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    Displaying 20401 - 20480 of approximately 22566 results

    News

    Armstrong ready for the real start of the Tour

    After a week in the saddle, and four days in the yellow jersey, Lance Armstrong says the Tour de France is only now getting set to start. After wrapping up stage 7 in Karlsruhe, Germany, won by Robbie McEwen (Davitamon), the six-time Tour champion said he feels none of the pressure he did last year when he was bidding to secure a record-breaking sixth victory. "In terms of pressure it's nothing compared to last year, so I'm a little relieved I don't have the pressure of winning the sixth Tour that people said couldn't be done,” said Armstrong. “It feels different this year.

    Published Jul 8, 2005
    News

    Checkin’ with Chris: Horner’s glad that first week has passed

    VeloNews: How have things been going since we last spoke? You sound as though you’re in pretty good spirits. Chris Horner: The racing has been going pretty well. The finish today was incredible. All the spectators that were there … you cannot imagine! All of Germany must have been out for it. VN: Even though it was wet, everyone came out? CH: Yeah, it was wet from the start to about 70km to go. It was pretty good after that. VN: It’s funny because when we spoke a few days ago, you said that with everyone fighting for position, you couldn’t imagine how the peloton could continue to ride

    Published Jul 8, 2005
    News

    A look ahead: Danger time for Discovery

    In the three days since Discovery Channel won the team time trial at Blois, its riders have had a relatively easy time defending Lance Armstrong’s yellow jersey. After another stage that ended in a field sprint Friday, Armstrong talked about “riding a medium tempo” and “getting a lot of help” from the sprinters’ teams. That’s not going to be the case in any of the next five stages, starting with this weekend’s two days in the climbs of the Black Forest and Vosges mountains. Armstrong admitted Friday: “I don’t know these stages.” That’s unusual for the master of knowing all there is to know

    Published Jul 8, 2005
    News

    The Boss would like a sprint-free finish on Saturday

    The Boss would like a sprint-free finish on Saturday

    Published Jul 8, 2005
    News

    Bernucci grabs opportunist’s win as sprinters fall in the rain

    Wet roads, tight corners and a nervous peloton are always a recipe for disaster. Add a gang of hard-charging sprinters anxious to reel in a breakaway, and you’ll come up with the crash-derby finish to Thursday’s 199km Tour de France stage 6 from Troyes to Nancy. It was a veritable otter slide on the rain-soaked final right-hander 700 meters from the finish line as a score of riders slipped, skidded and piled into the metal barriers. “It was like ice on that corner, there was nothing you could do,” said Fred Rodriguez (Davitamon-Lotto) who ended the day with a nasty scrape on his right knee.

    Published Jul 7, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Tour Security; Chatting with Cadel; Bernard who?

    London bombings won’t change Tour securityNews of the terrorist bomb attacks in London shocked the Tour de France entourage - as it did the world. In memory of those killed and injured, the peloton will observe a minute's silence before the start of Friday's seventh stage, the 228.5km leg from Lunéville to Karlsruhe in Germany. While the terrorist alert level in France was escalated to the red on Thursday, it appears that security at the Tour de France is already quite high and there is little the Tour can do to make it tighter. While representatives of the Garde Republicaine

    Published Jul 7, 2005
    News

    A look ahead: Die Tour Kommt!

    “Die Tour Kommt!” (The Tour is coming!) is the message that has been plastered across billboards in the German city of Karlsruhe for the past several months. Expect most of the city’s 300,000 people to be at the roadside Friday afternoon, along with perhaps three times that number from neighboring cities in the heavily populated valley of the Rhine. The last two times that a Tour de France stage finished in Germany (Saarbrücken in 2003 and Freiburg in 2000), crowd numbers were astronomical. They will be just as big on Friday when the final 40km of the stage are run on German roads, with the

    Published Jul 7, 2005
    News

    Magnus Opus: Hard turns, wet roads and that white paint.

    Well that was quite a finish in Nancy, eh? Thankfully, I missed the mess at the last turn… mostly because I got dropped on the last climb, got back on the descent and decided I didn’t have the legs to contest the sprint anyway, so I stayed back a little, think it was smarter to stay out of that last turn on wet roads. Looking at the book this morning, you could just see that thing would be trouble in wet weather… especially with that crosswalk and all that white paint right on the turn. That stuff always makes things touch-and-go. As soon as it’s raining, it doesn’t really matter if you’re

    Published Jul 7, 2005
    News

    Stage 5 – Chambord to Montargis > 183km

    Course: This stage has one of the event’s most beautiful stagingareas. Chambord is the largest of the Loire châteaux and one of world’sfinest Renaissance buildings. The stage is on rolling roads that generallyhead eastward, with crosswinds likely on a 40km stretch next to the LoireRiver before a final with-the-wind swoop into Montargis. History: The Tour has only once ended a stage in Montargis, in1969, when it was the terminus of a giant 10-hour, 330km slog from Clermont-Ferrand on the penultimate day. The winner was Belgium’s Herman Van Springel, who also won that year’s stage over the

    Published Jul 6, 2005
    News

    Robbie’s revenge; McEwen nails Stage 5 win at Tour

    Emotion fuelled the windswept, rain-spattered 183km stage 5 of the Tour de France from Chambord to Montargis on Wednesday - and for a full spectrum of reasons. At the start, we had an almost reluctant overall race leader in American Lance Armstrong (Discovery Channel) not wanting to wear the yellow jersey he felt that, morally, still belonged to Dave Zabriskie of CSC. But it was a gesture the Tour organizers would not allow. Then at the finish, we had an elated stage winner, Australian Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto), championing his vengeance against a race jury that relegated him to last

    Published Jul 6, 2005
    News

    Jan’s Journal: A confidence boost, a flat day and the road to Germany

    Hello,Well, finally we had a day that gave us all a renewed sense of hope! Yesterday’s team trial was exactly what we needed to restore confidence on this team. No, we didn’t win, but finishing 30 seconds off the pace set by Discovery and CSC was better than we had hoped to do. The morning started early for us, as the UCI medical crew came in for the usual checks. We also had a little birthday party for Valerio Piva, our director, before heading off to do a little bit of last-minute training. We got a pleasant surprise, too, when we came across a big organized fan club, with big banners

