The brothers Crank
The brothers Crank
The brothers Crank
The brothers' crank
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Interbike: Celeb's; bikes; retro' Ti?
Five years away from the trade show and Bagny hasn't missed a beat
The first of two days of the Interbike Outdoor Demo kicked off on Monday, October 4 without a hitch. This was the second year at the Bootleg Canyon venue above Boulder City, NV and overlooking Lake Mead. The trail system is extensive and challenging and keeps growing, unlike the previous location, which was threatened by development and would continue shrinking until it disappeared. This year, in addition to cross-country trails, downhill trails, a BMX loop, and various large man-made jumps of different sizes, there is a cyclo-cross trail with obstacles to mimic a European ‘cross course
Seattle— RacerMate, Inc., of Seattle, Washington, manufacturer of the CompuTrainer electronic bicycle training system, will stage 4-rider indoor bike races at each of the 2004 VeloSwaps scheduled for Denver, October 23, Chicago, October 30, and San Francisco, November 13. 10km/6.4-mile races will be held throughout the day to showcase RacerMate's new MultiRider Software which allows up to 8 riders to race together using a single PC computer. Cyclists, celebrities and journalists are invited to participate in the CompuTrainer Indoor Time Trials VeloSwap Challenge to get an understanding of
Doug Bradbury
Tomac and friend
Mechanics test their skills
Rest and RecoveryDear Joe and Dirk,Help me understand "recovery days." I know what all the training manuals,including yours, say, and my body sure seems to need them. My problem is,I never hear about pros having them. Every time I read about a pro's trainingschedule, it involves riding three to six hours a day, and none of it soundseasy. I asked a member of Sierra Nevada, our local pro team, about recoverydays and he looked at me like I was insane. Or, read Bob Roll's descriptionof training with Lance for a week in "Bobke 2" -- no recovery days there,I'll tell you. So are the pros just
The "Weekend 'Cross Wrap" is a service of VeloNews.com.Stories and results are provided by race promoters and are not producedby VeloNews or VeloNews.com. Promoters are welcome to submit race reportsthroughout the cyclo-cross season to Rosters@7Dogs.com.Reports may be edited for length and clarity.
The Mail Bag 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.Hey, how ‘bout that Horner!!!?Editors,I just wanted to make your readers aware that Chris Horner got eighthplace in this year’s World Championship Road Race (see "Three'sa charm: Freire earns his third rainbow jersey"). I am tired ofthis guy getting results with all odds against him and
How satisfying it must feel to be Oscar Freire when the days grow shorter and the leaves begin to turn. There’s something extra gratifying about winning the last big event of the year, when instead of just getting back to work in the following weeks, you can enjoy the success in the quiet off-season. Winning the world championships is cycling’s version of a walk-off homer, the buzzer beating swish. And no one in today’s pro ranks does it better than Freire, a Spaniard who put his name alongside cycling legends Alfredo Binda, Rik Van Steenbergen and Eddy Merckx by winning his third world road
As Freire wins, Horner's big grin shines through from the back
Le Mevel got the attacks started
Spain in charge
Favored for a medal, Bettini's day did not go as planned.
Baldwin was in the break
Rafaá Chtioui dropped like a rock off the final passage over the Torricelli climb to electrify an already attack-riddled junior men's road race Saturday and make history. The tall, gangly Tunisian didn’t win. That honor went to calculating Czech rider Roman Kreuziger, but Chtioui took second and became the first African rider to win a world road championship medal. “All of Tunisia is smiling with me now,” said the happy 6-foot-3 18-year-old from a suburb of Tunis. “It’s the first time a Tunisia has won anything in cycling and it’s the first time an African has won a medal. I am very
The European Union's top court has thrown out a complaint by two swimmersthat the International Olympic Committee's anti-doping rules infringedtheir EU right to work.Spain's David Meca-Medina and Slovenia's Igor Majcen, two professional long-distance swimmers, once banned from international competition for two years on doping charges, argued that the IOC's rules were discriminatory and excessive.But in a ruling issued Thursday the Court of First Instance said that two simply had no case."They (anti-doping measures) are intended to preserve the spirit of fair play," the court ruled.
