Tech talk: Manufacturers love Tour time
Tech talk: Manufacturers love Tour time
Tech talk: Manufacturers love Tour time
Tech talk: Manufacturers love Tour time
Tech talk: Manufacturers love Tour time
Millar looked really good until his chain popped off ...
... was it the chainring, or the lack of a front derailleur?
Riders woke up to absolutely perfect weather for Saturday’s opening prologue. After a few days of unseasonably cool weather and showers, temperatures eased back into summer-like numbers with highs in the upper 70s. There were already fans lining the course early Saturday morning, some five hours before the first rider was scheduled to go off. Big crowds are expected throughout the Tour, more so even in Paris. The prologue course drives right the heart of Paris, starting at the base of the Eiffel Tower, crossing the River Seine, passing the Place du Trocadero, hitting the Place de la
So much for all of those pre-scripted prognostications about the 2003 Tour de France. If Saturday’s surprising and exciting opening prologue is any indication, maybe Lance Armstrong’s comment that “anybody can win the Tour” might prove true. Australian Brad McGee (Fdjeux.com) survived a late-race puncture to take the 2003 Tour’s first yellow jersey by less than a tenth of a second ahead of hard-luck rider David Millar (Cofidis).Full Results Posted Tens of thousands of fans lined the 6.5km course as it started under the Eiffel Tower, hit a short, steep climb after crossing the River Seine
Bold=U.S. RiderItalics=U.S. team1. Bradley Mc Gee (Aus), FDJeux.com, 07:262. David Millar (GB), Cofidis, 00:003. Haimar Zubeldia (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, 00:024. Jan Ullrich (G), Bianchi, 00:025. Pena Victor Hugo (Col), U.S. Postal Service, 00:066. Tyler Hamilton (USA), CSC, 00:067. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 00:078. Joseba Beloki (Sp), ONCE - Eroski, 00:099. Santiago Botero (Col), Telekom, 00:0910. Vjatceslav Ekimov (Rus), U.S. Postal Service, 00:1111. Michael Rich (G), Gerolsteiner, 00:1112. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Rabobank, 00:1113. George Hincapie (USA), U.S. Postal
While following the sporting phenomenon that is the Tour, make sure to keep one thing in mind: It's all one big advertisement. Sure, there's plenty of heated racing drama to be had, but remember, the reason the race exists is to promote the goods and services of a countless number of businesses. And while the majority of us aren't particularly interested in European cement products (Fassa Bortolo) or the French national lottery (fdjeux.com), we can't wait to see the torrent of new bicycle technology unveiled throughout the race. Most manufacturers get awfully tight-lipped about exactly
Only 6.5km long, the course for this time trial through the heart of Paris is in the shape of a squashed question mark. It starts at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, crosses the Seine River to make a short climb around the Chaillot Palace and then drops back to the river at the Place de l’Alma, just across the street from the Crazy Horse nightclub. The course then parallels the river to the Place de la Concorde, crosses the bridge and heads back on the Left Bank before heading south to the finish on the Avenue de la Motte- Picquet — across the Champ de Mars Park from the Eiffel Tower. 7/5/2003
Medical officials at the 90th edition of the Tour de France have declared that all 198 cyclists in the race are “fit to ride,” following hematocrit tests earlier this week, but some experts in the field of doping are not so sure that the results mean much. Since the infamous “Festina scandal” almost brought the Tour to its knees in 1998, cycling has been at the forefront of the fight against doping and tests extensively for the banned endurance-booster erythropoietin (EPO). Officially, the entire Tour peloton started the race clean Saturday after their hematocrit levels, or the volume of
PARIS -- After a long week of getting ready and all of the pre-race hype, the Centennial Tour de France got under way today. There usually comes a point when I'm anxious to get rolling, because, believe it or not, things almost always calm down after the race begins. This will be my seventh Tour de France, which is no small detail with my wife. Seven is her favorite number. She also likes that my race number is 71, which is the year I was born. I wouldn’t be surprised if she high-fived herself when she heard my start time for the prologue was 7 p.m. sharp. I’m waiting for her to remind me
The trouble with a short prologue is that there is no room for error. After the 2003 Tour de France prologue, the top 20 riders are within 13 seconds of the leader, Bradley McGee, and 96 are within 30 seconds. For Lance Armstrong, his tendency to start time trials slowly proved to be his undoing, as he conceded more time in the first half of the prologue than he could retake in the second half. Lance is sitting in seventh place, five seconds behind principal rival Jan Ullrich and one second behind CSC team leader Tyler Hamilton. It is his lowest placing in a Tour de France prologue since
