CSC helps Voigt add to his lead in the Tour Med
CSC helps Voigt add to his lead in the Tour Med
CSC helps Voigt add to his lead in the Tour Med
And he causeth all . . . to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads; And that no man might buy or sell, save that he had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
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.Rights versus responsibilitiesEditor:Neal Rogers did a really great job of pointing out the crap that some employers want versus the rights of citizens (see “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood: Who draws the line between rights and responsibilities?”). For one job I had to sign an agreement that I
Voigt scores again in Tour MedJens Voigt (CSC) padded his lead in the Tour Méditerranéen on Friday, soloing to victory in stage 3 from La Garde to the summit of Mont Faron in Toulon. The 137km stage was animated at the foot of the day’s first climb, Fourches, at 32km. Five riders – Frenchmen Mickael Delage (Francaise des Jeux) and Lénaïc Olivier (Agritubel), Italian Alessandro Donati (Acqua & Sapone), Estonian Janek Tombak (Cofidis) and the Belgian Kristof Trouvé (MrBookmaker.com)– broke away and built a four-minute lead by 80km. Behind, Voigt’s team began a chase, assisted by the
While British and Irish cyclists were making breakthroughs in Europe’s top road races during the 1950s and early 1960s, North Americans were still very much in the twilight zone of world cycling. There were many reasons why road racing remained undeveloped on this side of the Atlantic; but one big reason was apparent in the very name of the body that controlled the sport in the United States, the Amateur Bicycle League of America (my italics). Professional cycling was anathema to the ABL, which was founded by a group of New York cycling clubs in 1920 to counteract alleged corruption in the
Number, please
Voigt wins again
Art Longsjo at Somerville
Bobby Julich and the CSC gang on the march
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.Say 'cheese'Editor:Here's the man, David Clinger, riding on a sunny day in the Santa Monica Mountains. Shane V. Luncinski(pictured next to Clinger in photo No. 2)Canoga Park, California That’s it? Big dealEditor:Boy, am I ever disappointed. Judging from the deafening geshrei
Armstrong to tell all in chat with OprahSix-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong reportedly will announce whether he’ll try for No. 7 on Friday’s “Oprah Winfrey Show.” Armstrong and rocker Sheryl Crow will join Oprah for their first interview together, according to a press release. Also on the agenda: The superstar couple shares how they first started flirting and why Crow is now writing love songs. Armstrong opens up about being a single father and Oprah asks, "Do you want to have more children?" Oprah challenges Lance to a bike race (with a few conditions). Crow debuts her new
Over the past few weeks I’ve had the opportunity to write about two American riders who have found themselves at odds with their domestic road teams over matters that aren’t strictly related to their jobs. In Matt DeCanio’s case, Ofoto-Sierra Nevada released him for expressing an admittedly controversial view of drug use in cycling. As for David Clinger, Webcor told him that his new full-face Maori-style tattoo was not an image the team cared to be associated with. I’m not going to weigh in with my opinion on either case - at least, not in this week’s column - primarily because I wrote the
Gilbert wins in Tour MedBelgian Philippe Gilbert (FDJeux.com) hung on to win the second stage of the 32nd Tour Méditerranéen. Gilbert’s victory in the 131km stage from Villeneuve-Loubet to Bormes-Les-Mimosas makes up for an error in the final stretches of the GP d’Ouverture La Marseillaise, when he steered off course. Team CSC’s Jens Voigt finished fifth to retain the overall lead. Tour MéditerranéenStage 2 results1. Philippe Gilbert (B), Française des Jeux, 131km in 3:10:45 (41,206 km/h)2. Franck Schleck (Lux), CSC, s.t.3. Kim Kirchen (Lux), Fassa Bortolo, s.t.4. Bram De Groot (Ned),
Dear Readers,Today’s column is the first of a three-part series written by attorney Bruce Epperson. Whether you are a triathlete, bike racer or just interested in bikes, the business/legal history of the bicycle is a rich one.– Bob MionskeThe Monopoly Machine, Part 1 "For a decade afterward came the wonderful battles of bicycle patents. All along Pope extended this department, and practically was in the position of a Czar of the business. . . Pope was largely hated and the Columbia was called the monopoly machine." - Bicycling World, 1902 Starting in 1879, the infant bicycle industry was
The athlete . . .
