The Mail bag: First the lawsuit, now the t-shirt
The Mail bag: First the lawsuit, now the t-shirt
The Mail bag: First the lawsuit, now the t-shirt
The Mail bag: First the lawsuit, now the t-shirt
Madsen and Tafi are key part of the CSC contingent
Grrrrrrrrrr
A two-man breakaway slipped away from the grip of the peloton in the Tour of Germany and ended up with the stage-win and the race leader’s jersey in the 183km second stage. Gerben Löwik (Bankgiroloterij) won the stage, finishing just one second ahead of Gregory Rast (Phonak). Rast jumped into the overall lead, moving more than two minutes ahead of Erik Zabel (Telekom), the winner of Tuesday’s first stage. The German tour continues Thursday with the 188km third stage from Coburg to Ansbach. Tour of Germany (UCI 2.2)Stage 2, Altenburg to Kronach, 183km1. Gerben Löwik (Ned), Bankgiroloterij,
Got beat by a girl today, thank you very much. Not just beat, actually, but crushed. So were a handful of my colleagues,many of whom are stronger riders than me. What makes the story compelling is that it wasn’t one of the local Boulder-areapros like Kimberly Bruckner or Dede Demet Barry handing our asses to usup the local Flagstaff climb, but Allison Lusby, an unsponsored part-timeworker in our very own www.velogear.com warehouse, riding on a borrowed Serotta. In just her second year of cycling, Lusby, 28, is a climbing phenomenon — although she’d never tell you. Interminably shy, Lusby’s
It’s been a good week so far for Threshold Sports and the Pro Cycling Tour, with the renamed Wachovia Cycling Series kicking into high gear and the announcement of a million-dollar triple crown prize linking together the PCT events in Philadelphia, New York and San Francisco. At the same time, however, Threshold and CEO Dave Chauner have had to deal with details of Gord Fraser’s lawsuit against Threshold, BMC Software and USA Cycling, and the subsequent disinvitation of Fraser’s Health Net team from the Wachovia Series, all going public as the week kicked off. On Wednesday, Chauner spoke
World Cup leader Nicole Cooke was knocked out of the Tour de Grande Montreal on Tuesday after colliding with a motorcycle. The 20-year-old Welsh cyclist suffered a seven-stitch gash on her knee and a bruised shoulder after slamming into a parked motorbike during the third stage of the Tour de Grande Montreal. She is expected to be out for 10 days. "My arm was hurting so much, I thought it was broken," said Cooke. Cooke was taken to hospital but X-rays showed no broken bones. The motorcycle belonged to a race official who was monitoring the progress of the riders, said race spokesperson
Telekom's Erik Zabel won the opening stage of the Tour of Germany on a day overshadowed by the death of 23-year-old French rider Fabrice Salanson, who was found dead in his hotel room before the start (see story below). Salanson's Brioches la Boulangere team opted not to start Tuesday's 184km stage, but the race continued as planned. Zabel won ahead of Stuart O'Grady (Credit Agricole) and Gerrit Glomser (Saeco) to grab the bunch sprint and take the overall lead. Jan Ullrich finished 23rd safely in the main bunch. The German tour continues Wednesday with the 183km second stage from Altenburg
Dear Lennard Zinn;I am looking for a recommendation for a good chain to use with a '95 Campy Chorus 8-speed EXA-Drive system. The cassette and chainrings are previously unridden, but a new SRAM PC-58, which I believe is intended to be an 8-speed chain, runs a little rough. Any better suggestion? --Bill Veihmeyer Dear Bill;I have found that 8-speed Shimano chains always worked great on that system. --Lennard A mystery skipDear Lennard;I have Campy record 10-speed on two of my bikes, the chain started skipping on one of them, so I figured it was the cog set, I put that same wheel on the
Dear VeloNews;Wasn't Nicole's death enough? Now Threshold Sports has to ruin Gord's career!(see “Why Gord Fraser and Health Net won't be in Philly" by Charles Pelkey -June 2, 2003)Gord Fraser had every right to go for the $250,000 bonus. Not only did he have to experience Nicole's death, but he also had his chance for thebonus taken away.Having known what tremendous pressure and hard work it required to get to get a team and a rider to that point and all the emotions that we all went through on September 17, 2000, I can only express support for Gord’s position. It is sad that this is what has
The U.S. Pro Cycling Tour is offering a one million dollar prize to the athlete able to win American cycling's version of horse racing's Triple Crown, USA Today reported on Tuesday.To win the bonus, a rider must win Sunday’s USPRO championship in Philadelphia, the New York City Cycling Championship on August 3 and the San Francisco Grand Prix on September 14."We know the one million will guarantee some excitement," said PCT chairman Dave Chauner. "This will help define the sport in the U.S."This is not the first time a million dollar bonus was offered. In 1993, the Thrift Drug series went to
The 2003 Wachovia Cycling Series kicked off Tuesday on a rainy evening in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and the Danish CSC squad quickly served notice that it would be a force to be reckoned with at the three-race East Coast series. After dominating the numbers game in the main breakaway of the day, CSC sprung team leader Jakob Piil to a solo victory in downtown Lancaster. Piil, the winner of both Lancaster and the Philadelphia USPRO Championship in 1999, was just part of an all-out assault by the CSC squad, which squashed the hopes of the major American teams in Lancaster. One American teams
Salanson on his way to winning the second stage of the 2002 Midi Libre
Zabel is in familiar form
Piil goes for it on his own
UnZipped: Dean had to finish on this.
