Jimenez takes his second career victory on this mountain
Jimenez takes his second career victory on this mountain
Jimenez takes his second career victory on this mountain
Two-time world champ Friere was in the sprinters' break on this mountain stage
. . . including Heras, who slipped away with Valverde and Piepoli on the final grind
Mancebo was back in the bunch with the challengers for the overall . . .
Thirsty work for Valverde
Well, they said the Vuelta a España would open up when it hit the hills. It was, after all, in the script. Sunday’s 162km ride from Xátiva to the beyond-category mountaintop finish at Alto de Aitana was put there for a reason, and, simply put, that reason was to shake up the general classification in a way that no stage in this race has thus far managed to do. And it should come as no surprise that it was defending champion Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) who did much of the shaking. While he may have finished four seconds in arrears of the day’s winner, Leonardo Piepoli (Saunier Duval),
Gunn-Rita Dahle almost didn’t start the world championships after coming down with a cold following her gold medal performance in Athens, but she’s glad she did. The Norwegian shook off a week in bed and post-Olympic letdown to become the first woman mountain biker to pull off the world title-Olympic champion double. And now she’s a week away from sewing up the World Cup and delivering an unbeatable triple. “Today was a matter of getting rhythm and being very careful with bike,” said Dahle, who covered the 30km course in 2 hours, 2 minutes, 12 seconds. “I felt good from the start and did my
Australian Oenone Wood finished third in the Tour of Nüremberg on Sunday to claim the 2004 women's World Cup title. The ninth and last leg of the series was won by Germany’s Petra Rossner, who outsprinted a 21-rider lead group at the end of the 116.1km race. But the overall title went to Wood, with 334 points. Rossner was second overall with 293, while countrywoman Allemande Angela Brodtka wound up third with 229. Tour de Nuremberg1. Petra Rossner (G), 116km in 2:53:492. Angela Brodtka (G), s.t.3. Oenone Wood (Aus), s.t.Final World Cup overall (after 9 of 9 rounds)1. Oenone Wood (Aus), 334
British national champion Nicole Cooke (Safi Pasta-Zara Manhattan) broke away on the final climb up San Francisco's steep Taylor Street to win the T-Mobile International on Sunday. It was the second consecutive win here for the 21-year-old Cooke, who soloed in for the victory ahead of the charging field in the 51.6-mile race, which started and finished on the Embarcadero, near San Francisco's famous Ferry Building. After Quark’s Manon Jutras spent a lap away with a maximum lead of 50 seconds, the French Canadian was brought back with two laps remaining. T-Mobile’s Dede Barry then
You might think a weekend that included a broken arm for Anne-Caroline Chausson, a DNF for Miguel Martinez and no podiums for Cédric Gracia would be considered a disaster for French mountain biking. And you might think it was even worse when you added in the fact that this was the weekend of the world mountain bike championships — and the event was being held in France. But clearly a new era has dawned for the country that puts on the world’s biggest cycling show each summer. And while the French may continue to search for new stars at their grand tour in July, their fat-tire ranks are thick
The third time was not a charm for Jason McCartney, who was off the front alone and apparently bound for victory in the final miles of the T-Mobile International in San Francisco Sunday. His Health Net-Maxxis team had put five riders - McCartney, Danny Pate, Mike Sayers, John Lieswyn and Mike Jones - into an early 15-man break in the hilly 108.4-mile race, the finale of the 2004 Pro Cycling Tour. With nine 8.8-mile laps and five five-mile laps, the course dished up a total of 23 trips up the steep Fillmore and Taylor Street climbs, peaking at gradients of over 20 percent. Also in the break
A California teen-ager is America's newest national sprint champion as the USCF Elite Track National Championships concluded this weekend at the Superdrome in Frisco, Texas. Eighteen-year-old Michael Blatchford of Cypress, California, began his season by setting records in the 200-meter qualifying rounds at the Pan Am Championships and went on to become the junior national match-sprint champion and the silver medalist in the sprint at the junior world championships. On Friday, he added an elite-level national title to his collection, beating 2004 Olympian Giddeon Massie (Lansdale,
Piepoli pips Heras in the finale
Heras was in the driver's seat on the final climb
Absalon heads to the end of the rainbow.
