Heras: Still in charge… barely
Heras: Still in charge... barely
Heras: Still in charge... barely
Cruz joins the day's big move
Hamilton at the Vuelta
Lance Armstrong is suing an insurance company over a $5 million bonus supposed to have been given for winning the Tour de France, the Dallas Morning News reports. The lawsuit - filed in Dallas Count on Tuesday by Armstrong and Tailwind Sports Inc., which owns the U.S. Postal Service Pro Cycling Team - reportedly asked that SCA Promotions Inc. fulfill the contract. The company told the newspaper that it is withholding payment until it has been given some reassurance that Armstrong has not used performance-enhancing drugs as alleged in the book "L.A. Confidential: The Secrets of Lance
Vuelta wide open with week to goWith one week left, the Vuelta a España has what the Tour de France didn’t at this point of the race – suspense. Following Sunday’s action on the steep climbing time trial to Sierra Nevada, the Vuelta sees Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) holding a five-second lead over Alejandro Valverde (Valenciana-Kelme) going into the decisive six-day run to Madrid. The surging Santi’ Perez (Phonak), a winner of back-to-back mountain stages, is poised in third at 1:45 back while Spain’s “Mr. Steady,” Francisco Mancebo (Illes Balears), is still in the hunt at 2:02 back.
Coming a week before the 2004 world road championships in nearby Verona, the 62nd annual Milan bike show, September 17-20, marked the beginning of the 2005 selling season for road bikes and products in Italy. In a season that’s packed with international trade shows, Milan 2004 set itself apart with a focus on improving the climate for cycling in Italy and worldwide. Maurizio Fondriest, one of several former world champions from Italy who showed up to speak about the future of cycling in Italy, stressed the need for better bike paths. The 1988 world champion, who hails from Cles in the
USA Cycling has confirmed its team for the 2004 UCI Road World Championships September 27-October 3 in Verona, Italy. Competing in the elite men’s road race will be automatic nominees Fred Rodriguez (Emeryville, California), Jason McCartney (Coralville, Iowa), and Chris Horner (Bend, Oregon) as well as discretionary selections Chris Baldwin (Boulder, Colorado), Kirk O’Bee (Ada, Michigan), Patrick McCarty (Allen, Texas), Michael Creed (Colorado Springs, Colorado), Tom Danielson (Durango, Colorado), Christian Vande Velde (Boulder, Colorado), Antonio Cruz (Long Beach, California), and Guido
Let’s pretend that your mountain-bike racing plans for next season include marathon and cross-country events — and you’re going to take on both the NORBA and World Cup schedules. Well you better buckle up for a long year. Starting March 5 in Boerne, Texas, the 2005 pro schedule includes nine NORBA stops, eight World Cup marathons and eight World Cup cross-country races. The last event of the year isn’t until October 7, when the marathon World Cup series wraps up in France at Roc d’Azur. Throw in the fact that there are races in Cyprus (marathon World Cup No. 1), Brazil (World Cup
Prescott, AZ – Inside Communications, publisher of VeloNews and other sports magazines, has teamed up once again with the Thunderhead Alliance for a celebrity event that will benefit Thunderhead’s 50 States, 50 Cities Project for bicycle advocacy. On Friday October 29th at La Strada – Top of the Plaza in downtown Chicago, Graham Watson, world renowned bicycle race photographer, will entertain guests with stories and the very first viewing of his 2004 race season photographs, 38 floors above Lake Michigan as guests enjoy hors d’oeuvres and a four course Italian dinner. Maxxis International
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.Drugs aren’t a black-and-white issueEditor:It is a shame that any professional cyclist feels compelled to use controlled substances to aid their performance. However, the harsh reality is that it is likely rampant in the pro ranks. If you were to take two athletes of equal physical
The Ford Cycling Women’s Mountain Bike Team will be hosting two events for women during the US Nationals at Mammoth Mountain on September 23-26. The first, a Last Minute Race Cram, will be held Friday, September 24, at 7:30 p.m. at McCoy Sports in the Village at Mammoth. This one-hour-long talk will cover topics such as nutrition, visualization, warm-up, tool kits and more. Joining the discussion will be the technical staff from Shimano Service. The second Ford event will be a Sunday morning recovery spin beginning at 8:30 a.m. in the start/finish area on the mountain. This easy 45-minute
