Barth rode a smart points race
Barth rode a smart points race
Barth rode a smart points race
Blatchford was smokin' in the sprint
The next winner of the Tour de France: Ricky Williams, late of the Miami Dolphins
Ford (right) celebrates with keirin winner Shane Perkins
Comparisons are odious. –John Fortescue As surely as the Christmas decorations go up after Halloween, so too do the “Lance Armstrong is not the world’s greatest athlete” tirades go out after the Tour de France. The latest yahoo to dust off this apples-versus-oranges claptrap is Mike Imrem, who scribbles for a thing called The Daily Herald, a suburban-Chicago sheet whose founder, Hosea C. Paddock, proclaimed that his goal was to “fear God, tell the truth and make money.” Paddock’s successors may indeed fear God and make money, but they have fallen short of telling the truth in running
Heading to Hamburg. Ullrich will ride the HEW Cyclassics
The Mail Bag is a regular feature on VeloNews.com. If you have a comment, an opinion or observation regarding anything you have seen in cycling, in VeloNews magazine or on VeloNews.com, write to WebLetters@InsideInc.com. Please include your full name and home town. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.Your 15 minutes are up, AdamEditors:How exciting is this? After what seems like dozens of maybe Nandrolonepositives or maybe just contaminated supplements, a good old fashionedEPO case. Headline reads: Young cyclist rockets through the ranks, findshimself second only to Chris Horner,
Dear readers,When I think of riding my bike I think of exercise, freedom, all thethings that have kept me riding for over 20 years and hopefully 20 more.What I don’t think of is danger and death. But the truth is, whether youare riding a bike, driving a car or even taking a shower, the possibility of anaccident always exists. This column is not about how to avoid mishaps,but instead how to be prepared, in advance, for the worst.Ken Rosskopf, an excellent attorney from Georgia, who has handledhis share of bicycle-related legal issues, has submitted the followingcolumn on Living Wills. This is
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJuly 29, 2004Release #04-189 Bicycle Helmet Recall Hotline: (866) 432-7832Ext. 195CPSC Consumer Hotline: (800) 638-2772CPSC Media Contact: (301) 504-7908CPSC, Geartec/Mackarl Announce Recall of Bicycle HelmetsWASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commissionannounces the following recall in voluntary cooperation with the firm below.Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unlessotherwise instructed.Name of product: DBX Engage (VT-3), DBX Ravage (FX-2), and Geartec ESPYbicycle helmetsUnits: 4,600Distributor: Mackarl Enterprises Inc., of
Meirhaeghe at Sea Otter
Meirhaeghe arrives at a press conference in Nazareth Thursday
Meirhaeghe wins at world's last year
Former Jelly Belly rider Adam Bergman has accepted a provisional suspension from cycling pending review of a positive for EPO on April 6 of this year. Bergman, 23, accepted and began serving the provisional suspension on July 27, 2004. By accepting the provisional suspension, Bergman agreed not to compete in any competitions under the jurisdiction of UCI, USA Cycling or the United States Olympic Committee. According to the agreement, Bergman is not admitting guilt and will receive credit for the period of the time he has served the provisional suspension should a doping violation be
Simoni on the attack during stage 17 of the Tour
Bergman accepts provisional suspension for EPO positive
T-Mobile’s Jan Ullrich said he has to speak with his team manager about comments questioning his commitment. T-Mobile manager Walter Godefroot had criticized Ullrich, saying the 1997 Tour de France winner "cycled to live", while six-times Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong "lives for cycling" after the German failed to gain a top-two finish at the Tour for the first time in his career. "I cannot let that go," Ullrich said late on Monday on a television talk show. "You should ask the people who I work with and not someone like Walter Godefroot who I speak to on the telephone twice a year
Aggressive, maybe, but is it intimidation?
