An easy day protecting the jersey
An easy day protecting the jersey
An easy day protecting the jersey
July in France: Heat, bikes and sunflowers
Yesterday was a great day for our team. Jacob Piil spent most of the stage in a break away, and then duked it out in a two man sprint for his first Tour de France stage victory. I'm really happy for him. He had a few tough moments during the first week of the race, but fought back hard, and came up with an incredible result. The team celebrated with a little Champagne at dinner last night. Thankfully today is a rest day. Ten stages into this year's Tour de France, and I'm feeling about ten years older. There are days when cycling can make you feel like an old man. And for me, yesterday
French cycling star Richard Virenque will be focusing on only one thing during the next few days on the Tour de France - winning a record-equaling sixth 'King of the Mountains' polka dot jersey. And the 33-year-old Quick Step rider, who has successfully reintegrated into the peloton after his career was in tatters in the wake of the Festina doping scandal, says he could stick around long enough to set his own Tour de France benchmark. "I'm preparing myself mentally for the Pyrénées and hopefully by the time we reach the mountains again my legs will stand up to the test," said Virenque on
The Lithuanian cycling federation has recommended a six-month ban for former Lampre rider Raimondas Rumsas, who tested positive for EPO during the Giro d’Italia in May, the federation said Tuesday. The federation also proposed to fine the 31-year-old Lithuanian year 2000 Swiss francs (1300 Euros). The Lithuanian federation has not taken a final decision on Rumsas, and has instead consulted the International Cycling Federation (UCI) and sent it Rumsas' explanations for the postive test. If the UCI rejects the Lithuanian federation's proposal, Rumsas's domestic federation will be obliged to
Just back from Bend, Oregon, land of breweries, brushfires and bicycle racing, and after my first outing I’d have to say that the Cascade Classic is a fantastic event. Race promoter Brad Ross ran a race with stunning courses and full community support, and the consensus from racers I spoke with was that Cascade is one of the more under-rated stage races in the U.S. “I’m going to tell all the girls from other teams to come next year,” said women’s overall winner Lyne Bessette (Saturn), who raced at Cascade for the first time, easily beating the 50-rider field. And while Bessette did trounce
Jan Ullrich thinks four-times Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong is in a weaker position at the halfway stage than in previous years and may be vulnerable to attack in the Pyrenees. The German, winner of the Tour in 1997, said there was a chance he could win his first stage of cycling's premier race in five years in the mountains of southwest France. "If I'm on good form and I'm feeling good on the day, then it might be possible," he told reporters at his team's hotel in Lignan-sur-Orb during the first rest day of the Tour on Wednesday. "The Pyrenees this year are tougher than the
While the concept of a rest day in a three-week stage race is very welcome, it is equally dangerous for riders. The body is more than happy to accept the rest, but breaking the routine of racing can cause trouble. Rest Day RoutinesRacing on the day after a rest day can be like starting a car on a cold winter morning. You might be able to get the engine to turn over, but it takes a while for it to run smoothly. For riders, the danger is that they will feel sluggish or heavy on the first stage following the rest day. In order to prevent this situation, it is important for everyone to spend
Overall Standings after 10 stages1. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 45:46:222. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, at 00:213. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 01:024. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, at 01:375. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, at 01:526. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, at 02:107. Ivan Basso (I), Fassa Bortolo, at 02:258. Roberto Heras (Sp), U.S. Postal Service, at 02:289. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 03:2510. Denis Menchov (Rus), iBanesto.com, at 03:4511. Roberto Laiseka (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 04:0312. Christophe Moreau (F), Credit Agricole, at
Lance Armstrong enters the second half of the 2003 Tour de France witha real fight on his hands. The four-time champion endured attacks in threepunishing days in the Alps but still emerged with the yellow jersey onhis back.Armstrong enjoyed a quiet rest day on Wednesday, riding for about twohours with his U.S. Postal Service teammates late Wednesday morning nearthe team's hotel in Montpellier. He later lunched with his family and enjoyeda relaxing day away from the race and the media.VeloNews caught up with U.S. Postal's director Johan Bruyneelafter the team's training ride. Here are excerpts
Sitting in the outside terrace of bar called Le Nat, we raised ourglasses of beer and toasted what is a rare feat in Tour de France trip– 36 hours free of relative trouble. Le Nat is in the town of Beziers, in southwest France, just 33km away from the start of Thursday’s stage 12 in Narbonne to Toulouse.As we drank, we shook our heads in disbelief at our good fortune. Thatis, until we realized that Le Nat is not exactly what we thoughtit was. Let’s just say the bar was open, and it was not yet dark, but itwas preparing to provide its clients with other services than just drinks!Our
I broke my collarbone, left side, last Monday. I’ve been off the bike since then. I am going to set my trainer up on Saturday for some indoor spinning. Do you have any ideas on how to make things heal any faster? Any advice would be a great help.Bob Cozzetti. Dear Bob,Since the clavicle ("collarbone") is the most commonly broken bone in the human body, your question is a good one for us to take a look atin detail. It's such a common injury for cyclists that I think we tendto not give it the attention it deserves. Certainly, it has had Tyler Hamilton's attention the past few days.I won't
