The 28-year-old Italian won a stage at La Mongie ahead of Armstrong, who relegated the classy CSC rider to second place a day later. Basso's efforts left him with a respectable third-place finish on the Champs Elysées last
Reigning champion Lance Armstrong will begin his bid for a seventh consecutive Tour de France crown on Saturday when he starts last off the ramp for the opening stage, a 19km time trial through western France. For a course profile, click here Armstrong, who begins his race at 18:48 local time (16:48 GMT), is among the favorites to pull on the race's yellow jersey along with Italian Ivan Basso, Germany's Jan Ullrich and Colombia's Santiago Botero. Organizers have made the opening stage more difficult, compared to the traditional prologues of around 6-8km in recent years, by
Few people in cycling have been to the Tour de France as often as T-Mobile director Walter Godefroot. This year he will accompany the Tour for the 32nd and final time - Godefroot is resigning from team management at the end of this year, to be replaced by former sprinter Olaf Ludwig. In an interview with the Munich-based Sueddeutsche Zeitung yesterday, Godefroot was unusually candid about the dynamics within the team, renewing his criticism of T-Mobile star Jan Ullrich, discussing his strained relationship with team co-founder Rudy Pevenage, and outlining T-Mobile’s strategy to defeat Lance
Levi Leipheimer huddled against the cold wind coming off the Atlantic Ocean at a Gerolsteiner team presentation Friday afternoon. He wouldn’t shake hands with journalists who came for an interview. With Leipheimer starting the Tour in his best condition ever, there’s no jinxing the form now. Sitting on a beach with the Pont de Noirmoutier towering overhead -- the same bridge he and the 188 other starting riders will tackle in Saturday’s 19km time trial from Fromentine to Noirmoutier-en-l’Ile – a leaner, meaner Leipheimer quietly puts himself among the top-line contenders. “Yes, I am more
Dave Zabriskie was gobbling down French sweets at an alarming rate Friday afternoon as journalists gathered around the tall, slender Utahan to learn more about this American making his Tour de France debut. “I feel stupendously happy. There’s a lot of free candy in the press room,” Zabriskie said with a wry smile. “Who doesn’t like free candy?” The world’s press is about to get the “Zabriskie treatment,” a mixture of humor, sarcasm and insight that keeps the hacks in stitches. How’s the motivation for the team? “Super motivated – the Prozac is being passed around nightly.” Are you
The riders of the 2005 Tour de France were on display Friday during a parade for the fans and the traditional team introductions. Our man Casey Gibson was on hand with his bag of cameras - here are a few of the postcards he sent home.
A critic savaged this year's Tour de France Guide
Just when you thought TV couldn't get any worse, we have Roll in the raw
'Hell on Wheels' rolls into Boulder tonight
Armstrong and Simeoni carry their dispute into stage 18 of the 2004 Tour
Basso and Riis before the start of the 2005 Tour
Leipheimer and the Gerolsteiner guys recon the stage-1 route
The parade leaders - future yellow jerseys?
The defending champ, riding in his final Tour
Faithful lieutenant Hincapie
Perennial rival Ullrich, sporting a bandage after a training mishap
Horner finally gets to the big show, and seems happy to be there
Rodriguez, sans stars-and-stripes this year
The wise-cracking Zabriskie takes his sense of humor to a whole new level
The Lithuanian cycling federation on Thursday deplored the aggressive manner in which the Baltic state's star cyclist Raimundas Rumsas was arrested in Italy this week. “Why use these hard-line tactics?" questioned Vytautas Zubernis, vice-president of the Baltic state's cycling federation. "Raimundas Rumsas lives in Europe. He is not in hiding. This kind of arrest would be justified if he had refused to attend his hearing" Rumsas was detained Wednesday in Italy on a European international arrest warrant issued by French prosecutors investigating drug trafficking. In 2002 Rumsas was
When Lance Armstrong announced his retirement, to begin July 24, theimplications for the 2005 Tour de France couldn’t have been more profound.Three weeks after the six-time defending champion takes the start in Fromentineon July 2, one of two historic scenarios will develop: Either a rival willrise to the occasion and become the only rider to have stopped Armstrongin his streak of Tour victories, or Armstrong will further distance himselffrom an elite group of five-time Tour champions with an unprecedented seventhconsecutive victory. Either way, the cycling world awaits the outcome. Since
With a little bit of luck, T-Mobile will arrive at the 2005 Tour withits full weaponry in place and finely honed. The German powerhouse hopesto wage a three-front war on Lance Armstrong, spearheaded by perennialTour contender Jan Ullrich and buttressed by a resurgent Andreas Klödenand the ever-combative Alexander Vinokourov. And if all goes accordingto plan, T-Mobile hopes its time to bring down Armstrong may have finallycome. “I’ve been trying for a long time to prove that there is strength innumbers, but I’ve never been able to get everything to come together,”says T-Mobile team manger