Frischknecht made the podium once again.
Landis fights his way back to hold onto the overall lead
Heras charges toward the finish with Piepoli in tow
Cardenas and Lastras kept going after Phonak pulled Valjavec back
Barry drives the Postal train
Hamilton shows the strain of a hard day in the hills
Cardena, Lastras and Valjavec
Menchov took a skidder some 10km in, and got back up to finish seventh
Is Blatchford fast?
Fast enough to beat Olympian Massie
Mercy Cycling didn't show any . . .
. . . Mercy beat the TIAA-CREF-5280 duo
Quinn took the scratch race . . .
. . . while Goodwin claimed the keirin
Cooke solos to victory yet again
The Brit just nicked Mayolo-Pic for the win
Dionne repeats in San Francisco
McCartney went long again . . . but this time, it didn't pay off
Postal got busy . . .
. . . but so did Horner and Dionne
And there you have it
Barry climbs
Bessette won the QOM
Jackson attacks
There will not be a ninth elite world downhill title for Anne-Caroline Chausson this year. According to a team staffer the Frenchwoman crashed hard in Saturday morning’s downhill practice session in Les Gets, and will not be able to race in either the downhill of four-cross finals this afternoon. According to the team source, Chausson injured her shoulder and was taken off the course in an ambulance before being transferred to a helicopter for the trip to a nearby hospital. Coming into the day, Chausson was the overwhelming favorite to win both the downhill and four-cross titles, after
Following the path of greats such as Nicolas Vouilloz and Cédric Gracia, the French downhill machine churned out a new pair of potential stars on Saturday morning, as Romain Saladini and Florent Payet grabbed the top two places in the junior men’s downhill at the world mountain bike championships in Les Gets. The No. 3 qualifier, Saladini blasted his way down the steep, 1.3-mile Mont Chery course, posting a 2:48.69, just 0.89 second ahead of countryman Payet. American Kyle Strait grabbed the final podium spot, finishing 2.46 seconds back of the winner. It was a one-place improvement for
Maybe it was the Olympic rings on the shoulders of his skinsuit. Perhaps it’s that the guy just thrives when he’s in pain. Whatever the reason, Phonak’s Tyler Hamilton had a near-perfect time trial Saturday, becoming the first American to win a stage in each of the world’s major tours. Hamilton, fresh from taking the Olympic gold medal in the individual time trial in Athens, vaulted up the Vuelta’s general classification Saturday, winning the seventh stage of Vuelta a España, a flat 40.1km time trial around the massive Ford Motor factory in Almussafes. The performance moved him from 10th in
Olympic silver medalist José Antonio Hermida tearfully defended his innocence of doping after failing blood tests with high hematocrit levels on the eve of Sunday’s world championship cross-country race. Hermida broke down in tears during a press conference Saturday evening as he tried to explain that he’s been fighting the UCI for years to certify his naturally high hematocrit, which hovers around the official speed limit of 50 percent. “I have not taken any drugs, I have not done anything wrong,” said Hermida as he choked back tears. “At the moment, I feel like my career is in the hands
If you like Hollywood endings, then the men’s downhill at the world mountain bike championships gets a big thumbs up. You had the classic hero in Frenchman Fabian Barel, who helped design the world’s course and is in part sponsored by the world’s host town of Les Gets here in the Rhone-Alpes region of France. And you had the villain, Great Britain’s Steve Peat, who at the end of the day was the only man separating Barel from a date with the rainbow jersey, not to mention the joy a Barel win would spread around a town the downhiller calls his second home. After posting a middle-of-the-pack