This is unexpected: Halfway through the Tour de France, Lance Armstrong has yet to put a stranglehold on cycling's showcase race. After 11 days of racing, with 10 to go, the talk among some riders as they headed into Wednesday's well-earned rest day was that the four-time champion is not the dominant force he once was as he goes for a record-equaling fifth successive win. Unusually, the 31-year-old Texan did not shine in the Alps and their monstrous climbs - although he rode well enough to take the overall lead. Another four days loom in the Pyrenees. To win, Armstrong needs to be strong
Jacob's good day
Dinner at the Anderson's
'Princess Emma,' the Low Rider
Antonio and Alexi Cruz
Chris and Erica Horner
Rest Day at the Tour: Bruyneel confident; Hamilton still day-to-day
One talented, highly motivated, and thoroughly tough SOB
Team CSC's Jakob Piil won Tuesday's hot and steamy stage 10 from Gap to Marseille as the Tour de France left the Alps behind and headed toward the Mediterranean Sea. Once more, Lance Armstrong retained his hold on the yellow jersey, this time staying on dry pavement a day after his already famous "short-cut" on Monday's stage to Gap. It was stinking hot again Tuesday in what's been one of the hottest Tours in recent memory. It was too hot for a sick Stefano Garzelli (Vini Caldirola), the 2003 Giro d'Italia runner-up, who didn't take the start, leaving 171 riders in the 90th Tour as the race
To see how Stage 10 of the Tour unfolded live, just go to our Live Update window and follow the action all the way to the finish.
1. Jakob Piil (Dk), CSC, 219.5km in 5:09:332. Fabio Sacchi (I), Saeco, at 00:003. Bram De Groot (Nl), Rabobank, at 00:494. Damien Nazon (F), Brioches La Boulangere, at 02:075. Rene Haselbacher (A), Gerolsteiner, at 02:076. Philippe Gaumont (F), Cofidis, at 02:077. Serge Baguet (B), Lotto-Domo, at 02:078. Vicente Garcia Acosta (Sp), iBanesto.com, at 02:079. Gutierrez José Enrique (Sp), Kelme-Costa Blanca, at 05:0610. Baden Cooke (Aus), FDJeux.com, at 21:2311. Robbie Mc Ewen (Aus), Lotto-Domo, at 21:2312. Erik Zabel (G), Telekom, at 21:2313. Fred Rodriguez (USA), Caldirola, at 21:2314. Fabrizio
A gasp of horror reverberated through the Tour de France entourage Monday when second-placed Joseba Beloki crashed at top speed on the descent to the finish of stage 9. It was immediately obvious that it was a serious fall, one from which the 29-year-old Spaniard would not get up. Beloki was transported Tuesday by air ambulance to his hometown of Vittoria for surgery at a private hospital, but long months will pass before he is rehabilitated from the broken femur in his right thigh, the complex fracture of his right elbow and his snapped right wrist. For Beloki though, the bitterest pill to
Despite the near total desertion of the Fassa Bortolo squad from the Tour de France, the Italian team still leads the overall list of prize money awarded at the half-way point of the race. Largely on the strength of four stage wins by Alessandro Petacchi, Fassa Bortolo has earned a total of 39,681 Euros thus far in the 2003 Tour.Prize money awarded, as of Stage 101. Fassa Bortolo 39,681 euros2. Quick Step 39,1493. Crédit Agricole 30,8234. fdjeux.com 29,4255. Telekom 27,8086. U.S. Postal - 26,0027. Euskaltel - 21,7368. AG2R - 19,4819. Jean Delatour - 17,24810. ONCE - 13,56511. La Boulangere -
After three long and hot days in the Alps, the peloton was more than happy to let a nine-man breakaway build a massive lead and contest the tenth stage of the 2003 Tour de France. Behind them, the U.S. Postal Service and Euskaltel teams set a controlled tempo on the front of the main field. Even when the pace is not blistering, riding tempo at the front of the Tour de France takes a lot of energy. Staying aerobic is the key to riding tempo on the front of the peloton, and riders who know the task falls in their job descriptions train specifically to handle the demands. The goal is to
If I've learned one thing these past couple of days here at my first visit to the Tour de France is that the race slows for no one. The riders, the Tour support staff and even the attending press are pushed to near-redline limits for three weeks straight. As one day blurs into the next with set-up, competition and subsequent tear-down, the Tour waits for no one–number plate or not. So with four hours of sleep under my belt, I hit the road with John Wilcockson (who's covered the Tour more than 30 times) in our trusty Passat. We were off to the team hotel of CSC so that I could spend the
This is the story about a fella nicknamed “Tracker John.” It’s also a about luck and how the two went hand-in-hand today before the 10th stage of the centennial Tour de France. Tracker John may be getting on, but with 35 Tours under his belt he is as wily as the most cunning of foxes. When he gets one sniff of a scent, he’ll follow the trail to its end. He did this morning, after we stopped on the way to the stage start at the point of yesterday’s stage 9 descent where Joseba Beloki crashed out of the Tour and Armstrong ran off course. Beloki, who sustained a fractured right femur, elbow
Day two of the Whistler Gravity Festival saw France’s Cédric Gracia grab his second victory in as many days, while Great Britain’s Tracy Moseley was the women’s downhill victor. The stage Tuesday was Whistler’s famed A-Line trail, where riders contested a jump littered 4-minute-plus run down from the midway point of the Whistler Village Gondola. After qualifying second behind Aussie Nathan Rennie (Iron Horse-MadCatz), Gracia (Siemens-Cannondale) blasted down the hill in the final to unseat Be One’s Bas De Bever. Gracia and De Bever were the only two riders to go below the 4:11 mark, with
Beloki: Painfully reminiscent...
