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    Displaying 18641 - 18720 of approximately 22576 results

    Tour de France

    Andrew Hood’s Tour de France Notebook, stage 4

    Garmin party: Garmin-Chipotle was in a good mood today. The riders raced with a yellow dossard because they stood atop the team GC while Will Frischkorn raced with a red background on his number after winning Monday’s most aggressive rider’s prize. Frischkorn said he felt Monday’s effort in his legs, but admitted he didn’t go too hard in Tuesday’s TT.

    Published Jul 8, 2008
    Tour de France

    Live Coverage – Stage 4 Tour de France, 2008

    • 05:35 AM: Tune in Tuesday morning at 8:00 a.m. EDT

      for live coverage of stage 4

    • 02:06 PM: Good day and welcome

      to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the fourth stage of the 95th edition of the Tour de France, a 29.5km individual time trial in Cholet.

      Published Jul 8, 2008
    Tour de France

    Stage 3 – By the numbers

    Stage 3, Saint Malo to Nantes, 208km

    Weather
    Intermittent showers, southwesterly winds, gusts up to 60kph, highs in 60s Stage winner
    Samuel Dumoulin (Cofidis) won out of the winning four-man breakaway featuring American Will Frischkorn (Garmin-Chipotle), the Tour’s first winning break this year. The diminutive Dumoulin, one of the smallest riders in the peloton, played it perfectly in the final 1.5km. Tour-rookie Frischkorn came within a wheel length of victory as Dumoulin became the first French winner of the 95th Tour. (5h05:27 at 40.857kph)

    Published Jul 7, 2008
    Road Racing

    Tour de France stage 3: Will Frischkorn gets on the podium

    Samuel Dumoulin (Cofidis) outsprinted three breakaway mates to win stage 3 of the Tour de France on Monday, while Romain Feillu (Agritubel) took the yellow jersey from Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne). "It was phenomenal to win the stage today. It was something you dream about,” said Dumoulin. “The priority was to make the breakaway stay clear. We had some common interests in the breakaway and we worked well together. I knew the yellow jersey wasn't possible so I started to think about winning the stage.”[nid:79536] Feillu was elated, too.

    Published Jul 7, 2008
    Road

    Team Columbia’s Ina-Yoko Teutenberg wins her second stage at the Giro Feminine.

    Ina-Yoko Teutenberg took her second consecutive stage of the Giro d'Italia Femminile Monday, defending the Maglia Rosa going into stage four. "I'm psyched to win the the pink jersey and be able to ride with it another day," said Teutenberg. "We couldn't have had a better start in the Giro and hopefully we can keep playing a big role in the race." The flat stage from Ca’ Tiepolo Porto Tolle to Rosolina Mare was hot and relatively fast with cross winds in the last ten kilometers. Team Columbia started the lead out for Teutenberg with three kilometers remaining in the race.

    Published Jul 7, 2008
    Tour de France

    Live Coverage – Stage 3 Tour de France, 2008

    • 12:44 PM: Good day and welcome

      to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the third stage of the 95th edition of the Tour de France, a 208km race from St. Malo to Nantes.

      Published Jul 7, 2008
    News

    2008 Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic, stage 4: No time for a salute! Tina Pic (Colavita/Sutter Home) takes the sprint.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Road Racing

    Cheatley and Wamsley wrap up Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic wins

    National criterium champion Tina Pic (Colavita-Sutter Home) won Sunday's Workers’ Credit Union Criterium, the final stage of the Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic stage race in Massachusetts. Pic outsprinted Cheerwine's Laura Van Gilder and ProMan's Megan Guarnier to take the win. [nid:79501] In the men's race, John Murphy (Health Net- Maxxis) outsprinted Emile Abraham and Alejandro Borrajo (Colavita). After four days of racing, the overall winners were Cheerwine's Catherine Cheatley and Colavita's Kyle Wamsley.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    News

    Laura McCaughey (Juice Plus-NC Racing) won the field sprint with Tibco’s Sarah Caravella second.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Road Racing

    Tour de France stage 2: Hushovd gets the win

    Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) shot out of a chaotic bunch dash to win stage 2 of the 2008 Tour de France on Sunday. Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne) finished safely near the front of the peloton to retain the overall lead. “Yesterday was not a great finish for me,” said Hushovd. “I felt stronger today in the final today. I like Brittany; it's a bit like Norway, always windy and rainy. Maybe I'm not a pure sprinter like Mark Cavendish, but after some hard climbs like today, I usually have some strength left, so maybe that's why I was able to win today."