Apparently we Americans have a rhotic “r.” No, not an E-rotic “r,” a rhotic “r,” meaning we have a hard pronunciation of the letter “r.” British and other English dialects do not have this cat-like growl. Maybe we are more animalistic in this linguistic isolation. I would say we are more barbaric. Barrrrbarick. I’ll tell you one thing, I feel barbaric scrapping for a piece of bread in this biketalk fixed-gear haven. Portland is the only place where fashion is determined by retro bike hats and messenger gear, a quasi-ethereal ideal world for us vane legged fanatics. In a way the bicycle
Nursing a five-second lead with 3km to go, the real question for Judith Arndt wasn’t whether she was going to win the elite women’s world championship race in Verona, Italy, but which finger she was going to raise coming across the line. Few forget Arndt’s finish-line gesture at the Athens Olympics, when she flipped the bird as she came across the line second because she was angry German teammate Petra Rosner was left off the team. With Rosner now quietly retired, the 28-year-old Arndt attacked on the final descent off the Torricelle climb midway through the final 14.75km lap of the
UCI president Hein Verbruggen had a message to renegade bike races threatening to derail his baby: The ProTour will start in 2005 whether you like it or not. Of course, Verbruggen hasn’t risen so high in international sport without being diplomatic. While the daggers still seem to be drawn in the power struggle between the UCI and cycling’s grand tours, Verbruggen was all smiles when he tried to gloss over differences threatening to derail major changes to cycling’s international calendar. “The ProTour is beyond the point of no return,” Verbruggen told a packed press conference Saturday
All of Tunisia is smiling
Kreuziger takes junior road race in Verona
Tina Mayolo didn't make the final selection Saturday
Arndt takes a risk
Edita Pucinskaite gives chase
After three days of time trial competition in Bardolino, Italy, road racing at the 2004 world championships got underway on a foggy Friday morning in the city of Verona. The first to don the rainbow stripes in Verona was Marianne Vos of the Netherlands, the winner of the 73.75km junior women’s road race. On a course similar to the one used in 1999, when road world’s were last held here, Vos won on a solo breakaway after escaping 8km from the finish near an ancient Roman arena in Verona’s Piazza Brà. After several attempts by others to get away on the Torricelle climb, the main obstacle in
Team officials announced Friday that Italian Saeco and Lampre squads will join forces in 2005 to ensure a position in the troubled UCI ProTour. Officials from both sides met Thursday in Bologna to finalize the plans. Lampre president Emanuele Galsbusera and Saeco president Sergio Zappella have agreed to fuse the teams ahead of the proposed ProTour. The planned renovation of cycling's international calendar is undergoing a difficult birth. A scheduled press conference Friday was postponed until Saturday as UCI officials and representatives from the renegarde grand tours tried to hammer out a
Doctor Michele Ferrari, who has worked with several top cyclists including six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, was found guilty of sporting fraud and given a 12-month suspended sentence by a court in Bologna, Italy, on Friday. However Ferrari, the former doctor of several cycling teams - most notably Gewiss in the mid 1990's - was acquitted of distributing doping products which could endanger health. Just 10 days ago, Italian prosecutor Lorenzo Gestri had recommended a 14-month prison sentence for Ferrari for administering performance-enhancing substances to cyclists. On
After producing two solo wins in two races on the opening day of the road racing portion of the world road and time trial championships in Verona, Italy, on Friday, it’s clear that the course, with its punchy climb up the Torricelle, can be selective. In Friday afternoon’s race, the little known Belarussian Kanstantsin Siutsou became the latest gold medalist after winning with flair in the under-23 men’s road race. Siutsou, impressive in the manner in which he stood up to the powerhouse squads including Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Russia and Spain among others, outlasted everyone to
Wow, is it really October already? I guess it must be, from today’s activity in my checking account. Judging from the automatic deposit of my twice-a-month paycheck, and my impending automatic mortgage payment, it must be the beginning of the month again. Between debit and credit cards and online payments, it’s amazing how you never actually even see your money these days. Then again, the way I tend to blow through cash when it’s in hand, I suppose that’s a good thing.