    Published Jul 6, 2005
    News

    Checkin’ with Chris: A chat with Chris Horner about his first Tour

    After dominating domestic racing for the past three years, Chris Horner earned himself a last-minute spot on the Saunier Duval-Prodir Tour de France team with a solo stage win at the Tour of Switzerland in June. It’s the first time riding the Tour for the 33-year-old from Bend, Oregon, who has missed out on several opportunities in the past due to injury, family obligations and race officials’ questionable team selection criteria. Over the three weeks of the race, VeloNews will check in with Horner when possible to get a first-person perspective from the always-outspoken rider. VeloNews:

    Published Jul 6, 2005
    Road

    Fraser takes Cascade opener

    As if taunting them, Pilot Butte loomed in the distance as Gord Fraser and Phil Zajicek raced toward the finishing climb with the peloton closing fast behind them. But the two riders stayed ahead of the pack, and they raced neck and neck for the mile-long climb up the steep road on the cinder cone in east Bend. Fraser then held off Zajicek by half a bike length to claim the 118-mile stage 1 of Central Oregon's Cascade Cycling Classic on Wednesday. The winning time was 4 hours, 38 minutes, 19 seconds. The two top finishers had broken away from a lead pack of eight cyclists at the

    Published Jul 6, 2005
    Road Gear

    Tour Tech Talk: Racing against the clock

    Tuesday’s stage was a showdown between the powerhouse time-trial teams, as well as a battle between old and new philosophies about racing against the clock. At the beginning of Lance Armstrong’s Tour victory run, the time-trial powerhouses were Telekom (now T-Mobile), ONCE (now Liberty Seguros) and U.S. Postal (now Discovery). But Liberty Seguros has become only a shadow of its former time-trialing self, and T-Mobile has also slipped a number of notches. The new guard still contains Discovery, but CSC, Phonak and Gerolsteiner are the new young bucks trying to kick the door in. All these

    Published Jul 5, 2005
    News

    A look ahead: Who can beat Boonen?

    With more than 80 riders now at least five minutes behind new race leader Lance Armstrong, there’s a good chance that a breakaway will succeed Wednesday on stage 5 of the Tour de France. That’s the theory, but in a year when the opportunities for field sprints are limited the fast men should again prevail. Going into this 183km stage, QuickStep’s Tom Boonen is two for two in the field sprints, partly thanks to his main rival, Robbie McEwen of Davitamon-Lotto, making a hash of his sprint on stages 2 and 3. McEwen is unlikely to make a mistake a third time running, so expect a much tighter

    Published Jul 5, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Ullrich will be back; Davis progressing; and a tip from The Boss

    Jan Ullrich concedes that retirement is not too far away. But the T-Mobile star has discounted suggestions that it will come sooner than later by reaffirming his desire to race the Tour de France next year in Lance Armstrong's absence. In an interview Tuesday with the French sports daily L'Equipe, the 1997 Tour champion said he still wants to win, but doesn’t feel the same pressure he did eight years ago. “This period of my life when the pressure is always there is in the past. I want to live out my life in cycling quietly and in peace,” he said. “Him (Armstrong) leaving will not

    Published Jul 5, 2005
    News

    Stage 3 – La Châtaigneraie to Tours > 212.5 km

    Course: Most of this fairly long stage (212.5km) takes the back roads of the Vendée region before heading northeast to the Loire Valley. The race passes some of the region’s famed châteaux, including the 11th century Chinon and 16th century Azay-le-Rideau. The final 30km are full of twists and turns until reaching the 3km-long Avenue de Grammont, which hosts the finish of theParis-Tours classic every fall. History: Despite its permanent place in classics history, the town of Tours has seen only six Tour stage finishes. The last was in 2000, when Dutchman Leon Van Bon brought home a small

    Published Jul 4, 2005
    News

    Boonen does it again, Zabriskie still in yellow

    It was Tom Boonen's day at the 2005 Tour de France -again. Still, even after the Belgian sprinter blasted away his rivals to win the 212.5km third stage from La Chataignerie to Tours in the Loire Valley, his back-to-back victory was not the talk of the Tour. Instead, it was the fireworks that erupted between two of the tightly packed speeding bunch he left in his wake - Australians Robbie McEwen (Lotto-Davitamon) and Stuart O'Grady (Cofidis), who were third and fourth across the line behind Boonen and Austrian Peter Wrölich (Gerolsteiner). While Boonen had space to rent behind him

    Published Jul 4, 2005
    News

    Magnus Opus: A bit of the old argy-bargy

    Quite a day, today… I’ve finished in Tours before – Paris-Tours a few times, for example – and I really like this finish: Wide open streets and lots of room to fight out the sprint. It’s just things didn’t quite work out like we had planned. My job today was supposed to be lead-out man for (Luciano) Pagliarini, but coming into to Tours, we didn’t actually find each other in the peloton. That’s not all that unusual, especially when things are as chaotic as they are in this Tour. There really is no single team keeping things under control in the sprints. Without Petacchi here, Fassa Bortolo

    Published Jul 4, 2005
    News

    Zabriskie, Boonen grab the headlines

    The Dave Zabriskie Show came to the Tour de France on Sunday, momentarily diverting the cameras away from Lance Armstrong and the other big stars in the Tour’s stage 2. And the European media, getting their first taste of Dave Z’s quirky sense of humor, didn’t know quite what to make of it — especially when he dead-panned to French television on how his first day went in the yellow jersey. “How did I spend it? Racing bikes,” said the 26-year-old CSC rider said with a sardonic smile. Zabriskie enjoyed the view from the front of the peloton during most of Sunday’s 181.5km stage across

    Published Jul 3, 2005
    News

    Continental Drift, with Andrew Hood: Dave Z’s yellow run could last a while

    Dave Zabriskie didn’t quite know what to make of all the fuss. Sure, he became just the third American to wear the yellow jersey in Tour de France history and he beat six-time Tour champ Lance Armstrong to do it, but after all, it’s just a bike race. “I got a massage, had dinner, read a little, then went to sleep,” was how Zabriskie described his first evening in yellow. “Yeah, we had a little champagne.” Sunday morning, Zabriskie got the full yellow-jersey treatment, with dozens of photographers and reporters waiting outside the team bus. Team CSC riders huddled inside the bus for

