John Lieswyn
John Lieswyn
John Lieswyn
The tifosi hardly had time to mourn the death of former champion Marco Pantani when a new star emerged to take over Il Pirata's mantle during the three-week Giro d’Italia. On Sunday, Italy’s most rabid cycling fans fully embraced their newest hero, the young Giro winner Damiano Cunego. The celebrations in the center of Milan underscored the Italian public’s adoration of the 22-year-old from Verona. Cunego was clearly living the dream Sunday, but he nonetheless maintained a keen awareness of his public image as he carefully answered a reporter’s question asking him to pick three words to
Time specialist Michael Rich (Gerolsteiner) won Monday’s 23.7-kilometer race against the clock in Karlsruhe to open the week-long Tour of Germany. Coming through second was 1997 Tour de France champion Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) at 24 seconds with Uwe Peschel (Gerolsteiner) taking third at 29 seconds slower. “I wanted to find out where I stood and it looks pretty good,” said Ullrich, who returned to competition after a five-week break. “I want to use one or two stages to find out how strong I am but I should not be expected to win. The only thing for sure is that I won't finish last.” Ullrich
Cunego credits everyone on Saeco for the win
Roel Paulissen (Siemens Mobile Cannondale) took an extremely popular victory in front of a partisan Belgian crowd in Houffalize, with the bonus of taking the overall lead in the World Cup from fellow countryman Filip Meirhaeghe (Specialized), who could only manage fourth on the day. In the women's race, it was all Gunn-Rita Dahle (Merida) once again, riding away from the field on the first lap. Alison Dunlap (Luna) took second, which gives a real boost to her Olympic hopes. The traditional Houffalize course was trimmed considerably, from 12km to 8km. Both the men and the women did a
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Italy has its new star. Fresh-faced Damiano Cunego (Saeco) raced like a seasoned pro to dominate the 2004 Giro d’Italia. The blond-haired former junior world champion won four stages and conquered the 20-stage Giro in surprising fashion for a 22-year-old largely unknown beyond Italian cycling just over one month ago. “This has been a dream race for me,” Cunego said after beating Ukraine Serhiy Honchar (De Nardi) by 2:02. “I would have not believed before I started that I would win this Giro. It’s very satisfying.” With the 87th Giro d’Italia now part of history, Cunego becomes the youngest
Dutchman Theo Bos crashed twice en route to his quarter-finals sprint victory on Saturday, then arose on Sunday to dethrone French world champion Laurent Gane and win the sprint gold medal on the final day of the world track cycling championships Sunday in Melbourne, Australia. The former junior world kilometer champion refused to be daunted by either his injuries or his opponent and twice furiously powered to the line ahead of Gane, a seven–time world gold medalist who was a member of the gold-medal-winning French squad in the team sprint on Wednesday. "It's unbelievable... I can't believe
Jan Ullrich will test his Tour de France credentials in the Tour of Germany beginning Monday. The German, regarded by many as the rider most capable of denying U.S. Postal’s Lance Armstrong a record sixth Tour de France win in July, has struggled with his form early in the season. Still, the 30-year-old suggested he was improving with a strong performance in Saturday's Rund um die Hainleite race in Erfurt, Germany. The 1997 Tour de France winner, entering his first event in five weeks after concentrating on training, said he was satisfied with fifth place in a race won by Austrian Peter
Scott Moninger (Health Net-Maxxis) won the 33rd Iron Horse Bicycle Classic road race from Durango to Silverton on Saturday, outkicking Drew Miller (Landis-Trek-VW) at the line after more than two hours of racing through Colorado’s San Juan Mountains. Moninger finished in 2:17:23, just a single second ahead of Miller, in the finale of the 47-mile road race, with 5500 feet of climbing across two 11,000-foot passes. The legendary Ned Overend (Specialized) crossed third, less than a minute behind. In the women’s Category I-III race, Sarah Tescher (3D Racing) took the win in 2:45:44 over Teri