The last couple of days have been for the climbers, the pure climbers, with one hard day in the mountains followed by a 29.6km uphill time trial. And on both days, Santi Perez of Phonak dominated the stages winning with ease and boosted himself into the first three overall Two weeks into a three-week race and everyone on the team is getting a bit homesick. We have been together for nearly three weeks straight now, as we arrived at the start in Leon three days before the race began, and we are ready for a change of pace, a change in diet and a change in schedule. The morale is still good, and
The World Cup series came to a close last weekend in Italy, with Swiss cross-country star Christoph Sauser and French downhiller Celine Gros locking up the only two overall titles that were still in doubt. As for the races in the high mountain town of Livigno, Belgian Roel Paulissen took the men’s XC, with Gunn-Rita Dahle of Norway continuing her unbeaten streak with yet another win. The Norwegian’s run is up to 11 straight World Cups dating back to the start of the 2003 season. Dahle is now the reigning World Cup, world and Olympic champion. In the downhill, Gros also got the win in the
Tyler Hamilton is denying media reports of blood tampering that have been detected in two samples taken since he won the Olympic time trial gold medal last month. The Vuelta a España was rocked overnight following reports that the UCI informed Phonak team doctor Iñaki Arratibel that blood samples taken Aug. 19 and Sept. 18 showed traces of mixed blood cells. Follow-up tests were scheduled for later Tuesday. Phonak confirmed those reports, but said Hamilton has denied any wrong-doing. Phonak officials have scheduled a press conference at the team’s headquarters in Zurich on Tuesday
Heras plans to fight to the end
(l-r) Felice Gimondi, Marino Basso, Mario Cipollini, Fiorenzo Magni, Vittorio Adorni, Gianni Bugno, Ercole Baldini, Francesco Moser, and Maurizio Fondriest
One of the streetlights for Milan's auto-free zone
It says Fulcrum, but it's a Campy
Look's new pedal
Yes that's an American on the XC podium.
Ever since the Vuelta a España started, two-time champion Roberto Heras has been playing the cautious hand. The quiet, reticent Spaniard is hardly known for his flamboyant manner, and perhaps his bitter memories of losing the 2002 Vuelta on the final day was another reason for his prudence. Days after snagging the maillot oro at Calar Alto, the Liberty Seguros captain insisted the Vuelta was still wide open and he was wary about playing the confident patrón. It was obvious Heras knew more than the overzealous Spanish press, which had all but crowned him winner of the 59th edition – because
The UCI 1.6 Univest Grand Prix is America’s premier elite amateur event, traditionally taking top domestic and international riders around a 100km loop through the Pennsylvania countryside before taking on 13 laps of a brutal 5km finishing loop through the towns of Souderon and Telford. But when you’re at the top of your class, there’s always someone waiting to take you down a peg. In this case, it was the remains of Hurricane Ivan, which plowed its way northward to douse the Univest course with five inches of rainfall on race day. Washed-out roads, downed trees, and flooding on the long lap
Perez may start thinking in terms of the overall
Perez does it again
Heras escaped with the jersey – but just barely
Vino' had the best time for a good, long while
Valverde rode a stunning TT, nearly swiping the jersey
Phonak came to the Vuelta a España hoping for big things from Tyler Hamilton and Oscar Sevilla. With Hamilton gone and Sevilla struggling, the Swiss team has been more than happy to watch Santiago Perez step into the void. On Thursday’s etapa reina, the three-climb monster that saw Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) claw his way into the overall lead, Perez finished an impressive second behind the two-time Vuelta champion. The result was a jolt of positive energy for the 27-year-old Spanish rider, who has had his share of hard knocks the past few years. “I was able to stay with the strongest
Postal angered by Hamilton’s suggestionU.S. Postal Service brass are peeved at former pupil Tyler Hamilton who suggested earlier this week the Posties weren’t working hard enough to protect Floyd Landis and his hold on the Vuelta a España leader’s jersey. Hamilton approached Postal Service assistant sport director Dirk Demol during the race and said he noticed some of the Postal riders appearing not to be doing all they could to help Landis. While Landis eventually lost the jersey to Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) on Thursday, Demol said Hamilton’s charges were off the mark. “He came up
Perez took off on the final Cat. 1 climb and held off the chase on the descent
A mountainous menu
Perez saw his chance and took it
Landis lost more ground today
Heras and a resurgent Valverde dueled on the ups and downs
Nozal was doing a job of work for Heras once again