    Published Jul 3, 2005
    News

    A look ahead: Opportunities for opportunists

    Tom Boonen may have won this Tour’s first ferocious sprint on Sunday, but don’t expect the tall Belgian to continue winning stages this week in the manner perfected by Mario Cipollini in the 1990s and Alessandro Petacchi in more recent years. That’s because Boonen won the stage into Les Essarts despite not having an organized lead-out train. The team that did its best to set up a strong paceline on the run-in was Baden Cooke’s Française des Jeux squad; but the French team’s efforts fell far short of guiding Cooke into a winning position. The twisting run-in and a sharp left turn into a

    Published Jul 3, 2005
    News

    Magnus Opus: Back on the road again

    So, here we are again. The Tour kicked off yesterday with what would normally be a perfect time-trial course for a guy like me: a pan-flat, straight shot to the finish line. But it takes me a few days to “find my legs” in a big tour, and I had what you could only call a day that wasn’t all that bad, but wasn’t all that great either. It’s difficult for me, usually, the first few days. You spend so much time getting ready, training like mad, and then you have a couple of days that throw you off a bit, with travel, medical controls, the presentation and all. It’s tough to get back into the

    Published Jul 3, 2005
    News

    McGee tips Rogers as first Tour winner from Oz

    Noirmoutier, France, July 2 (AFP) - Bradley McGee might be engaged in his own battle to boost his overall performance on the Tour de France but that has not stopped him tipping Michael Rogers to become the first Australian winner of the yellow jersey in Paris. McGee, who won the prologue at the 2003 Tour for his Francaise des Jeux team, has spent the last few campaigns in July helping teammate Baden Cooke in the bunch sprints. But after a long, hard 10 months year of climbing in the mountains in a bid to better prepare himself for this year's race, the 29-year-old New South Wales rider

    Published Jul 2, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Rodriguez backs McEwen; Voigt cools jets; CSC deal near; champs in Tour; USPS trivia

    Fred Rodriguez will be Robbie McEwen’s top lead-out man in the hunt for stage wins in the mass sprints, and that’s just fine by him. “Fast Freddy” believes his chances will come in what’s his fifth Tour de France start. “I’ll be mostly working for Robbie,” Rodriguez told VeloNews. “I think in the second half of the Tour there will be some chances for me, on the courses that are a little more selective, when maybe some of the bigger guys will have some trouble getting through.” The Californian said working for other sprinters is something he’s used to. In his 2000 Tour debut with Mapei, he

    Published Jul 2, 2005
    News

    A look ahead: Stats, speed, danger and sprints

    Keepers of statistics will love this one. In trouncing his main GC opponents at the opening 19km time trial of the Tour on Saturday, Lance Armstrong raced at precisely 54.545 kph. Sound familiar? Well, yes. When Greg LeMond rode his famous 24.5km time trial between Versailles and Paris at the 1989 Tour, to overcome a 50-second deficit on Laurent Fignon, he raced at precisely 54.545 kph. What’s even more important for Armstrong is that, while conceding the stage win to former teammate Dave Zabriskie by two seconds, he defeated third-place Alexandre Vinokourov by 51 seconds, Floyd Landis by

    Published Jul 2, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Zabriskie keeps ’em laughing; Levi’s lightweight; Boonen starts Sunday; Cuesta out, Bertogliati in

    Dave Zabriskie was gobbling down French sweets at an alarming rate Friday afternoon as journalists gathered around the tall, slender Utahan to learn more about this American making his Tour de France debut. “I feel stupendously happy. There’s a lot of free candy in the press room,” Zabriskie said with a wry smile. “Who doesn’t like free candy?” The world’s press is about to get the “Zabriskie treatment,” a mixture of humor, sarcasm and insight that keeps the hacks in stitches. How’s the motivation for the team? “Super motivated – the Prozac is being passed around nightly.” Are you

    Published Jul 1, 2005
    Road

    Tuesday’s EuroFile: Ullrich the believer; No Simoni at Tour

    This is the last chance for Jan Ullrich and his lonely quest to beat Lance Armstrong. With just a few days to go before the pair’s final Tour de France showdown, Ullrich’s optimism proves yet again that hope springs eternal. “I’d love to beat him,” Ullrich, 31, told Welt am Sonntag newspaper. “He’s dominated the race for the last six years and broken the records of the century. That's my motivation -- this is the last chance.” The red-headed German has consistently been Armstrong’s top rival in the Texan’s six-year Tour reign. Ullrich nearly derailed Armstrong in the exciting 2003

    Published Jun 28, 2005
    Road

    Monday’s EuroFile: For Vino’ it’s all or nothing; Mancebo, Karpets lead Balears effort

    T-Mobile rolls into this week’s Tour de France with a stronger focus than ever. The German team will leave sprinter ace Erik Zabel at home to fortify its Tour objective of beating Lance Armstrong in his final run at the maillot jaune. Alexandre Vinokourov said the team is more motivated than ever, with Jan Ullrich, Andreas Klöden and Vino’ sharing the load on the road to Paris. “I don’t have individual objectives. The whole team is geared up for one objective: winning the Tour de France. I won’t be there to ride my own race, but to ride for the team,” Vinokourov said on the team’s web page.