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Road

    Hekman, McCaughey win Iron Hill Twilight Criterium

    Toshiba-Santo strongman Mark Hekman showed the form he displayed in 2007 by winning Saturday’s fourth annual Iron Hill Twilight Criterium in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Hekman, who held the lead in the 2007 USA CRITS Series until a crash at Downers Grove ended his pursuit of the title, lapped this year’s Iron Hill field with 20 laps remaining in the 60-lap event, run on a 1km course. “I got away on the 10th lap and just crushed it." Hekman said. "This is a really technical course with the hill on the back side and I thought I was going to die.”

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Tour de France

    It’s the wind (and the hill), stupid!

    Anyone who follows American politics knows that in the build-up to the 1992 presidential elections, Arkansas governor Bill Clinton had the message “It’s the economy, stupid!” pinned to a wall in his campaign headquarters. By keeping that mantra in mind, Clinton came from behind to win the Democratic nomination, and then the Presidency. In these opening days of the 2008 Tour de France, the message to would-be winners is: “It’s the wind, stupid!”

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    News

    Hushovd leads out the sprint, with two Columbia riders in pursuit.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Tour de France

    Andrew Hood’s Tour de France Notebook, stage 2

    A SECOND IS A MILE: Alejandro Valverde’s one-second grip on the yellow jersey might seem slim, but it should keep him in the maillot jaune going into Tuesday’s first time trial. Because the Tour eliminated time bonuses in this year’s race, Valverde simply had to follow the wheels in Sunday’s rush to the line into Saint-Brieuc. Monday’s easier profile should assure another bunch sprint and another day in yellow for Valverde.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Road Culture

    Will Frischkorn’s Tour de France diary, stage 2

    This part of France, Brittany, is a cycling-mad area. I could write again about the crowds, as they were just as impressive as yesterday, if not more so, and still blowing my mind.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Tour de France

    Tour de France leader Alejandro Valverde’s custom Pinarello Prince

    When Caisse D’Epargne superstar Alejandro Valverde stormed past Columbia’s Kim Kircken in the last 200 meters of the opening stage of the 2008 Tour de France he did it on a brand new bike. The winning bike wasn’t new in the sense of a new design — it is the same bike as his teammates ride, a Pinarello Prince — but it was new to Valverde. In fact, it was his first ride on the new bike.

    Matt Pacocha
    Published Jul 6, 2008
    Tour de France

    2008 Tour de France, Stage 2: Live Updates

    • 01:02 PM: Good day and welcome

      to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the second stage of the 95th edition of the Tour de France, covering 164.5km from Auray to St. Brieuc.

      Published Jul 6, 2008
    Road Racing

    Wrubleski wins Canadian road title

    Alex Wrubleski (Webcor) won the second Canadian national road title of her career on Saturday when she outsprinted Leigh Hobson (Cheerwine) and Felicia Gomez (Aaron's) after 114km of racing. Julie Beveridge (Aaron's) took the under-23 title after finishing seventh in the lead group. A nontechnical 28.5km course with no major climbs meant that the only way to reduce the number of contenders was through attacks, and time trial champion Anne Samplonius (Quebec) did just that on the second of four laps with a strong move along a crosswind section.

