Don’t tell us who won, we’re waiting for the TV coverage.
Don't tell us who won, we're waiting for the TV coverage.
Don't tell us who won, we're waiting for the TV coverage.
The Treasure Island criterium with the Bay Bridge in the background.
DII women's winner Kellogg.
DII men's winner King.
Jacques-Maynes won the DI men's race.
Hannos was No. 1 among the DI women.
One of several pile-ups.
Dane Lars Michaelsen won his first race since the 2000 season after he edged Ag2r’s Jaan Kirsipuu to take the 200km second stage of the Four Days of Dunkirk on Thursday. The Team CSC rider overcame a back injury in February but missed the spring classics and only returned to competitive racing last weekend. Michaelsen, 34, cracked a vertebra when he crashed when a time trial handlebar snapped during a team training camp in Tuscany. “He tried to come back for the classics and tried to race at Harelbeke (March 29) and De Panne (April 1-3), but he just wasn’t up for it,” said Team CSC sport
Dear Bob;When I go out riding, I usually take my driver’s license with me so I can use it for identification in an emergency. A friend warned me that I shouldn’t do that, because if the police wrote me a ticket and I had my license on me, the state would assess moving violation points. Can they do that?Thanks in advance,Anonymous Dear Anonymous;I have had my share of experience in this area with both police in patrol cars and police on bikes. When I was a student at the University of Wisconsin in the '80s we wanted to know if the bicycle police cruising around campus with mirrored sun
So finally, a week after the world found out that the Telluride World Cup was cancelled, word came down from the UCI that…the Telluride World Cup has been cancelled. In its brief press release dated May 7, cycling’s world governing body was kind enough to reiterate that fact, remind us of the dates that no longer matter, and then impart these encouraging words. “The UCI regrets this decision and will make the most to ensure however a harmonious development of the 2003 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup.” Hmm…ensure however a harmonious development? Not sure what that’s all about, but wouldn’t it
How about if people quit whining about cycling on TV and just goride their bikes? Isn't that what the sport's all about? Why waste a beautifulday sitting on the couch watching someone else do what you could be outsidedoing yourself? If it's nice hit the road, if it's not hit the trail, or vice versa.There's a whole world out there to be enjoyed and a bicycle is a greatway to do it. You know, cycling doesn't need people making $2 million ayear to validate it. Whether anyone ever gets paid to ride a bikeagain or not, there will still be more people on bikes on a
The UCI on Thursday suspended Team Coast for the second time this season from racing in what's another setback for the troubled German team. The UCI issued a statement Thursday afternoon saying that riders had not been paid during April and that it was once again suspending the team from competition. "Unfortunately, this reveals the structural problems of the team remain very serious, despite all the steps taken by the UCI to protect the interest of the racers," the UCI said a statement. "Team Coast is not authorized, as of this day, to take part in any race on the international
Giro news: Colombia-Selle Italia Division II Colombia-Selle Italia is hoping for big things from its fleet of sleek Colombian climbers. It’s been a few years since the glory days of the Colombian mountain goats (even Santiago Botero is better in the time trial than on the steeps), so it’s hard to tell if this team can bring back the mystic. John Freddy Garcia was the rider race judges ruled that Francesco Casagrande barged into the fences on a Category 3, leading to Casagrande’s early exit from last year’s Giro.Colombia-Selle Italia José J. Castelblnaco (Col)Freddy González (Col)John Freddy
“I’m not a great champion like Binda,' says Cipo'
No word from the silver city on the hill
Ullrich must be regretting that CSC decision
They say the Salad Days of mountain bike racing are dead and gone... whoever "they" are. If you've been following Jason Sumner's recent reports on the current state of the NORBA National Points Series, it's clear that the current model of "prime time" pro racing is currently on life support. Even World Cup events (Telluride) are not immune from decreased sponsorship involvement. Like it or not, big-time (i.e. cash, big rigs, gala events and liberal TV coverage) pro mountain bike racing ain't what it used to be. Even our very own Patrick O'Grady has chimed in on current events, claiming,
Frenchman Frederic Finot (Jean Delatour) won the 190-kilometer stage fromDunkirk to Roost Warendin as part of a two-man break that held off themain peloton in Wednesday's opening stage of the Four Days of Dunkirk. With the win and time bonuses, Finot grabs the race lead of the five-day,six-stage race across the flats of northern France after finishing aheadof Stephane Berges (Ag2r). Tom Steels (Landbouwkrediet) led the main bunchat 2:05 back. The 49th Four Days of Dunkirk continues Thursday with the 200-kilometersecond stage from Sin le Noble to Bapaume. Stage 1, Four Days of Dunkirk,
Dear Ms. Ryan;I recently had the MedGem test completed and found that my metabolic rate was 1590 kcals a day. I also train with a power meter that measures the number of calories that I burn during a ride. Every Tuesday the club meets for a "hammer and suffer fest." During this 1:45 minute death march, I burn approximately 1600 joules, which equates to roughly 1600 calories. Adding these numbers up, I would need approximately 3200 calories on this day to maintain. Since I spend most of the time above my anaerobic threshold, I suspect that the majority of the calories burned are from sugars
Doctor Prentice Steffen answers a reader question on dealing with depression
Editor:As an avid cyclist, and an avid sports fan, I am dismayed at the mediacoverage that is given to cycling in general, not just mountain biking. Tyler Hamilton won a huge race not too long ago, and this accomplishmentgot not one second of coverage here in Southern California. And I listento sports talk radio all day long at work. Granted, Lance Armstrong getshis play after he wins the Tour de France, but during last year’s Tour,the 20-second blurb that came across the radio waves was pessimistic abouthis chances of winning until he actually had the maillot jaune on his shoulders.This
A little late-night Super 8 wrenching before the race
Titec's CM carbon bars
A sticky situation...