    Published Jun 27, 2005
    News

    The fight for the jerseys

    YELLOW JERSEYThe yellow jersey — or maillot jaune — is worn by the overall raceleader, the rider who has covered the overall distance in the least amountof cumulative time. Time bonuses (20 seconds for winning a road stage,six seconds for winning an intermediate sprint) are deducted, and timepenalties (for infractions like dangerous riding or accepting pushes fromspectators on the climbs) are added to riders’ stage times before calculatingtheir GC (general classification) times.2004 WINNER: Lance Armstrong (USA), U.S. Postal Service POINTS LEADERThe green points-leader’s jersey is awarded to

    Published Jun 27, 2005
    Road

    German surprise as Euro’s decide national titles

    First-year senior Gerald Ciolek ended T-Mobiles long running dominanceof the German national road championships on Sunday, beating such Germansprinting stalwarts like Gerolsteiner's Robert Forster and especially T-Mobile's Erik Zabel in the final charge to the line at the end of a 204-kilometer road race in Manheim. The German event comes on the same day as all European national championship races.With 75 meters to go, it appeared that Zabel had the national titlein the bag. But suddenly Ciolek, who has still contested junior events thisseason, charged out of the field to catch and

    Published Jun 26, 2005
    Mountain

    Kona riders toughest at Mont-Ste-Anne DH

    The crew from Kona dominated the downhill at Mont-Sainte-Anne Sunday, with Tracy Moseley winning the fourth round of the World Cup for the women and Fabien Barel the men's for the Kona Les Gets Team. Competitors were nearly universal in their praise for the course. The reason for their positive comments was simple – it was a long course. "Real mountain biking" was often mentioned. The return of the start at the top of the mountain after three years was clearly a crowd-pleaser. WomenThe favorite going into this round of the World Cup was the series points leader Sabrina Jonnier of

    Published Jun 26, 2005
    News

    Davitamon-Lotto

    AERTS Mario - BAge 30 Turned Pro 1996 BRANDT Christophe - BAge 28Turned Pro 2000 EVANS Cadel - AUSAge 28 Turned Pro 2001 McEWEN Robbie - AUSAge 33 Turned Pro 1996 MERCKX Axel - BAge 32Turned Pro 1994 RODRIGUEZ Fred - USAAge 31 Turned Pro 1996 VAN BONAND Leon - NCAge 33 Turned Pro 1993 VAN SUMMEREN Johan - BAge 24Turned Pro 2003 VANSEVENANT Wim - BAge 33Turned Pro 1995 Sponsors: Pharmaceutical company, national lotteryWeb site: www.davitamon-lotto.be2005 budget: $7.8 millionDirecteur sportif: Marc SergeantTeam created (under current name): 2005Past tours: 15th year participating

    Published Jun 23, 2005
    News

    Francaise des Jeux

    McGEE Bradley - AUSAge 29Turned Pro 1998 COOKE Baden - AUSAge 26Turned Pro 2000 EISEL Bernhard - AAge 24Turned Pro 2001 GILBERT Philippe - BAge 23Turned Pro 2003 LÖVKVIST Thomas - SAge 21Turned Pro 2003 CASAR Sandy - FAge 26Turned Pro 2000 DA CRUZ Carlos - FAge 30Turned Pro 1997 MENGIN Christophe - FAge 36Turned Pro 1995 MOUREY Francis - FAge 24Turned Pro 2004 Sponsor: National LotteryWeb site: cyclisme.fdjeux.com2005 budget: $8.4 millionDirecteur sportif: Marc MadiotTeam created: 1997Past tours: 9th year participating, 4 stage wins, 1 sprint classification(Baden Cooke,

    Published Jun 23, 2005
    Road

    T-Mobile announces Tour roster

    Erik Zabel’s ongoing hunt for the green points jersey has often been a distraction from his team’s real mission at the Tour de France, T-Mobile manager Mario Kummer said Wednesday as the team announced its line-up for the race. As expected, the 34-year-old Zabel was left off of the roster for next month's Tour de France and replaced by 26-year-old all-rounder Stephan Schreck, who is riding in his first Tour. The move is intended to strengthen Jan Ullrich's bid to dethrone six-time winner Lance Armstrong. Zabel, a six-time winner of the Tour's green jersey, has raced in 11

    Published Jun 22, 2005
    Road

    Curi, Decker earn U.S. road titles

    A pair of surprise winners took top honors at the National Road Race Championships in Park City, Utah, on Wednesday, as Webcor’s Katheryn Curi and mountain biker Carl Decker (Broadmark Capital) outclassed two strong fields of elite riders to earn stars-and-stripes jerseys in their respective events. Worker bee no moreFor the past few years Curi (Webcor Builders) had played second fiddle as a support rider –for Genevieve Jeanson on the Rona squad and more recently for Christine Thorburn at Webcor. But at Wednesday’s national championship race the 31-year old Vermonter proved her abilities

    Published Jun 22, 2005
    Road

    Monday’s EuroFile: Di Luca taking July off; Gonzalez is smiling

    Overall ProTour leader Danilo Di Luca will return to the circuit on July 31 for the HEW-Cyclassics in Hamburg, Germany, his Liquigas team announced on Monday. The 29-year-old Italian has not raced since the Giro d’Italia, which finished earlier this month when he finished fourth. "I returned to training on Sunday because I wanted to rest after the Giro," he said. "If it isn't too hot I will train in the Appennine mountains. "I will return at Hamburg in order to rediscover my rhythm and then I will race in San Sebastian, Spain, and the Tour of Germany so I can pick up more points,"

    Published Jun 20, 2005
    Road

    Moninger wraps up Tour de Nez as Candelario wins final stage

    Alex Candelario (UCICT-Jelly Belly) launched an early attack in the final stage of the 13th Annual Tour de Nez in Reno, Nevada, and still managed to fend off his breakaway companion to take the win, as Health Net’s Scott Moninger finished in the field to keep the overall title. After two days of racing in wet, cold conditions, riders welcomed the sunny skies and moderate winds that greeted them in downtown Reno for the final stage of the Tour de Nez. Such favorable weather drew the largest crowds yet, with hundreds of spectators lining the .8-mile course. With beer gardens, a cycling expo,

    Published Jun 19, 2005
    Road Racing

    Lastras takes stage, Rogers holds lead in Swiss tour

    Pablo Lastras (Illes Baleares) won the second-to-last stage of the Tour of Switzerland on Saturday after a brutal climb to the high ski town of Verbier. The general classification did not change substantially, as race leader Michael Rogers (Quick Step) and his two closest challengers – Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) and Bradley McGee (Française des Jeux) – finished in a group, 1 minute, 20 seconds behind Lastras Garcia. “I rode 100 percent today,” said a sweaty Ullrich, who trails Rogers by 20 seconds going into the tour’s final stage Sunday. “The last mountain was hard, with lots of attacks. I was

    Published Jun 18, 2005
    Road

    Friday’s EuroFile: Horner headed to the Tour; What’s up with Mayo?