With six-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong out of Sunday’s T-Mobile International in San Francisco, the 108-mile race is wide open. And while defending champion Chris Horner (Webcor Builders) was hesitant to predict victory, as he did a year ago, Horner’s teammate Charles Dionne was less reluctant. The Canadian sprinter, who won the race in 2002 and has enjoyed a strong showing this season after an injury-plagued 2003, said his form “is similar, if not better than in 2002.” “I’ve been training on the hills in Québec, which is similar to San Francisco but with less traffic,”
For the first time in nearly a decade, the elite women’s world championship downhill race started with an air of suspense. Downhill’s unrivaled queen of the piste and eight-time defending elite women’s champion Anne-Caroline Chausson was KO’d with injuries, and suddenly the women’s field was wide open. “I hate to admit it, but it’s true,” said American Marla Streb. “When we heard that Anne-Caroline had crashed out, then everyone else started thinking we have a chance. That’s how much she’s dominated this sport.” Chausson dislocated her shoulder and fractured her arm after crashing during
Eric Carter isn’t ready to retire just yet, but whenever the American does decide to call it a career he’ll do so a fulfilled man. After winning every other meaningful title on offer in the gated-racing world, Carter finally added the elusive rainbow stripes to his long list of accomplishments after winning the four-cross at the world mountain bike championships in Les Gets, France Saturday night. In the final heat Carter made a daring inside move, pulling clear of 2003 world champion Michal Prokop and French veteran Mickael Deldycke. From there Carter ran for his life, holding his lead all
"Hora who?" That was the question on everyone’s mind Saturday evening in Les Gets when unheralded Jana Horakova of the Czech Republic literally came out of nowhere to win the women’s four-cross world title. “I’ve done four international events before this race, so it’s a bit of a surprise that I won,” said Horakova, who barnstormed to victory at the expense of Americans Jill Kintner and Tara Llanes, who took silver and bronze. “I honestly didn’t know what to expect. After practice I liked the course and I focused on the start and just hoped to make it to the finish without making a
Belgian Nick Nuyens (Quick Step-Davitamon) won the 84th edition of Paris-Brussels on Saturday, edging Philippe Gilbert (Fdjeux.com) and Denmark’s Allan Johansen (BankGiroLoterij). Briton Jeremy Hunt (MrBookmaker.com) won the field sprint for fourth a few seconds later. The race really began 60km from the finish when the favorites’ teams decided to end a long breakaway by Netherlander Rudie Kemna (BankGiroLoterij) and Frenchman Benoit Poilvet (Crédit Agricole), who had an 11-minute lead on the bunch. Quick Step worked particularly hard to bring them back. Meanwhile, Italian Paolo Bettini
Chausson two days before her crash.
Tyler takes the TT
Chausson is taken off the course.
Barel brought the title home.
Peat was left to wonder what went wrong.
Quin grabbed gold.
Hermida says he has a naturally high hematocrit
Hamilton was playing hurt again
Nozal bumped Grabsch out of the lead until Hamilton came along
Landis's third was good as gold . . .
. . . it put him back on top of the general classification
But Sastre had a good ride Saturday, too – and he can climb as well
Carter on the way to the final.
This wasn't your ordinary bike race.
The French love their bike racing.
Horakova introduces herself.
Llanes made the podium once again.
