The usual escape with – as usual – Jakob Piil in the mix.
The usual escape with - as usual - Jakob Piil in the mix.
The usual escape with - as usual - Jakob Piil in the mix.
Ullrich: Watching and waiting
COURSE: A year ago, stage 7 was the first day in the Alps,meaning that the sprinters’ chances of stage wins had already been puton hold. This year, the sprinters have at least three more bites of thecherry, including this rolling stage to the northern coast of Brittany. FAVORITES: A breakaway could well succeed, as one did on a similarstage into Brittany two years ago won by Rabobank’s Karsten Kroon. Maybe his teammate Erik Dekker will come though this time or perhaps a Frenchman like AG2R’s Laurent Brochard or La Boulangère’s Didier Rous. HISTORY: There have been eight stage finishes in
Filippo Pozzato did for his Fassa Bortolo teammates Saturday what their celebrated-yet-absent leader Alessandro Petacchi could not: Win a stage at this year’s Tour de France. With Petacchi back at home nursing injuries from a crash in the fifth stage to Chartres, Pozzato's stage 7 victory gave the Fassas much cause for needed cheer going into week two of the Tour "I didn't think it would be my day, but I was hoping to win the stage. After Alessandro left the race yesterday it kind of gave us the freedom to go out there and do our own thing," explained Pozzato, who joins prologue winner
A pair of North American criterium specialists — Gord Fraser of Health Net-Maxxis and Nicole Freedman of Team Basis — showed their stuff Friday night at the Cascade Classic twilight criterium in downtown Bend, Oregon, taking field sprints in front of a festive downtown crowd. The respective races shared a few similarities: Neither had significant breakaways; both were won in field sprints; and both were won by former winners at the USPRO criterium championships in Downer’s Grove, Illinois (Freedman in 2001, Fraser in 1999). While there were time bonuses on the line in the women’s race —
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS1. Filippo Pozzato (I), Fassa Bortolo, 4:31:342. Iker Flores (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:003. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), Illes Balears-Banesto, 00:004. Laurent Brochard (F), Ag2R Prevoyance, 00:105. Hinault Sébastien (F), Crédit Agricole, 00:106. Michele Scarponi (I), Domina Vacanze, 00:107. Paolo Bettini (I), Quick Step-Davitamon, 00:108. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Crédit Agricole, 00:109. Scott Sunderland (Aus), Alessio-Bianchi, 00:1010. Stuart O'Grady (Aus), Cofidis, 00:10 11. Erik Zabel (G), T-Mobile, 00:1012. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Davitamon, 00:1013. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus),
The young Italian Filippo Pozzato (Fassa Bortolo) scored a great win in the 204.5km stage 7 from Chateaubriant to St-Brieuc. He rode hard, but more importantly, he rode smart, applying his energy just when it was necessary. The race was thrown into a bit of disarray when the peloton was split in two with 45km to go. While all of the general-classification leaders were at the front when the split happened, it probably had an unsettling effect on the riders left behind. The group finally came back together on the outskirts of St-Brieuc. That was a perfect setup for the final attacks,
After a major fall in the final kilometer of yesterday’s stage, the peloton may have finally worked out their nervousness. In place of the crashes, speed and organization were the order of the day. Even a period of rain and heavy crosswinds didn’t wreak havoc with the field, despite the CSC team’s best efforts. Bjarne Riis’ CSC team suffered a few setbacks in the first week of the 2004 Tour de France, including flat tires and several crashes in the Stage 4 team time trial, so it’s not surprising they took the race into their hands when the rain started falling and the peloton turned into a
Greetings from the rain-drenched Tour de France. I don’t think we saw a single drop of water throughout all of last year’s Tour, but 2004 is shaping up to be a battle against Mother Nature, among other things. Well, so much for that old theory that the first half of the Tour is always boring. The first week has been full of all kinds of action. Unfortunately, all of the excitement has been more about things outside of the riders' control than the race itself, although one could argue weather is a major part of the Tour every year. Last year’s heat wave was no treat. So far this year, it’s