Last night, I returned to North America for the first time since mid-February. Today the Montréal World Cup was my first race on the continent this season. This race is the premier women’s race in North America, and it is perhaps the only race that fields a quality international women’s peloton. A cool Canadian breeze greeted us at the start, but the fans kept us warm. Geneviéve Jeanson and Lyne Bessette are household names in Canada now, and they bring many admirers to this race each year, as Mont Royale is always lined with people. Geneviéve’s name has been in the headlines of the
Italian cycling fans hardly had time to mourn the death of former champion Marco Pantani when a new star emerged to assume Il Pirata's mantle during the three-week Giro d’Italia: 2004 champion Damiano Cunego (Saeco). Cunego, a fresh-faced rider from Verona who until this year was hardly known to the wider cycling public, scored a major upset when he held on to the pink jersey that he audaciously claimed at the start of this year's race. The fact that the 22-year-old Saeco rider defied his team captain, two-time winner and defending champion Gilberto Simoni throughout, has merely reinforced
When CSC took over the title sponsorship of the seven-year-old Clarendon Cup NRC race – now the CSC Invitational – the company was obviously hoping to gain a little extra exposure for the brand. That sponsorship paid off in spades on Sunday, when CSC’s Dane Lars Michaelsen, fresh from Europe, gave the company double exposure by just nipping Gord Fraser (HealthNet-Maxxis) in a photo-finish field sprint. It was not a day for breakaways, with no move lasting longer than several laps around the flat, six-turn, 1 kilometer circuit in Arlington, Virginia. With 20 laps remaining, the Navigators
Cunego on the road to Milan
Cunego gets another day in the jersy
Saeco before the stage
The surprising victory ...
... and the subsequent elation
Petacchi notches his ninth stage win
Paulissen takes the win and the World Cup lead
Sauser and Paulissen working the trail
Dunlap grabbed some valuable UCI points by finishing second
But the win went to Dahle
Stefano Garzelli (Vini Caldirola) salvaged a disappointing Giro d’Italia with an emotional stage victory Saturday in a grueling stage that paid homage to fallen hero Marco Pantani over the legendary Passo di Mortirolo. Once seen as a natural inheritor of Pantani’s crown after winning the 2000 Giro, Garzelli held off two-time Giro champion Gilberto Simoni (Saeco) to win the three-climb, 122km stage from Bormio to Presolana high in the Italian Alps. “I wanted to try to win today to save something of this Giro, which has been very disappointing for me,” said Garzelli, who zipped away from
Australia powered to its third consecutive team-pursuit crown at the world track cycling championships Saturday in Melbourne, Australia, beating back a spirited challenge from Great Britain. The Australian combination of Peter Dawson, Ashley Hutchinson, Luke Roberts and Stephen Wooldridge trailed in the mid-stages before pulling away to win the gold-medal final by 1.5 seconds in 4:00.322 seconds. Spain beat the Netherlands in the ride-off for bronze. The British quartet of Robert Hayles, Paul Manning, Christopher Newton and Bryan Steel laid down a stern challenge. They diced with the
With the rest of her summer hanging in the balance due to a missed post-race dope test in April, Canada’s Geneviéve Jeanson (RONA) set out to make the most of Saturday’s Montréal Women’s World Cup. While she may yet be suspended for six months after the UCI doles out punishment for the missed test after the Flèche-Wallone World Cup, Jeanson won her third Montréal title in front of an overwhelmingly partisan home crowd that either didn’t know or didn’t care about their hero’s off-the-bike troubles. “I don’t want to be suspended, but right now, winning this race, I’m so happy,” said a candid
Geneviéve Jeanson (RONA) scored her third victory at the Women's World Cup race in Montréal on Saturday, and photographer Casey Gibson was on hand to record the action. For the story, read Chris Milliman's report for the pictures, you need only scroll down.
Garzelli leads Simoni and Valjavec
Today's stage was a vindication of sorts for Garzelli, but another bitter pill for Simoni
Sella had a go
Honchar had to fight to hold onto his second place overall
Garzelli adds to Simoni's woes
Cunego played it cagey, following Cioni's wheel
Fast Freddy survives the mountains to sprint once more in Milan
Jeanson's queen of the mountain in Montréal once again
Jeanson wasn't the only heavy hitter in the field: Quark's Lyne Bessette was on the attack, too
Also in the thick of things was VeloNews.com diarist Dede Demet Barry (T-Mobile)
And what top-shelf race would not be led at some point by France's Jeannie Longo?