Tyler Hamilton had just finished riding to the top of grueling climb of Luz Ardiden, the summit finish for what will be Stage 15 in the Tour de France still nearly six weeks away, but he wasn’t done yet. Hamilton had already climbed the Col d’Aspin, a snowy and muddy Col du Tourmalet and then motor-paced up Luz Ardiden. But he wanted one more look at the final climb in what’s sure to be a decisive stage in the 2003 Tour. “I’ll race you down,” Hamilton says half-joking to Team CSC sports director Johnny Weltz. It was no contest. By the time Weltz and soigneur Josep Salgueda reached the
World champion Mario Cipollini will not ride in the Tour de France after race director Jean-Marie Leblanc on Monday upheld his decision not to accept the Domina Vacanze team. "To accept a 23rd team in the Tour de France would go against the rule book of professional cycling," Tour organizers said in a statement. "After a deep examination of the situation, it appears it would hamper the security of the race and the quality of the organization to allow another team in." Cipollini's Domina Vacanze team declined to comment. Tour organizers last month handed their last four wild cards to three
The 2003 Wachovia Cycling Series kicks off on Tuesday in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. And while there are few certainties in bike racing, one thing you can be pretty sure of is that no matter how the race develops, Gord Fraser will not be winning it in a sprint - or in any other fashion, for that matter. Fraser also won't repeat his win from last year at the Wachovia event in Trenton, New Jersey, two days later. Nor will he - or any other member of the Health Net squad - be contesting the finish in Sunday's USPRO Championship in Philadelphia. No, Gord Fraser hasn't lost his finishing kick, and
The name may have changed but the Wachovia Cycling Series remains the sameas it ever was: the highest-profile week of racing on the U.S. domesticcalendar. Over the years, through two bank mergers, the title sponsor haschanged from CoreStates to First Union to Wachovia, but the three-raceseries has consistently been the biggest target of the season for the topU.S. pro teams. The series begins Tuesday evening in Lancaster, Pennsylvania,continues on Thursday in Trenton, New Jersey, and culminates Sunday inPhiladelphia with the USPRO Championships and the Liberty Classic women’srace. On Tuesday,
The snow may be gone in July, but the ride will be just as steep.