    It’s official: Chris Horner will be going to the Tour de France. Horner’s stage-winning ride in Thursday’s climbing stage at the Tour de Suisse assured the popular American rider of a spot on the nine-man Saunier Duval-Prodir team for July’s big dance. “Yes, Chris will be going to the Tour. It was looking good already, but his victory makes the decision final,” Saunier Duval sport director Joxean "Matxin" Fernández told VeloNews. Horner entered the Tour de Suisse with something to prove. After injury kept him out of the Giro d’Italia, the 33-year-old reloaded with ambitions of earning a

    Published Jun 17, 2005
    Road

    Moninger, Bajadali share lead in Tour de Nez

    The 13th annual Tour de Nez kicked off Thursday with a 5km time trial in Verdi, Nevada, followed by an hourlong criterium in Truckee, California. Now in its third year on the NRC calendar, this year’s three-day, four-race omnium has attracted its strongest field ever with a pro-Category 1-2 field of more than 100 riders, including Scott Moninger, Gord Fraser and Tyler Farrar (Health Net-Maxxis); Alexander Candelario and Dave McCook (Jelly Belly-PoolGel); and Discovery’s Steven Cozza racing with the under-23 national team. Also in attendance are full squads from Kodak Gallery-Sierra Nevada,

    Published Jun 17, 2005
    News

    Dajka suspended

    Controversial cyclist Jobie Dajka was suspended Thursday for three years by a Cycling Australia disciplinary tribunal Thursday that determined he had assaulted head track coach Martin Barras. Cycling Australia (CA) said the incident occurred last week at the High Performance Program offices in Adelaide. The suspension would take immediate effect. CA said in a statement that the tribunal took into account medical evidence relating to Dajka's state of mental health. As a result, CA said, the tribunal determined that Dajka, 24, may apply to have the penalty suspended and reapply for his

    Published Jun 16, 2005
    Road Racing

    Ullrich holds lead in Swiss tour as Albasini takes stage

    Liquigas’s Michael Albasini jumped out of a seven-man escape group to win the fifth stage of the Tour of Switzerland on Wednesday. The win was the first in the 24-year-old Albasini’s professional career and one that was especially sweet as it took place on home soil and came by outsprinting his old Phonak teammate, Swiss national champion, Gregory Rast at the front of a small group that finished but 38 seconds ahead of the main field. “I never thought our group could arrive ahead of the peloton,” said Albasini. “But about 10 kilometers from the end, I began to believe we just might do

    Published Jun 15, 2005
    Road

    Galletti dies of heart attack during Spanish race

    Italian rider Alessio Galletti died Wednesday after suffering an apparent heart attack during Spain's Subida Naranco cycling race, chief press officer Jose Ramon Rodriguez confirmed to AFP. The 37-year-old Galletti, a rider with the Naturino-Sapore di Mare team, died near the northern town of Oviedo after losing consciousness following a fall 15km from the finish line. Spanish media quoted other riders as saying that the 37-year-old had difficulties breathing at points leading up to the climb. "He was at the back of the peloton about to begin the penultimate climb of the stage. He

    Published Jun 15, 2005
    Road

    Rollin takes over at Tour de Beauce

    Lac Etchemin, Quebec - Quebec riders made it two-for-two in thesecond stage of the Tour de Beauce on Wednesday, with Dominique Rollin(Equipe Quebec) winning the 180 kilometer stage.  Rollin finishedsecond to Martin Gilbert (VW-Trek) in Tuesday's opening stage and, withthe time bonuses awarded for winning the stage, takes over the yellow leader'sjersey.The race took the riders on a long, hilly loop around Lac Etchemin,through the Beauce region south of Quebec City.  The weather playeda major factor in the stage, with cold rain and strong winds forcing theabandonment of many

    Published Jun 15, 2005
    News

    The strange and terrible saga of Jobie Dajka

    There are serious concerns for the mental and physical well being of Australia's former world sprint champion Jobie Dajka as he awaits Thursday’s verdict from an inquiry into his attack on national coach Martin Barras. Whatever the outcome of the Cycling Australia disciplinary hearing, held and adjourned last Friday, still hanging over Dajka is the threat of assault charges stemming from an incident at the Australian Institute of Sport headquarters in Adelaide last Wednesday. As of Tuesday, Adelaide police said no charges had yet been laid. Since Dajka was taken to Adelaide's Lyell

    Published Jun 14, 2005
    Road Racing

    McEwen wins stage at Swiss Tour; Ullrich holds lead

    After three stage wins and an early departure from last month’s Giro d’Italia, Robbie McEwen (Davitamon-Lotto) resumed his winning ways on Tuesday, taking the fourth stage of the Tour of Switzerland. The Australian national champion easily beat Daniele Colli (Liquigas) at the head of a mass sprint finish in the town of Bad Zurzach. “A stage win here in the Tour de Suisse with this field is pretty worthy,” said the Australian winner, pointing out that many of the UCI Pro Tour’s top sprinters chose the Swiss stage race over the overlapping Dauphiné Libéré. Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) held on to

    Published Jun 14, 2005
    Road

    Gilbert wins Tour de Beauce opener

    A local Quebec rider, riding for a local Quebec team won the first stageof the Tour de Beauce, despite the presence of top-flite U.S. squads the likes of Navigators, Health Net and Jittery Joe's. Martin Gilbert (VW-Trek) took the leader's jersey after winning the sprint out of select group of 14 riders who finished just under a minute ahead of the peloton.The 169-kilometer stage started in light rain, and overcast skies doggedthe race all day.  The stage featured the long, rolling climbs whichthe region is famous for.  Jean Sebastien Beland (Equipe Quebec) startedthe action

