Marc Gullickson
Marc Gullickson
Marc Gullickson
Tim Johnson
Jonny Sundt and Jonathan Page
Gullickson and Wells
The Denver Public Library has acquired 14 years of Red Zinger Bicycle Classic and Coors International Bicycle Classic materials for permanent installation in its Special Collections Archives. Michael Aisner and Kay Groeneveld, owners and promoters of the event that was the premier stage race in the U.S. from 1975-88 donated the collection. The multi-day stage race through California, Nevada and Colorado attracted top pros and amateurs, including Tour de France, World and Olympic champions. It was credited as being instrumental in the careers of three-time Tour de France champion Greg
A day marked by sloppy conditions and sloppy racing drew to a close with an almost perfect performance, as DEVO’s Adam Craig took the men’s under-23 title at the USCF national cyclo-cross championships in Baltimore, Maryland, on Friday. Craig’s stars-and-stripes jersey was the last of 11 handed out on the first day of the nationals weekend.
Adam Craig
Jed Schneider
Paul Curley
Katrina Davis
Alicia Genest
Jodi Groesbeck
James Coats
Adam Craig
Jeff Weinert
The route for the 57th Vuelta a España was unveiled Thursday, and it was music to the ears of defending champion Angel Casero of Spain. This year’s Tour of Spain, September 7-29, won’t pass through the Pyrenees and there will be only four mountain stages — down from eight in previous years. "I like the course," said Casero who was pleased to hear there will be three time trials — two individual and one team time trial. Casero took the winner's jersey this year from fellow Spaniard Oscar Sevilla in the final time trial at Madrid. But even without the Pyrenees, there is the tough 15th
Ever since Jonny Sundt (K2) surprised everybody with a win over Tim Johnson (Saturn) at the Downeast Cyclo-Cross in Auburn, Maine, back in September, it's been clear that this is a wide-open season in U.S. cyclocross racing. Nowhere will that be more evident than this weekend, at the USCF national cyclo-cross championships in Baltimore, Maryland.
'02 Vuelta route announced
Eyes on the prize: Grande is hoping to end Dunlap's win streak.
Will Gullickson (front) be able to hold off Johnson?
Some of the world's leading cyclists have been slated to appear as witnesses in the trial of Doctor Michele Ferrari, which began in Bologna, Italy, Wednesday. Ferrari is facing allegations of administering harmful substances, abusing his profession, trading in banned dietary supplements and sporting fraud. If convicted, Ferrari faces a prison sentence, but the anticipated revelations from some of the stars of the peloton could add another unsavory chapter to cycling’s struggle against doping problems. Former Giro d'Italia winner Ivan Gotti, Tony Rominger, Claudio Chiappucci,
The Prime Alliance Cycling Team officially announced its 2002 roster Tuesday, confirming its position as an up-and-coming force on the domestic road racing scene. Returning team members include world under-23 time trial champion Danny Pate, Michael Creed, Jonas Carney, Jame Carney, Ryan Miller and John Walrod. New signings for 2002 include former Mercury pros Chris Horner and John Peters, Matt Decanio, David McCook, Alex Candelario and Canadian Svein Tuft. The team will continue to focus on U.S. races, including a heavy emphasis on National Racing Calendar events. Last year Prime Alliance
World champion Erwin Vervecken led a Belgian sweep of the top four placings at the fifth round of the Superprestige cyclo-cross series in Hoogstraten, Belgium, Saturday. In a race which saw Belgian riders collect eight of the top-10 spots, Vervecken beat Mario De Clerq and Sven Nijs in the finishing stretch to chalk up his second win of the series. Vervecken and Nijs battled for most of the race before being joined by DeClerq on the last lap. Nijs was unable to match Vervecken’s finishing speed, but the 25-year-old’s third-place finish allowed him to retain the Superprestige lead with three
Reigning national champion Tim Johnson made the most of his last race in the 2001 stars-and-stripes jersey, darting away from two breakaway companions to claim victory at Round 6 of the Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series at Wasserman Park in Merrimack, New Hampshire on Sunday. In the women’s race, Canadian Lyne Bessette picked up another ‘cross win, locking up the overall Verge championship. More importantly, she said she’s going to take the sport a bit more seriously now, and will likely compete at next month’s world championships in Belgium. Johnson had been swapping the
Johnson powers to the win.