Motor-pacing up Luz Ardiden
At the top of the Tourmalet, a group of cycle tourists is surprised by the celebrity in their midst
Working the kinks out between climbs
Fraser: Can't ride without an invitation
For nearly two weeks now, there has been little doubt who has been in charge of this Giro d’Italia. On Sunday, the man poised to ride into Milan to claim the final maglia rosa of this race would leave no one on the side of the road wondering just who the race leader might be. Wearing his pink jersey, astride a pink Cannondale, with pink Mavic wheels, Gilberto Simoni had plenty of room to spare as he left the starting gate of Sunday’s 33km time trial through the streets of Milan. By the time he arrived at the finish, the Saeco man had lost a bit of his eight-minute buffer, but easily took the
Telekom’s Cadel Evans has been forced to withdraw from the Tour de France after breaking his collarbone in a fall during a race in Germany, his team announced on its website on Sunday. The 26-year-old rider took a heavy fall in a race in Erfurt on Saturday and fractured his collarbone for the second time in six weeks. Evans, who was tipped as a contender for the leading places in July's Tour, had said earlier on Sunday that his chances of recovering from his latest fall in time for the big race in France were not good. "The chances of riding the Tour now are pretty slim because it took me
Before traveling on Friday, I looked up the forecast for Montreal on weather.com. It said rain for the next seven days. I was pleasantly surprised by the sunshine that greeted me as I stepped off the plane and even more excited to wake up to sunshine for the race on Saturday. Each time I have competed in the MontrealWorld Cup, the crowd has grown. The Canadian fans are passionate and were lining the course today, cheering everyone – first to last- and yelling out the names of the home favorites – Genevieve Jeanson, Lyne Bessette and Manon Jutras. The energy on the course was
Team Bianchi said Marco Pantani won't be racing with them during July's Tour de France. The Pirate had hoped to join Bianchi to get into the Tour, but team officials shot down the notion this weekend. "There was never a meeting between the directors of Bianchi and the directors of Mercatone Uno to plan for the next Tour," Bianchi associate Felice Gimondi told Reuters. "There was only a meeting in view of a reunification in 2004-2005." The words come as a blow to Pantani, who desperately wants to get back to the Tour de France. Pantani's Mercatone Uno team is buried deep in the Division II
France still rules supreme when it comes to the downhill, although the names on the top step of the podium in Fort William were different from the usual ones. Anne-Caroline Chausson did not race, and Nicolas Vouilloz retired at the end of last year, but Cedric Gracia (Siemens Mobile Cannondale) and Celine Gros (Morzine Avoriaz) made sure that the French national anthem was playing after the first downhill World Cup. French riders went 1-2-3 in the women's race and 1-2 in the men's. Americans David Klaassenvanoorschot, Eric Carter, Todd Bosch and Todd Leduc finished 13th, 17th, 49th and
On a sunny, but windy, day, Prime Alliance’s Jonas Carney and Saturn’s Laura Van Gilder overcame 30-mile-per-hour gusts and formidable competition to claim the Clarendon Cup, the latest round of the National Racing Calendar. Van Gilder, known for her speed in bunch sprints, drew on some lesser known time trialing skills to solo away from the field early in the women’s race, despite strong and constantly shifting winds on the .6 mile course. Though Van Gilder is no breakaway artist, she could be comfortable knowing that if she faltered, Saturn had its bases covered with 2001 and 2002
Despite the bravery Pantani showed at the Giro, there's no space for him at the Tour
Simoni's first major attack came on Stage 10 and from then on, he was in rosa
Gonchar pushed it to the limit on Sunday
Simoni can finally relax
Carney and Van Gilder tops at Clarendon Cup
Carney and Van Gilder tops at Clarendon Cup
Simoni and trophy
With the 86th Giro d’Italia essentially a foregone conclusion, and most of the sprinters having been eliminated in Thursday’s giant mountain stage, stage 20 was a chance for the domestiques to shine. And at the finish, it was Giovanni Lombardi who outkicked three breakaway companions to seize another victory of opportunity, further distinguishing himself as one of the world’s shrewdest, fastest, and consequently most dangerous riders to have in a breakaway. The Italian with the broad, smiling face is normally the final leadout man in the Domina Vacanze train, charged with delivering Mario
Saturn’s Charles Dionne and Velo Bella’s Lynn Gaggioli were victorious in the inaugural CapTech Classic Friday in Richmond, Virginia. The NRC event's four-corner, 0.9-mile downtown circuit was challenging, with nearly 100 feet of climbing per lap. The 22.5-mile women’s race boiled down to a two-woman battle between Saturn's Ina Teutenberg and Gaggioli, and with the German sprinter still weary from the 10-day Tour de L'Aude Feminin, which concluded last Sunday in France, it was Gaggioli - riding as a one-woman team, as usual - taking the win at the line The 45-mile men’s race was controlled