    Published Jul 6, 2008
    News

    2008 Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic, stage 3: Kyle Wamsley (Colavita/Sutter Home) wins the uphill bunch sprint for the victory.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    News

    2008 Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic, stage 3: Robin Farina (Cheerwine) defeats her breakaway companion in the uphill sprint.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Road Racing

    2008 Tour de France: Valverde leaps uphill to stage win and yellow jersey

    With his Pinarello painted bright yellow and red, Spain’s new national champion Alejandro Valverde clawed his way up to and past an attacking Kim Kirchen (Columbia) on the steeps of the Côte de Cadoudal to take the first stage and yellow jersey of the 95th Tour de France.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Mountain

    Paulissen, Dahle-Flesja take Marathon world titles

    Belgium’s Roel Paulissen and Gunn-Rita Dahle Flesjå of Norway have won the 2008 UCI marathon mountain biking world championships, in Villabassa, Italy on Saturday. The 119 km course wound a long lap through the Südtirol Dolomiti area of northern Italy.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Andrew Hood’s Tour de France Notebook, stage 1

    BANG-BAM-BOOM: Tour brass will surely preen with pride at the huge crowds lining the route across the heart of Brittany, but not everyone was happy that the opening prologue was ditched in favor of a hectic, nervous road stage. Since 1967, the Tour started with some form of a time trial. This year, Christian Prudhomme wanted to shake things up and simply decided to let them sprint for the yellow jersey.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Stapleton: Kirchen beaten but we’re not

    Team Columbia manager Bob Stapleton is looking to Britain's Mark Cavendish for a Tour de France stage victory after his team missed out on an historic first stage win here Saturday. Stapleton's team have come to the Tour looking to fight on several fronts, but at the start of the 2008 race - being held without a prologue for the first time in 41 years — he was reminded that they'll get nothing for free.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Robbie McEwen forgoes an 11-speed bike on the Tour’s first stage

    Robbie McEwen’s bike was lined up unassumingly, mid-pack, among his teammates' rigs in front of a roped off and guarded Silence-Lotto bus. All of the extra protection was meant to protect the race favorite — McEwen's teammate Cadel Evans — but McEwen’s bike benefited. He was suppose to start the race on Campagnolo’s new 11-speed group, but instead he unassumingly rode away from the team bus on a 10-speed bike. [nid:79347]

    Matt Pacocha
    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Cadel Evans says going from Tour de France favorite to victor won’t be easy

    On the eve of his fourth Tour de France, Silence-Lotto’s Cadel Evans told a crowded hotel lobby that though he might be the pre-race favorite heading into the race, due to his second-place finish last year, given this year’s list of contenders, actually winning the race is something else entirely.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Live Coverage – Stage 1 Tour de France, 2008

    • 06:48 PM: Good day and welcome

      To VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the 1st stage of the 95th Tour de France, 197.5km race from Brest to Plumec.

      180 riders rolled out of Brest this afternoon, exiting the neutral zone at 12:31 and begining a long day in the saddle, an unusual way to start the Tour. This is only the first time since 1966 that the Tour de France has not started with some form of time trial, usually a short sub-8km prologue.

      Published Jul 5, 2008
    Road Culture

    BC Bike Race: A week of the sweetest pain.

    Editor's Note: Subaru/Gary Fisher pro endurance racer Nat Ross has been sharing daily diaries from the BC Bike Race with VeloNews.com readers. Today, Ross reports on the final stage in Whistler. We just finished the 7th stage in the 2nd Annual BC Bike Race and my body is pretty worked. My legs feel great because I was getting daily massages, and they are accustomed to high mileage in the summer months, but everything else on my body is sore.

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    News

    After contesting the intermediate sprint, Colin Jaskiewicz (CCB Volkswagen) touched wheels and went down

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    News

    A pair of riders jump off the front of the field for the points sprint

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Tour de France

    Starting another Tour

    Editor’s note: Every day during the 95th Tour de France, VeloNews editorial director John Wilcockson will be writing his “Inside the Tour” column. It will have a more personal slant than most of the pieces he writes. There will be comments on each day’s tactics, insights on what to look for the next day, and stories he has witnessed in the 40 years he has been reporting the race. This first column includes thoughts on the opening stage and what to looking for on the wild roads of Brittany over this first weekend. * * *

    Published Jul 5, 2008
    Road Racing

    Cheatley, MacGregor score wins at Fitchburg

    Cheerwine Cycling has all but dominated the first two stages of the women’s race at the Fitchburg-Longsjo Classic. After winning Thursday’s time trial, the team took the top two spots in Friday’s 69-mile road race, with Catherine Cheatley and Kristin McGrath finishing one-two. The last step on the podium was taken by Kathleen Billington (Connecticut Coast).