Before coming to Germany, I had a month-long break from racing. I took one week completely off the bike and then started to ramp up my training. I packed in some heavy mileage weeks, riding mostly with Michael each day. Riding with Michael pushes me into fitness, as he rides quite a bit faster than I generally do on my own. We would go out the door together each day, although often when we hit a major climb, or he needed to do some intensity, he would speed off ahead and I would keep going at my pace. It is neat to be able to share so much time together on the bike. Cycling has allowed us
GIRONA- Being home during the month of July for the first time in nine years felt a little strange to say the least. Watching theTour on television was something I had hoped would be reserved for retirement. But life throws you a curveball every so often. The trick is making the catch and hucking the ball back where it came from. I’m getting ready to do just that. Give me another week or so to mend. My wife and I traveled north to Paris to see the finish of the Tour.I stopped in my tracks when Haven informed me that I would need a “pass” to get near the finish line. I had never been a
Filippo Simeoni was questioned by investigators from the Italian drug squad on Tuesday over an incident between him and six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong during the race last Friday. The investigators grilled Simeoni for three hours about what happenedwhen Armstrongchased down an early attack by the Italian on the 18th stage of theTour last week. In an unusual move for a race leader confronted with a rider who isno threat to his overall lead, Armstrong had chased after the Domina Vacanzeteam rider who had made a breakaway and the pair exchanged words beforeSimeoni later dropped
Nicholas “Mickey” Francoise, national amateur and professional sprint champion between 1936 and 1940, died July 20 in a hospital in Glen Ridge, N.J., of heart complications. He was 86. Francoise also raced in the late 1930s in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia, where he and Billy Guyatt were popular rivals. In January 1939 Francoise captured the Grand Prix of Melbourne. A second-generation racer born in 1918 in Montclair, N.J., and trained by his father James, Francoise started racing at age 15 in 1933 as a member of the Bay View Wheelmen on the half-mile dirt horse track in Newark’s
David Millar, who is set to lose his world time-trial title due to doping, admitted in an interview published Tuesday that he took banned performance enhancer EPO, saying he opted to cheat after a poor season. The 27-year-old Scot, Britain's leading cyclist, told the Manchester Guardian that after struggling badly in the 2001 Tour de France he was introduced to drugs by a senior member of his Cofidis team. He was later taught how to inject EPO himself, and to make sure he was not caught. "You don't stop and think, or it's game over. When the line is crossed, it's crossed. It stops being a
More trips down the Champs-Élysées in Armstrong's future?
Ullrich's lone attack on stage 15 was eventually reeled in
Ullrich had a strong performance on l'Alpe d'Huez, but it was still only good enough for second.
Tour de Tech: Your questions
Faustino Muñoz of Liberty Seguros with the Tacx Cycle Spider Team stand
Postal's Geoff Brown with his Park stand
A 39/53 and a 14-15-16-17-18-19-20-21-22-23 took him to the top
Millar arrives with his lawyer Paul-Albert Iwens at Nanterre's courthouse on July 20.
Millar (C), arrives with his lawyer Paul-Albert Iwens at Nanterre's courthouse on July 20
Jan Ullrich has got only himself to blame for sub-par performance on the Tour de France which left him with his lowest placing ever in his seven starts. Eclipsed by his friend and teammate Andreas Klöden and up-and-coming CSC star Ivan Basso, T-Mobile's team leader ended the race in fourth, a massive nine minutes behind six-time winner Lance Armstrong. Despite being heralded as the 32-year-old American's main rival after his close second place last year, Ullrich disappointed from day one - on the 6.1km prologue in Liege he lost 15 seconds to the U.S. Postal leader, and from then on he never
Mondays. No, I don't have to go to work. Quite the opposite, but it still hurts. They (Mondays) have to be much worse for NFL players, but I'm feeling like I put the pads on for a few quarters. Flying home right now thinking of my bed and what kind of state I left the apartment in. And where is my car? I know that I parked it somewhere in Girona. I'm serious. Do I have coffee in the house? Ah man it's another holiday in Spain, so nothing will be open, so no milk for the coffee even if I do have beans. I've grown pretty used to being taken care of for the last month, but it’s time for