Bessette survived the snow to win the series.
The Saturn cycling team announced Friday that it has signed 19-year-old Californian Rahsaan Bahati to their 2002 roster. Bahati, who rode for Mercury last year, first captured the attention of American cycling when he won both the junior and senior elite criterium national championships in 2000. Lightning fast, Bahati went on to win the junior national road championship later in the year. Bahati is currently enrolled at Indiana University where he is majoring in computer animation and telecommunications. He will join the team in January for training camp, and will compete on the college
Former world champion Gianni Bugno has been summonsed to appear before a Belgian court relating to his alleged involvement in a doping affair which dates back to 1999, the public prosecutor told AFP in Brussels on Friday. Swiss-born Bugno, who was world road race champion in both 1991 and 1992, will face questions over a suspect packet addressed to him while he was a Mapei team rider two years ago during the Trois Jours de La Panne race. The packet, which turned out to contain amphetamines, was handed over to the authorities by delivery firm DHL. Magistrates in Belgium will also question
Most of America’s top cyclo-cross riders will converge on Wasserman Park in Merrimack, New Hampshire Sunday for the season’s final tune-up before the national championships in Baltimore, December 14-15. Racing in the Granite State begins at 10 a.m. with the elite women’s race set for noon, followed by the elite men at 1:15 p.m. The event is the sixth in the seven-race Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series, and will offer over $2000 in cash and prizes. Expect to see a dozen current and former U.S. and Canadian national champions compete. Entering Sunday’s race, Saturn teammates
Think Lollapalooza outdoor-sports style and you get some idea of what the organizers of the new-for-2002 Primal Quest Telluride 360-Degress Adventure Festival are trying to pull off. Like the all-over-the-map music festivals of the 1990s, the four-day event, July 11-14, will try to bring together a diverse cross-section of people. Included in the itinerary will be adventure racing, mountain biking, hiking, rock climbing, trail running and for the less energized… fly-fishing. From a cycling standpoint the 360-Fest will provide a new opportunity for both amateur and pro mountain bikers. All
Citing internal changes and pressures from the struggling U.S. economy, Kona announced Wednesday that the Ford Motor Company had opted not to renew sponsorship of its mountain bike team for the 2002 season. The impact of this move will be much greater on the British faction of the Kona team than its Canadian counterpart. "We didn’t really get much support from Ford Canada," said Kona cross-country rider Geoff Kabush. "The only reason we were grouped together was that so we could have a World Cup team." Kabush added that he would be back with Kona in 2002, but didn’t know what they fate of
In what could go down as a landmark case, a Chicago motorist was convicted of first-degree murder following the April 26, 1999 death of a bike messenger, according to a report in the Chicago Tribune. After 16 hours of deliberation, a jury in Cook County ruled that Carnell Fitzpatrick deliberately ran down Tom McBride after McBride had cursed at Fitzpatrick following a near-collision. "When you have a three-ton vehicle and maybe a 20-pound bicycle, that is no even match," said assistant state's attorney Lynda Peters following the verdict. George Christensen, a friend and co-worker of
USA Cycling sent out a memo Thursday announcing two more additions to the 2002 AMBC schedule: the Big Shark Challenge, May 4-5, in St. Louis, Missouri, and the Schweitzer Dirt and Rock Tour, in Sandpoint, Idaho. That brings the total number of races to 26 for the year. Here is the updated AMBC calendar. Asterisks denote races awarding UCI points. February 24 — Spring Series, Gainesville, FloridaApril 19-21 — NOC Knobscorcher, Bryson City, North Carolina April 26-28 — The Twilight, Athens, GeorgiaApril 28 — High Point Ranch Roundup, Ada, OklahomaMay 4-5 -— Big Shark Challenge, St. Louis,
