Webcor Builders CEO Andy Ball gets a lift from sponsoring the Webcor Women
Webcor Builders CEO Andy Ball gets a lift from sponsoring the Webcor Women
Webcor Builders CEO Andy Ball gets a lift from sponsoring the Webcor Women
Cunego may be the star of the Giro, but he's got an eye on the Tour, too.
Robbie McEwen likened the roar of the crowd in the home straight to that of a football grand final after charging home to win the final stage of the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under on Sunday. Like he has done so many times in a star-studded career, McEwen, 32, timed his run perfectly down the 500-meter finishing straight to get over the top of Italian Paride Grillo (Ceramiche Panaria-Navigare) and Queenslander Allan Davis (Liberty Seguros).
Osteopath Benoit Nave, who treats six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, said as part of a judicial investigation that he has never seen traces of injections or other doping practices on the American rider's body. The investigations come after Armstrong's former British masseusse Emma O'Reilly was interviewed by police. She was reported to have confirmed the allegations of the Texan using the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) she made in "L.A. Confidential - Les Secrets de Lance Armstrong" last year. Armstrong is suing the authors for defamation, claiming two million euros
Spanish rider Luis Sanchez may have remembered on Sunday - when he won the Tour Down Under - more than any other days the reason he first took up cycling. Sanchez's father, a policeman in Spain, was injured in a terrorist attack when Sanchez was just five years old and doctors told him cycling would aid his rehabilitation. The bikes he bought for his two sons at the same time gave Luis a taste for the sport, and before long he was hooked on the sport. Eventually, and despite angering his family, he ended his studies at 18 to follow his passion. He was discovered by former ONCE manager
Italian cyclist Damiano Cunego will call upon the spirit of dead rock star Jim Morrison to help him in his bid to defend his Giro d’Italia title later this year. The 23-year-old is a huge fan of Morrison's legendary 1960s rock band “The Doors” and believes the music of the American group can play a pivotal role when the 88th edition of the race gets underway on May 7. "I can only say that on paper I like this Giro, but I will need to go and have a look at it to get a better idea," said Cunego. "It seems to me like the tour will suit the climbers, but we'll see. As usual, there will be Jim
Rabobank’s Sven Nijs padded his lead in the UCI’s cyclo-cross World Cup in fine style Sunday, winning the penultimate event of the 11-race series he’s led for most of the season. Nijs beat fellow Belgians Davy Commeyne and Sven Vanthourenhout in the 10th and World Cup race at Hoogerheide in the Netherlands. The win was his 20th major victory of the season. Just a week before the world championships in Saint Wendel, Germany, Nijs confirmed that he is a clear favorite in next Sunday’s race for the rainbow jersey. Nijs, who has made a habit of staying with the lead group until the final laps
Robbie the Rocket scores again
Sanchez and Liberty cruised to the GC and team wins
Adelaide served as the hub of the week-long race
Leblanc was impressed with Oz
Liberty was dominant throughout the week
Sanchez: 'I'm no Indurain.'
Spaniard Alberto Contador celebrated his recovery from life-threatening brain surgery by winning the fifth stage of the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under in Willunga Saturday. But his better-credentialed Liberty Seguros teammate Luis Sanchez will take an almost unassailable lead into Sunday’s final stage in Adelaide. And the best local hero Stuart O'Grady can finish is third, as he trails Sanchez by 47 seconds, while Queenslander Allan Davis splits them at 35 seconds off the pace. Saturday’s 147km stage, which included a torturous 3km climb to the top of Old Willunga Hill, was expected to blow
Organizers unveiled the route for the 88th edition of the Giro D'Italia in Milan on Saturday. The 3465.65km event, which consists of 20 stages, begins with the prologue down south in Reggio Calabria on May 7 and ends in the northern city of Milan on May 29. The Giro offers a diverse mix of conditions, including five mountain climbs and two individual time trials besides the opening-day prologue. On May 15, the race pays homage to the late Gino Bartali, one of the all-time greats of Italian cycling, who died on the eve of the 2000 Giro. A 41.5km time trial starting at Lamporecchio will
In Mazda Palace, Milan – The 2005 Giro d’Italia presentation Saturday eveningsaw typical Italian flare and style in what race officials are hopefulwill be one of the best battles in recent years. The prospect of a clash between Italy’s hottest young stars and increasedinternational participation thanks to the ProTour, the duel between DamianoCunego and Ivan Basso is sure to make the 88th Giro palpitating to watch. Some of Italy’s biggest stars were on hand for nearly two-hour presentation,including 2000 Giro winner Stefano Garzelli, 2002 winner Paolo Savoldelli(with his newly broken
Sanchez and Contador celebrate their successful teamwork
Contador and Sanchez work it
O'Grady leads Van Summeren by a single second
Sprint leader McEwen got into an early break
Damiano Cunego receives yet more accolades during the Giro's kitschy presentation ceremony in Milan on Saturday.