. . . and the artwork
Health Net-Maxxiss Mike SoPro Jones jumps on the anti-doping/body-art bandwagon: He advises that his self-decoration cost three bucks for the markers, took three minutes to apply and less than one to remove
Gilbert outkicks the bunch
Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood: Who draws the line between rights and responsibilities?
Voigt hangs onto the lead
Jens Voigt (Team CSC) used his strong early season form to hold off the hard-chasing peloton and win Wednesday’s opening stage of the Tour Méditerranéen that hit the Poggio en route from San Remo to Menton. Voigt was part of a four-man break that pulled clear over the Poggio, forcing such sprinter teams as Gerolsteiner and Liquigas to chase hard to set up their men Danilo Hondo and Mario Cipollini. With the lead down to 20 seconds, the others lost their verve and were ready to give in to the inevitable, but not the irrepressible German. He shot away with 6km to go and held the peloton at
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.Clinger’s phiz sparks a quizEditor:Let's break the David Clinger situation down to a level that all can grasp with a quick quiz: 1. Professional cycling is mostly:A. A sportB. A businessC: A fun way to get a tan2. To pay bills a pro cycling team depends on:A. Donations from other
Ford-Basis Women's Cycling Team is officially announcing its roster for the 2006 season today. "I realized how late I was in posting our 2005 Ford-Basis team announcement, so I decided to be the first to post a 2006 announcement," says team director Nicole Freedman. "This legally binds our sponsors to another season, correct?" Five riders return to the Ford-Basis cycling team. Freedman (Boston, MA), the 2000 US Olympian and two-time U.S. national champion, continues to mentor the developing squad. "And this is how to wear a training bra," she has been heard to encourage after a race.
Computing CP zonesDear Joe and Dirk,My goals for the coming season are two centuries, so I have invested in a power meter. Now I am ready to start using a combo of heart rate and power to train. I am a bit overwhelmed with how to go about computing my different Critical Power zones. Do you have any advice?JTJT,The advantage of training with power is that you can make your training as objective as possible. I like to say training with power is like viewing the world in three dimensions instead of two, as most cyclists do. The addition of power to one's training metrics can elevate the
Joseba Beloki has ambitious plans for 2005
Team Ford-Basis
Valverde wins at Mallorca for the second day in a row
Voigt hangs on for the win
Gerolsteiner chases
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.Cultural respect and Maori tattoosEditor:Facial tattoos have specific meanings for Maori, and the designs are based on the spirituality of family and ancestors. Getting a moko knockoff in Argentina is about as culturally respectful as having the Stars and Stripes tattooed on your butt by
Dear Lennard,I have two sets of wheels I use for my bike with two different sets of clinchers, each with a different maximum-pressure rating. My race wheels have tires with a max pressure rating of 116 psi (Michelin Pro Race). However, my training wheels have tires with a max pressure of 145 psi (Vredestein Fortezza Tri Comp). I use my training wheels as my pit wheels while racing. If I have to change a wheel during a race, will the different pressures between the front and rear cause me handling problems or other dangers? Secondly, I am 175 pounds and use paired-spoke wheels (Shimano
Editor’s note: In his new weekly web column, VeloNews European correspondent Andrew Hood takes you behind the headlines. This week he looks at Mario Cipollini’s comeback attempt, how Bobby Julich helped secure Dave Zabriskie and Christian Vande Velde contracts at Team CSC, and Graeme Obree’s remarks on Lance Armstrong’s talk of making a run at the world hour record. Check back each Tuesday for more. Will the Lion King roar again?Mario Cipollini couldn’t have hoped for a better start to the 2005 season with his stage victory last week in the Tour of Qatar. After two lackluster seasons, a
Valverde gets his in MallorcaIn a week that’s seen some big names take early season victories, it was only a matter of time before Alejandro Valverde would bounce into the winner’s circle. The 24-year-old Spanish sensation won more than 15 races last year and it didn’t take long for him to notch his first victory of the 2005 season. Valverde sprang back to life by peeling away from the main bunch to win the Trofeo Soller and give home team Illes Balears a much-desired win. Conditions were horrible during the 164km stage, which featured three tough climbs, with wind, snow and rain pelting