It’s still a long way from being resolved, but at least one scenario for the shaken-up 2002 mountain-bike World Cup schedule has emerged, and it might bring another North American venue into play. Here’s how it would work. First the two Canadian Gestev-run events, Mont-Ste-Anne and Grouse Mountain, would each move forward one weekend on the World Cup calendar. This would place the Grouse Mountain "triple" on the weekend that had originally been occupied by the downhill in Arai, Japan, which was cancelled two weeks ago. Mont-Ste-Anne would then jump into Grouse’s spot, opening up the weekend
The U.S. Postal service team kicks off its 2002 campaign on Wednesday with the start of the team’s first training camp of the season, held in Austin, Texas, hometown of three-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong. The week-long camp has been held in Austin for each of the last three seasons, with Armstrong and company training on many of his favorite rides, typically in the Texas "Hill Country" west of Austin. The riders scheduled to attend are: Lance ArmstrongMichael BarryTom BoonenDylan CaseyAntonio CruzDavid ClingerGeorge HincapieBenoit JoachimSteffen KjaergaardChann
Riding the coattails of its performance at the 2000 Olympics, British cycling hit the jackpot when it was announced that money from the National Lottery will fund a four-year development program at the rate of 4 million pounds (approximately $5.6 million) annually. Cycling, for many years the redheaded stepchild of British sport, is reaping the reward for its medal-winning efforts at Sydney 2000. The team emerged with one gold — won by Jason Queally in the 1km time trial — a silver in the Olympic sprint; bronzes in the team pursuit and women’s pursuit, plus a couple of fourth place
It’s not going to be long before people start wondering if the 2002 mountain bike World Cup series is going to happen at all. First the stop in Arai, Japan was cancelled because of what the UCI called financial reasons. Now the loss of a key sponsor has tabled the event in Leysin, Switzerland. According to mountain bike World Cup coordinator Christophe Burri, the recent withdrawal of event sponsor Club Med was the primary reason behind Leysin's decision to pull out of the 2002 World Cup schedule. "With this sort of financial hit, the organizers in Leysin no longer saw themselves as
Three-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong busted out the mountain bike last Saturday to compete in the Dirty Duathlon, held at the Rocky Hill Ranch, just 40 minutes east of Armstrong’s hometown in Austin, Texas. And were it not for a little bad luck, the U.S. Postal Star probably would have won the race. Armstrong was sitting third coming out of the first of two three-mile runs in the run-bike-run format, and a third of the way through the 12-mile ride he had made up that time and was in the lead. But a flat tire cost Armstrong a big chunk of time, and he eventually finished sixth
Team Sports announced Monday that it has hired Eric Wallace to head up the Volvo-Cannondale mountain bike racing team in 2002. Wallace takes over for the departed Charlie Livermore who left the position after seven years to pursue other business interests. Wallace comes to the Volvo-Cannondale from Team Sports Events, where he led the Timex Event marketing program. Prior to running the promotional tour for Timex, Wallace worked in the marketing department of Derby Cycle Corporation. Wallace's competitive and bicycle specific background includes management of several bike shops in Texas
Reigning Vuelta a España champion Angel Luis Casero announced Monday that he would be joining the German outfit Team Coast next season. The 29-year-old said he had received offers from Italian teams Lampre and Maglieria but preferred Team Coast because they had hired members of his former Festina team which disbanded at the end of last season. Casero joins up with Juan Fernandez and Roberto Torres who were team managers at Festina. "The offers of the other teams were tempting but I was more concerned with sporting rather than financial aspects," Casero said. Apart from the 2001 Vuelta,
With the national championships just two weeks away, many of America’s best cyclo-cross riders showed up in Wayland, Massachusetts for the fifth stop of the Verge New England Cyclo-Cross Series last Saturday. In the men’s pro race, a group of 11 moved to the front early, with Todd Wells (Mongoose-Hyundai), Saturn’s Mark McCormack and Tim Johnson the most well known names. But it was Matt Svatek (Wheelworks-Cannondale) surprising the group by launching an attack that saw him go clear for two laps. But unwilling to let Svatek ride away with the race, Wells took it upon himself to reel in the
The men's podium.
