Armstrong scores the stars and stripes
Armstrong scores the stars and stripes
Armstrong scores the stars and stripes
Athens bound
Armstrong and Thorburn worked up front as T-Mobile controlled the chase
Thorburn said she was feeling the effects of winning Thursday's time trial
An early break went in the men's race
But McCartney has a habit of attacking such breaks
The break which hesitates has lost ...
... as had Horner, who was not at all happy about it
Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) revealed some chinks in his pre-Tour armor in Friday’s difficult climbing stage and lost control of the race leader’s jersey at the 68th Tour de Suisse. Ullrich lost contact with the climbing specialists on the very steep 13km summit finish to Malbun, on an average grade of 8.7 percent, and surrendered the lead he’s held since the prologue to Fabian Jeker (Saunier Duval). Georg Totschnig (Gerolsteiner) reeled in fading leaders Erwin Thijs and Ben Day (both Mr. Bookmakers.com) as he jumped out of a 10-man chasing group. The Austrian started the day just 25 seconds
Fresh off the announcement that the Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, California, will be hosting a road racing series this summer, I summoned up an interview that I’d conducted last month with Rick Sutton, GaleForce Sports Marketing’s chief operating officer and Sea Otter race organizer, regarding the future of motorsports venues in North American bicycle racing. Pieces of the interview made it into my VeloNews story on the Sonoma NORBA National in issue 10 (”Work in Progress: Solid infrastructure not enough to draw crowds to NORBA National at Sonoma speedway”), but I present it to you here in
The Mail Bag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com, appearing each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. 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. This reader believes LanceEditor:I find the almost evangelical fervor with which some readers have come to the defense of Lance’s character a little distressing. The reasoning, if cited, for this faith is not, in my view, supported by what
David Walsh declines to answer when asked if he truly believes thatLance Armstrong has used performance-enhancing drugs. The Irishman, co-author of the just-released “LA Confidential — TheSecrets of Lance Armstrong,” suggests that "it is not relevant what I think. (Pierre Ballester and I) have done what journalists are supposed to do: we have asked questions. Many, many people have helped by providing answers. We then write a book and the reader gets the chance to make up his or her own mind. What matters is the evidence of those who worked and rode with Lance Armstrong. The people who have
With the greatest spectacle in cycling just around the corner, VeloNews is pleased to announce the publication of its 2004 edition of the Official Guide to the Tour de France. Published in cooperation with the Société du Tour de France, the Official Guide puts everything you need to know about the race in one handy place for the month of July. The Official Guide includes detailed rider profiles of all the top American pros, including Lance Armstrong, Tyler Hamilton, Bobby Julich, Levi Leipheimer and George Hincapie, who discuss their preparations for the Tour and their view of the race. The
Race favorite Chris Horner won’t be at his best come the USA team selection race in Redlands, California on Saturday, but that won’t stop him from showing up at the startline. On Thursday the Webcor rider said he’s had a nasty cold for about a week, and has been on antibiotics since Tuesday. That was the reason he opted to take a pass on the national time trial championship race that was won by U.S. Postal’s David Zabriskie. “I’m not sick enough to miss the race on Saturday, but it definitely wasn’t worth doing the TT,” Horner explained. “I probably could have done half decent, but it’s not
Marblehead, MA. – The Tyler Hamilton Foundation (THF) today announced that it will host a live viewing of stage 13 of the Tour de France on movie screens across the United States. Scheduled for Saturday, July 17, 2004, the nationwide fundraiser’s two lead sponsors are Outdoor Life® Network (OLN®) and Regal CineMedia™. The event will be presented in nineteen Regal Entertainment Group (REG) movie theatres, and marks the first time that U.S. cycling fans will be able to view a live European cycling race on high-definition screens. For a complete listing of cities and Regal Entertainment Group
Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.John AdamsArgument in Defense of the [British] Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials [December 1770] Okay, how many of you out there have read “LA Confidential – The Secrets of Lance Armstrong?” Raise your hands. Nobody? Not a single, solitary one of you? Then shut the hell up about it already. Didn’t a teacher ever smack you down for trying to bluff your way through a question about a book you hadn’t read? Never heard the old saw
It stands to reason that when you make a mountain-cross course with flat turns, a gradually sloping start and no massive jumps, the BMX racers in the field will have good days. The newly built Mount Snow NORBA mountain-cross course had all the aforementioned qualities, and as a result, BMX pros Jill Kintner (Yeti) and Michael Robinson (Intense) copped the top spots on their respective podiums. Robinson, in his first year on the NORBA circuit, got the best start in the finals, opening a small gap in the flat, 40-meter starting straight. On a course lacking super-fast sections, a good start
Pound noted that as of Thursday, the UCI was the last holdout IGB
Walsh and another famous Irishman
Questioning the accuser - We speak with “LA Confidential” author David Walsh
Kintner got the jump from the gate
Robinson just rode like he rides
If there was any doubt that Jan Ullrich would be ready in time for theTour de France, the German erased it in Thursday’s grueling 185.4km sixthstage of the Tour de Suisse.The 1997 Tour winner retained the overall lead at the Swiss tour afterfine work by T-Mobile teammate Giuseppe Guerini helped break up the mainbunch on the final of two climbs that punctuated the difficult stage throughthe Swiss Alps.Swiss rider Nicki Aebersold (Phonak) held on from an early move to takethe stage victory, but all eyes were on Ullrich to see if he would wilton the mountain steeps.Ullrich, who once again faced
On a steamy, cloudless Thursday in Southern California, David Zabriskie and Christine Thorburn each grabbed time trial wins at the Pool Gel USCF National Road Championships. Besides the stars-and-stripes jersey, Thorburn also earned an automatic berth on the U.S Olympic team, which will compete in Greece in August. “I’m very surprised,” admitted Thorburn (Webcor) of a win that came at the expense of the heavily favored T-Mobile team. “I didn’t even do the time trial last year because I didn’t have the right equipment.”