Botero at last year's Vuelta
A break that worked
Dear Lennard,I am refitting the components on my son’s bike, and was looking for150mm crank arms. Where did you find them? Are they single, double or triples?--Ron Dear Ron,HSC makes 150mm in double or triple. www.hscycle.comTA used to make that length as well, but I have not seen any in years.--Lennard Dropping the chainDear Lennard,My chain continues to jump past my small chain ring when I go fromthe big ring 53 to the small 39 tooth. This always seems to happen at themost inopportune times. I have the front derailleur adjusted to where itis all but touching the chain in the 39X25 combo.
Who says mountain-bike racing is dead? From the looks of it, the sport has a bright future. All you have to do is look in the right places. Last weekend, for example, all you would have had to do was look at the muddy trails around an abandoned air strip near Nevada City, California, to understand just how vibrant the sport really is. This year, an influx of new coaches, and the young teams they lead, raised the competition to a new level. New coaches meant new riders and, in some cases, entire new schools choosing to become involved in an increasingly competitive high school mountain bike
Tyler Hamilton is back at his home-base in Spain after an amazing run when he became the first American to win Liege-Bastogne-Liege and then pulled off the rare double to take the overall title at the Tour of Romandie. Only Ferdi Kubler (1951) and Bernard Hinault (1980) have equaled the feat and Hamilton’s the first to do it since Liege was bumped back a week in this year’s racing calendar. “It’s been an incredible eight days,” Hamilton told VeloNews on Tuesday. “I didn’t have time to really reflect on my Liege win before I started Romandie. I didn’t want to rest on my laurels and relax too
For decades, there has been a friendly but heated rivalry between theU.S. and Canada in bicycle racing. Nowhere has that been more evident thanin the Pacific Northwest, where riders from both sides of the border havedone battle in such storied races as the Cascade Classic, Gastown GrandPrix, Tour of White Rock, and the Tour of Willamette. Another skirmish between the North American rivals took place this pastweekend at the three-day, four-stage Columbia Plateau Stage Race, and theCanucks unquestionably came out on top, winning seven of a possible eightstages and taking all six overall podium
As the under-18 women line up for the start, one proves you can still have fun while readying to kick some butt.
Redwood High
Rand Miller at the start
Michael Roye
The final podium at Romandie
It all came together in the TT
Two of the most common questions we get at Hamilton 2003 are “why aren’t your tickets on sale?” and “when will they be?” The answer is, they are now and we still have more than six months to go. Now, let me explain why it took longer than you might expect and where the best places are to see the race. Like most other busy downtown cores, Hamilton, Canada’s eighth largestcity with a population of over 500,000 people, doesn’t normally have grandstands for more than 10,000 lining its Main Street. What it does have is big, bustling city hall, a very beautiful and well-attend performing arts
I can sum up the last week in Belgium with one word: wind. Windier than average, which is to say "lots of wind." Luckily, the wind has been blowing from the south, which means that the temperature has been relatively mild. Some Belgians will tell you that the reason for so much wind (irrespective of global circulation models and regional weather patterns) is that France sucks, and Holland blows. Perhaps it is for this explanation that actual weather forecasting seems even more voodoo here than in the good ol' USA. Weather on the 8's, forget about it. Doppler radar, no way. Hey man, we
Editor:I think Patrick O'Grady has done a fine job of expressing what manyof us have been thinking recently about the sponsorship of bike racing(See “Dog breath:Hard times”) But I think his basic premise can be challenged withtwo words: bull riding. Based on my own random sampling, I'd estimate that OLN devotes roughly16 hours a day to televising professional bull riding. I couldn't findany good data on the number of people involved in recreational bull riding,but I asked around the office, and only one person claims to have triedit, and I'm pretty sure he's lying. My conclusion is that
This will be covered in seating
Target: Hamilton
Crossing with hand power
Despite a winter of training and seemingly miraculous recovery from a broken shoulder, Gerolsteiner’s Davide Rebellin will miss the Giro d’Italia it was reported in Berlin on Sunday. According to German sports news agency SID the 31-year-old suffered a reaction to a shoulder injury when he won the Frankfurt Grand Prix last Thursday and has decided not to contest the Giro, which starts on May 10 and runs till June 1. "I trained all last winter with the Giro as my objective," admitted a frustrated Rebellin. "However competing in it now would be too risky. I felt the pain when I was riding