Justin Spinelli goes over a barrier.
Thorne heads for the win.
Armstrong takes on the Dirty Duathlon run.
Ferguson finished third.
Belgian Sven Nijs made it 2-for-2 on Sunday, holding off countryman Bart Wellens to take the win at the second round of the cyclo-cross World Cup in Igorre, Spain. Two weeks ago Nijs won the World Cup opener in Monopoli, Italy. Nijs now has a 20-point lead in the overall standings of the six-race series, with Wellens in second, followed by Richard Groenendaal, Mario De Clercq and Jiri Pospisil. In the race in Spain Nijs finished with a time of 1:02:42, 50 seconds faster than Wellens. Reigning world champion Erwin Vervecken was third, at 1:25, followed by De Clercq at 1:35, and Groenendaal
Nijs heads to the win in Spain
After a run of bad news from the mountain-bike racing world — cancelled races, rider defections, folding teams, etc. — finally some good news. Word from the West Coast is that the newly formed all-women’s squad, the Luna Chix featuring world champion Alison Dunlap, have inked a deal with Santa Cruz as its bike supplier for 2002. Dunlap rode for GT last year, but that team’s status is much in doubt for the upcoming season following the company’s bankruptcy and ensuing purchase by the Pacific Cycles, which has shown just a marginal interest in supporting racing. Meanwhile, on the others side
The Saturn women's team announced its roster for the 2002 season on Friday, with the big news being the addition of former world pursuit champion Judith Arndt. Arndt's 2001 season highlights included a win at the Rotterdam Tour World Cup race, second in the HP Women's Challenge and the Tour de L'Aude, and third in the women's Tour de France, the Grande Boucle Feminine. Riding for the German national team last year, Arndt ended the season ranked No. 2 in the UCI world rankings behind Saturn's Anna Millward. Saturn also adds up-and-coming American rider Jessica Phillips,
Whether it was Geneviève Jeanson’s amazing performance at Redlands or cross country day at the world championships in Vail, North America and North Americans provided some of the year’s best bike racing. In this final installment of the 2001 VeloNews Awards we reveal the winners of the North American Awards. Note: All awards are for performances on North American soil. RIDE OF THE YEARGeneviève Jeanson entered the 99km final stage of the Redlands stage race with a healthy lead of nearly two minutes. Well, she didn't rest on her laurels. Within a kilometer of the start of the tough
Former Italian cyclist Annibale Brasola died Friday, according to the ANSA news agency. Brasola, 76, was a leading support rider of two of the most legendary names in Italian cycling, Fausto Coppi and Gino Bartali. His brother Elio, who died some years ago, was also a top rider. Brasola, who was born in Padua, had some successes of his own, too, with 16 wins including three Giro d'Italia stages, most notably the Campobasso to Naples run in the 1950 race. Copyright AFP 2001
The list of names leaving mountain biking behind to pursue road-racing glory has grown to four with the additions of Bas Van Dooren and Michael Rasmussen. Rasmussen, the 1998 cross-country world champion who raced a limited road schedule last year, will be a full-time member of the CSC-Tiscali team in 2002. "We might try to get him to ride for us at the world’s in Kaprun but right now he’s very committed to the road," said Haro-Lee Dungarees team manager Mike King, Rasmussen’s boss in 2001. Rasmussen helped design the course that will be used for this year’s world championships in
Jeanson rode away from the field at Redlands
Klasna had the best season of career.