Charles Dionne (Canadian National) finally scored the result he has been hoping for - a stage win at the Grand Prix Cycliste de Beauce. Dionne was one of the most dominant riders all day in the 180 kilometer stage that began and finished in the small town of Lac Etchemin, helping to initiate the day-long break, and then attacking repeatedly in the last 30 kilometers to finally engineer a solo win. Tomasz Brozyna (Action ATI), the overall leader, rode comfortably in the pack all day, as his team set tempo at the front. With three ranked climbs (two Category 2 and one Cat. 3), plus the
Julich is having his best year since '98
Zabriskie smoked 'em
oung Russian Vladimar Karpets (Illes Balears-Banesto) retained theoverall lead at the 84th Volta a Cataluyna in Wednesday’s summit finishup the Coll de Pal after finishing fourth behind the persistent MiguelAngel Martin Perdiguero (Saunier Duval). Martin Perdiguero, a winner in Tuesday’s roller-coaster stage,proved he can win on any terrain and put the Russian under pressure. Itlooked like Colombian Félix Cárdenas (Cafés Baqué)would win, but he was reeled in by a group of four riders. Perdiguero shotaway in the final punch and trimmed Karpets’ hold on the leader’s jerseyto just six
The Mail Bag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com, appearing each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. 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.A warning!?!?!?Dear USCF, USADA and AAA/CAS:Thank you so much!I cannot express enough joy and gratitude when I finally heard thatCanadian cyclist, Genevieve Jeanson, was given a mere warning and smallfine after she failed to show up for a drug
Rabobank’s Robert Hunter continued his promising run up to Tour de France form by winning the fifth stage of the Tour of Switzerland as it finished in Adelboden Wednesday. T-Mobile team leader Jan Ullrich, the 1997 Tour de France winner, retained the overall lead of the race that ends on Sunday. Hunter was part of a three-man break that dominated the day’s action in the 162-kilometer stage from Bätterkinden to Adelboden. Hunter, a winner in stage 3, joined Michael Blaudzun (CSC) and Murilo Fischer (Domina Vacanze) in an attack about 50 kilometers into the rolling stage that ended with a
America’s top cycling talent competes this week for a chance to representthe United States at the Olympic Games. Three athletes will earn that privilege in Redlands, Calif. at the PoolGel USCF Elite National Championships and Team USA Selection Race.This year the U.S. will be sending five men and three women to Athens to compete in road cycling. To earn a spot on that squad, it’s quite simple: Win in Redlands and a trip to Athens will follow in August. One of those five spots for the men’s team, and two for the women, will result from this week’s competition in Southern California.The winner
It’s always an interesting mix at the startline of the elite men’s road race held annually at the U.S. national road championships. For every aspiring, young Cat. 1 who’s hoping to parlay a podium performance into a pro contract, you’ll find a guy like Chris Walker. The 42-year-old was a pro with Nutra-Fig back in the mid 1990s, but today he’s sporting the kit of California-based amateur team Labor Power. The squad’s name is a reference to the law practice of primary sponsor Roger Worthington, whose client base is people who’ve been injured in the workplace. But Walker stamped his own
Tomasz Brozyna (Action ATI) took the yellow leader's jersey from Ivan Dominguez (Colavita Olive Oil) on day two of the Grand Prix Cycliste de Beauce, after an early race split in the field reduced the number of contenders dramatically. Brozyna won the 180-kilometer stage in front of Viktor Rapinski (Navigators) and Radoslaw Romanik (Hoop CCC Polsat), while Dominguez finished a whopping 17:36 back with the decimated main peloton. Stage two was packed with the kind of terrain Beauce is infamous for a seemingly unending series of two- and three-kilometer climbs of seven and eight percent. Eric
Vermaut moved to Lotto after his Postal stint
Walker eventually rid himself of the two young guys
Tilford does his best to drive the chase
Elken and Walker
Taylor was getting dropped on the climbs
The hills did their part to sort out the race
The Olive Oilers did their part to close the gap
Lotto’s Robbie McEwen won a sprint finish to take his second stage victory at the Tour of Switzerland on Tuesday. McEwen finished the fourth stage of the Swiss tour, a 211.6km race from Le Sentier to Batterkinden, ahead of Fassa Bortolo’s Francesco Chicchi and Olaf Pollack of Gerolsteiner. Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) continues to hold the overall race lead. Ullrich, a main threat to Lance Armstrong in next month's Tour de France, is two seconds ahead of Switzerland's Oscar Camenzind. Chicchi thought he had won the stage and lifted his arms in a victory salute but McEwen came through on the