Although this opening stage of 168km around the Paris suburbs will likely be run at lightning speed, it will be a long day. Things begin at 11:40 a.m. outside the Stade de France (where France won soccer’s World Cup in 1998). There follows a formal 20km procession across the city center to Montgeron, where the actual stage will start at 1:15 p.m. outside the Auberge au Réveil- Matin, a small inn from which the original Tour began in 1903. The actual race loops south through the Forest of Fontainebleau, then north and east to the finish in Meaux. Three Cat. 4 climbs punctuate the middle part
This 204.5km route across rolling terrain northeast of Paris ends on similar roads as those raced every March on the opening stage of the Critérium International — which usually ends in a field sprint. After a flat opening alongside the Marne River, most of the action will take place at the time-bonus sprints in Jaulgonne (43km), Avançon (128km) and Amagne (149km), and the Cat. 4 hills at La Charmel (46km) and Longwé (169.5km). 7/7/2003 Start Time: 12:15:00PM7/7/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:24:00PM HISTORYThis is the first time a Tour stage has ended in Sedan, but neighboring Charleville
At 167.5km, this is the shortest stage of the opening week. The rolling terrain may encourage attacks, but with a fast, straight run in to St. Dizier, it will almost certainly end in a mass sprint— and perhaps in a Tour road stage record speed to top the 50.355 kph (31.289 mph) set by Mario Cipollini at Blois in 1999. 7/8/2003 Start Time: 1:17:00pm7/8/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:22:00pm HISTORYThis is the first time that St. Dizier, a town of 35,000, has been included on the Tour route. Besides the novelty of seeing the world’s biggest bike race, the crowds will be rooting for one of the
The course for this 69km team time trial is similar to last year’s between Épernay and Château-Thierry, with an early climb followed by undulating roads and a fast, flat finish. 7/9/2003 Start Time: 2:00:00pm7/9/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:08:00pm HISTORYTeam time trials were first seen at the Tour 76 years ago, but they were far different from today’s specialized affairs. In fact, all of the flat stages at the 1927 Tour were team time trials, some as long as 360km. The reason was that race organizer Henri Desgrange was unhappy with the slow pace and predictable finishes of the flatter
The race is only 48 hours away from the Alps, and this stage and the following one to Lyon see increasingly hilly terrain. Only a couple of the climbs on this 196km stage have categories, but this is by no means a simple “flat” stage. 7/10/2003 Start Time: 12:35:00pm7/10/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:30:00pm HISTORYWhile the Tour men of 2003 will have raced 811.5km (the prologue and five stages) to reach Nevers, the 60 pioneers of the first Tour came through Nevers only halfway through their opening stage of 467km from Paris to Lyon. In 1903, Nevers was one of the race control points where
At 230km, this is the longest stage yet, and with the first Cat. 3 climb of the race (71km from the finish) it is also the hilliest of the opening week. Students of the Tour will note that halfway through the stage, the riders will pass through the village of Le Guidon (the French word for handlebar), the birthplace of two-time Tour winner Bernard Thévenet. 7/11/2003 Start Time: 11:45:00am7/11/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:30:00pm HISTORYIn memorializing the Tour of a century ago, the race organizers based the course around the original six stage towns, but only this stage into Lyon bears
At 230.5km, this is the longest stage of the 2003 Tour, and includes four climbs that have never been used. The toughest is the Col de la Ramaz, which tops out at 1619 meters (5311 feet), 22km from the finish in Morzine. More than 14km long and averaging almost 7 percent, the Ramaz is a significant obstacle. By coming so late in the long day, and being followed by a steep descent, a 4km climb to Les Gets and another downhill, it will give a first indication of who will be challenging for the yellow jersey. 7/12/2003 Start Time: 11:10:00am7/12/2003 Estimated Finish Time:
This long stage across the plains and hills of Provence should have a spectacular conclusion. After racing downhill into the sprawling port city of Marseille, the race heads to the Vieux Port, the old dockside quarter, and then makes a 13km circuit around the city streets. 7/15/2003 Start Time: 11:46:00am7/15/2003 Estimated Finish Time: 5:16:00pm HISTORYLooking at the mostly downhill profile of this stage, one is reminded of the dramatic 1971 stage from the ski resort of Orcières-Merlette (just above Gap) to Marseille. Two-time defending champion Eddy Merckx had suffered one of his worst