Still, when Jeanson attacks, it's usually au revoir to the field ...
... and bonjour to the finish line
Says Gibson: 'Boy, was she happy to win this race.'
The dream is over for Damiano Cunego. The Saeco revelation won his fourth stage of the 2004 Giro d’Italia on Friday and nudged two days closer to turning his phenomenal run very much into a reality. “It no longer feels like a dream,” Cunego admitted after winning the three-climb, 118km stage. “It’s a reality now that I can win this Giro. I can’t get nervous now. There are only two stages left, so we have to stay calm.” Cunego is now less than 48 hours away from becoming the youngest Giro winner since Giuseppe Saronni won at 21 in 1979. Mother Nature and the Giro’s peloton threw a lot at
Over the last few years, a trip to Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles has meant either sneaking out late at night for a fourth meal of the day while visiting family in SoCal, or insane 16-hour stealth road trips. But now chicken and waffles have landed in the least likely of places, Boulder, at a new restaurant here in town. A report will definitely be forthcoming. On a related topic, according to an AP report, a 53-year-old man is suing the company that promotes the Atkins Diet, “alleging that following the high-fat meal plan clogged his arteries and threatened his health.” Gee, you think? Seems
Fred Rodriguez (Acqua & Sapone) etched his name in the history books in stage 9 when he became the fifth American to win a stage at the Giro d’Italia. Rodriguez also did what few have been able to do in the past two seasons – get around Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo) in full flight. VeloNews European correspondent Andrew Hood caught up with “Fast Freddy” before the start of the Thursday’s stage. Following are excerpts from the interview – Editor VeloNews: Congratulations on the big victory, tell us how it happened? Fred Rodriguez: Petacchi’s team is so strong it’s so hard to get there
Sarah Ulmer and Greg Henderson grabbed gold medals on Friday to hoist New Zealand to second on the medals table behind France on the third night of the world track cycling championships in Melbourne, Australia. Henderson surprised even himself with a helter-skelter victory in the men's 15km scratch race, surging to the finish line to snare a narrow victory after being part of an audacious three-man breakaway early in the 60-lap race. The Kiwi raised his arm in victory as he crossed the finish line just ahead of Dutchman Robert Slippens and Walter Perez of Argentina. His pulse-quickening win
A time trial is often called the “race of truth” because each rider is racing against the clock, giving his or her best. There is no teamwork. There is no drafting. The winner is the cyclist who can ride the fastest. In today’s stage of the Giro, we can clearly say that it, too, was a “race of truth.” There was no denying the young Italian rider, Damiano Cunego. He deserves to be wearing the pink race leader’s jersey. There has been a lot of speculation about the dynamics in the Saeco camp. Was there tension between the young rising star, Cunego, and the team leader, Simoni? Cunego has
The French cycling team Cofidis has given Cedric Vasseur the green light to return to competition following his temporary suspension amid allegations of drug-taking. Vasseur, a former wearer of the Tour de France yellow jersey, will saddle up for the Bicicleta Basque stage race on June 2 after a two-month exile from the peloton. The 33-year-old Frenchman was suspended on April 8 when it was disclosed that traces of cocaine had been found in a hair sample. A counter-analysis later proved negative. Vasseur, a former member of Lance Armstrong's U.S. Postal team, was one of the last of eight
Yeah, Pavel, you tell ’em, babe. Tell ’em how it is. Fight the power. Damn the man! I’m referring, of course, to the unseen “up yours” finish-line salute Thursday’s Giro d’Italia stage winner threw as he crossed the line. Tonkow explained his reasoning — “No one's got any faith in me, everyone thought I was finished” — but actually, I felt like throwing the same gesture at a race last week, to the unidentified genius that took out my rear wheel in the first 5km of the Colorado Roubaix on a flat, straight and completely manageable dirt road. I’d been focusing on this local race for months
Saeco's strongman blasts to the line
Fast Freddy, livin' large at the Giro
Cunego played the loyal teammate as long as he could, then dashed to the line for the win
A defiant Garzelli was on the attack, vowing to burn out rather than fade awway
Wegmann took off early, too, trying to defend the green jersey
The snowbanked climb of the Gavia
Miholyevic claimed the Cima Coppi prize
But Cunego was after a bigger prize
Talk about your long days in the saddle . . .