The Mail Bag 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.Dario, Dario, say it ain't so DarioAn open letter to Dario Cioni: I believe in you!!!!!It is absolutely unbelievable that Dario has been declared unfit torace (see "Cioniout of world's" in Friday's EuroFile). He works so hard and everythingI know about Dario Cioni leads me to believe
The Professional Cycling Council (CCP), one of the most influential decision-making bodies in the sport, announced Friday that the impending ProTour series would now include 20 and not 18 teams. The CCP's decision here at the world cycling road race championships follows a request by the International Association of Professional Cycling Teams (AIGCP) to increase the number of teams to 20 in 2005 instead of 2006, as was initially planned. It means the likes of Saeco, which announced its merger with Lampre on Friday, will be virtually assured of a place and other teams can aspire to join
Crank Brothers cyclocross series takes on European flairBOSTON – Reigning Italian national champion Daniele Pontoni is planningto race all six events in the inaugural Crank Brothers U.S. Gran Prix ofCyclocross, bringing all the luster of a former two-time world championto the series, which kicks off on Saturday Oct. 9th with the CannondaleStumptown Cyclocross Classic, in Portland, Oregon.Pontoni, who finished fourth in the World Championship last February,is no stranger to either the American cyclocross scene or the North Americanfavorites. He raced here in Supercup events in 1999 and 2000,
MORGAN HILL, CA –October 1st, 2004. The Gerolsteiner Teamhave selected Specialized as their bicycle supplier of choice for 2005and beyond. The partnership ensures that Specialized S-Works bikes willbe present and highly visible in all Pro Tour cycling events in comingyears, including the Giro, Tour, Vuelta, and every major internationalrace. The team is presently third in UCI rankings and boasts World Cupleader Davide Rebellin and USA standout Levi Leipheimer, who will ridewith Specialized optics as well as the team frame.As the agreement between the German-based team and the Morgan Hill
A classic setting for the road opener
Simeoni (front) now says his testimony was worth the cost
Found guilty of malpractice, Ferrari leaves the courtroom in Bologna.
Dekker takes the sprint for second.
I'm always amazed by how different roadies look wearing a cross-country kit...
Oh, there's Sayers!
Alison Dunlap, relaxed, an hour before the cross-country race.
JHK quenches his thirst with the true breakfast of champions.
Chris Del Bosco and his race winning LenzSport ride.
The plan of attack has been formulated. Reinforcements put on notice. Theweaponry checked twice. Notebooks and pens held at the ready… Yup, Interbike kicks-off next week (October 4th-8th) and the crack staffat VeloNews are ready and waiting… With two days of On Dirt Demo and three days of convention floor timescheduled for this year, look for daily reports from several of us attendingthe show. Indeed, with more than half of the editorial staff attendingthe Las Vegas, Nevada trade show, you can be sure we’ll do our best tohave every angle of the show covered: from the latest technology to
UCI officials are set to present the ProTour to the world’s press in a lavish press conference Friday, but sources close to cycling’s governing body say negotiations are still franticly underway to try to bring renegade grand tours into the fold. Last week, race organizers from the Tour de France, the Giro d’Italia and the Vuelta a España wrote a letter to the UCI saying they don’t want to be part of cycling’s redesign as the much-vaunted ProTour stands now. While UCI president Hein Verbruggen has publicly said the ProTour will go on “with or without” the grand tours, others have kept the
Olympic champion Paolo Bettini will not be the biggest loser if he is beaten to the road race title by Italian compatriot Davide Rebellin at the world championships' blue ribbon event on Sunday. Instead, the sword is likely to fall on national team selector Franco Ballerini. Ballerini, a former winner of the tough Paris-Roubaix one-day classic, has created huge pressure for himself following Rebellin's defection to represent Argentina around the city made famous by Romeo and Juliet. There will certainly be no love lost between the Italian public and Ballerini if Rebellin, the current World
Mike Van Abel, a former national vice president for the American DiabetesAssociation, has been selected to head the International Mountain BicyclingAssociation (IMBA). Mike was picked from a field of more than 350 candidates,following a nationwide search conducted by T. Malouf & Company.He replaces long-time IMBA executive director Tim Blumenthal, who recentlyassumed the top role at Bikes Belong, the bicycle industry's trade association.Hill Abell, president of IMBA's board and owner of the Bicycle SportShops in Austin, Texas, said, "We couldn't be happier that Mike has acceptedthe position.
Tech Report: Getting soaked before going to 'Vegas
Tech Report: Getting soaked before going to 'Vegas
Tech Report: Getting soaked before going to 'Vegas
Tech Report: Getting soaked before going to 'Vegas
Tech Report: Getting soaked before going to 'Vegas
Franco Ballerini may have a lot to think about on Monday.
Former Tour de France winner Jan Ullrich has pulled out of Sunday's world road race championship in Italy with the same stomach sickness which caused him to pull out of Wednesday's time-trial. "He can't race, it's impossible," said his business manager Rudy Pevenage. Ullrich, 30, the 1997 Tour de France winner is a two-time world time-trial champion - in 1999 and 2001 - but has never won the road race, although he won the Olympic road title at Sydney in 2000. “The season is over for me,” Ullrich said on his on website. “I am so weak that I lose my breath just climbing up stairs.” “The