Another near miss for Rodriguez
Another near miss for Rodriguez
Another near miss for Rodriguez
Julich and McCormack slip off the front
Lotto in pursuit
Fraser celebrates another Health Net win.
Jelly Belly puts in an effort for Candelario and McCook
Horner concedes that Health Net is hard to beat in a sprint.
Van Den Broeck
Dutchman Marc Lotz has been sacked by his QuickStep team for taking blood-boosting drug EPO, the ProTour cycling outfit said on Wednesday. The 31-year-old Lotz admitted in a judicial inquiry that he had taken EPO recently. Later on Wednesday, police announced that an unnamed Dutchman was being held for questioning for suspected sale of doping products, including to Lotz. Agence France Presse Zabriskie on track for Tour?Dave Zabriskie’s impressive Giro d’Italia performance could get him a ticket to the Tour de France. The 26-year-old Utahan won a time trial and finished third in another as
Press Release: Discovery ChannelDiscovery Channel Celebrates Its Pro Cycling Team With 'Watch With TheWorld' Programming Event, THE SCIENCE OF LANCE ARMSTRONGIn-Depth Global Special Takes Viewers into the Power and Physiologyof Armstrong's Physique and Training; Premieres June 27 in 160 Countriesand 35 LanguagesSILVER SPRING, Md., June 1 -- Gearing up for the July 2start of the Tour de France and Lance Armstrong's historic final attemptto win a seventh title, Discovery Channel presents an exclusive hour-longspecial, THE SCIENCE OF LANCE ARMSTRONG, to premiere in
Former Phonak rider Tyler Hamilton has filed an appeal to world sport's top tribunal to overturn a two-year ban for blood doping, the International Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) announced on Wednesday. Hamilton, who won an Olympic gold medal in Athens just weeks earlier, tested positive for homologous blood transfusions – the injection of red blood cells from another person - during the Vuelta a España last September. Following a lengthy hearing in March, the U.S. anti-doping agency handed down a two-year suspension on April 18. Hamilton’s suspension expires in April of 2007,
Michael J. Ross, M.D., team physician for Jittery Joe’s-Kalahari andrace doctor for the U.S. Pro Tour, will give a presentation on the scienceof cycling at Cadence Performance Cycling on June 4,7:30 p.m.Dr. Ross will talk to cyclists about how to tailor workouts to theirown unique physiology and then answer questions after the presentation.Ross will also sign copies of his new book, Maximum Performance for Cyclists,on sale at Cadence for $18.95. Maximum Performance for Cyclists guidesreaders through the steps of individualizing workouts, making sound nutritionalchoices, and planning for
LONDON (AP) The World Anti-Doping Agency has told its accredited laboratories to modify testing procedures for the banned steroid nandrolone. In the last several months, WADA said it has come across ``very rare cases'' of so-called ``unstable urine,'' which could produce a positive finding for nandrolone. WADA has asked its labs to conduct ``stability tests'' if there is a positive nandrolone finding. If these tests reveal unstable urine, the positive result will be annulled. In a statement, WADA defined unstable urine as a chemical reaction that ``may occur in a
Spanish police have arrested 70 people, breaking up a drugs network that made and trafficked anabolic steroids for sports use. According to the Interior Ministry, six drug manufacturing laboratories were raided in north-eastern Catalonia province where police discovered 30 million products, including the stimulants EPO, clenbuterol and nandrolone following an undercover investigation dubbed "Operation Mammoth." Although the products are designed to increase muscle mass they can have potentially lethal side effects. The products were destined for sale to gyms, sports and fitness clubs at
Lance Armstrong will be back in the peloton Sunday for the start of the Dauphiné Libéré, his final tune-up before a run at a seventh Tour de France crown. As the Tour nears, Armstrong took a look at his likely teammates. The Texan will be tackling his final Tour without the help of veteran teammate Viatcheslav Ekimov, who injured his back in a training spill with Armstrong last month. Assured places for the July 3 start of the Tour are George Hincapie, the only rider to be a part of all six of Armstrong’s previous Tour victories, Spanish riders Manuel Beltran and Chechu Rubiera and