Judging by the results of Saturday’s prologue time trial, this centennial Tour de France is going to be full of surprises. And a race of surprises is a race of excitement. That should be the case on Sunday, when half-a-dozen sprinters have a great chance of taking over the yellow jersey from prologue winner Brad McGee. With time bonuses of 20, 12 and eight seconds at the Stage 1 finish in Meaux, and six, four and two seconds on offer at the day’s three intermediate sprints, the stage winner could pick up a minimum of 20 seconds and a maximum of 38 seconds. The chief candidates to take the
There is nothing like a media scrum on the first day of the Tour de France, especially when you find yourself at the epicenter and face-to-face interviewing the day’s winner. But after waiting for the best of the day for the prologue to start, that’s where I was within a minute of Australian Brad McGee taking out the 6.5km “race of truth” in Paris. As soon as McGee dismounted, he lay on the cobblestones. He then sat up to find himself surrounded by a phalanx of probing microphones and television cameras. The first push’n shove, press of the flesh and huff’n puff of the centenary had been
The Tour de France is the biggest race in the world. Everyone knows that. But today, as it celebrated the start of its centenary edition, I really found out first-hand how big it is. First off, there’s organization and the number of people. Although when you’re racing, you can’t really hear them. I saw them, but inside myself I was in a zone. The number of media here is another thing altogether. In the days leading up to the start there are so many interviews, so many questions. It all takes a bit out of you. It is clear to anyone who races the Tour how winning a stage can change your
The prologue to a major stage race always seems to be watched with more interest than all but the most difficult mountain stages. No one knows who will be riding well until this first little test gives its hints. But how accurate are these hints as to the form of a rider when it comes to pursuing the overall title? And how can we use the prologue as a crytstal ball to see what's to come? Well, despite all the talk of a prologue just being a little warm-up, and not really meaning much for a three-week tour, I think it's an excellent indicator of overall form. No, I don't think Brad McGee will
Trek's Madone is named for a steep French climb
CicloSport's limited-edition USPS HAC 4
The Orbea team edition ...
... and the one you can buy.
Still the favorite
Millar: So close and yet....
Hincapie really is feeling better.
Hamilton was top American
Zubeldia set an early standard
Ullrich showed he's back
Can you think of a better place to start a Tour de France?
Leipheimer took 12th, at 11 seconds
Jan is back... and riding green
Cervelo went all out for the Tour
Jean Delatour... ready to ride
CSC is sporting new Zipps for the occasion
Hubba, hubba, hubba: Gold and carbon... bike jewelry at its best
Postal's cockpit
2004 Dura-Ace
There are 10
Speed is of the essence
The VeloNews staff carries out its own quiet protest at the Tour de France (L-R - Andrew Hood, John Wilcockson and Rupert Guinness)
Jan Ullrich is looking fit and determined in what's a comeback Tour de France for the 1997 champion. After a dark 2002, when he suffered two knee surgeries and tested positive for the party drug ecstasy, Ullrich is back with modest aspirations for Saturday's start of the Tour. "I'll do my best in this Tour. It will be even a surprise for me because I don't know where my form truly is," Ullrich said in a press conference Friday. "I would be happy with a stage victory. I don't know what to expect for the overall standings." It was nearly a year ago to the day that Ullrich faced the world's
The 1998 Tour de France winner, Marco Pantani, has returned home after spending two weeks in a clinic specializing in nervous disorders, drug addiction and alcoholism. Romano Cenni, owner of Pantani's Mercatone Uno team, said he was delighted by the progress made by the cyclist, who left the Villa Parco dei Tigli private hospital near Padova on Thursday night. "They told me that he had left, that he was well and that he could soon start training on the bike. It seems to me like marvelous news," Cenni told the Gazzetta dello Sport. "They informed me that he has made great progress. He has
Even though I’ve been to the Tour de France many times over the years, there’s more excitement around the start this year than ever before. The 100th anniversary of the Tour, with the prologue in Paris, is bringing cycling fans and the sport’s past luminaries out in droves. For Lance Armstrong, however, it is important to stay focused on the task at hand: starting the 2003 Tour de France with a powerful statement of his intention to win again. On the first day of the Tour, riders only race for 6.5km, but they are among the most important kilometers in the entire race. The prologue is the