Givisiez, Switzerland, July 26th, 2004 - Joseba Beloki has signedto ride with the Scott sponsored Saunier Duval - Prodir Pro Cycling Teamfor the remainder of the 2004 season and for 2005. Beloki will start ridingfor the team in August, and intends on doing the Vuelta a España.Beloki finished second to Lance Armstrong in the 2002 Tour de France, andwas riding in a very strong position last year before his tubular tirecame off, causing a serious crash that took him out of the 2003 Tour deFrance.He skipped the 2004 Tour de France due to a lack of form and a contractualdispute with Brioches la
A dozen police officers wearing bulletproof vests were called to the home of Frank Vandenbroucke on Monday, after the Belgian cyclist apparently brandished a shotgun during an argument with his wife Sarah. Police entered the home of the Fassa Bortolo rider and after speaking to him for some time an ambulance was called to his residence at Nieuwkerke in northern Belgium. According to police sources, the two had been engaged in a heated argument when Frank Vandenbroucke grabbed a shotgun, reportedly threatening to commit suicide. Sarah Vandenbroucke left the home and sped off in her car and
COURSE: After a morning TGV train ride from Besançon, thepeloton will enjoy a slow promenade for the first couple of hours. Seriousracing should start with the steep Cat. 4 climb at Montfermeil, 25km beforereaching the circuit around the Champs-Élysées in downtownParis. The eight hectic laps of the 6.1km course should again end in a chaoticsprint finish. FAVORITES: Ya think maybe that McEwen will get it right this year? Of course, if Alessandro Petacchi makes it to Paris, as he says he will, McEwen will have a serious fight on his hands. HISTORY: Every edition of the
At long last, Paris
For those of you keeping track of the Tour de France at work, we're giving you another window to hide when the boss walks in. A Daily interactive Photo Gallery direct from the tour. To take full advantage, you'll need to have MacroMedia's Flash Player installed on your system. Go ahead, give it a try... and practice using that minimize button, too! AFP INTERACTIVE PHOTO GALLERY - High Bandwidth AFP INTERACTIVE PHOTO GALLERY - Low Bandwidth
The Postal posse in Paris
It was the day that everyone knew was coming for some time now. But the sight of American Lance Armstrong finally standing atop the podium as the first rider to win the Tour de France six times, gave everyone a chance to take in the history that he had now made real. Obviously, one of the first to be swept up by the occasion was the person who called Armstrong on his mobile telephone just as he stepped off the winners' podium. Tongues were wagging like new-born puppies as to who it could be. “Winning my first Tour (in 1999) was special; but this is unbelievable,” said Armstrong. So happy
The jersey winners
OVERALL STANDINGS - FINAL1. Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service, 83:36:022. Andréas KlÖden (G), T-Mobile, 06:193. Ivan Basso (I), CSC, 06:404. Jan Ullrich (G), T-Mobile, 08:505. Azevedo José (P), U.S. Postal Service, 14:306. Francisco Mancebo (Sp), Illes Balears-Banesto, 18:017. Georg Totschnig (A), Gerolsteiner, 18:278. Carlos Sastre (Sp), CSC, 19:519. Levi Leipheimer (USA), Rabobank, 20:1210. Oscar Pereiro Sio (Sp), Phonak, 22:54 11. Pietro Caucchioli (I), Alessio-Bianchi, 24:2112. Christophe Moreau (F), Crédit Agricole, 24:3613. Vladimir Karpets (Rus), Illes Balears-Banesto,
Racing in the shadow of the Arc d'Triomphe
Leblanc: Armstrong big, but Tour is biggerTour de France director Jean-Marie Leblanc paid homage to record six-time winner Lance Armstrong but insisted the world's most famous cycling race was bigger than the men who have won it. Asked if Armstrong was the greatest Tour champion ever, Leblanc said: "Figures say yes. He's the only one to have won it six times. He won stages of all kinds, time trials, mountain stages. He's an accomplished champion, but he's not invincible. "Except for last year, he has never showed any signs of weakness. His reign can be explained by his individual strength
Only a few corners to go
Lance Armstrong never stops learning, and the 2003 Tour de France taught him what it’s like to struggle. He’d battled back from cancer and adversity before, but hadn’t struggled like that during any of his four prior Tour wins. Last year, Armstrong never really had full control of the race, was vulnerable to attack and on the edge of losing the yellow jersey every day. Coming back to the Tour in 2004 was never a question, and from the moment he started training, he focused on regaining an undisputed position as the strongest man in the Tour de France. The tests we did with Lance in the
Five-time winner Bernard Hinault congratulates the six-time champ
Photographer Casey Gibson followed this year's Tour de France from the prologue in Liège to the finale in Paris – here's a sampling of what he saw through the lens on the Champs-Élysées as Lance Armstrong scored his historic sixth consecutive victory.