But the day belonged to Perez
Alessandro Petacchi sped into Málaga Friday, outsprinting Erik Zabel, and offering up his traditional victory salute, this time raising four fingers – the number of stages he’s won thus far in this year’s Vuelta a España You’d think some days he’d lose count. The win is the 21st of the year for Fassa Bortolo’s sprint ace, the 13th in a major tour this season, joining the nine he won at this year’s Giro d’Italia. Indeed, Petacchi’s only disappointment this year is that he failed to score a single victory in this year’s Tour de France, after he tore a ligament in his shoulder in a
When you’re engrossed in the cycling world most of the time, a few pop-culture items sometimes slip through the cracks. But, leave it to David Zabriskie to spark some Guns N’ Roses research and discussion in the VN editorial department. Following his epic 160km solo stage win in the Vuelta, one of Zabriskie’s post-race comments was “I had a Guns N’ Roses song in my head. I’m not sure which one, though. It’s the one where he says, ‘They can’t catch me, I’m innocent.’” First came the frantic scramble over the “N”. For the record, it’s not “Guns ‘N Roses” or “Guns N Roses”; it’s Guns N’
Hamilton goes homeOlympic time trial champion Tyler Hamilton did not take the start to Friday’s 13th stage at the Vuelta a España. Hamilton won stage eight to become the first American to win stages in all three grand tours, but faded out of contention on the steep climbing finish to Aitana the following day. Hamilton complained of stomach problems that kept him from properly feeding during the race and said he felt sapped of strength up Aitana. He suffered again Thursday, finishing uncharacteristically in the last group at 31 minutes behind winner Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros). “He had
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.‘Meirhaeghe speaks’ interview stunkEditor:Gotta say, I couldn’t be more disgusted with your magazine – at least, since I decided to stop buying it until it took a more progressive role in helping the sport solve its doping problem. That interview with Filip Meirhaeghe just stunk. How
Petacchi drives to No. 4
Race leader Heras relaxes going into Saturday's mountain stage
The break was doomed from the start – but a guy's gotta try, right?
The peloton kept the break on a short leash on this largely flat stage
And after the usual leadout, Petacchi collected his fourth win of his Vuelta
Roberto Heras insisted that a win on the slopes of Calar Alto wasn’t in his game plan for Thursday. The defending Vuelta a España champion said after winning the 145km 12th stage from Almería to the Observatory complex at Calar Alto that he had simply hoped to “put a little time on some of my main rivals.” Whatever his game plan, the Liberty Seguros team captain found himself putting time on all of his rivals, including Kelme’s Alejandro Valverde and the man who began the day in the leader’s jersey, Floyd Landis of U.S. Postal. Landis finished 3:06 off Heras’s winning time, ending the
Valverde: Hoping to get through itAlejandro Valverde is hopeful he’ll be able to get through Thursday’s brutal climbing stage in the mountains near Almería without too much difficult. The Valenciana-Kelme rider suffered a serious fall early in Tuesday’s stage and showed up for the pre-race sign-in with bandages on his left knee. “I am lucky we had the day off yesterday,” Valverde told VeloNews. “I’m pretty banged up, with the most pain in my knee and my hip. We’ll see how things go but it could be difficult.” Valverde’s crash made national news and some were wondering if he’d be able to
With little fanfare, the Union Cycliste Internationale has ordered a radical change in mountain-bike racing, announcing that in 2005, cross-country racers will no longer be responsible for fixing their own mechanical problems during the World Cup and world championships. The word came down during the recently concluded world championships in Les Gets, France, when UCI mountain-bike coordinator Régis Alexandre told VeloNews associate editor Jason Sumner: “We can't accept that the best rider in the world with a lot of sponsors can lose a race just because of a puncture.” Beg pardon? The
Only two of the five elite American men nominated to the upcoming UCI world road championships in Verona, Italy, have accepted their bids, USA Cycling announced on September 15, leaving speculation on which riders might fill the remaining spots. All five women nominated have confirmed their participation in Verona. USPRO champion Fred Rodriguez (Acqua & Sapone) and 2004 Olympic team member Jason McCartney (Health Net-Maxxis) will compete at the world championships. Tyler Hamilton (Phonak), Bobby Julich (CSC), Levi Leipheimer (Rabobank), and Lance Armstrong and George Hincapie (both of U.S.