Telekom’s Santiago Botero won’t be defending his title at the Alps Classic or go up against Lance Armstrong in next week’s Dauphine Libere. Instead, the Colombian will be racing at the Tour of Germany and then the Tour of Catalunya as he prepares for the Tour de France. “It’s a shame because I would have preferred to have raced the Dauphine, but the team isn’t planning on going,” Botero told VeloNews. “The Cataluyna race is a good one, but the climbs aren’t quite as long as the Dauphine, which is better preparation for the Tour.” Botero won last year’s Alps Classic, beat Armstrong in the
Gunn-Rita Dahle (Merida) solidified her lead and Filip Meirhaeghe (Specialized) put himself back into contention at the Fort William UCI World Cup race Saturday in Scotland. Both riders took extremely hard-fought victories in front of nearly 6,000 spectators, under the most perfect conditions imaginable. Fort William, in the Scottish Highlands, held its first World Cup – a downhill/four cross – just last year. This year, the organizers added a cross country in the shadow of Ben Nevis, the tallest mountain in the United Kingdom. The 8.5km course, built by the Scottish Forestry Service at a
Geneviève Jeanson (Rona-Esker) showed once again why she is considered to be one of the best women cyclists in the world by decisively beating a world-class field at the Montréal World Cup on Saturday. British strongwoman Nicole Cooke (Ausra Gruodis-Safi) finished second to Jeanson and extended her overall lead in the World Cup. The 8.2km circuit around and up Mont Royal has been used repeatedly for some of the most celebrated races in cycling-the world championships (1974), the Olympics (1976) and multiple World Cups. This year, the women had to ride the 1.2km climb 12 times, with the
Giovanni Lombardi outkicks the break to win stage 20.
Riders cycle along lake Maggiore
Lombardi (R) celebrates followed by Vini Caldirola Edy Mazzoleni
Lombardi celebrates as he crosses the finish line
Simoni again wears the pink jersey
Champagne again
A beautiful day for cycling in Italy.
Marco Velo and Lombardi make a bid for freedom.
Eddy Mazzoleni tries to lose Lombardi ... to no avail.
The men start on the $150,000 cross-country course built by the Scottish Forestry Service.
How Geneviève Jeanson usually looks to the field ... this time, in Montréal.
Jeanson's Rona-Esker team masses at the front on the Mont Royal climb.
Saeco's Gilberto Simoni won one for himself today, punching the air to underscore the statement he had just made by launching the move that mattered during a final flurry of attacks in the Giro d’Italia’s 19th stage. "I did not plan on going for the stage win, but when the race exploded with 3km to go and everyone was attacking, I decided to give it everything I had to win,” Simoni said. “This win was for me, not for my team or my sponsors.” The Cascata del Toce was the longest stage of this year’s Giro, at 239km, ending with a hard climb to an awesomely powerful waterfall on the Toce
Sometimes I wonder about this town I live in. A couple of weeks ago, a letter was published in Boulder’s Colorado Daily. It began as follows: While on a walk recently, I came upon hideous-looking, twisted, tortured, distorted remnants of living beings. I encountered this scene, block after block. It looked like a war zone, in many ways it was. The stench burned my mouth, my sinuses, and my lungs while inflaming and swelling the lining of my brain. I often experience an un-coordinated walk after such exposure as well, compounded by profound exhaustion. I saw the twisted scene as an astute
Upon completing a damp, three-hour solo ride this past weekend, I returned to happily inform my housemate that I had discovered the best training tool ever invented. No, it isn’t a German power meter, a palm-reading heart-rate monitor or any sort of output-measuring device. Rather, it is an energy-inducing device, one that, when used properly - and responsibly - can introduce a whole new element to long miles spent in the saddle. And while I’m not usually one to cover bike tech, and it’s still only May, I hereby cast my vote for the VeloNews Technological Innovation of the Year: Apple’s
Memo to: Maynard HershonFrom: Geneviève JeansonSubject: “The New Cannibal” Hi, Maynard! If I didn’t know any better, I’d say you’re about as shy as I am. Otherwise you’d have come up to me and at least said hello at some point. It would have been great to chew the fat and clear a few things up. As things stand now we’ve never even exchanged the time of day, which is kind of a shame, I think. I mean, it must make it real tough for you to write a whole page about me without ever having said boo, even once. In light of what you wrote about me (see "The New Cannibal," by Maynard Hershon, in
Gilberto Simoni claims the final mountain stage.
Nowitzki and Voight: Separated at birth?
iPod, therefore iRide.
Simoni at the start
During the climb
The final climb of the day ... and of this Giro.
Marco on the attack...
.. but Simoni is the man to beat in this Giro.
Pantani after crossing the finish line
Simoni celebrates
Looking to Milan.