Monterey, California — MotionBased Technologies and Sea Otter Classic, the most celebrated cycling festival in North America, have teamed up to provide athletes with detailed course descriptions to train for races. Riders simply strap on their GPS devices and they’re instantly empowered with online performance analysis and mapping. The 15th annual Sea Otter Classic will be held this year on April 14-17, 2005, at the Laguna Seca Recreation Area, Monterey, California. “We’re excited to partner with MotionBased Technologies,” says Frank Yohannan, president and CEO of Sea Otter Classic. “By
Marco Pantani: The Legend of a Tragic ChampionEdited by John Wilcockson For Immediate Release: On February 14, 2004, Italy’s most recent Tour de France champion Marco Pantani died alone in a hotel room at the Adriatic beach town of Rimini. He was only 34 years old. Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong, who lost to Pantani in two stages of the 2000 Tour, said: “I had deep respect for Marco. Cycling has indeed lost a great champion and a great personality.” Some 30,000 fans attended the funeral, to remember a man who they affectionately nicknamed The Pirate for his bandanna-covered shaved
The Lion King has roared once already in 05, in Qatar
Valverde scores one for the home team
Tankink and Pozzato on the Poggio
PRESS RELEASE: Marco Pantani: The Legend of a Tragic Champion
It’s two for two for Oscar Freire, who scored his second straight victory in just two days of racing in the 2005 season. A day after making his season debut a winning one at the Trofeo Mallorca, the reigning world champion won Monday’s Trofeo Alcudia in similar fashion. It’s not bad for a guy who only has about 2500km in his legs when many of his competitors might have double or triple that amount. “I didn’t start training seriously until after Christmas and then I got sick with a cold, so I haven’t been able to put in the kilometers I normally would,” Freire said after Sunday’s win. “To
If I could go through it all again,the slender iron rungs of growing up,I would be as young as any,a child lostin unreality and loud music. –Robert Traill Spence Lowell, Realities These crazy kids today, with their mouthy web sites and Maori tattoos. They got no respect, do they? And that stuff they call music – why, it’s just noise. There has been no end of the old viewing-with-alarm lately, thanks to the madcap antics of Matt DeCanio and David Clinger. Once clean-cut, happy young men, the kind a lucky team director could feel good about taking home to meet the sponsor, they
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.Webcor’s decision on Clinger’s tattoo is shockingEditor:I am shocked by Team Webcor's stand against David Clinger and his choice of "artistic expression.” (see Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood: Webcor gets a new look – one it's not happy with") I was surprised that a clean-cut,
Boulder, Colorado – Tuesday, February 8, at Boulder’s Flatirons Theater, Boulder-based cyclists star in “Pro: The Movie”. “Pro” is a feature-length film shot at the 2004 US Professional Road Cycling Championships in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Boulder riders Scott Moninger, Chris Wherry, Dan Schmatz, Michael Barry, Will Frischkorn, Mike Jones, Greg Henderson, Alex Candelario and Jonas Carney play substantial roles in a movie that offers an insider’s view of the biggest cycling event in North America. Racing legends Andy Hampsten (winner of the 1988 Tour of Italy), Nelson Vails (silver
TEMPE, Arizona - Do you believe that you can ride a bicycle the 494 miles from San Diego to Flagstaff, Arizona, in 24 hours? This year, the organizers of the Insight Race Across America aim to make everyone a believer. While history tells us that the Insight Race Across America (RAAM) is the same to ultra-distance cyclists as the Tour de France is to road racers, recent years have brought significant changes to the organization of the world's greatest ultra-cycling challenge. First was the Corporate Challenge that emerged in 2002, making it a realistic prospect for weekend warrior teams
1. What is RSS?RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. It is an easy way to keep up with your favorite news. An RSS feed contains headlines and links to full news stories. If you click an RSS link, you will see XML (or eXtensible Markup Language) code in your browser. This is to be expected, since you do not view RSS content through a browser. You view the headlines through an RSS news reader. 2. What are RSS Readers?RSS news readers are small software programs that aggregate RSS feeds and display the story information. They allow you to scan headlines from hundreds of news sources in one
Mancebo, seen here at the 2004 Tour of Germany, is looking to France this year.