"It's the toughest sponsorship climate I've ever seen. Right now it's justa dry lakebed."Rick Sutton of GaleForcein a chat with Jason Sumner of VeloNews About 8 million people age 7 and older tried mountain biking off-road at least once in 2002, according to the National Sporting Goods Association. More than 82 million tried walking. And we’re surprised that the NORBA National Championship Series has sponsorship troubles? Puh-leeeze. With all due respect to the pros who may be racing for fun like the rest of us this season, if I were the marketing wizard for Chevy Trucks, I would have my
What a week it’s been for Tyler Hamilton. Just a week after becoming the first American to win Liège-Bastogne- Liège, Hamilton erased a 46-second deficit in Sunday’s final-day time trial to claim the overall title at the Tour of Romandie in Switzerland. “I’m incredibly happy and it’s like a dream come true to win them both,” Hamilton said of his rare Liège-Romandie double. “I didn’t know how well I did in the time trial. I didn’t have time splits, so I went as hard as I could. I knew there was a lot at stake, but I am surprised to win by that margin.” The 20.4km time trial was well-suited
Danes celebrated cycling during its most important weekend of racing in fine fashion, with national riders Frank Hoj (fatka) winning Saturday’s GP S.A.T.S. and Jakob Piil (CSC) taking the big win in Sunday’s CSC Classic. The two Danish powerhouses dominated both races, the most important one-day races on the Danish cycling calendar. The only things bigger are the Danish national championships and the Tour of Denmark. Saturday’s race took the peloton over gravel and dirt roads around Herning, the hometown for 1996 Tour de France winner Bjarne Riis. But it was fatka’s Hoj that stole the show
In the mountains surrounding Silver City, New Mexico this Sunday, Canadian cycling phenom’ Geneviève Jeanson (Rona Esker) and Flagstaff, Arizonan, full-time father, husband, mechanical engineer, and self-proclaimed ‘old, club rider,’ Drew Miller tucked their third Tour of the Gila overall wins each under their respective belts on Sunday. Showing two different types of cycling dominance -- Jeanson purely overmatching her competition, Miller outworking and outplaying his -- the men’s and women’s races were each decided before they had reached the halfway mark earlier this weak. In a
They're working on developing a downhill event, too.
All of the excitement of Mountain-cross, without the insurance hassles
A strong TT made all the difference.
Perez was in yellow... for the day
Laurent Dufaux took second overall
After a while, Jeanson had no one to chase except the masters racers who had started well ahead of her
The alliance up front
Neutral support. When you get a flat, your first job is to find your wheel
Working man's hero
At the close of the 2002 Telluride 360 Degree Festival, Rick Sutton couldn’t have been happier. His latest brainchild had been a substantial success, and he was already looking ahead to 2003. Next year would almost certainly include a World Cup triple, and there was even talk of a point-to-point cross-country race that might start on the other side of the mountains in Durango. Sutton’s event would eventually be awarded that World Cup triple, and until recently it looked like all was a go for the second year of the multi-sports festival in the scenic southwestern Colorado resort town. But
Spaniard Francisco Perez Sanchez (Milaneza-MSS) took the lead in the Tour of Romandie on Saturday after winning the 146.5km stage between Monthey and Chatel-St-Denis on the penultimate day of the event. Perez Sanchez cruised home alone on the final kilometer after overtaking second-placed Italian Eddy Mazzoleni (Vini Caldirola-Sidermec), who eventually finished 21 seconds behind, on the final mountain climb. Swiss riders Fabian Jeker (Milaneza-MSS) and Alexandre Moos (Phonak), finished third and fourth. American Tyler Hamilton (CSC) was fifth. The start was delayed by three minutes as
The 21st century isn't all it's cracked up to be. The mighty Inside Communications Server Farm spent most of Saturday immobilized by a power outage after a peon whose Starbucks card had been rejected tripped over an extension cord en route to the coffee urn at a nearby 7-Eleven. The fan quit spinning, the hamster got all sweaty, the wheel stopped turning, and before you could say, "Al Gore invented the what?", cycling journalism as we know it ground to a halt. We promise it will never happen again. Until the next time. Stay tuned from reports from the 1989 Tour de France, where we understand