    Published Jul 4, 2008
    Tour de France

    A Tour with many questions, but few answers

    When Lance Armstrong was winning the Tour every year, the only real question before the race was not “Who will win?” but “Can anyone get close to him?” Now, after two totally unpredictable Tours, both of them ruined by doping controversies, it looks like we’re about to start on another Magical Mystery Tour. All the same, it’s still fun trying to peek into the crystal ball.

    Published Jul 4, 2008
    Tour de France

    Team Columbia presents Tour squad, new jersey

    For the second consecutive day, an American team kicked off its Tour de France by unveiling a fresh jersey design created for a new title sponsor. Team Columbia, the former T-Mobile team referred to as Team High Road for the first half of the 2008 season, presented its new look and new sponsor in front of a packed press conference at the Penfeld Parc des Expositions in Brest, France, where the Tour will start Saturday morning.

    Published Jul 4, 2008
    Road

    These eight favorites will battle for victory in the 2008 Tour de France

    One of these eight men will win the 2008 Tour. Here, we break down each of their chances based on four key metrics.

    CADEL EVANS (Aus), Silence-Lotto

    Climbing Though not a pure climber, Evans is consistent and economical on all types of climbs. He rode last year’s Tour with or just behind the leaders in the mountains. This year he has been more assertive, especially in his winning ride at the Coppi & Bartali Week. Time Trialing

    Published Jul 4, 2008
    Tour de France

    Absences make the Tour … more interesting?

    Pro cycling fans may find themselves unclear who to root for at this year’s Tour de France. The list of familiar faces absent from this year’s race is as long as it is top-heavy. The exclusion of the Astana team of defending champion Alberto Contador and teammates Levi Leipheimer and Andreas Kloden means three former podium finishers will sit out this year. It's the first instance in modern history where the previous year’s Tour winner was eligible to race, yet not invited to defend his title.

    Published Jul 3, 2008
    Road

    USA CRITS series comes to Pennsylvania for the Iron Hill Twilight Criterium

    The 4th annual Iron Hill Twilight Criterium, Saturday in West Chester, Pennsylvania, is up next in the USA CRITS Series. Teams including TOSHIBA-Santo presented by Herbalife, Richmond Pro Cycling, Colavita Sutter Home presented by Cooking Light, Team Inferno Racing, Time Pro Cycling, Locos Grill & Pub, and Kelly Benefit Strategies will send their riders to the starting line in the men’s match-up.

    Published Jul 3, 2008
    Road

    Pros arrive in Massachusetts Thursday’s start of Fitchburg-Longsjo Stage Race

    The inaugural New England Race Week wraps up with the four-day Fitchburg-Longsjo stage race in Massachusetts. The new race series includes eight days of top-tier racing in four Northeastern states. Back on the NRC calendar for 2008, the 49th running of the Fitchburg-Longsjo stage race begins Thursday with a stacked line-up of former winners and top pro riders.

    Published Jul 2, 2008
    Tour de France

    The race for the green jersey

    The positive out-of-competition test for cocaine that put defending points champion Tom Boonen out of the Tour de France, and the absence of the top Italian sprinters Alessandro Petacchi and Daniele Bennati, has opened up this year’s green jersey competition; while the decision by exciting newcomer Mark Cavendish to start the Tour rather than focus entirely on his Olympic track preparations gives new interest to the early sprint stages.

    Published Jul 2, 2008
    Road

    USA Cycling names Olympic squad

    USA Cycling named 21 of its 24 nominees to the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team on Tuesday, including all 16 men’s athletes across the disciplines of road cycling, track cycling, mountain biking BMX. The governing body also named five automatic women’s nominees across the four Olympic disciplines of cycling. Of the 21 named on Tuesday, 12 earned automatic nominations under USA Cycling’s Olympic selection procedures, while nine other riders were nominated to the Olympic Team by a nine-person selection committee according to USA Cycling’s Principles of Discretion.

    Published Jul 1, 2008
    News

    2008 Manhattan Beach Grand Prix: Brooke Miller (Team Tibco) celebrates through the line after a close sprint.

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    News

    2008 Manhattan Beach Grand Prix: Rahsaan Bahati (Rock Racing) takes the sprint on the line for the second year in a row.

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    Road

    Tibco’s Brook Miller and Rock Racing’s Rahsaan Bahati win Sunday’s Manhattan Beach Grand Prix in California.