Park City, Utah, and USA Cycling are hosting the second annual ParkCity Cycling Festival '05, June 21through July 2. The complete programfor the event is included as a special section in the latest edition ofVeloNews. We are also pleased to offer it in itsentirety in PDF form here on VeloNews.com
Lancaster, Pennsylvania- Heading into June, the big wins just keep coming for the Health Net Pro Cycling Team presented by Maxxis. Coming off Ivan Dominguez’s win at the CSC Invitational in Arlington, Virginia, on May 29, Health Net came in to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on May 31 for the 91-mile opening round of the three-race Wachovia Cycling Series as the undisputed top team in the U.S. And the team lived up to its reputation, putting four men into the race-winning 14-rider breakaway and setting up New Zealander Greg Henderson for a bunch sprint victory, beating American national champion
Armstrong's final Tour tune-up begins Saturday
Despite his troubles, Rodriguez was still there for the final sprint
Horner was motivated
The final stage of the Giro d'Italia is traditionally a parade into Milan, followed by a series of fast circuit racing leading up to a massive field sprint and this year held true to tradition. The riders lined up in Albese Con Cassano, a small town on the edge of Como decorated in pink to start and then paraded towards Milan, with a stop for gelato and cookies along the way. T he mood was relaxed and the Discovery team staff served champagne to all the other team cars in the caravan during the race. Everything was going smooth until Sean Yates got a flat tire in the first Discovery
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.Simoni can’t face up to his own failuresEditor:Perhaps like most others in recent years, I anticipated this Giro only its completion would bring us that much closer to the start of the Tour. I had some hope that Simoni might do something special and that the “underdog” might get past some
MILAN, Italy- (AFP) - Paolo Savoldelli's face looked anything but that of an angel as he struggled to hold on to his pink jersey on the penultimate day of the Giro d'Italia on Saturday. But the 32-year-old Italian, who won the race for the second time in Milan on Sunday, is not known as the 'falcon' for nothing. As Gilberto Simoni led a threatening three-pronged attack in the company of Danilo Di Luca and Jose Rujano on the tough Finestre climb on the race's 19th stage, Savoldelli was left trailing and had lost the race lead - at least at that point on the road. Once
Somerville, New Jersey - A trio of trackies came out on top in the62nd running of the Tour of Somerville on Memorial Day, with Snow Valley-SealOn’s Kyle Wamsley netting the team its first NRC win. It was a win that Snow Valley had been looking for since the beginningof the season, when the standout elite development squad from Marylandmade the jump to the professional ranks.“It’s outstanding,” said Wamsley of taking some pressure off the squad.
Paolo Savoldelli’s imminent victory in the 2005 Giro d’Italia is a combination of cunning, strength and luck. Even by his own account, Savoldelli admits he wasn’t strong enough to blow apart the race. Yet he’ll take his second Giro victory within four years. VeloNews European correspondent Andrew Hood sat down with Discovery Channel’s Sean Yates before Sunday’s final stage to get the inside story on Savoldelli’s remarkable victory. Here are excerpts from the interview: VeloNews: What was it like sitting in the team car listening to Paolo having some difficulties?Sean Yates: It was
For once, there wasn’t a surprise in the Giro d’Italia. Sunday’s 119km final stage unfolded just like everyone expected, with Alessandro Petacchi riding the fumes of his Fassa Bortolo train to his fourth stage victory of this year’s corsa rosa. Beyond that, there was hardly a day where something unexpected didn’t happen. From Ivan Basso’s stomach problems to Damiano Cunego’s collapse to José Rujano’s near revolt, the 88th Giro has packed plenty of surprises per kilometer. “This victory has been very satisfying because it was a very challenging and interesting Giro,” said Paolo Savoldelli,