Lance Armstrong believes Tour de France organizers could do more to calm nervous riders and avoid spills that could ruin his bid for a record sixth straight victory. For a second straight day, the five-time defending champion offered unsolicited pointers for Tour officials, suggesting that a time trial be held in the often-tense first week to thin the number of race favorites. Sending riders out one by one against the clock would leave just the fastest with a realistic chance of winning the three-week Tour. Laggards would fall by the wayside, reducing the field of contenders. That, in
The Mail Bag is a Monday-Wednesday-Friday feature on VeloNews.com, but will appear daily during the Tour. 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 goes around, comes aroundEditor:Recent letter writers have expressed confusion and/or disapproval regarding Iban Mayo and company finding themselves left behind in Tuesday's stage following a crash, while on Thursday U.S. Postal
Simoni eager for rest daySaeco’s Gilberto Simoni says Monday’s first rest day of the Tour de France cannot come quick enough for him. The 32-year-old Italian, a two-time winner of the Giro d’Italia, was hanging on by a thread on Saturday as the seventh stage raced over 204.5km from Chateaubriant to Saint Brieuc. At one point, Simoni was close to calling it quits as he held onto his team manager's car, complaining that his head was spinning and he felt terrible. Radio Tour even reported that he had abandoned. However, after persuasion by team manager Giuseppe Martinelli, Simoni continued
Mike Creed got by with a little help from his friends on Saturday. And they weren't all on his team. With just three U.S. Postal Service-Berry Floor teammates, Creed got some assistance from TIAA-CREF riders during the stage 5 circuit race to hang on to the overall lead at the Cascade Cycling Classic in Bend, Oregon. The two teams struck a deal to help keep Creed in first place and TIAA-CREF's Dan Bowman in eighth place. The plan worked, as the stage ended in a sprint finish that had little effect on GC – Charles Dionne (Webcor) outsprinted Ben Brooks (Jelly Belly-Aramark) in 2:58:48 with
Nestled away in the rugged mountain valleys of central Switzerland, the posh Euro town of St. Moritz is better known for its fur-covered, jet-setting ski bunnies than for high-tech carbon fiber. But for three days in July, carbon was en vogue as Scott showed the press its 2005 product line. The media event July 6-8 showcased the company’s impressive investment into the ever-developing world of carbon-fiber frame construction. Unlike frame manufacturers that simply day-trip over to Taiwan, pick a stock carbon configuration from a major producer, alter a few shapes and call it their own
It really does pay to pay attention. That’s easy to say, but over the course of a five, six- or seven-hour stage you can let your attention lapse and miss something important. Fortunately, I was keeping an eye on things as we headed toward the coast of the English Channel today.
NEW YORK, NY. - The Junior PCT Grand Prix, the second race on the Jr. PCT Grand Prix series will be kicking off the day’s festivities at the 2004 BMC Software New York City CyclingChampionship on August 1,in Lower Manhattan. Approximately 50 juniorcyclists will compete in the 20-mile race for a cash prize on the challenging,Lower Manhattan course.The juniors will have to maneuver the tight 1.2 mile dog bone-shapedcourse beginning and ending at the intersection of Wall and Water Streets.For registration information please contact Ron Ruggiero, AncillaryEvent Coordinator, 215-546-3273 or email
STAGE 7 July 10 Châteaubriant - Saint-Brieuc (129.251mi/208km)
STAGE 7 July 10 Châteaubriant - Saint-Brieuc (129.251mi/208km)
STAGE 7 July 10 Châteaubriant - Saint-Brieuc (129.251mi/208km)
Pozzato takes the stage
The women's field lines up for the evening crit
The men prepare for their chance on the course
Pozzatto pulls off a last-minute win in his debut at the Tour
CSC split the peloton with a vigorous pursuit
Voeckler finished 10 seconds back in the pack with the overall contenders
Dekker and Marichal off the front
Postal joined in the fun, too
Waiting for another day at the office
If Joan Rivers was a bike racer, would she give Lance's black socks a big thumb's down?
Magnus Opus: A big split, an interesting finish and a looming sense of dread
Get your Phonak Jersey at VeloGear.com!