    Rock Racing's Rahsaan Bahati won his second Manhattan Beach Grand Prix on Sunday, outsprinting Ricardo Escuela (Successful Living), and Brad Huff (Jelly Belly). “I had a lot of trust in my teammates and they delivered,” Bahati said before being congratulated by Rock Racing Team Owner Michael Ball and a host of teammates and cheering fans. “With a lap to go, I was concerned about us getting swarmed. But our lead out was tremendous. The guys started sprinting with a kilometer to go.”

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    Road Racing

    Veilleux clinches Tour of Pennsylvania as Holloway wins finale

    David Veilleux (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast) wrapped up the overall at the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania on Sunday as Daniel Holloway (VMG-Felt) collected the final stage win in downtown Pittsburgh. Holloway — who also won the tour’s opening criterium Tuesday in Philadelphia — sprinted to victory in the finale ahead of Keven Lacombe (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast) and Erik Barlevav (Time Pro Cycling). The 50-mile race, run on a 1.5-mile, four-corner circuit, was interrupted by a tornado warning and heavy rains that required spectators to take cover.

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    Road Culture

    Nat Ross’s BC Bike Race Diary – Day 1

    Editor's Note: Subaru/Gary Fisher pro endurance racer Nat Ross will be sharing daily diaries from the BC Bike Race with VeloNews.com readers. This is the first installment.

    Stage 1 Shawnigan Lake to Lake Cowichan

    Grass attack! The race gun went off at 9am and all the 200 racers in this year's BC Bike Race headed out on two prologue laps around Shawnigan Middle School. These laps will go down in history and will be known from this day forward as the Grass Attack.

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    Road Racing

    Team Mona Vie Cannondale. dubbed Team Daddy, takes the lead in British Columbia

    Under brilliant blue skies and a hot summer sun, the BC Bike Race start gun fired to launch more than 400 riders from around the world into the first stage of the second annual multi-stage mountain bike event. Over the next 7 days, racers will cover stages totalling more than 550 kilometers as they race a combination of singletrack and logging roads from Victoria to Whistler.

    Published Jun 29, 2008
    News

    2008 Tour of Pennsylvania, stage 4: David Velileux of Kelly Benefit Strategies /Medifast wins the sprint into Latrobe.

    Published Jun 28, 2008
    Road Racing

    Veilleux takes stage 4 of the Tour of Pennsylvania while Van Heerden takes overall lead

    Kelly Benefit's Canadian strong man David Veilleux won Friday's soggy fourth stage of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania, surviving torrential rain and nearly 7,000 feet of climbing to win the sprint ahead of breakaway companions into Latrobe, Pennsylvania. South Africa’s Christoff Van Heerden (Konica Minolta) finished third and moved into the race lead. [nid:78955]

    Published Jun 27, 2008
    Road

    The National Racing Calendar spreads out this weekend, with events in California and Rhode Island.

    The last weekend in June will see the National Racing Calendar split between coasts with a pair of big money criteriums. For the right coasters, the Cox Charities Cycling Classic in Providence, Rhode Island will be making its debut on the men’s NRC calendar on Saturday while the West Coast will host the 47th edition of the Manhattan Beach Grand Prix in Manhattan Beach, California, on Sunday.

    Bahati guides us through the bent paperclip by the ocean

    Published Jun 27, 2008
    Road Racing

    Driscoll wins stage 3 of the Tour of Pennsylvania

    Fiordifrutta’s Jamie Driscoll took a slim victory in the longest stage of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania on Thursday. The 168-kilometer stage was made even more difficult when strong winds and rain threatened the international field at the starting line in Camp Hill. While the sun broke through as riders lined up, but the strong winds continued to disrupt the day.

    Published Jun 26, 2008
    Tour de France

    Liquigas releases Tour roster

    Liquigas will lineup without green-jersey candidate Daniele Bennati for next week’s Tour de France. The Italian sprinter has been forced out of the Tour after problems with his Achilles tendon that flared up during Giro d’Italia, where he won three stages and the points jersey.