If 2000 Giro d'Italia champion Stefano Garzelli has his way, it will be him in the maglia rosa in May. Anything to trade out that green tie.
Nothing is ever under-stated in Italy. Nearly 1,000 people packed into the Mazda Palace on Saturday evening to watch the unveiling of the 88th Giro d'Italia.
Matthew White stepped out of the shadow of teammate Stuart O'Grady Friday with a hollow victory in the fourth stage of the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under. “I've waited six bloody years for this,” White said after he crossed the line a clear winner from fellow Australian Robbie McEwen, referring to his last major stage win in the Tour of Switzerland in 1999. Better known as a domestique on the world stage, White, 31, helped his Cofidis teammate O'Grady win last year's World Cup in Hamburg, and has carved out a profitable living for the past 10 years in that role. But Friday was his chance to
Armstrong reacts to doping probeLance Armstrong reacted strongly against a new doping investigation initiated this week in France, saying he’s “disappointed” yet insists he’ll be “vindicated.” On Thursday, French newspapers reported that Philippe Drouet, a prosecutor in Annecy, is starting a preliminary investigation into allegations against the six-time Tour de France champion in the controversial book “LA Confidentiel.” “I am disappointed by the judge’s decision to launch an inquiry without first hearing my side of the story,” Armstrong said in a press release issued by news agency PR
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.Thank NBC for covering RAAMEditor:This week is a great time to call NBC (number below) to thank them for putting cycling on their national network. I'm sure cyclists agree our sport does not get on the national networks nearly often enough. Well, on January 22, the Insight Race Across
Jill Janov’s January 17 article, “Why ride a bike? Ten reasons and counting,” must’ve struck a chord out there – we were deluged with e-mail from readers who eagerly provided their own rationales, which ranged from the spiritual to the technological to the Darwinian. A few samples follow. Enjoy the ride. – Editor My brother pointed me to your article about 10 reasons to ride a bike. He is a person who will take his 16-pound road bike on a 50-mile ride, just for run. I am still one of the unenlightened, in the "carrying potatoes" group. I commute to work on the average of 3.6 days per week,
When true road races were first held in Britain during World War II, Alf Buttler was one of the thousands of amateur cyclists who “did a bit of everything.” Like most riders, he came into the sport through a touring club, enjoying the weekend club runs and weeklong tours with his buddies to the hillier parts of the British Isles. Racing was a natural progression, first the “anonymous” road time trials, then track racing (usually on unbanked grass tracks), followed by the occasional hill climb, circuit race and, eventually, a full-blown stage race. Alf talked about the early days of modern
Since we’re hunkering down to produce the 2005 VeloNews Buyer’s Guide, I’m going to have to keep this week’s column a bit tighter (read: shorter) than usual. Excuses aside, I have to say that the most exciting part of producing this year’s BG has got to be the “Bikes of the ProTour” section. When the idea of rounding up every production ProTour replica bike was first pitched in November, I have to admit it seemed more than far-fetched to me. I mean, I was going to be the guy responsible for ordering 15 of the hardest-to-get road bikes of 2005 – a long shot in full production months of May
McEwen had no interest in chasing
The Nav's did, though
Sanchez is still in command
Sanchez is enjoying his time in the spotlight
'Pretty bloody happy,' White scores stage win in Oz
Alf Buttler and John Wilcockson in Wales
The RockShox Pike Air
Rumors are flying that Ag2r and Phonak will be the two wild-card teams selected for the 2005 Tour de France. The Italian newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport tipped inside sources that these two teams will be selected for the Tour when the wild-card teams are announced Jan. 31. Under new ProTour rules, 19 top teams are already guaranteed places in the Tour, leaving race organizers just two cards to play in rounding out the team list. In the past, French teams have been favored by Tour officials when issuing wild-card invitations. Ag2r is the top French team overlooked in the ProTour selection
Spain's Luis Sanchez, touted as the next Miguel Indurain, is the new leader in the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under after an enthralling third stage between Glenelg and Victor Harbor on Thursday. Sanchez, 21, from the Murcia region and riding for Liberty Seguros, outsprinted Belgian Johan Van Summeren to win the stage after both riders attacked a 26-man breakaway 20km from the finish. The win catapulted Sanchez into the leader's yellow jersey after he trailed Queensland's Robbie McEwen by 12 seconds overnight. McEwen, 32, winner of the opening two stages was the day’s biggest loser, missing