COURSE: This is a flat course that uses some of the roadsof Paris-Tours, with a run along the Loire Valley at the end. If there’sno wind, this stage could see a 50 kph average speed. FAVORITES: With this stage marking the end of the first week of racing, the teammates of the top sprinters will be starting to get tired, while others will have dropped out because of crashes. In other words, some of the “other” sprinters like Olaf Pollack or Jean-Patrick Nazon might get their chance in Angers. HISTORY: Angers has seen 14 stage finishes, but none since 1979.That year, Dutchman Jan Raas
Top Italian sprinters Alessandro Petacchi and Mario Cipollini have both pulled out of the Tour de France with injuries. Petacchi, the world’s No. 1, injured his shoulder when he crashed in Thursday's fifth stage. The Fassa Bortolo team leader, who won four stages in the flat sections in last year's Tour, had a disappointing start and failed to challenge in the first three big sprints. He won nine stages in the Giro d'Italia in May but was lying 83rd, 13 minutes off the pace, when he called it a day. The 37-year-old Cipollini had been struggling with a leg infection from a crash in the
Quick Step’s Tom Boonen avoided a dramatic last-minute pile-up in the peloton before going on to claim a deserved victory on the sixth stage of the Tour de France Angers on Friday. Thomas Voeckler, of the La Boulangere team, retained the race leader's yellow jersey after the 196km ride Bonneval and here. Boonen, 23, claimed his first ever stage win on the race on the back of a blistering season so far which has seen him win a number of prestigious one-day victories and stages. But it was the frightening realities of the high-speeds at the world’s biggest bicycle race that took center stage
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS1. Tom Boonen (B), Quick Step-Davitamon, 4:33:412. Stuart O'Grady (Aus), Cofidis, 00:003. Erik Zabel (G), T-Mobile, 00:004. Danilo Hondo (G), Gerolsteiner, 00:005. Baden Cooke (Aus), FDJeux.com, 00:006. Sergio Marinangeli (I), Domina Vacanze, 00:007. Pineau Jérôme (F), Brioches La Boulangere, 00:008. Julian Dean (NZl), Crédit Agricole, 00:009. Janeck Tombak (Est), Cofidis, 00:0010. Samuel Dumoulin (F), Ag2R Prevoyance, 00:00 11. Filippo Pozzato (I), Fassa Bortolo, 00:0012. Karsten Kroon (Nl), Rabobank, 00:0013. Massimiliano Mori (I), Domina Vacanze, 00:0014. Massimo Giunti
Looking at the weather as Stage 5 was about to begin this afternoon, I almost felt sorry for the small group of riders I knew would inevitably strike out on their own for the day’s long breakaway. Working in a break for the majority of a stage is hard enough, but doing it in driving rain and a terrible headwind is absolutely miserable. Of course, a Tour stage win and the prospect of taking Lance Armstrong’s yellow jersey, which he was more than happy to put up for grabs, are strong motivators. Sure enough, a five-man breakaway left the field behind before the 20th kilometer and never looked
There are thousands of tactical opportunities that present themselves over the course of a single stage at the Tour. Most of them never result in any major advantage and for the most part we simply forget about them. Every once in a while, though, someone takes advantage of a turn of events and almost changes the outcome of a stage. For that, I have to commend the Fassa Bortolo rider Jaun Antonio Flecha for his great attempt in the closing kilometers of stage six, the 196km race from Bonneval to Angers on Wednesday. Early in the stage, six riders moved to establish a lead and built it up
I wish I didn’t know as much as I do about road rash. I wish I didn’t still have scars on my hips, knees, arms, and back from the innumerable falls that came with being a professional cyclist. Unfortunately, I know all too well what it’s like to leave a lot of skin on the roads of France, Italy, Belgium, the United States, etc. If you choose to be a cyclist, at any level of the sport, you have to be prepared to sacrifice some skin, and you have to know how to care for your wounds. There were already a lot of riders sporting bandages at the start of Stage 6 this afternoon, and many more will