For years it’s was the one thing that definitively separated mountain biking from its road-racing cousin. If you get a flat, you fix it. Bust your chain, get out the chain tool. But that will all change starting next year when the UCI introduces a rule that will allow outside technical assistance in cross-country races at World Cup and world championship events. The details of exactly how it’s all going to work are still a little murky, but Regis Alexandre, the president of the UCI mountain bike commission, says he envisions two or three pit zones where riders can swap out everything but the
If he’s there, he wins. Alessandro Petacchi may have missed the cut on a relatively tough day of climbing Wednesday, but he sure made up for it Thursday, scoring his third victory of this edition of the Vuelta a España. “I know this finish, it seemed almost perfect for me,” the Fassa Bortolo sprinter said. “I asked my team to do what they could for me and they came through and they did so on what has to be the best run to the finish at this Vuelta . . . at least as far as the sprinters are concerned.” It was one surely designed with riders like Petacchi in mind: a wide, nearly
Olympic champion Paolo Bettini of Italy and Belgian sprinter Tom Boonen, who ride for Quick Step, are among the favorites for the 225km Paris-Brussels classic cycling race on Saturday. Boonen showed his form in Wednesday's Rik Van Steenbergen Memorial race in northern Belgium where he had his 22nd victory of the season. Boonen and Bettini, despite their superb record this year, might not have it all their own way with Luxembourg's Kim Kirschen, led by an impressive Fassa Bortolo team, also a possible winner. Other challengers include Italy's Michele Bartoli, Germany's Danilo Hondo,
With its rich tradition of great road racers, you’d think the Germans would have had a few breakthroughs in cross-country racing, too. But the fact is no German man has won so much as a World Cup during the last decade, and their record in world championships is even worse: 0-for-all time. The same goes for Great Britain. The last time a U.K. rider won a cross-country World Cup (Gary Foord in 1994), Ned Overend was still a mainstay on the circuit. Outside of the junior ranks, "God Save the Queen" has never been sung at the world championships. But all that began to change on Friday in Les
It was almost like a home crowd for Nino Schurter after rowdy Swiss fans poured over the border into Les Gets to cheer the brawny 18-year-old to an impressive victory in the junior men’s cross-country race. Schurter trounced a 96-rider field under sunny skies Friday, leaving the hard-chasing French duo of Stéphane Tempier and Maxime Marotte fighting for leftovers after powering away in the first of five laps and never letting go of the lead. “I was worried before coming to the race because I was taking antibiotics for a sore throat and ears, but after Wednesday’s team relay I knew I was at
Yes, “Notes” is back, after a long inexplicable absence. But before diving back in, there’s a little catching up to do, just to remind everyone why they probably didn’t even notice the column was gone in the first place. Is “Big” the next “Monster Garage”? I don’t know, haven’t seen it yet, but if the 15-minute preview they show on United is any indication, I’m saying it is. Krispy Kreme’s taken a dive. The stock, that is. Maybe, though, the whole low-carb fad has just about run its course. Have people figured out yet that it will kill you in the long run? I sure hope so. Some of the most
A week has of racing has almost passed, we are now in Valencia on the Mediterranean, and the team has held on to the gold leader’s jersey for the entire week. Triki has now held it for a couple of days, and with each passing moment in gold he becomes more of a Spanish hero. He has been grinning like a kid that has just found a jar full of cookies. The countryside has become a little more interesting in the last two days. We have gone from Alberta-like prairie to Southern California-style hills and orange groves, from straight roads in the open wind to sinuous and undulating roads along the
Becky Conzelman continued her winning ways during the USCF Elite Track Nationals on Thursday, adding a victory in the 500 meter time trial to her gold medal in the previous day's sprint finals. The Pennsylvania native turned a 36.272 at the Superdrome in Frisco, Texas, to best silver medalist Annette Hanson (Kirkland, Washington) and bronze medalist Miranda Moon (Beaverton, Oregon). In the 200 meter time trial, 18-year-old Michael Blatchford, a resident at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado, turned a 10.719 to win gold over 2004 Olympians Giddeon Massie (Lansdale,
Six-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong has pulled out of Sunday’s 108-mile T-Mobile International in San Francisco, citing tendinitis in his right knee. Armstrong, who has finished the San Francisco race just once in four attempts, in 2002, thought it best to give his injury a rest and sit out this year’s race in hopes of coming back strong in 2005. The U.S. Postal Service-Berry Floor captain said his injury “started acting up toward the end of the Tour, and I didn’t talk about it – obviously not the wisest thing to do when your rivals are still looking at you – but it never got
Fassa's train puts Petacchi into the station first
The seven-man break nearly made it . . .