Dear Readers,Last week we got a note from C.A. in Connecticut, who asked: In general, what is the legality of a group ride? If I email my friends and say, “Let’s all meet at my place at 6 AM for a century ride, I’ll lead,” and someone joins me and gets hit by a car while on my ride, to what degree can I be held legally accountable? Second, what if my group includes a university cycling team with members under 18? In response to that question, we talked about the most simple case, that of co-participant liability in a sport—what happens if you misjudge that gap in the big sprint and
French prosecutors have opened an investigation into the doping allegations against six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong that were originally outlined in the book "L.A. Confidential - Les Secrets de Lance Armstrong." Officials were quoted in Thursday’s edition of Le Parisien that the investigation stems from a magistrate's interview with Armstrong's former Irish soigneur Emma O'Reilly, who was reported to have confirmed the allegations of the Texan using the banned blood booster EPO (erythropoietin) she made in the book, written by Sunday Times of London sports journalist David
Ask TIAA-CREF team director Jonathan Vaughters how important the upcoming season is along the career path of his team’s new leader Will Frischkorn, and he’ll tell you that in a word, it’s crucial. After five years racing at the professional level the 23-year-old Frischkorn is, for the first time in his career, being given the opportunity to lead a team. “Will is 23, going to be 24 this year, and at that sort of the age, you really have three options,” Vaughters said. “Maybe not for somebody that starts racing at 22, but Will’s been at this for more than five years. At the point he’s at in
McEwen's hopes of an overall win evaporated Thursday
Sanchez joined Van Summeren in the winning move 20km from the finish
QuickStep drove the chase...
... but, as it turns out, the team would still have another 100km to ride Thursday
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood: A Will to win
Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood: A Will to win
Robbie McEwen overcame a rogue civilian and a near crash into the barriers to win an unprecedented 10th stage of the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under in Tanunda on Wednesday. In another bunch sprint finish, McEwen just had too much power for Italian Paride Grillo and Queenslander Allan Davis. The Tour de France sprint champion won clearly, but the margin would have been greater had he not had to change direction about 250m from the line. “We nearly hit some bloke on his bike with about 800m to go,” McEwen said. “He was just riding along the road. It's bad enough with the parked cars and then
Bettini already has Madrid on his mind Olympic champion Paolo Bettini is already putting the 2005 world championships at the top of his list of goals for the upcoming season. The “Cricket” was a disappointing DNF in last fall’s worlds on the Verona course, but hopes to earn the rainbow jersey that’s so far eluded him. “The worlds are always one of my objectives, but after my win at the Olympics, I’m more tranquil than the other favorites,” Bettini said during a break at the Quick Step training camp in Italy. “Petacchi has already gone to see the course and he says it’s a course that’s
What police called an “important network” of drug trafficking between Belgium and France was dismantled Tuesday and Wednesday, with 25 people being arrested for questioning in the two countries and several of them being caught red-handed. “This trafficking seems unhappily to involve cyclists at different levels, both amateurs and semi-professionals,” confirmed Denis Chausserie-Laprée, a vice procurator with the Bordeaux branch of the specialist interregional judiciary (JIRS), at a press conference held with the police investigators. The magistrate refused to give the identities of the people
McEwen strikes a familiar pose
O'Loughlin and crew built a 5:40 lead at one point... but then the chase started
Tour de France chief Jean-Marie Leblanc admits it is only a matter of time before Australia’s ever-improving cycling contingent can finally produce a Tour winner. “I never say this or that guy is going to win the Tour, but a rider like Michael Rogers, who is young, who knows how to climb, who is good in the time trial and who is in a Quick Step team which is very professional and focused has a great chance,” Leblanc told AFP. “He's got everything needed to do it, and he knows what's required of him. In two or three years he can get on the podium in Paris. I'm almost certain of
Robbie McEwen continued his brilliant early season form with a thrilling victory in the opening stage of the Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under in Adelaide's East End Tuesday evening. In an All Australian trifecta, McEwen beat Queenslander Allan Davis with South Australian hero Stuart O'Grady third after 25 frenetic laps of a 2.5km circuit before a crowd estimated at close to 65,000. It was McEwen's ninth stage victory in seven years and followed closely on his win in the Australian Open road championship in Echunga on Saturday.