The overall classification underwent a minor reshuffling Friday at the Columbia River Bank Cascade Cycling Classic, after a rolling 6.6-mile time trial showed who the strongest players at the race truly are. In the women’s race it was recently-crowned national time trial champion Christine Thorburn (Webcor Builders) again disproving the on-paper dominance of the heavily favored T-Mobile squad, winning by two seconds over soon-to-be Olympic teammate Kristin Armstrong of T-Mobile. In third place was defending Cascade champion Lyne Bessette (Quark), nine seconds down. T-Mobile’s Lynn Gaggioli,
One step at a time. One day at a time. I know that my “legs” and whether I have them or not has been a recurring theme here this Tour. I tell ya, it’s a big deal coming to the Tour de France feeling like death warmed over and it’s an even bigger deal when you start feeling good. And I feel pretty good all of a sudden. Yesterday’s long break certainly gave me a confidence boost, but today I felt ready to do it again and did my best to get in an early break. As it turned out there were a lot of attacks and the one that finally stuck included my teammate Alessandro Bertolini. Actually, we
The Mail Bag is a Monday-Wednesday-Friday feature on VeloNews.com, but will appear daily during the Tour. 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.Who needs cable with Live Updates?Editor:Aha! I knew I was on to something when I canceled my cable two months ago! (see Thursday's mailbag, "Enough about OLN, already.") I'm saving $55 per month and loving every new bike-bit minute
STAGE 6 July 09 Bonneval - Angers (118.066mi/190km)
STAGE 6 July 09 Bonneval - Angers (118.066mi/190km)
STAGE 6 July 09 Bonneval - Angers (118.066mi/190km)
Boonen survives the carnage to win
Armstrong took an early digger
Hamilton, meanwhile, got caught up in the final spill
Boonen stays ahead of the carnage to claim his first Tour stage win
An early break that did not stay away
Voeckler looks as though he feels the weight of that jersey
The thrill of victory
Voeckler chats with 'the voice of the Tour,' Daniel Mangeas
Armstrong finishes after the last crash.
Bruckner and Bessette in the start house
COURSE: There’s only one official climb on this 200km stage, but the roads to the west of Paris pass through a series of small towns with short hills and lots of turns. With crosswinds expected in the final 50km, there could be some splits that catch out a few sprinters. FAVORITES: The winds will make it tough for a breakaway to succeed, so expect Petacchi to get another chance of winning — especially as the finishing straight is a kilometer long. HISTORY: The Tour has never ended a stage in Chartres, but when the race passed through here in the 1950s, Italian campionissimo Fausto Coppi was
A new yellow jersey in French champion Thomas Voeckler and a thrilling stage win by Australian Stuart O'Grady gave the fifth stage of the Tour de France plenty for fans to talk about even as the overall contenders, like overnight leader Lance Armstrong, happily took a back seat for the day. Voeckler (Brioches La Boulangere) and O'Grady (Cofidis) were in Thursday's delightfully successful five-man breakaway, which formed at the 12km mark after a flurry of early attacks. The quintet then spent the next 188km racing into a bitingly cold cross/head wind and through often-torrential rain. The
INDIVIDUAL1. Stuart O'Grady (Aus), Cofidis, 5:05:582. Jakob Piil (Dk), CSC, 00:003. Sandy Casar (F), FDJeux.com, 00:004. Thomas Voeckler (F), Brioches La Boulangere, 00:005. Magnus Backstedt (Swe), Alessio-Bianchi, 00:006. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Lotto-Domo, 12:337. Janeck Tombak (Est), Cofidis, 12:338. Thor Hushovd (Nor), Crédit Agricole, 12:339. Rene Haselbacher (A), Gerolsteiner, 12:3310. Nazon Jean-Patrick (F), Ag2R Prevoyance, 12:33 11. Erik Zabel (G), T-Mobile, 12:3312. Jaan Kirsipuu (Est), Ag2R Prevoyance, 12:3313. Danilo Hondo (G), Gerolsteiner, 12:3314. Allan Davis (Aus),
Saeco team leader Gilberto Simoni, a two-time winner of the Giro d’Italia, is so fed up with the Tour de France that he wants to go home. The Tour has yet to reach the tough mountain stages, where Simoni last year had a tough time trying to challenge eventual winner Lance Armstrong for honors. But it’s not the upcoming climbs that worry Simoni – it’s the team time trial that went so wrong for him on Wednesday. Saeco's TTT performance would not have been so bad for Simoni, had he not finished behind the leading five riders in his team. The time for Wednesday's event was taken on the fifth