    Published Jun 26, 2008
    Road

    Irish tour back for second edition

    The Tour of Ireland is back for 2008 and both top-level American teams will be starting the five-day, five-stage race across the green hills of the Emerald Isle set for August 27-31. Team Columbia, with likely starts from Mark Cavendish and Michael Rogers, and Garmin-Slipstream both confirmed they would be among 16 international teams lining up in Dublin.

    Published Jun 26, 2008
    Road Racing

    Kevin Lacombe wins stage of the Tour of Pennsylvania, while Steven Van Vooren maintains his overall lead.

    Canadian all-rounder Keven Lacombe (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast/USA) jumped ahead of a late-race, 18-rider breakaway to triumph in stage 2 of the American Eagle Outfitters® Tour of Pennsylvania on Wednesday. LaCombe took his first stage win ahead of the South African speedster Christoff Van Heerden (Konica Minolta) and Ryan Baumann (Sakonnet Technology).

    Published Jun 25, 2008
    Road Racing

    Holloway scores win at Tour of Pennsylvania

    Philadelphia’s downtown cycling fans were offered a second round of excitement Tuesday afternoon when the current U.S. national criterium champion, Daniel Holloway (VMG-Felt) lit up the final 200-meters in Stage 1B of the American Eagle Outfitters Tour of Pennsylvania presented by Highmark Healthy High 5. Holloway captured a convincing field sprint victory in this elite U25 competition ahead of Jacob Keough (Kelly Benefit Strategies-Medifast) and Christoff Van Heerden of South Africa (Konica Minolta Continental) in the 25-lap criterium of day one.

    Published Jun 24, 2008
    Road

    Tour of Missouri 2008 to visit new towns

    The second year of the Tour of Missouri will capitalize on the success of the inaugural race, again visiting Kansas City and St. Louis, but will also bring the action to new towns. The seven-day race from St. Joseph to St. Louis will kick off September 8 and feature squads from Team Columbia (formerly High Road) and Garmin-Chipotle (formerly Slipstream). Here is a breakdown of the stages. Stage 1 – Monday, September 8 St. Joseph to Kansas City, 90 miles

    Published Jun 23, 2008
    Road

    Live Coverage – Stage 9 Tour de Suisse, 2008

    • 01:58 PM: Good day and welcome

      to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the ninth stage of the Tour de Suisse, a 168-kilometer race from Altdorf to Bern.

      Today's features rolling terrain, with two Category 4 climbs, the first above the village of Hueb at 142.8km and a climb to Aargauerstalden, at 159.9km. The peloton rolled out of Altdorf - the start of yesterday's hillclimb - about an hour ago.

      Published Jun 22, 2008
    News

    2008 Tour de Nez, stage 5: Sara Bamberger (Cheerwine) out sprinted her breakaway companions for the victory

    Published Jun 22, 2008
    News

    2008 Tour de Nez, stage 5: Roman Kilun (HealthNet) sprints home for the win

    Published Jun 22, 2008
    Road Racing

    Olson, Bamberger wrap up the Tour de Nez

    Stage five of the 2008 Tour de Nez, a 45-mile up and down affair in and around the Village at Northstar resort, gave onlookers one last chance to see the main protagonists of the stage race fight it out on the tough technical course. The 1.75-mile loop took riders over stretches of the cobblestones that run through the village, lending an old-school feel to the race.

    Published Jun 22, 2008
    Mountain

    Buhl earns U.S. Gold in Four Cross

    Exhausted, sunburned but smiling in her new rainbow jersey — that’s how Melissa Buhl spent her Saturday evening. The Arizona native had a jam-packed schedule on the sun-baked penultimate day of the 2008 UCI world mountain bike championships in Val di Sole, Italy. First Buhl tackled the pro women’s downhill, speeding down the steep 1.40-mile track with the 10th fastest time of the day.