Grigson won another NORBA title.
Candelario's amateur exploits earned him a pro contract.
Wells has even shown abilities in cyclo-cross.
Rasmussen will try his hand on the road.
One of the most well-attended events on the mountain bike World Cup schedule that last few years won’t be around come 2002. Without outlining any reasons the UCI has informed VeloNews that the World Cup stop at Arai Mountain in Japan has been cancelled. The downhill/four-cross event was originally slated for July 13-14. And though the UCI would not confirm it, a British mountain biking Web site is reporting that Fort William in Scotland has been chosen as the replacement site. Check back to VeloNews.com for updates, as more information becomes available.
Italian cyclist Claudio Salvi tested positive for the banned steroid nandrolone, the anti-doping panel of the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) announced Thursday. The presence of the substance norandrosterone was detected at a level of two nanograms per milliliter — a result confirmed by an analysis on the second sample. Salvi gave the sample in a random test on July 24 at Salice Terme a training camp for the Italian national under-23 cycling team. Copyright AFP 2001
Here’s a look at the rest of the VeloNews International Awards. Check back tomorrow when we will reveal the remainder of the North American Awards. MALE ROAD RACER OF THE YEARIn winning 24 races and taking his nine-year career total to 139, Erik Zabel was by far the most successful pro road racer in 2001. Among his major achievements this year: winning Milan-San Remo for the fourth time in five years; extending his tenure in the Tour de France green jersey to six years (and adding three stage wins); winning the Hamburg World Cup race for the first time; and taking three stage wins on his
The state famous for its potatoes may need a new slogan. For the second straight year, Idaho received the top grade in the International Mountain Bicycling Association's Mountain Bike Access Report Card, solidifying its status as the best state for mountain biking. Serpentine trails, expansive public lands and a low population are key components in Idaho's success. Idaho received the top grade in the inaugural 2000 IMBA Report Card, but that didn't make the local cyclists complacent. Riding opportunities improved this year around Boise, Idaho's largest city, as mountain
Zabel won his sixth straight green jersey in 2001.
Chausson added another rainbow jersey.
The Postal squad delivered Lance Armstrong to his third straight Tour win.
Vaughters after his wasp encounter.
Belgian cyclist Frank Vandenbroucke signed a one-year contract, with an option year, with the Belgian team Domo, team manager Patrick Lefevere announced Wednesday. The 27-year-old, who won the Liege-Bastogne-Liege classic in 1999 and two stages in the Tour of Spain the same year, admitted that after a couple of lean years this could well be his last chance to revive his career. Vandenbroucke joins Richard Virenque and a number of other new arrivals at the Belgian outfit. However, Vandenbroucke will be expected to produce better results for Domo than he did for Lampre the past two
The 14th Annual VeloNews Awards issue hits the streets this week featuring three-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong as the VeloNews International Cyclist of the Year. This is the second consecutive year the U.S. Postal Service rider has won VeloNews’s top honor, making him just the second athlete to win the award twice. Past winners of the award, which started in 1988, include Greg LeMond (1989), Miguel Indurain ('92, '94) and Juli Furtado ('93). To reach his new point of excellence and win his third consecutive Tour de France, Armstrong worked harder than ever during
The December 17 issue of VeloNews, the 14th annual VeloNews Awards issue, includes our "10 best" list, the things we will remember most about bike racing in 2001. Of course each of us had our own ideas about what stood out this year, so in addition to the final list, here is a look at some other memorable happenings according to the writers and editors of VeloNews. KIP MIKLER, EDITOR1. It’s rare for me to take in a race as a spectator, but in September I left the notebook behind and went to San Francisco for the Grand Prix. I joined thousands of rowdy fans soaking in the atmosphere and the
Lance Armstrong
Dunlap's win was the best of the best.
San Francisco treat
Rasa Polikeviciute wins world's.
Longo wins again.
Hincapie wins a classic.