I told you I was feeling better. I had a good day today. I knew I was feeling okay after yesterday’s time trial and this morning circumstance had it so that I managed to take advantage of that and get into one of those rare little breaks that actually manages to stay away. Sure, I am disappointed I didn’t win today, but at the same time, I am really happy that my legs are feeling good. There were attacks from the gun. We all knew there would be, especially after we saw Armstrong speaking last night about how he and the team really had no reason to defend the jersey at this stage of the
Five-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong has bowed out of this year’s Olympics in Athens according to a team spokesman. The announcement comes just two days after the 2000 bronze medalist was named to the five-rider team that will compete in Greece. Armstrong, who is currently racing at the Tour, said he wanted to spend the month of August with his three children. Meanwhile, USA Cycling athletics director Steve Johnson said his organization has a short list of possible replacements that includes Floyd Landis, Chris Horner, Levi Leipheimer and Freddy Rodriguez, and that a decision
Sorry for the delay in getting this update to you. Last night was pretty emotional for our team. In fact, the last couple of days have really put everyone to the test. And I don't just mean us, I mean everybody in the race. Tuesday's stage from Waterloo to Wasquehal didn't make any liars out of those who predicted carnage by the conclusion of the day. I don't know if I've ever ridden in a peloton as aggro’ as the one that headed into the first section of pavé. The fight for position started 40km in advance of the cobblestones, which meant we were going all out for nearly an hour before we
The Mail Bag is a Monday-Wednesday-Friday feature on VeloNews.com, but will appear daily during the Tour. 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.Noval’s doing a fine jobEditor:I was sorry to read Holly Whitney's note about Ben Noval not being the right man for the job. Did she notice his work today? I wish people would stop second-guessing the wisdom and experience of both
Getting a rider ready for the Tour de France, and the six- and seven-hour days in the saddle that come with it, requires a great deal of attention to detail. One detail that gets constant attention before and during the Tour involves the proper set up of new shoes and other equipment. These are often critical issues, because if a new shoe cleat is in even a slightly different position from where the old one was or a seat is a bit higher or lower or more forward or back from what the rider is used to, or the bar is positioned differently than before, it can be a big problem. Riding so hard
It’s been a tough month of racing for the T-Mobile women’s squad, which saw Webcor’s Christine Thorburn get the better of their strong U.S. national team at the Columbia River Bank Cascade Cycling Classic after she took the elite national time trial championship and nearly repeated the feat several days later, taking second in the national-championship road race. On Thursday, Thorburn, a Bay Area physician specializing in rheumatology, showed why she’s gone from a virtual unknown to Olympic team member in the span of a season, dropping the entire women’s field on the final climb into Three
As in Thursday’s Tour de France stage, which saw an early break succeed, the second stage of the Columbia River Bank Cascade Cycling Classic men’s stage race was won by a member of a break that escaped in the first 15km and stayed away. But unlike the outcome at the Tour, the Oregon win went to a U.S. Postal Service-Berry Floor rider – 23-year-old Michael Creed of Colorado Springs, who assumed the overall race leadership with just his second professional win. An on-form Creed, who took fourth last weekend at the Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic stage race, was clearly the strongest out of a group
STAGE 5 July 08 Amiens - Chartres (121.173mi/195km)
STAGE 5 July 08 Amiens - Chartres (121.173mi/195km)
André Leducq wins in 1932.
The break drives along well ahead of the peloton...
O'Grady plays it smart and scores a stage
'Aber wo sind die Ami's?'
In case you're wondering, I'm the big guy in the middle of the picture.
Voeckler in yellow: A promising career ahead for the 24-year-old French Champion?
This mishap took down four Posties
Postal moved to the front and kept the pace under control
Aldag in an early crash
It seemed like everyone crashed at one time or another
... while the peloton battled wind, rain and crashes