San Francisco is one of the most culturally diverse, cosmopolitan cities in North America, and environmentally, it is one of the most beautiful as well. For a cyclist, the beauty of San Francisco is having all the conveniences of a big city, plus great riding to boot. With T-Mobile sponsoring the Grand Prix in San Francisco, I came early to take part in a few media and sponsor events, and managed to squeeze in some enjoyable training each day. We would head towards the Golden Gate Bridge on the Embarcadero, roll across the bridge and then ride up Mount Tamalpais or along the bike path after
Dear Bob,I had my bike stolen yesterday from the enclosed parking garage in my office building. It’s operated by a local company that runs several lots in the San Francisco area. It was locked up to a bike rack bolted to the floor about 30 feet from the lot attendant’s shack. The attendant, by his own admission, watched it happen and didn’t try to stop the guy or call the cops. He said that “customers park at their own risk.” It was a $4000 bike. (I commute in 26 miles one way, so I’m not about to ride a clunker.) Can I sue the building owner or the lot operator?S.M.California Dear S.M.,This
Heras charges off toward a stage win and the overall lead
Thursday's Eurofile: Valverde recovering; So is Trenti; Menchov low-key
The gutsy Landis finally slipped back a bit on Thursday
Heras didn't plan to win – but did it anyway
See The Man With No Name out there anywhere?
Liberty went to the front and charged up the final climb
Valverde attacked despite his painful injuries
Heras knows it's a long way to Madrid
Following an out-of-competition test two days before the Mont-Ste-Anne World Cup, the then-reigning world cross-country champion Filip Meirhaeghe found out that he had tested positive for EPO on July 27. Meirhaeghe didn’t fight the result, immediately announcing his retirement from the sport. Since then he’s spent time working on his neighbor’s farm while he tries to figure out what to do with the rest of his life. Meirhaeghe also made a surprise appearance at the world mountain bike championships in Les Gets, France, where he hoped to clear the air with some of his former sponsors and
Two-time Vuelta a España winner Roberto Heras (Liberty (Seguros) appears to be the favorite to join Swiss racer Tony Rominger as the only triple victor after a stage-11 crash left chief rival Alejandro Valverde (Comunidad Valenciana-Kelme) battered and bruised. Wednesday is a rest day in the Vuelta, the first since the tour began September 4 in León, and the teams and race staff will travel from Caravaca to Almería, where Thursday’s decisive mountain stage will start. The 145km route between Almería and Observatorio Astronómico de Calor Alto, with two Category 1 climbs and a beyond-category
Two weeks ago, when we arrived at the start of the Vuelta, we sat down as a team, had a meeting and talked about our goals for the race. The team time trial was our first goal — from there, we would aim for stage victories, first in the field sprints with Max and second as individuals trying to win out of breakaways. Max pointed to the third and 11th stages as ones he was looking to win. The third stage ended up being too hard an uphill sprint for him, and he didn’t make it to the 11th — but Dave did, and he took the stage in his grasp and rode away with the victory. Dave has had a lot of
World champion Igor Astarloa (Lampre) will not be starting the grueling stage 12 of the Vuelta a España on Thursday – instead, he plans to concentrate on defending his title at the world road championships next month. "I need to polish my form with some specific training for (next month's) world championships in Verona." Astarloa told Reuters. "Last year I pulled out two days earlier in the Tour of Spain and won the worlds, so this year I will adopt the same strategy." Hushovd extends contract with Credit AgricoleNorwegian Thor Hushovd has extended his contract with Credit Agricole until
The Shimano “Little 100” is a short-track, 4-team member bicycle relay race for middle school children. It is based on the 50+ year-old “Little 500” event, a premier intramural collegiate cycling event at Indiana University, and is an expansion of the existing “Little 100” junior racing program in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The “Little 100” will be held on a 1/8-mile indoor track at the Denver VeloSwap. Heats for this demonstration event will be held throughout the day. Racers will ride custom single-speed bicycles provided by Indiana University. 2004 Olympic Time Trial Gold Medal winner, Tyler