A gutsy solo move in the final three laps of Saturday’s fourth stage of the Tour of the Gila propelled Tecos’s Florencio Ramos Torres to a win, robbing the field’s prominent sprinters from an opportunity to strut their stuff… and earn their paychecks. Of course the day’s biggest and most unexpected development came during the women's race when Rona’s Genevieve Jeanson did not win. We repeat: Jeanson did not win. At least that’s how the news should probably sound with Jeanson so dominant in U.S. women’s cycling these days, but that story line would take due credit from the strength and
Francisco Perez Sanchez (Milaneza-MSS) salutes the crowd as he dons the leader’s jersey with just one stage remaining
Alexandre Moos (Phonak) dogs Tyler Hamilton (CSC)
Francisco Perez Sanchez (Milaneza-MSS) finally finds the finish line
Cycling's world track championships, scheduled to take place in China this summer, have been canceled because of fears over SARS, the Union Cycliste Internationale confirmed today. "The UCI wishes to express appreciation to the organizers of Shenzhen, as well as to the Chinese National Cycling Federation," the UCI said in a press release. "The UCI also wishes to confirm that track world championships will most certainly take place in China before the 2008 Olympic Games of Beijing, probably in 2007." This year's track world's was due to be held July 30-August 3 in Shenzen, the southern
Feel like I finally earned my stripes last week. Not because I finally got to cover a U.S. stage race the magnitude of the Tour de Georgia (the Coors Classic and Tour DuPont were a little before my time). No, I’m talkin’ about finally eating at a Waffle House. Having spent the first 22 years of my life in California, I had a valid excuse for a while, but after my extensive American travels - and living within 20 miles of a Waffle House here in Colorado - that excuse was wearing pretty thin. So, it was with great delight that on the third day of the Tour de Georgia, my roommates and I made
The wearing of a hard-shell helmet in elite men's races is to be made compulsory, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) said on Friday. The move, which takes effect in time for the start of the Giro d'Italia in May, comes after the death of Kazakh rider Andrei Kivilev from head injuries at Paris-Nice in March. "The International Cycling Union (UCI) announces that as from 5 May 2003 it will be mandatory to wear a hard-shell helmet in Elite Men's events for classes 4 and above," the UCI said in a statement. "This decision was taken in agreement with all parties represented in the
Swiss rider Laurent Dufaux (Alessio) took the overall jersey from Italian Simone Bertoletti in the Tour of Romandie on Friday when he won the third stage of the event between Moudon and Loeche-Les-Bains, a stage that was marred when Spaniard Francisco Perez Sanchez (Milanez) was mistakenly directed off the course in the final kilometers. Dufaux and Perez Sanchez of Milaneza were credited with the same time and placing on the stage, with Swiss rider Fabian Jeker, also of Milaneza, second and Phonak's Alexandre Moos third. Italian Giosue Bonomi (Saeco) was forced to pull out early in the
Mountain-bike racing needed some good news, and Friday it looks like it got some. VeloNews has learned that the mountain-biking version of the Jeep King of the Mountain series has gotten the thumbs up from Chrysler, and that a three-race made-for-TV series will get under way on June 29 in Wintergreen, Virginia. “We just met with Chrysler and worked out the final details,” said Denise Lavaroni, the VP of events for Eclipse TV, the production company behind the new series. The series will continue on July 29 at a yet-to-be-determined site in Colorado, before concluding August 23 in
Saturn and Navigators both came to the Uptown Greenwood Professional Cycling Challenge expecting to win. And so it was no surprise that between them, the two teams had five riders in a 14-man break that led the 50-mile race from midway on. But when push came to shove Thursday night on the streets of Greenwood, South Carolina, in the third race of the South Carolina Heritage Cycling Series, it was Ofoto-Lombardi pulling off an upset as the big boys concentrated on each other. Ofoto’s Erik Saunders took a flyer out of the front group with less than eight laps remaining, building a 10-second
It was just another day at the office for Geneviève Jeanson (Rona-Esker), who soloed off the front of the pack 12 miles into the 76-mile third stage of the Tour of the Gila on Friday morning, tacking an additional 5 1/2 minutes onto her overall lead. But Gord Fraser (Health Net) had to win his race in company, pouncing at the line on Steve Cate (Mathis Brothers) and Todd Wells (Hyundai-Mongoose) like a famished tabby on a pair of field mice, showcasing to whoever is paying attention that he is to be considered a racer of note in domestic cycling and is in top form early in the season. For
Tyler Hamilton (CSC) leads the charge.
Francisco Perez Sanchez (Milaneza) fights toward the line.
Laurent Dufaux takes the win and the lead.
Dufaux wins stage, seizes Romandie lead
No, Geneviève Jeanson has not taken to racing cars.
Gord Fraser had the legs today.