    Published Jun 14, 2005
    Road

    Thorburn keeps jersey as Gaggioli takes final at Nature Valley

    STILLWATER, Minn. (June 12, 2005) -- Twenty-six seconds is all that separated Webcor Builder’s Christine Thorburn from Quark Cycling Team’s Tina Pic. That’s about as much time as it took to crest Chilkoot Hill, a short climb at a grade of 20-percent that the riders had to tackle 13 times in this final stage of the Great River Energy Bicycle Festival’s Nature Valley Grand Prix. With eight turns, the 1.5-mile course also provided ample spots for breaks to sneak away out of sight. Thorburn’s team was determined not to let either of those affect who wore the general classification leader’s

    Published Jun 12, 2005
    Road

    England sneaks to stage win, Lieswyn powers to overall Nature Valley title

    STILLWATER, Minn. (June 12, 2005) – A spent Shawn Milne rolled through the finish line of the last stage of the Nature Valley Grand Prix, gasping for air after climbing the 20-percent grade Chilkoot Hill for the last time. “Today was a day you just talk with your legs, and obviously John’s spoke louder,” the Navigator Insurance rider said. For all the talk that transpired over the last two days between Milne and Health Net/Maxxis’ John Lieswyn over the way the leader’s jersey changed hands between the two of them, on Sunday everything was left on the road. Midway through the Stillwater

    Published Jun 12, 2005
    News

    That sprint got him the points jersey.

    That sprint got him the points jersey.

    Published Jun 12, 2005
    Road

    Saturday’s EuroFile: Eisel wins Swiss opener; CSC eyes journalists?; Rabobank and Phonak for Tour; 1948 medalist dies

    Austria's Bernhard Eisel (Fdjeux.com) won a sprint finish in the first stage of the Tour of Switzerland here on Saturday and then thanked Australian teammate Baden Cooke. Eisel finished ahead of Belgian Tom Boonen (Quick Step) and Austrian Peter Wrolich (Gerolsteiner) following the 170km stage from Schaffhausen, but it was sweet revenge for Cooke over Olympic champion Paolo Bettini (Quick Step). Bettini launched the sprint finish, but Eisel, having insider knowledge that Cooke was not at his best, was able to claim victory with Bettini fourth and Cooke sixth. "Before the stage, it

    Published Jun 11, 2005
    Road Racing

    Aussies irked at Olympic track cutbacks

    Cycling Australia said Saturday it was surprised and disappointed at the decision of the sport's world governing body to axe the men's kilometer and the women's 500m race from the Beijing Olympic program. The two events were removed from the program for the 2008 Games to make way for the Olympics debut of BMX, the UCI said on Friday. "All federations were invited to make submissions to the UCI and this is certainly the first we've heard that the track time trial events were being targeted for removal from the Games program," Cycling Australia chief executive Graham

    Published Jun 11, 2005
    Road

    Friday’s EuroFile: Ullrich honing form in Switzerland; no Tour for Rebellin; Olympics shed kilo, 500m

    Jan Ullrich will fine-tune his preparations for next month's Tour de France by racing the Tour of Switzerland, which starts on Saturday. The 31-year-old T-Mobile captain, who has finished second five times in the Tour de France, is still dreaming of repeating his 1997 Tour win. And six-time winner Lance Armstrong (Discovery Channel), who is competing in this week's Dauphiné Libéré in France, has once more designated Ullrich as his major rival for a seventh and final Tour victory. A major factor in whether Ullrich repeats his 2004 overall victory here will be his performance in the

    Published Jun 10, 2005
    News

    Aussie track star faces suspension

    ADELAIDE, Australia -- Former world keirin champion Jobie Dajka, suspended for four months last year for lying to a doping inquiry, faces a longer ban for assaulting the Australian cycling track team's head coach. Dajka said Friday that Cycling Australia had recommended a possible four-year suspension. Dajka has admitted assaulting coach Martin Barras and said he regretted doing so. He testified at a tribunal hearing Friday. Dajka, the 2002 keirin world champion, was suspended and dropped from the Olympic team last year when it was determined he had lied to a doping inquiry. He was

    Published Jun 10, 2005
    Road

    Lieswyn, Thorburn lead Nature Valley GP

    Health Net-Maxxis is riding a big wave of momentum, and John Lieswyn shot the curl on Thursday. The veteran rider and former champion of the Nature Valley Grand Prix overcame a deficit of more than two minutes to catch a break of 16 and then kept motoring to win the second stage of the Minnesota race, the 92-mile Mankato Road Race. It marked the fourth consecutive road-race win for Health Net, by four different riders. “It was a team victory of the greatest magnitude,” Lieswyn said. “Right now, it feels like we have a V-8 under the hood.” Lieswyn shared the spotlight with teammate Tyler

    Published Jun 10, 2005
    News

    Inside Cycling with John Wilcockson: Dauphiné with an English accent

    When Levi Leipheimer, Lance Armstrong and Floyd Landis labored up Mont Ventoux on Friday, battling for the leader’s jersey at this year’s Dauphiné Libéré, their presence emphasized how far American cycling has come in this sport once dominated by Europeans. But the current generation of English-speaking riders is not the first one to produce contenders at the Continent’s leading stage races, especially the Dauphiné. In the early 1980s, America’s Greg LeMond, Australia’s Phil Anderson, Britain’s Robert Millar and Ireland’s Sean Kelly all won stages or challenged for overall victory at the

    Published Jun 10, 2005
    Road

    Crashes, confusion mark Nature Valley crit

    An officiating error and a late-race crash combined to shake up the men’s standings in the Nature Valley Grand Prix on Friday. Shawn Milne (Navigators Insurance) won the Minneapolis Downtown Classic and collected the leader’s jersey after a lap counter that read 2 for two laps gave him an unexpected edge over a small lead group confused about just when stage 3 of the NVGP was supposed to end. Milne sprinted for the line when the lap counter should have read 0, but his sprint turned into an attack when race officials began ringing the bell signaling the final lap. “I went for it, but I