... of Ocaña in 1971
Lance Armstrong and Baden Cooke await the start
Demonstrators stop the tour mid stage
Demonstrators stop the tour mid stage
Stage 10 Gallery from Reuters
The course winds along the Marseille Harbor
IMAX camera mounted on helicopter
Young fans on the course today
Cultural dancers in horse outfits
The longest finish straight, just under 2 kilometers
TV and a photo bike covering the break
Soigniers tell stories while waiting 20 minutes for the field to finish
Landis cooling off at finish
Postal at the helm
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Stage 10 Tech Talk: The Tour never stops
Gracia heads to the win.
Mountain biking has made it to billboard status in Whistler.
To see how Stage 9 of the Tour unfolded live, just go to our Live Update window and follow the action all the way to the finish.
If this year's Tour de France hasn't been exciting enough already, Monday's 184.5km stage 9 through the scorched French Alps proved yet again that there's never a dull day at the Tour. Tragically, last year's runner-up Joseba Beloki crashed out of the race in a high-speed spill with just 4km to go, while four-time defending champion Lance Armstrong had to test his cyclo-cross skills when he bounced through a hay field to avoid the fallen Beloki. When he crashed, Beloki was leading Armstrong in hot pursuit of Telekom's Alexandre Vinokourov, who was heading toward a famous stage win in Gap.
Stage 9 Individual Results1. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz), Telekom, 5:02:002. Paolo Bettini (I), Quick Step-Davitamon, 00:363. Iban Mayo (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:364. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 00:365. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, 00:366. Ivan Basso (I), Fassa Bortolo, 00:367. Georg Totschnig (A), Gerolsteiner, 00:368. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), iBanesto.com, 00:369. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:3610. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, 00:3611. Roberto Laiseka (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:3612. Didier Rous (F), Brioches La Boulangere, 00:5213. Denis Menchov (Rus),
After three races of the International Cycling Classic-Superweek, Saturn’s Viktor Rapinski holds the overall series lead over former Superweek champion Harm Jansen. The 17-day event kicked off in Chicago on Friday evening with Prime Alliance’s Jonas Carney taking the win over Rapinski. The following evening Jansen took a solo win in Menasha, Wisconsin, and on Sunday, West Virginia’s Patrick O’Donnell scored a surprise win in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, winning out of a six-man break ahead of Belgian Karel Vereecke (Soenens-Germond) and Jansen. Check back to VeloNews.com over the next two weeks for
Four-time champion Lance Armstrong avoided being fined or punished for his dramatic detour through a field to avoid crashing into fallen rival Joseba Beloki near the end of the Tour de France ninth stage Monday. A race jury determined that Armstrong was deemed not to have benefited from his impromptu change of direction. "Beloki's fall led Armstrong to take evasive action, leading him into a field which he left without gaining any advantage on the group of riders he had been with," said an organizers' statement. Meanwhile, the jury fined several other riders for infractions that occurred
It's my second day here at the Tour and the team product news keeps streaming in, but first, something of a personal look at today's big event. By now, you've all seen (or read about) Joseba Beloki's nasty spill, just four kilometers from today's finish. As the VeloNews crew made its way to the arrive in Gap, two hours in front of the peloton, we noticed the hot road (37 degree centigrade air temp) had begun to "weep" oil in sections where recent road repairs had been made. The highly heated road was so slick that it made even the handling of our Volkswagen Passat a bit tenuous in
Today's photo gallery is a little different, due to a slight misunderstanding between the race committee and me. As a result of said misunderstanding, today’s photos are all from the perspective of the fan, outside the race itself… which is precisely where I found myself for today's stage. Let me explainYou see, the Tour de France has very strict rules about the movement of journalists and photographers during the race, designed to protect the safety and integrity of the riders and the race. Unfortunately, I found myself violating the primary rule for those of us not in the race; Don't get