The Colavita Olive Oil-Sutter Home team sent a powerful message Saturday at the Kelly Cup, the pro men’s event of the Baltimore BikeJam in Patterson Park. The squad took four of the top five spots in Maryland, spearheaded by winner Aaron Olson and runner-up Mark McCormack. New Zealander Glen Mitchell (Kodak Gallery-Sierra Nevada) was third. The top trio was part of a five-man break that went away just a few laps into the race, 40 laps of a 1-mile circuit. After a warm, sunny morning, the race began in a windy downpour as an afternoon storm blew through the city. Bad weather, the subsequent
Michael Carter and Karen Kingsley won the 34th annual Iron Horse Bicycle Classic road race on Saturday, a Colorado monument with 5500 feet of climbing over its 47-mile course between Durango and Silverton. The 42-year-old Carter (Colorado Velo) emerged triumphant from a three-man battle with Mitch Moreman and the apparently immortal Ned Overend, who were racing for the new Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory team. As Carter assaulted the 10,660-foot Coal Bank Hill, Moreman and Overend struggled to hold the pace. Carter reached the summit first, shot down the wicked descent, climbed alone up
Rain gear is usually more critical at Houffalize than sunscreen, but on Sunday riders were wilting in 30-plus degree (Celsius) heat and choking on dust during the third round of the mountain bike World Cup. But the Belgian bakery didn't cook Gunn-Rita Dahle (Multivan Merida), who took her second consecutive victory over the women's field, to extend her lead over Marie-Helene Premont (Rocky Mountain-Business Objects). In the men's race, there was a new face on the top step of the podium - Marco Bui (Full Dynamix). Bui stormed away from the field, as he has done in both previous
ARLINGTON, VA – Ivan Dominguez (HealthNet Maxxis) and Laura Van Gilder (Team Quark) out sprinted their respective break-away companions to win the CSC Invitational on Sunday. Dominguez was the last sprinter standing in a four-man break formed only thirty minutes from the finish. Break mates Kirk O'Bee (Navigators), Ivan Stevic (Aerospace Engineering-VMG) and Bobby Julich (CSC), after trying several times to attack the HealthNet sprinter, could do nothing more than watch Dominguez power out of the last turn and throw his bike across the line for the win. Van Gilder nipped Ina Teutenberg
Carter soloes to his second victory in the Iron Horse
Savoldelli toasts his victory
Savoldelli mistakes the winner's trophy for a podium girl
The final podium
Zabel runs out of real estate as Petacchi takes the stage
Ahh - that's more like it
Simoni was critical of defending champ Cunego, saying he could have used more help from his young teammate in the mountains
Dahle was unstoppable once more
Spitz fought her way into second
McConneloug bounced back from a bad start into fifth
The men start . . .
. . . and Bui finishes
Dominguez powers to a win
Woman to woman - Van Gilder gets the edge
Julich gets a good reception at his sponsor's showcase event
And then there were four
Saturday’s larger-than-life battle over the gravel roads of the Colle delle Finestra was a fitting ending to what’s been an epic Giro d’Italia. Discovery Channel’s Paolo Savoldelli saw his maglia rosa come under fire in the grueling 190km 19th stage after Gilberto Simoni (Lampre-Caffita) and Danilo Di Luca (Liquigas-Bianchi) attacked hard up the fearsome Finestra, but he clawed back to save his second Giro victory in four years with just one day left in the 88th corsa rosa. “I don’t feel like a great Giro champion because I don’t attack and make a dramatic showing like the other Giro
Saturday's stage 19 of the Giro d'Italia was an epic battle for the final podium, with more than one memorable moment along its 190km route between Savigliano and Sestrière. Here are a few of them as captured by the photographers of Agence France Press.