The anthem
Australian Robbie McEwen couldn't hide his joy after holding off the threat of Norwegian Thor Hushovd as he claimed back the Tour de France green jersey for the race's points competition on Sunday. McEwen, flanked by his wife and his son Ewan, admitted he'd missed his family over three weeks of tough racing at the end of which he picked up two stages and the green jersey he won for the first time in 2002. "It's really special. It's been a few week and I miss them. I've been looking forward to this day to see my wife and my son, and to top it off I win the green jersey," said McEwen.
McEwen's main concern was Hushovd's location in the sprint
Standing-room-only downtown pub crowds wildly cheered hometown hero Lance Armstrong here Sunday as the American captured a record sixth consecutive Tour de France. In an otherwise empty city center, the Texas capitol came alive in late morning as supporters watched live television coverage of the final stage of the epic showdown in sports bars. Cyclists in yellow jerseys glided down Fourth Street while a city bus, painted bright yellow, featured a portrait of Armstrong and the words, "Tour de Lance" while newspaper racks featured the phrase of the hour - "Go Lance Go!" At Fado, an Irish
Ten days in the yellow jersey, Voeckler became the new darling of France
STAGE 20 July 25 Montereau-Fault-Yonne - Paris Champs-Élysées (102.531mi/165km)
STAGE 20 July 25 Montereau-Fault-Yonne - Paris Champs-Élysées (102.531mi/165km)
STAGE 20 July 25 Montereau-Fault-Yonne - Paris Champs-Élysées (102.531mi/165km)
Boonen gets the stage, but McEwen stays in green
McEwen must be pooped after winning another green jersey – he had to put both feet on the ground to pop a final wheelie
Lance totes 'em up
Leblanc and Armstrong chat
Robbie McEwen does not now have to be asked how he is feeling every year on the eve of the final Tour de France stage which brings the peloton into Paris. The 32-year-old Lotto rider, for the third year in a row, will ride around the chic quartiers surrounding the Champs Elysees knowing that at the end of the day he could pull on the green jersey for a second time since 2002. McEwen won the points classification's coveted prize two years ago before losing it on the final stage to Baden Cooke last year. This year, he will have to defend a small lead, of 11 points against Norwegian Thor
Can someone please tell Robbie McEwen to retire the Big Fat Helmet™ thathe and his teammates wore during Tour de France time trials? It is physically painful for me to look at that thing. Not only is his helmet just plain dorky looking, there isn’t a doubt in my mind that it is an extremely slow helmet and ultimately is a detriment to his time-trial performance. What would make me say such a thing? Well, I was recently lucky enough to spend some time in the Allied Aerospacewind tunnel where I got to tunnel test some one-piece aero bars.During that entry I also got to stick my long-legged and
STAGE 19 July 24 Besançon - Besançon (TT) (37.284mi/60km)
STAGE 19 July 24 Besançon - Besançon (TT) (37.284mi/60km)
STAGE 19 July 24 Besançon - Besançon (TT) (37.284mi/60km)
Armstrong powers to yet another victory in the final time trial
Armstrong powers to another stage win and virtually cinches a sixth straight Tour
Ullrich finished second to Armstrong, but will miss the podium
Basso gave it his all, but slipped back a spot on GC
Landis had the best time before the big dogs started barking
COURSE: This is the Tour’s most difficult final time trial since1994, when stage 19 went over two Cat. 3 hills and finished atop the Cat.1 climb to Avoriaz. None of the climbs on this circular course at Besançon is categorized, but the constant ups and downs, and the frequent turns, could cause large time gaps. FAVORITES: Armstrong, Ullrich and Hamilton will be vying to winthe stage (and the Tour), while Mayo, Basso and Menchov will be tryingto hang on to their GC positions. HISTORY: In 1963, Jacques Anquetil clinched his fourth Tour victoryby winning the 54.5km stage 19 time trial from
Vande Velde's Tour: Venga! Venga! Venga!