Mancebo (r) with co-captain Alejandro Valverde at last weeks team presentation
Freire does it again
With the king of Malaysia looking on from the VIP seats at the finish line, Aussie Graeme Brown affirmed his status as ruler of the Tour de Langkawi sprints, easily taking the 10th and final stage of the 2005 Tour de Langkawi on Sunday in downtown Kuala Lumpur. The win was Brown’s fifth at the 10th anniversary of the Malaysian national tour, upping his all-time wins record to nine.
Freire wins season opener in Trofeo MallorcaReigning world champion Oscar Freire (Rabobank) got his season started on a nice note with a sprint victory against Isaac Gálvez (Illes Balears) in Sunday’s Trofeo Mallorca. With Erik Zabel (T-Mobile) and Paolo Bettini (Quick Step) also in the field for the opener of the five-day Mallorca Challenge, the three-time world champion made his season debut in the rainbow jersey a pleasant one. Freire’s win comes as somewhat of a surprise, considering just yesterday the Spanish sprinter was complaining of an early season bout with the flu. He follows in
A federal court jury in Minnesota last Friday concluded that a New York manufacturer violated the terms of a contract when the firm dropped Greg LeMond’s name from a line of mass-market bicycle accessories sold in Target stores. The jury awarded LeMond a total of $3.46 million dollars in what the three-time Tour de France winner said was a “very conservative” estimate of potential royalties that he would have earned had PTI Holdings Inc. properly marketed the brand and honored the contract for its full 10-year term. “I think it was a fair judgment,” LeMond told VeloNews Monday. “I mean,
Brown wins the final sprint
Discovery riders Mike Creed, Patrick McCarty, and Michael Barry look forward to the finale
Yellow jersey Cox takes a corner early on
The peloton passes the Abdul Samat, a former palace in downtown KL
Headed for home
You could not have scripted a more appropriate ending for the ninth stage of the 2005 Tour de Langkawi on Saturday. The 164.8km run from Menara Kuala Lumpur to Putrajaya started with the standard early attacks, continued with solid team tactics by Barloworld, and concluded with Ceremica-Panaria coming to the front to deliver yet another sprint win for Aussie Graeme Brown. The win was Brown’s fourth at the 10th anniversary of this 10-day race in Malaysia, and it extended his all-time wins record to eight.
The peloton charges towards the line in the heat in Putra Jaya
A base jumper pops his chute over the start line at the base of the KL
Ryan Cox in the leaders jersey near the top of the first climb
Walters leads the chase over the first climb
The massive Putra Jaya mosque near the finish
Jose Rujano’s run at the overall Tour de Langkawi title won’t officially come to an end until the finish of Sunday’s stage 10 criterium in Kuala Lumpur. But in his mind, the pint-sized Venezuelan climber’s concession likely came with 3km to go in Friday’s stage 8 run from Kuala Kuba Baru to the top of the Genting Highlands. It was there that Rujano’s chief rival in the chase for the GC title, South African Ryan Cox, rolled up beside him and gave him a glaring gaze of confidence.