Lance Armstrong was on hand at the Discovery Channel world headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, on Tuesday to announce Discovery Communications' deal to take over title sponsorship of his U.S. Postal squad in 2005. But it wasn’t questions of a multimillion-dollar sponsorship deal that generated the most heated questioning at the ensuing press conference. At the post-announcement media event, questions inevitably surfaced about “L.A. Confidential,” a new book by award-winning London Sunday Times sportswriter David Walsh and former L’Equipe cycling writer Pierre Ballester. The book,
Ivan Dominguez (Colavita-Bolla Wines) outsprinted Canadian Olympic hopefuls Charles Dionne (Canadian National) and Mark Walters (Navigators) to take the first stage and the leader's jersey at the Grand Prix Cycliste de Beauce Tuesday in Quebec City. Dominguez also donned the Points jersey, while Adam Wadecki (Action ATI) took the Climber's jersey after a race-long breakaway that was only caught in the final lap. Stage 1 threw riders into hard terrain right away, with 10 laps of a 12-kilometer circuit that featured a sharp kilometer-long 11-percent climb and an upward sloping finish into
Lance Armstrong was confident he had found a sponsor his son Luke could endorse when he took the stage to announce that Discovery Communications would assume the title sponsorship of his U.S. Postal team in 2004. “My son would be very proud of me for standing up here with a T-Rex,giving a press conference,” Armstrong said, gazing at the skeletal tailof the life-size Tyrannosaurus Rex reproduction that dominates the lobbyof Discovery’s world headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland. Perhaps more important to cycling fans than Luke’s approval, Armstrongconfirmed that, unlike the T-Rex and the
Dominguez takes GP Beauce opener
O’Reilly in 2000
The Mail Bag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com, appearing each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. 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.Kids these days! Hello VeloNews, I just thought that I should tell you about something that happened today that normally would not happen to a cyclist. I live and train in Colorado Springs and I was coming back from a long four-hour Sunday
T-Mobile's Alexandre Vinokourov has pulled out of next month's Tour de France after a fall during the Tour of Switzerland over the weekend, spokesmen for his team confirmed Monday. "Vinokourov won't be on the Tour," team spokesman Matthias Schumann told AFP. Vinokourov, 30, suffered several torn ligaments to his right shoulder after the fall during the second stage of the Tour of Switzerland on Sunday and will remain hospitalized for a further two days. He was also forced out of the Tour de France two years ago with injury. "It's a very difficult period for him because he was getting
Snowshoe, WV - Team Yeti showed incredible strength and depththis weekend as it won the men's and women's pro 4x, took 3rd and 5th inthe STXC, and 5th place in the downhill.Perhaps the biggest surprise of the weekend was Ross Milan, a Coloradonative who has been a dominant force on the Colorado race scene for thelast few years, had a breakthrough race winning the men's 4x over someof the biggest names in the sport. "I've have always known I had the potentialto get on the podium at a national event, but I am stoked that it was afirst place finish," said an elated Milan after the race.Milan
Lance Armstrong, seeking a record sixth consecutive Tour de France in July, has vowed to take legal action over a new book about him which alleges he used banned drugs. Tailwind Sports, owner and operator of Armstrong's US Postal Service Cycling team, said Armstrong, 33, will begin libel proceedings against the authors and publishers of "L.A. Confidential: The Secrets of Lance Armstrong." "Lance Armstrong utterly denies ever having taken any performance-enhancing drugs," a statement said. "Accordingly, Lance Armstrong has instructed his lawyers to immediately institute libel
The United States Anti-Doping Agency announced Monday that a three-member panel of the American Arbitration Association /North American Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) arbitrators has found that Rona’s Geneviève Jeanson committed a doping violation when she failed to appear for a drug test at this year’s Flèche Wallonne World Cup in Belgium. A member of the 2000 Canadian Olympic team, Jeanson received a public warning and was fined 500 Swiss Francs. Jeanson, 22, failed to appear for a doping control test at the request of the Union Cycliste International (UCI) following the race in