The latest Photo Gallery in our continuing photo contest has now been posted for your viewing pleasure. Last Week's WinnerWe’ve awarded a copy of Graham Watson’s "Landscapes of Cycling." to Bill Parsons for "Bug Eyes," a shot that perfectly captures that "Oh $#@&!!!!" moment of realization that something is going on behind you. Thank you and congratulations Bill. We'll be sending you a copy of Graham Watson's "Landscapesof Cycling. This Week's ContestThe announcement of a winner also signals the start of a New Contest, so go ahead and take a look at the Gallery from this
Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong said he isn’t quite ready to decide on his post-cycling career path until after he finishes this year’s race and takes “a few years to just relax and really evaluate what I want to do with my life.” Armstrong held a pre-Tour press conference in Challans, France. Thursday, two days before the start of what he has promised will be his final professional race. Armstrong will saddle up on Saturday hoping that the "tough" 19km time trial from Fromentine to Noirmoutier will begin a successful final trek around the country which has been his home every July
The 92nd edition of the Tour de France promises to be one of the most competitive in the event’s history. Each of the 21 teams is made up of riders with specific roles. Climbers, sprinters, time trialists and domestiques. Each is essential to a team’s success at the tour. Here is a look at each of the teams contesting the race. AGR-Prevoyance (France)Jean-Patrick Nazon (Fra)Ludovic Turpin (Fra)Mikel Astarloza (Spa)Nicolas Portal (Fra)Samuel Dumoulin (Fra)Simon Gerrans (Aus)Stéphane Goubert (Fra)Sylvain Calzati (Fra)Yuriy Krivtsov (Ukr) Bouygues Telecom (France)Anthony Geslin (Fra)Didier
Once a year we get a cycling event that is so big that it deserves its own special corner of VeloNews.com. Keep track of the greatest sporting event in the world by logging visiting www.velonews.com/tour2005/ and bookmarking the site to follow developments throughout the three-week-long Tour de France. We will have live daily coverage, daily highlight videos of each stage, full results, and pictures. Don't miss out on any of the great stories that will make up the fabric of this year's Tour de France!
Armstrong's Stage 17 win last year capped a dominant Tour.
VeloNews Photo Contest: A new winner and a new gallery
Armstrong works his way through a crowd of reporters to attend a pre-Tour press conference in Challans on Thursday.
Armstrong and his Discovery Channel teammates reconnoiter Saturday's time trial course.
Floyd Landis isn’t one to take things too seriously; be it himself or the often-intense business of racing bicycles. The 29-year-old enters this year’s Tour de France anxious to prove to the world he deserves his shot at being a team leader, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have a little fun along the way. After a strong ride at the Dauphiné Libéré, Landis rolls into Fromentine this Saturday knowing his form is on target for the season’s big test. Phonak officials are quietly confident their man can deliver a top-five result, perhaps even claw his way onto the podium. VeloNews European
Dan Coyle is a contributing editor for Outside magazine, a two-time National Magazine Award finalist, and the author of “Hardball: A Season in the Projects.” Most recently, Coyle spent the 2004 season following Lance Armstrong and has offered his insights in his book "LanceArmstrong's War," which reached bookstores last week. VeloNews contributor Sebastian Moll recently had a chance to sit down with Coyle and discuss the impressions a year spent with "Lance Inc." made on the author from Homer, Alaska. VeloNews: So, after nearly a year trying to figure it out, maybe we should start
Lithuanian rider Raimondas Rumsas has been detained in Italy on a European international arrest warrant issued by French prosecutors investigating drug trafficking. His French lawyer, Alexandre Varaut, told AFP they would be appealing to a Florence court to get the 33-year-old Rumsas released. In 2002 Rumsas was involved in a scandal after his wife Edita was caught with large quantities of growth hormones and other drugs in her car after the Tour de France in which Rumsas had finished third. Rusmas had already left France but his wife was jailed for several months before being released and
The week before the Tour de France is finally here. The second half of the season has already begun. The Giro d’Italia is long over, along with the Dauphiné and Tour du Suisse. Before you know it, we will be at Lombardi racing the last race of the calendar. I raced – well okay, I participated – in the Dauphiné after the Giro. I stopped with one day to go and even that was a few days too late. I have been at home ever since. It's a weird feeling being home after more-or-less racing non-stop for five weeks. You find yourself ridiculously restless and then absolutely knackered all at