One of the top stories coming out of last year’s Tour de France was the fighting panache of Thomas Voeckler, the quiet, hard-working national champion who held the yellow jersey for more than a week. The fresh-faced national champion defied the odds and carried the maillot jaune out of the Pyrénées, giving French fans something to cheer for as Lance Armstrong barnstormed to a record sixth consecutive win. Voeckler is making his season debut at the Tour of Qatar with his fellow Bouygues Telecom teammates. Here are excerpts from an interview posted on the official race page: Q: How do you
Lance Armstrong and Jan Ullrich could cross swords on more than one occasion this season if the Union Cycliste Internationale’s ambitious plans for major reforms come to fruition. Ullrich, the 1997 Tour de France winner, and Armstrong, the six-time winner and record holder, hardly ever race each other outside of the Tour. But that could all change. Or at least that is what UCI president Hein Verbruggen hopes will happen when the system that has been in place for nearly two decades is ripped up and replaced by an elite league which, in theory, will guarantee cycling's top stars ride in
The 10-race World Cup and the UCI world rankings are no more, replaced by the 27-race ProTour series and a new system of awarding points that will determine who wears the ProTour leader’s jersey. In the three-week grand tours, the first 20 overall finishers gain ProTour points; in the others, such as Paris-Nice and Milan-San Remo, only the first 10 overall finishers do. In most stage races, stage winners collect one point. However, in the more difficult grand tours, the first three stage finishers receive three, two and one, respectively. And the Tour de France delivers more points than
Wow. File this week’s column under the “Stranger Than Fiction” heading. Or, following last week’s story about Matt DeCanio and the Ofoto-Sierra Nevada squad parting ways, maybe we should designate this as chapter 2 of “How to lose your job before ever toeing a start line with the team.” So, where to begin? When three-time NRC winner Chris Horner left the upstart domestic Webcor Builders squad to take his rightful place among the world’s elite in Europe, the first question many asked was, “What will happen to Webcor?” That question seemed to have been answered when Webcor announced that it
Giroscopic Sports Management is pleased to present Team Biovail, which will be competing in road cycling events throughout North America in 2005. Team Biovail continues to build on an existing five-year franchise and is actually two distinct teams. The Elite Women's team focuses on key Pro-Am races in the U.S. and Canada while the Master Men's team will contest events primarily in Canada. Women's Elite Team: Newcomer Amanda Shaw, 2004 Ontario provincial ’cross champion, returning rider Anna Garnett, Jennifer Stephenson, Nanci Dodman and newcomer Tracey Vincze. Men's Masters
American cyclist Will Frischkorn will moving into a team leadership role as he joins newly crowned national champion Ian Macgregor in heading up Team TIAA-CREF in 2005. Sponsored by Fortune 68 financial services company TIAA-CREF, the team begins its second season with a full slate of the country’s most exciting young up-and-coming riders. Frischkorn, who comes to TIAA-CREF after serving as a key teammate for Chris Horner at Saturn, is widely recognized as one of the country’s top talents. An accomplished rider at only 23, Frishkorn has won stages in the Ronde de L'isard and the Tour
Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto) finally got it right in a week dominated by sprinting’s biggest names. After watching Tom Boonen and Mario Cipollini take the glory earlier, the Aussie boxer punched his way to victory in the 153km final stage from Sealine Beach Resort to Doha Corniche. There were some early attempts at a breakaway, but the sprinter teams were anxious for one more stab at the spoils before leaving behind the oil-rich Persian Gulf nation. Boonen came through third, but McEwen scored the win that eluded him all week in Qatar. Team CSC delivered Lars Michaelsen into the overall
What we read and how we communicate have always been important elements in the evolvement of our sport. At the outset of professional road racing in the late nineteenth century, the editors at newspapers and magazines not only reported the events but they also dreamed up the races and put them on. The world’s very first long-distance road race, from Paris to Rouen along the length of the Seine valley, was sponsored in 1869 by a magazine called the Vélocipède Illustré. Another title, Véloce-Sport, organized the first Bordeaux-Paris classic in 1891, Le Petit Journal put on the inaugural
A sprint to the line at Genting
Cox was clearly not intimidated
The two leaders emerged from a shrinking lead group as the climb to Genting took its toll
Grajales managed fifth