    Published Jun 9, 2005
    Road Racing

    Leipheimer grabs Dauphiné lead as Botero takes TT

    A second is not very long, but less than one tick of the second-hand has cost Levi Leipheimer two important victories inside four days of racing at the Dauphiné Libéré. The 31-year-old lost Wednesday's windy, demanding 47km individual time trial to Santiago Botero (Phonak) by a narrow 0.70 seconds. That bitter disappointment comes after losing Sunday's prologue to compatriot George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) by an even more slender 0.17 seconds. So why was Leipheimer smiling after standing atop the podium in sunny Roanne? Because he was wearing the overall leader's jersey, and

    Published Jun 8, 2005
    News

    Cycling in the News: Malaysian PM recognized; Wondering about Lance

    "Cycling in the News" is a regular service of VeloNews.com. Readers,reporters and friends are encouraged to send links to current stories aboutcompetitive cyclists and cycling that appear in the mainstream media. Ifyou come across a news item that you believe may be of interest to otherVeloNews readers, we would be grateful if you choose to send it to Rosters@InsideInc.com.Bernama.com - Malaysian National News Agency - June 6, 2005Mahathir Gets Award For Support Of Cycling EventsPUTRAJAYA, June 6 (Bernama) -- The International Cycling Union (UCI)Monday presented Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad with

    Published Jun 7, 2005
    Road Racing

    Dumoulin moves into lead after Dauphiné stage win

    Ag2R's Samuel Dumoulin moved into the overall leader's jersey after winning the second stage of the Dauphiné Libéré, a 187-kilometer race from Givors to Chauffailles, on Tuesday. The AG2R rider prevailed in a sprint on what was the final, relatively flat stage ahead of Wednesday's 47km time trial – a stage in which Lance Armstrong is favored to win and thus claim his first victory of the season. Dumoulin takes over the race lead from Discovery's George Hincapie. Dumoulin - whose international fame has largely been confined to the distinction being the smallest rider at the

    Published Jun 7, 2005
    News

    PRESS RELEASE: VeloNews releases 2005 Tour de France Official Guide

    Often called the most grueling athletic event in the world, the 2005 Tourde France is professional cycling’s most well known race. With less thana month until the Tour’s opening, VeloNews is pleased to announcethe release of its 2005 edition of the "Official Guide to the Tour deFrance." A collaboration between VeloNews, the journal of competitive cycling, and the Société du Tour de France, the 2005 Official Guide is titled “Grand Finale: Armstrong Aims at Tour Win 7” and features:Detailed rider profiles of Tour hopefuls Jan Ullrich, Floyd Landis, Levi Leipheimer, Ivan Basso,

    Published Jun 7, 2005
    Road Racing

    Hincapie holds lead as Hushovd takes 1st stage at Dauphiné

    For six Julys in a row, George Hincapie has been one man Lance Armstrong could always count on. The New Yorker is the only teammate who’s been on the Texan’s record six consecutive Tour de France victories. But it’s June, Hincapie is in the leader’s jersey at the Dauphiné Libéré, and this time the tables are turned. In Monday’s long, flat opening road stage pushing west away from the Alps where the real race will be decided later this week, it was Armstrong’s turn to help his ever-loyal lieutenant. The six-time Tour champion helped chase down a breakaway to set up a mass sprint and keep

    Published Jun 6, 2005
    Road

    Monday Morning Wrap: Tuft, Goldstein win Mt. Hood

    Despite the three Category 1 climbs on the final stage, this year’s Mt. Hood Cycling Classic in and around Hood River, Oregon, was largely won (and lost) on the time trial stages. Svein Tuft (Symmetrics) set the stage for his overall win by breezing to victory in both the stage 1 prologue and the stage 3 time trial. His lead going into the last stage was enough to hold off the climbing prowess of challengers Andy Bajidali (Vitamin Cottage) and Justin England (Health Net-Maxxis). Scott Moninger (Health Net-Maxxis) was well positioned going into the stage 3 time trial, but a broken chain 50

    Published Jun 6, 2005
    Road Racing

    Teutenberg takes Wachovia

    While the Keystone State already has a town with the name, Philadelphia might want to start thinking of borrowing the moniker “Germantown” for a few hours every year. Ina Yoko Teutenberg (T-Mobile) became the eighth German winner in the 11 editions of the Wachovia Liberty Classic, out-kicking a select break at the end of the 57.6-mile race. The gigantic women’s field was scheduled for four laps of the 14.4-mile lap, but less than half-way through the opening tour a careless cross of wheels sent riders scattering and created the first of several scenes of havoc on a nervous first lap. But as

    Published Jun 5, 2005
    Road Racing

    All-American podium as Wherry wins USPRO

    With three men off the front of the field by more than one minute in the final kilometers of the USPRO Championships, held Sunday in Philadelphia, two truths had become self-evident: there would be an all-American podium, meaning one rider was going to win the race as well as the stars-and-stripes national champion’s jersey awarded to the first American across the line. Out of a dwindling 40-man breakaway that had gone clear early in the 156-mile race, Chris Horner (Saunier Duval-Prodir) and Chris Wherry (Health Net-Maxxis) escaped on the last of 10 trips over the infamous Manayunk Wall,

    Published Jun 5, 2005
    Road

    Sunday’s EuroFile: Bodrogi holds off Fassa in Lux; Jiménez rules at Vasca

    Fassa Bortolo dominated the five-stage Tour of Luxembourg, but it’s Laszlo Bodrogi (Credit Agricole) who’s sneaking away with the trophy Sunday. Fassa Bortolo won three stages in four days, but Bodrogi was just fast enough in the deciding time trial to secure the overall victory by just 0.13 seconds. The deciding stage was Saturday's 10.8km time trial when Fassa’s young gun Fabian Cancellara won, but couldn't quite make up enough time to Bodrogi. Despite winning the stage, the difference remained less than a half-second in the overall. An early breakaway Sunday ruined

    Published Jun 5, 2005
    Road

    USPRO Championships preview: 10 riders to watch for

    It’s the stuff of legend, the subject of a recent documentary and the race all North American racers dream of. On Sunday, June 5, the single most important day of racing on the American calendar takes place in Philadelphia — the 156-mile USPRO Championship — and by day’s end, one rider will be crowned U.S. national champion. An open national championship with nearly $150,000 in prize money, the event known as “Philly” is open to riders from Europe and beyond, meaning that there could be two winners on Sunday - the first man across the line, and the first American and subsequent national