PARIS (AP) -- Lance Armstrong's team director says only three riders could threaten the Texan's bid for a seventh straight Tour de France title when cycling's showcase race begins Saturday. Johan Bruyneel, Armstrong's tactical adviser in each of his six Tour wins, picked 1997 winner Jan Ullrich, Alexandre Vinokourov and Ivan Basso as the main competition. ''I think those three are the real challengers,'' Bruyneel said this week in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. Vinokourov is not as quick as his T-Mobile teammate Ullrich on time trials, but
This is the last chance for Jan Ullrich and his lonely quest to beat Lance Armstrong. With just a few days to go before the pair’s final Tour de France showdown, Ullrich’s optimism proves yet again that hope springs eternal. “I’d love to beat him,” Ullrich, 31, told Welt am Sonntag newspaper. “He’s dominated the race for the last six years and broken the records of the century. That's my motivation -- this is the last chance.” The red-headed German has consistently been Armstrong’s top rival in the Texan’s six-year Tour reign. Ullrich nearly derailed Armstrong in the exciting 2003
Chris Wherry laughs about it now, but in the first days after his stunning win at the USPRO Championships, he admits he had something of a tenuous relationship with the race’s top prize. “When I first came home I had two of the national championship jerseys and I didn’t wear either of them for like three days,” said Wherry during an interview with VeloNews at his home in Durango, Colorado, on Monday. “I was like, I’m not going to take this thing out training. It’s totally being a poser. But then I was finally like screw it, I f--king won that race. That was a hard day. I deserve to wear this
By announcing on April 12 that the 2005 edition will be his last Tour de France and that his career will come to a close when the race does, Lance Armstrong has not changed the expectations for the race — after all, the players are all the same. He has, however, changed the context in which the race will unfold. Armstrong has liberated himself from a two-year commitment that seemed to weigh on him. Surely his position as “absolute record holder” with six consecutive victories gives him the right to be master of his own destiny as a cyclist. There is a certain amount of panache to this move,
Levi Leipheimer and Georg Totschnig shared more at last year’s Tour de France than their top-10 finishes. In key mountain stages, whenever the roads went up, both quickly found themselves isolated without any team support. Leipheimer’s Rabobank teammate Michael Rasmussen spent much of the Tour in a vain hunt for a stage win, so when the time came for Leipheimer to find a friendly wheel, the former mountain-bike world champion was already blown out the back. Totschnig, meanwhile, got some help on the mountain approaches from his young Gerolsteiner teammates, but he was often left to fight
Waving to the crowd from the final Dodge Tour de Georgia podium, a grinning Floyd Landis looked as though he couldn’t be happier. He showed no disappointment in his overall third-place finish, even though he had begun the final climbing stage two spots higher, only to be passed by Discovery’s Tom Danielson and Gerolsteiner’s Levi Leipheimer. Nor were there signs of the strained relationship with his former U.S. Postal Service captain Lance Armstrong, with whom Landis had exchanged curt words just hours earlier regarding the previous day’s finish. There was no sign of fatigue or pressure or
VeloNews and the HandleBar & Grill will team up on Saturday,July 2 at 5:30 p.m. to kick off the Tour de France!Launching the biggest month-long Tour party in Colorado, the HandleBar& Grill will throw a Tour de France bash at its location near downtownDenver.Watch Outdoor Life Network’s coverage of the first stage of the 92ndTour de France on HandleBar & Grill’s large outdoor screen or relaxat the bar and watch inside.Admission is free to watch the Tour alongside hundreds of passionatecycling fans as the world’s strongest cyclists race the short distanceindividual time trial that
The reigning champion, Jure Robic, concluded his domination of the2005 Insight Race Across America through furnace-like conditionson a refreshingly cool, cloudy evening on the Atlantic CityBoardwalk. He completed the 3,502 miles in 9 days, 8 hours and 48minutes. Throughout this unusually hot race, Robic proved far moreresilient than any of his rivals to the brutal heat that bore downfrom above and bounced mercilessly back off the road. When the Appalachian mountains rose as the final, dauntingchallenge to legs weary from 2,500 miles' racing, Robic remainedsmooth and strong. No rider at
Ullrich has his eye on the yellow jersey
Wherry and the jersey he won at Philly. It was a little on the small side.
Mementos from a Philly win.
Close up with a prize not many of us get to see.
Wherry says his ab roller is one of his key training tools.
Leblanc, 60, directs the Tour for the 17th time this year
Signed as co-captain by Gerolsteiner, Leipheimer is aiming for a top-five finish
Totschnig says the Plateau de Beille stage last year was one of my best days as a pro.