Tour de France chief Jean-Marie Leblanc admitted Friday that organizers of this year's race had been duped into reaching agreement with Batasuna, the banned political wing of the armed Basque separatist group ETA, to allow the 16th stage between Pau and Bayonne in southwestern France to be conducted bilingually. The annoucement by Batasuna earlier in the day that they had agreed a deal for the stage to be in both French and Euskara, the language of the Basque people, led to a storm of protest. "We were conned, tricked," claimed Leblanc on the eve of the start of the centenary Tour. "I've
Lance Armstrong is the odds-on favorite to take a fifth Tour de France, but he’s not expected to win Saturday’s opening time trial. He did win the prologue last year and in 1999, but both of those stages were on hilly courses that suited the Texan’s power-based strengths. That won’t be the case in Paris, where most of the 6.5km course is on long, straight, flat city streets. The only hill is just half-a-kilometer long, and comes right at the start. Armstrong will be trying to win, of course. He knows that even more than being a race between specialists, the prologue is a battle of prestige
When the gang at Team Saeco sends out a press release, it’s not just a piece of puff pastry – there’s usually some real meat for anyone hungry for news about the squad. And the following question-and-answer session with team leader Gilberto Simoni shows that the Spaniards aren’t the only ones talking a good game at this year’s Tour. – Editor Q: The Tour has been defined as more than just a sporting event and even more than a show. It has been defined as a mental state. Do you agree? Do you feel it in that way? A: Some riders have much more experience of the Tour than I have, but I agree
The Tour de France really begins the night before the prologue with the opening ceremonies. Tonight's was held in front of the Hotel de Ville in Paris.
Jan Ullrich has his eyes on L'Alpe d'Huez this year.
Franco-American unity at the Hotel de Ville.
Big crowds welcome Tour 2003
Levi Leipheimer
Tyler Hamilton
1996 Tour winner Bjarne Riis
The odds-on favorite
Fred Rodriguez
Johan Bruyneel and Lance
Jean-Marie Lebanc and Bernard Hinault
Hi Bob;I have been working in a bicycle shop for the last three years. Lastweek my manager walked up and said it was my last day. He gave no explanation,no written reason.Don’t they have to give me warnings before terminating me?Thanks in advanceTim SPortland, ORTim;When in doubt, go to an expert. In this case, I consulted with Oregonemployment lawyer, Liz Farrell, an excellent attorney (and pretty goodex-wife!). Her response follows:Oregon is what is called an "at-will employment" state (versus a "cause"state). At-will employment means that your employer may take whatever adverseemployment
Australian Michael Rogers is psyching himself up for a dramatic debut on the Tour de France with plans to go all out and win the first yellow jersey of the race's centenary edition. The 23-year-old who hails from Canberra has hit a rich vein of form on the European cycling calendar over the past few months winning the Tour of Belgium, the Tour of Germany and last week's Route du Sud. As well as his obvious skills as a time trialing force, it was Rogers' crushing time trial win on the penultimate stage of the latter race that propelled him forward as a major favorite for Saturday's 6.5km
I know this isn’t a big secret, but if you like riding mountain bikes but have never done so in Crested Butte you really are missing out. I say this after spending three days down there this past weekend, when I had a chance to sample some of the trails and check out the new home of the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame. The MTB Hall had been homeless for the past two years, but thanks to an influx of cash and the generosity of the people who run the local Heritage Museum, it has moved into the back of the remodeled Tony’s Conoco (also home of the Heritage Museum). And while a spot in the back of
Four-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong was the man of the hour in Paris on Thursday when he gave his annual pre-Tour press conference. Just minutes after his pre-race health checkup, Armstrong walked before 200 members of the world’s press. Flanked by body guards and members of his entourage, photographers were snapping pictures of the arrival of cycling’s king. Armstrong looked and sounded confident. “I can’t think of a better way to spend July,” he quipped. Despite coming in as the undisputed king of cycling, the 31-year-old said it’s wrong to call the Tour a one-man race. He