300 FREE ENTRIES ‘UP FOR GRABS’ FOR JUNIOR XC CYCLISTS AT 2005 SEA OTTERCLASSICNapa Sheriff’s Activities League offers nationwide youth a ‘freeride’ at cycling’s largest, most competitive race for Juniors.Monterey, Calif., January 18, 2005 — The Napa Sheriff’s ActivitiesLeague (NSAL) and Sea Otter Classic, the most celebrated cycling festivalin North America, announced today they will offer 300 complimentary entriesto junior riders. There are 14 Junior Cross Country events for youths 18and under. The 15th annual Sea Otter Classic, known throughout the cyclingworld as the “grand season
Six weeks after the news broke that that there would be no more gravity racing or riding at Snow Summit Resort in Big Bear Lake, California, word came Tuesday that the NORBA national mountain bike series event that was scheduled there for May 13-15 has been moved to Brian Head, Utah, where it will take place on July 29-31. The reason behind the move, according to event organizer Tom Spiegel, was directly related to Snow Summit’s decision to ban downhill bikes from its slopes in the wake of a lawsuit filed by a rider that was badly injured while racing at the resort in June of 2003. “My
Dear Lennard,I recently converted to wheels with bladed spokes, and now my speedometermagnet no longer fits onto the spoke (I have a Performance brand Axiom8.0C). Is there any solution where I don't have to buy an entire new computer?If I do have to upgrade, can you recommend one that will mount to a bladedspoke?AndrewDear Andrew,You can buy separate magnets for this type of spoke. For example, lookingin the Quality Bicycle catalog, and estimating the retail price, it lookslike you could get a hand-tightening Campagnolo magnet for $27 that I ampretty sure I have used on bladed spokes, a
INSIGHT RACE ACROSS AMERICA HITS NBC NATIONAL AIRWAVESWorld’s Ultra-Endurance Cycling Elite Captured in Riveting 2-hourDocu-DramaTEMPE, Arizona—The Insight Race Across America (RAAM), whichpassed through your area last June, is pleased to announce a two-hour NBCSports airing of the 2004 race on Saturday, January 22, 2005, 2.30 p.m.– 4.30 p.m. EST (check local listings for variations). Insight RAAM isthe American answer to the Tour de France, attracting many of the leadingultra-marathon cyclists in the world.Now in its 24th year, RAAM has worldwide recognition beyond the wildestdreams of the
McEwen's season is starting off right
Another summer evening in Adelaide
Two-time Giro d’Italia winner Gilberto Simoni was among the top names to underline his aims for the coming season a day ahead of the start of cycling's Tour Down Under in Adelaide, Australia, Monday. The Italian joined local hope Stuart O'Grady, a two-time winner of the season's first stage event, Spaniard Isidro Nozal and Australian all rounder Cadel Evans in singling out the race as an increasingly significant date on the growing global calendar. "I've noticed in the past that when McEwen and O'Grady compete here they tend to have successful seasons, do well at the Tour de France and even
Discovery Channel officials are still unsure how long 2002 Giro d’Italia champion Paolo Savoldelli will be sidelined after breaking his collar bone in three places during a training ride in California over the weekend. Savoldelli was scheduled for surgery on Sunday in a Santa Barbara hospital and officials are still waiting to find out how long the Italian will be set back. Savoldelli crashed in a training ride Saturday during the team’s annual training camp near Solvang when his front tire exploded after hitting a pothole. He was initially seen by team doctors on the scene and then
SIMONI HEADS TO Oz WITH NEW FI'ZI:K SADDLE: THE LIMITED EDITION AUSSIE ARIONE-Technology Plus Flexology Yields Power & Comfort-14 January 2005 - Pozzoleone, Italy ¡V Gearing up for what is often considered the official start of the race season, even if just for warm climate training, Lampre-Caffita's Gilberto Simoni is off to Australia for his first Tour Down Under with an honorary saddle in tow: the Aussie Arione. Paying respect to the hosting country and in honor of Simoni¡¦s first Tour Down Under, fi'zi:k called upon its limited edition material suppliers to produce the special cover