SOUDERTON, Pa., September 10, 2004—Univest Corporation of Pennsylvania (listed on NASDAQ: UVSP), today announced that Jonathan Vaughters, a former professional rider and a stage winner at the 2001 Tour de France, will lead the Cyclosportif 100K ride at the seventh annual Univest Grand Prix on Saturday, September 18. All proceeds from the ride will benefit the Indian Creek Foundation in Harleysville, Pa. Vaughters, considered one of the greatest mountain racers in U.S. history, was a long-time record holder on the famous Mt. Ventoux (France) climb, a record he set in the 1999 Dauphiné
Friday, September 10, was a day of both good and bad news for the T-Mobile International, now in its fourth year. While Lance Armstrong’s withdrawal due to tendonitis certainly diminished the number of spectators and media attention the race had expected, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom’s surprising enthusiasm for the event — a lingering question mark following the departure of former Mayor Willie Brown, a major advocate for the costly race — was underlined by Newsom’s announcement that the race would return in 2005 and beyond. As late as August of 2003, the future of that year’s event was
Heras looks good for a third Vuelta
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and some bike racer
It’s as predictable as the swallows to Capistrano: Big tour, flat stage, early break, heart-breaking capture and a field sprint. It happens so often that one begins to wonder, why bother? But every now and then one of those early gambles pays off. This time it was U.S. Postal’s David Zabriskie who hit the jackpot in the 11th stage of the Vuelta a España with an exhausting 161km solo ride to the finish. The win added another to the team’s laurels this Vuelta, as team leader Floyd Landis stayed in the maillot de oro for another day, keeping the jersey in Postal hands, where it’s been since
The United States could host the world cyclo-cross championships within five years and will likely see a World Cup stop as soon as next year. Peter Van den Abeele, the UCI’s cyclo-cross coordinator, says a world championships and a World Cup stop in the United States is a real possibility. “I will be traveling to America and seeing about what kind of interest there is there,” Van den Abeele told VeloNews. “I would like to see a World Cup race in USA sooner, maybe even next season, and why not the world championships? Cyclo-cross is really growing in the United States and I’d like to take the
A spent, salty Zabriskie crosses the line after 160km off the front alone
Valverde crashed shortly after Zabriskie took off
And the peloton waited just a little too long to get serious about chasing . . .
Time trial champ Zabriskie pushed all the way to the line
Race leader Landis, trailing teammate Barry, stayed in the bunch
A weary Zabriskie salutes from the podium
It almost had to be. Not only had Kelme’s Eladio Jimenez won when the 2000 Vuelta finished here at Xorret de Catí, he had done so while working for his then Banesto team leader, the late Jose Maria Jimenez, who won the stage in 1998. On Monday, after winning the tenth stage of the 2004 Vuelta a España, Eladio Jiminez took his laurels from none other than the great 1960s climbing sensation Julio Jimenez. Are we beginning to see a pattern here? Unlike his win in 2000 – a battle of top climbers – Jimenez’s win this time around came at the end of a long, long, break that began in the first
The race is now into the mountains and things are beginning to really shake up in the overall classification. The race is moving along nicely for us as Floyd is in gold and Triki is in the top 10. After their incredible rides in the TT they have managed to maintain their positions at the top of the classification for the last week. It has been an awesome ride for the team so far – we have won a stage and carried the leader’s jersey since the start in Leon. In the time trial it was expected that Victor, Floyd and Dave would ride well but it was a real surprise when Vic finished a close