The happy couple
Sierra Nevada's Glen Mitchell says the team likes to work for each other
The Women’s Prestige Cycling Series gives women a spotlight they don't have to share with the men
With most of the top cross-country pros on the other side of the ocean giving some lesser names a chance to shine, the racing at Big Bear last weekend featured plenty of drama. But the highlight for me had nothing to do with results. It was the 15 minutes I spent interviewing John Waddell. The 23-year-old Aussie downhiller spent most of last July in a coma after a nasty crash at the Mont-Ste-Anne World Cup. In fact, things got so bad doctors were saying he probably wouldn’t be able to use the left side of his body again, or even go to the bathroom on his own. But Waddell is a fighter and
Pavel Tonkov (Vini Caldirola) gave the 2004 Giro d’Italia a blast from the past as race leader Damiano Cunego (Saeco) safely fought through some bike problems in Thursday’s 153km 17th stage. A winner of the 1996 Giro, Tonkov attacked on the day’s major hurdle at the Category 2 Passo della Mendola at 99km and dropped fellow escapee Alessandro Bertolini (Alessio-Bianchi) with 16km to go to win his first Giro stage since 2002. Tonkov’s finish line gesture wasn’t your typical kisses-to-the-heavens thankfulness. After adjusting his helmet and pointing to himself as No. 1, the 35-year-old Russian
Britain's Chris Hoy claimed his second world kilometer title on Thursday, trumping French great Arnaud Tournant in the final at the world track cycling championships in Melbourne, Australia. The Flying Scotsman hurtled around the four laps of the Vodafone Arena, clocking 1:01.599, to once again get the better of four-time kilo world champion Tournant, who was timed at 1:01.957. Dutchman Theo Bos took the bronze medal ahead of defending world champion Stefan Nimke of Germany and Australians Ben Kersten and Shane Kelly. Hoy beat Tournant by one-thousandth of a second for his first world crown
Pavel Tonkov put a lot of thought into his solo win today – then perfectly executed several very calculated tactical moves. First, we have to understand the Vini Caldirola rider's motivation. He starts the day in 19th place, almost 10 minutes down on race leader Damiano Cunego (Saeco). He is probably a bit upset about not being higher on general classification after some bad luck and a day with bad legs. He would like to gain back some time and maybe take a stage win. Clearly, he needs to get away. As the Passa della Mendola approaches, there is an attack, and Alessandro Bertolini
A ghostly antiquity shatters the air between houses, hotels and dim, squatting light poles. The vintage town of Torrington swallows another day and crests into the shady mass of energy that is the night. Short dark streets end abruptly at churches and arcades. The school of Saint Francis is holding an amateur boxing match tonight. As on most first nights of a stage race, I need a period of adjustment. Our room is three floors up from Main Street in the Village Peddler, a rickety old hotel rasping through its wind swept windows: old cloth, old mattresses, basements filled with empty
I was pleasantly surprised today. For a day in the mountains, it was actually a pretty mellow day. The first 70, 80 kilometers of the stage today were almost downhill – a fast false flat, really – and the speed was very high. There were a number of attacks, but no one really got anything going. At one point today, there was a pretty bad crash. We didn’t really see who went down, but it slowed things down for a bit as teams were trying to make an assessment of who went down and what was going on. By the time we reached the one big climb, though, the speed had picked up and then the climbers
Tonkov delivers a message to those who may have doubted him
The Flying Scotsman spreads his wings
Tonkov shows he still has it
Bertolini got some company along the way
Cunego: Still in control
Tonkov shows he still has it
Tonkov shows he still has it
Tonkov left with 16km to go
The road ahead