Well, we tried to get another one, but this time it just didn’t work out. We did a lot of work today and chasing that early break from like 30 kilometers or so and pulled the peloton all the way to the base of the Finistere. At least we got to that point… after that, I dunno. The plan today was to do pretty much what we did on Thursday, when Ivan pretty much rode everyone off of his wheel. That and yesterday showed us all that Ivan was capable of doing it, it’s just that he didn’t really have it today. Frankly, after these last couple of days, it really, that shouldn’t come as that big of a
Stage 19 was a nail-biter to watch - all the protagonists were fighters, giving every ounce of energy on the road. Discovery’s Paolo Savoldelli looked to be in danger on the Colle delle Finestre, steadily losing time to Lampre’s Gilberto Simoni, Selle Italia’s José Rujano and Liquigas’s Danilo Di Luca, but he fought back, flew down the descent and chased all the way up the final ascent into Sestriere and essentially won the race, as Sunday’s final stage is sure to be a parade commandeered by the sprinters in the final meters. Rumor has it that on the final stage of the Giro, townspeople stop
Always the crowd pleaser, Canadian Genevieve Jeanson surprised a few people and turned a few heads when she pulled off another World Cup win in Montreal this weekend. She won Saturday's race in similar style to her 2004 victory, taking the win with an uphill sprint finish in the final 300 meters of the race. The international women's field of just under 100 riders found the 12 lap, 99.6km event to be something of a race of attrition. The field stayed together for the first 10 laps of the race, despite a series of early attempts to break away. The attacks that did happen were futile
Savoldelli clings to a 28-second lead over Simoni with one stage remaining
Rujano wins
Di Luca leads the attacking trio on the Finestre
Savoldelli battles back
Rujano makes his move
ProTour leader Danilo Di Luca (Liquigas-Bianchi) did yeoman's work on the gravel steeps of the Colle delle Finestre
But race leader Paolo Savoldelli (Discovery Channel) rode his own race and took back time from the attacking trio
When Di Luca cramped and fell off the pace, Gilberto Simoni (Lampre-Caffita) pressed his advantage, dogged by José Rujano (Selle Italia-Colombia)
But it would not be enough - Simoni will finish second in Milan
The stage went to Rujano . . .
. . . and the maglia rosa stays with Savoldelli
The madness of the Finestre
Ivanov and Niermann get an early start on the day's suffering
Savoldelli's fans
Watching the race on big-screen TV at the finish
Jeanson cranks it up
It was slow going for much of the day
Jeanson wasn't sure this one would stick
Amber Neben
Wood now leads the World Cup
Gaggioli tries her hand
The latest Photo Gallery in our on-going photo contest has now been posted for your viewing pleasure. Last Week's WinnersWell, actually we just couldn't make up our minds... Firstoff, Jeff Schweninger's "VueltaFans 2004" underscores just how spectacular the sport ofcycling can be. Despite the fact that there isn't a single bike racer inthis photo of fans lined up to watch the 12th stage of the 2004 Vuelta,you can sense the anticipation of what will be happening as the pelotonreaches the winding roads that climb to the Observatory complex at CalarAlto. (In case you forgot,
Paolo Savoldelli and other Giro d’Italia contenders must be quietly thankful that Ivan Basso had his stomach problems. If the Team CSC captain hadn’t come down with a crook stomach and lost 40 minutes over the Stelvio, this Giro very well could have been all but decided a week ago instead of being one of the most exciting in a generation. For the second day in a row, Basso blazed to an impressive stage victory, this time roaring to the first major time trial victory in his career in Friday’s 34km race against the clock in the hills around Torino. “These stage victories make up for the
When 23-year-old Markus Fothen returns home to his parents' farm near the Dutch-German border after the Giro d'Italia, the Gerolsteiner rider will be a different man. Before the Giro, which marked his grand-tour debut, he was a young, albeit very talented rider trying to get used to the hardships of pro racing. But if he holds onto his 12th-place spot in Milan, he will have to live with the expectation of becoming the next big thing in German cycling, the idol of German fans in the era after Erik Zabel and Jan Ullrich. His greatest moments during this Giro, Fothen says, came during
Sunday's eighth annual CSC Invitational will unleash a host of national and international cycling champions upon the streets of Arlington, Virginia. Part of USA Cycling’s National Racing Calendar, and the second event in the American Criterium Championship Series, the race will pit men and women against a five-turn, 1km circuit. The 50km women’s race is shaping up as a battle among former winners, with 2004 victor Gina Grain (Victory Brewing) facing 2003 champ Laura Van Gilder (Quark) and two-time winner Ina Teutenberg (T-Mobile). A pair of runners-up also will take the start - Shannon