    Published Jun 21, 2008
    Mountain

    Buhl earns U.S. Gold in Four Cross

    Exhausted, sunburned but smiling in her new rainbow jersey — that’s how Melissa Buhl spent her Saturday evening. The Arizona native had a jam-packed schedule on the sun-baked penultimate day of the 2008 UCI world mountain-bike championships in Val di Sole, Italy. First Buhl tackled the pro women’s downhill, speeding down the steep 1.40-mile track with the 10th fastest time of the day.

    Published Jun 21, 2008
    Road

    Barry, Hesjedal hoping to end Canadian drought at Tour

    It’s been more than 10 years since a Canadian has lined up for the Tour de France. That’s likely to change in 2008 as it’s expected that not one, but two Canadians could be lining up in Brest to end Canada’s Tour drought that dates back to 1997 with Gordon Fraser. Ryder Hesjedal and Michael Barry are both hoping to earn Tour berths on Garmin-Chipotle and Team Columbia, respectively.

    Published Jun 21, 2008
    Road

    Boonen wins in comeback race

    Tom Boonen (Quick Step) returned to the spotlight for the right reasons Friday after blazing to victory in the 170km fourth stage at the Ster Elektrotoer in Holland. The Belgian classics star made headlines earlier this month after he tested positive for cocaine in an out-of-competition test that forced him out of next month’s Tour de France, but he decided to keep racing rather than retreat from increasing media pressure.

    Published Jun 20, 2008
    Road Racing

    CSC’s Fabian Cancellara wins stage 7 of the Tour de Suisse with a 5k solo effort.

    CSC's world time trial champion, Fabian Cancellara, won the seventh stage of the Tour de Suisse on Friday with a trademark solo attack in the final kilometers. Just like Cancellara's win at this year's Milan-San Remo and last July's stage 3 of the Tour de France, Cancellara attacked as the top sprinters were gearing up for a field sprint, and held them off for a narrow victory in a daring display of raw power.

    Published Jun 20, 2008
    Road

    Live Coverage – Stage 7 Tour de Suisse, 2008

    • 02:22 PM: Good day and welcome

      Coverage of the seventh stage of the 2008 Tour de Suisse, a 170.6-kilometer race from Gruyeres to Lyss.

      Published Jun 20, 2008
    Road Culture

    Olympic hopeful Adam Craig reports on his world championship week, so far.

    I've been tossing around the idea of trying to "move" to Italy one of these days. I was really only half serious. But now, as I sit here writing this from our balcony overlooking the Torrente (river) Nocem, about to go eat delicious pizza once again, I'm getting a bit more serious. It's real nice here.

    Published Jun 20, 2008
    News

    Tour De Nez Stage 3: Roman Kilun (HealthNet) sprinted home for the victory

    Published Jun 20, 2008
    Tour de France

    Hunter, Soler lead Barloworld at Tour

    Barloworld is hoping this year’s Tour de France is as good as last year’s. In 2007, the wild-card team was one of the Tour’s biggest surprises, winning a sprint stage with Robbie Hunter and a mountain stage and the King of the Mountains jersey with breakout Colombian Mauricio Soler. For this year, the team is heading into its second Tour with quiet ambitions that things will be just as good.

    Published Jun 19, 2008
    Road Racing

    Kirchen takes the lead of the Tour de Suisse after winning the sixth stage.

    Luxembourg's Kim Kirchen, riding for the High Road team, surged into the overall lead of the Tour of Switzerland after winning the sixth stage on Thursday. [nid:78578] The stage was a 188km race from Ambri to Verbier, punctuated by two major climbs, the hors categorie Nufenenpass early in the race and the Category 1 finishing climb to Verbier.

    Published Jun 19, 2008
    Road Racing

    Bissell’s Steven Howard wins the first stage of the Tour de Nez.

    The Tour de Nez, a five-stage race that bills itself as "the Coolest Race in America," got underway Wednesday with a criterium at a Reno, Nevada, casino. The Bissell team gave Michigan's Steven Howard a perfect lead out, setting him up for a bike-length win ahead of Riccardo Escuela (Successful Living) and Eric Wohlberg (Symmetrics). [nid:77952]

    Published Jun 19, 2008
    Road

    Tejay Van Garderen, 19, a development team rider, places second at the Circuito Montañes stage race.