BERKELEY, Calif., June 14, 2004 — Sheryl O’Loughlin, 37, has beennamed CEO of Clif Bar Inc., the first time the privately-held energy andnutrition foods company has had a CEO outside of the original founder.Founder Gary Erickson, who had held variously the co-CEO and CEO post since1992, will continue his involvement in the company, becoming more activein new product development, package design and disseminating the company’sunique story.As owners, Erickson and his wife Kathleen (“Kit”) Crawford will continueshaping the long term vision of Clif Bar Inc. as well as direct involvementin
Monday's EuroFile: Vino' out of Tour; Hunter scores win in Switzerland
Alison Dunlap (Luna) exorcised some demons today by taking a dominating win in the Snowshoe round of the NORBA cross country series. Dunlap finished 15 seconds clear of teammate Shonny Vanlandingham, who was followed a minute and a half later by a third teammate, Katerina Hanusova, completing a Luna sweep of the top three steps of the podium. Last year, Dunlap was leading on the second and last lap of the Snowshoe cross country when she went down hard, a crash that resulted in a fourth-degree separation of her shoulder and the end of her mountain-bike season. This year, under nearly
A soon-to-be-published book entitled “L.A. Confidential: The Secrets of Lance Armstrong” alleges that the five-time Tour de France winner has been involved in doping since recovering from cancer in 1998. Charges made in the book, co-written by award-winning Sunday Times sports reporter David Walsh and Pierre Ballester, a cycling specialist formerly with L'Equipe, appear in this week's L'Express, a weekly magazine. The book itself is slated for release on Tuesday. Their book recounts the allegations of a former U.S. Postal physiotherapist that Armstrong used the banned blood booster EPO
In the end, the 56th Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré came down to a 21km time trial. Not just any time trial, but last Thursday’s uphill test from the Vaucluse vineyards to the mile-high tip of Mont Ventoux, the “windy mountain.” Spanish Tour de France hope Iban Mayo of Euskaltel-Euskadi won the time trial, and so won the race: the most important victory so far of his young career. The three stages before the Ventoux were neutralized by the top three teams — Euskaltel, Phonak and U.S. Postal — wanting to keep their respective leaders in good shape for the time trial. And once Mayo broke the
Photographer Graham Watson had another busy day at the Dauphiné Libéré on Sunday. With Stuart O'Grady off the front and the big stars keeping tabs on the gap, our man Graham had a full day charging around on the back of his driver's motorcycle. Now that things have settled down, here's a small sample of what came off of the digital chip in one of his many Nikons.
Goeff Kabush (Maxxis) and Allison Dunlap (Luna) completed their domination of the cross-country events at the Snowshoe Mountain round of the NORBA national series by taking hard-fought victories in the short track competition on Sunday. Kabush emerged at the front of the short track after just three laps, but the field was not willing to give Saturday’s cross-country winner a long leash. Australian Trent Lowe (Yeti) was the first to latch on, followed by Chris Sheppard (Haro-Adidas) and Carl Swenson (RLX-Ralph Lauren). Just behind, Travis Brown (Trek-VW), using a ‘cross bike setup, led a
Robbie McEwen (Lotto-Domo) outsprinted a large group of finishers to win the second stage of the Tour of Switzerland on Sunday. Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) retained the overall lead after finishing in the main pack in the flat, 170 kilometer ride from Dürrenroth to Rheinfelden. Featuring flat, mainly wide roads the stage two of the Tour of Switzerland was destined to finish in a field sprint. Still, a seven-man group, including former Giro d'Italia champion Stefano Garzelli, managed to breakaway, but the group was eventually reeled in as McEwen’s Lotto team joined up with Olaf Pollack’s
Given that McGuire Pro Cycling’s Dave McCook had won three sprint finishes in three days at the Nature Valley Grand Prix, it would have been a safe bet he’d be a favorite for a race titled the “Stillwater Criterium.” But the notorious 1.3-mile Stillwater Criterium is not your ordinary criterium; with its steep and narrow Chilkoot Hill climb through Stillwater’s upscale neighborhoods, dishing up an average grade of 18 percent and over 3000 feet of total climbing, Stillwater is one of the most feared crits on the North American circuit. Like the Fillmore Street climb in San Francisco, 39x25
Armstrong at the Dauphiné Libéré
Mayo stays in yellow
Armstrong has always denied doping
O'Grady had another fine day at the Dauphiné Libéré
O'Grady with Casar
O'Grady is king for the day
Mayo is tops for the week
Euskaltel kept the gap down to managable levels
A ride in the woods
Horillo leads
Levi takes a gamble
Moncoutié joins up