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.What would Eddy do?Editor:On the subject of Lance Armstrong making a decision about riding the Tour this year, I think it is useful to ask the question: "What would Eddy do?" The Tour today is the most important cycling race of the year, bar none. This was not necessarily the case when
“Nothing compares with the simple pleasure of a bike ride.”– President John F. Kennedy Why ride a bicycle? When I asked 10 observers of the bicycle industry, they replied with inspired observations, unprintable expletives, lively endorsements of guilt-free dessert consumption and one common complaint — “Jeez, to pare it down to just one reason is difficult.” A Zen teacher once asked his students why they rode bicycles. One said he rode to carry potatoes. Another cycled to observe the world. A third said it cleared the mind, and a fourth said cycling put him in harmony with all sentient
Simoni's saddle sponsor, fi’zi’k, showed its support by producing a special saddle for event.
PRESS RELEASE - Simoni gets new saddle for TDU
Cycling makes you smart
Recently-crowned Olympic track champion Stuart O'Grady is among the contenders who will find the going tough when the first stage race of the season begins at the Tour Down Under in Adelaide, Australia, on Tuesday. O'Grady, the 31-year-old local rider who had blistering form with his French Cofidis team last season, has been tipped for overall success in the race which takes the peloton through the wine-growing regions of southern Australia. The Adelaider, the winner in 1999 and 2001, came a close third when he last took part in 2003. But during six days of racing, O'Grady's ambitions will
The Discovery Channel pro cycling team has reported that Paolo Savoldelli crashed during a training ride at the team's training camp in Solvang, California, on Saturday, breaking his collarbone. Savoldelli, winner of the 2002 Giro d'Italia, crashed after his front tire blew out. He had apparently damaged his tire when he hit a pothole on a climb. "It happened suddenly while we were climbing up a short hill at about 20kph," Michael Barry, one of Savoldelli's new teammates recalled. "He went down immediately and never had a chance to react. His collar bone took the entire blow of the fall
After California was battered by wet, wind and colder-than-normal weather, some had doubts that the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling team would be holding its scheduled training camp in Solvang, California, this week. Doubts? Why most of these guys used to ride for a sponsor whose motto was "Neither rain, nor snow nor..." Well, the weather has cleared and even though it's still chillier than usual, most of the Discovery team is in Solvang working out the post-holiday kinks and getting ready for a full season of racing as a part of the UCI's new ProTour. Photographer Casey Gibson is in
Rabobank’s Sven Nijs led a five-up Belgian sweep at the ninth round of the UCI cyclo-cross World Cup in Nommay, France, on Sunday. Nijs, the current Belgian national champion, World Cup leader and a favorite to take the title of world champion in Germany at the end of the month, earned his 19th major win of the season, escaping from an elite group of leaders that included second-place finisher Tom Vannoppen, third-placed Sven Vanthourenhout, Erwin Vervecken and Davy Commeyne, who rounded out the top-five. Reigning world champion, Bart Wellens, who has never quite found his form this season,
O'Grady had a fine day at Germany's HEW classic last year
Sean Yates and Johann Bruyneel are deciding on the route for the morning ride. Its a question of how many loops to include for a four- or six-hour ride, while still keeping things interesting.