    American Tejay Van Garderen finished second overall at the Circuito Montañes, an eight-stage UCI 2.2-ranked race in Spain that concluded Tuesday. Van Garderen, 19, was competing for his Rabobank Continental squad, which also earned the overall team title. It was Van Garderen's second podium finish at a UCI stage race this season. He was also second overall and won a stage at last month's Fleche du Sud in Luxembourg, where he was also best young rider and took the points competition.

    Published Jun 18, 2008
    Road

    Live Coverage – Stage 4 Tour de Suisse, 2008

    • 01:13 PM: Good day and welcome

      To VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the fourth stage of the 2008 Tour de Suisse, a70.7km ride from Gossau to Domat.

      The peloton is slated to roll off of the start line at 2:20 p.m. local time, with the formal start at the end of the neutral zone at about 2:27 p.m. We'll begin our live coverage a few minutes before the start.

      Published Jun 18, 2008
    Road Racing

    France upsets Switzerland in the first event of the 2008 Mountain Bike World Championships.

    France’s four-person squad of Jean-Christoph Peraud, Arnaud Jouffroy, Laurence Leboucher and Alexis Vuillermoz stormed to a convincing win in the first event of the 2008 UCI mountain bike world championships, the team relay. The French led from start to finish, and stomped pre-race favorites Switzerland by more than two minutes. “It was very challenging at the start because [the Swiss] were favored to win,” Peraud said with the aid of a translator. [nid:77862]

    Published Jun 17, 2008
    Road Racing

    Robbie McEwen wins again at the Tour de Suisse

    Silence-Lotto's Robbie McEwen won a sprint finish in the 170km fourth stage of the Tour of Switzerland on Tuesday for his second consecutive stage win. The 35-year-old McEwen crossed the line ahead of Spaniard Oscar Freire of Rabobank and German Gerald Ciolek of High Road in exactly the same order as in Monday's third stage. [nid:77868]

    Published Jun 17, 2008
    News

    Phinney posts world pursuit mark

    American Taylor Phinney, the 2007 world junior time trial champion, set a new world junior pursuit record Monday at the ADT Event Center velodrome in Carson, California. Phinney’s time of 3:16.589 in the 3000-meter individual pursuit broke Australian Michael Ford’s four-year-old record of 3:17.775. It was the first world record set at the ADT Event Center — the same track where Phinney won a pursuit World Cup in January.

    Published Jun 16, 2008
    News

    NVGP Stage 6 – An exhausted David Veilleux (Kelly Benefit Strategies/Medifast) sprints

    Published Jun 16, 2008
    Road Racing

    Silence-Lotto’s Robbie McEwen wins stage 3 of the Tour du Suisse.

    Silence-Lotto's Aussie sprinter Robbie McEwen won Monday's third stage of the tour of Switzerland, outsprinting Rabobank's Oscar Freire and High Road's Gerald Ciolek. "Leif Hoste and Greg Van Avermaet did well for me on the sprint," said McEwen. "It's exactly the tactic that we discussed this morning. "It's one of the first times that I've sprinted with the two of them and it worked well." This win, he said, "was good for confidence ahead of the Tour de France."

    Published Jun 16, 2008
    Road

    Live Coverage – Stage 3 Tour de Suisse, 2008

    • 01:44 PM: Our Live Coverage begins at 8:40 a.m. EDT (U.S.)

      Good day and welcome to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the third stage of the 2008 Tour de Suisse, a 155-kilometer race from Flums to Gossau.

      Published Jun 16, 2008
    News

    2008 Harlem Cycling Classic: Barlevav sprints against Rock Racing’s Rashaan Bahati

    Published Jun 16, 2008
    Road Racing

    Time’s Eric Barlevav wins the 35th annual Harlem Classic in a photo finish — then crashes.

    [nid:77758][nid:77759][nid:77754][nid:77755] Erik Barlevav of the Time Pro Cycling team scored the biggest win of his young career with a narrow advantage win over Rock Racing's Rahsaan Bahati on Sunday at the Harlem Cycling Classic. Barlevav's final effort was so intense that he lost control of his bicycle and crashed just after the finish line. The first-year professional managed to get up unassisted and take a victory lap with a bouquet of flowers.

    Published Jun 16, 2008
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