    Published Jun 4, 2005
    News

    Inside Cycling with John Wilcockson: LeMond, man of the future

    Three days after he became the first American to earn a world pro road championship medal, the silver, at Goodwood, England, in September 1982, Greg LeMond began the Tour de l’Avenir (Tour of the Future) as the hot favorite. Then 21, LeMond was hungry to win a big European race, not least because he was about to renegotiate his contract with Cyrille Guimard’s Renault-Gitane team. LeMond had already established himself as a budding stage-race rider by winning Colorado’s 1981 Coors Classic in his rookie year, then following up with a string of excellent finishes in early 1982 (second at the

    Published Jun 4, 2005
    Road

    Thursday’s Eurofile: Raisin rides again; Di Luca refocuses on ProTour and a correction

    Saul Raisin is back on the bike and preparing for the upcoming Tour de Suisse (June 11-19). The 22-year-old Crédit Agricole rider said he’s been training normally for two weeks following an incident in the opening stage of the Four Days of Dunkirk in early May. A motorcycle knocked him off his bike during the stage, injuring his hip and collarbone. “I am training and riding again. I have been riding on the road for two weeks now and my first race back will be the Tour of Swiss,” Raisin told VeloNews. “I have no set goals but just to finish and help my team as much as possible. It is good

    Published Jun 2, 2005
    Road Racing

    Health Net train keeps on rolling at Trenton

    There’s a saying that’s come en vogue these days that’s applicable across many horizons in life: When it’s on, it’s on. And for the domestic Health Net-Maxxis team, the Wachovia Cycling Series has been on. The team followed up its win by Greg Henderson in Lancaster Tuesday with another sprint win Thursday evening in Trenton, New Jersey, this time coming from cagey veteran Gord Fraser. Add in Ivan Dominguez’s win at the CSC Invitational in Arlington, Virginia, on May 29, and the powerhouse team has taken three sprint wins in three consecutive races with three different riders. Looking at the

    Published Jun 2, 2005
    News

    Horner concedes that Health Net is hard to beat in a sprint.

    Horner concedes that Health Net is hard to beat in a sprint.

    Published Jun 2, 2005
    Road Racing

    Henderson fastest at Lancaster

    Lancaster, Pennsylvania- Heading into June, the big wins just keep coming for the Health Net Pro Cycling Team presented by Maxxis. Coming off Ivan Dominguez’s win at the CSC Invitational in Arlington, Virginia, on May 29, Health Net came in to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on May 31 for the 91-mile opening round of the three-race Wachovia Cycling Series as the undisputed top team in the U.S. And the team lived up to its reputation, putting four men into the race-winning 14-rider breakaway and setting up New Zealander Greg Henderson for a bunch sprint victory, beating American national champion

    Published May 31, 2005
    News

    Despite his troubles, Rodriguez was still there for the final sprint

    Despite his troubles, Rodriguez was still there for the final sprint

    Published May 31, 2005
    Road Culture

    Dede’s Diary: The final ride into Milan

    The final stage of the Giro d'Italia is traditionally a parade into Milan, followed by a series of fast circuit racing leading up to a massive field sprint and this year held true to tradition. The riders lined up in Albese Con Cassano, a small town on the edge of Como decorated in pink to start and then paraded towards Milan, with a stop for gelato and cookies along the way. T he mood was relaxed and the Discovery team staff served champagne to all the other team cars in the caravan during the race. Everything was going smooth until Sean Yates got a flat tire in the first Discovery

    Published May 30, 2005
    Road Racing

    Savoldelli wins Giro; Petacchi takes finale

    For once, there wasn’t a surprise in the Giro d’Italia. Sunday’s 119km final stage unfolded just like everyone expected, with Alessandro Petacchi riding the fumes of his Fassa Bortolo train to his fourth stage victory of this year’s corsa rosa. Beyond that, there was hardly a day where something unexpected didn’t happen. From Ivan Basso’s stomach problems to Damiano Cunego’s collapse to José Rujano’s near revolt, the 88th Giro has packed plenty of surprises per kilometer. “This victory has been very satisfying because it was a very challenging and interesting Giro,” said Paolo Savoldelli,

    Published May 29, 2005
    Road

    Olson, Van Gilder win Baltimore BikeJam

    The Colavita Olive Oil-Sutter Home team sent a powerful message Saturday at the Kelly Cup, the pro men’s event of the Baltimore BikeJam in Patterson Park. The squad took four of the top five spots in Maryland, spearheaded by winner Aaron Olson and runner-up Mark McCormack. New Zealander Glen Mitchell (Kodak Gallery-Sierra Nevada) was third. The top trio was part of a five-man break that went away just a few laps into the race, 40 laps of a 1-mile circuit. After a warm, sunny morning, the race began in a windy downpour as an afternoon storm blew through the city. Bad weather, the subsequent

    Published May 29, 2005
    Road

    Carter, Kingsley soar to victory in Iron Horse road race

    Michael Carter and Karen Kingsley won the 34th annual Iron Horse Bicycle Classic road race on Saturday, a Colorado monument with 5500 feet of climbing over its 47-mile course between Durango and Silverton. The 42-year-old Carter (Colorado Velo) emerged triumphant from a three-man battle with Mitch Moreman and the apparently immortal Ned Overend, who were racing for the new Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory team. As Carter assaulted the 10,660-foot Coal Bank Hill, Moreman and Overend struggled to hold the pace. Carter reached the summit first, shot down the wicked descent, climbed alone up

    Published May 29, 2005
    Road Racing

    Dominguez, Van Gilder tops at CSC

    ARLINGTON, VA – Ivan Dominguez (HealthNet Maxxis) and Laura Van Gilder (Team Quark) out sprinted their respective break-away companions to win the CSC Invitational on Sunday. Dominguez was the last sprinter standing in a four-man break formed only thirty minutes from the finish. Break mates Kirk O'Bee (Navigators), Ivan Stevic (Aerospace Engineering-VMG) and Bobby Julich (CSC), after trying several times to attack the HealthNet sprinter, could do nothing more than watch Dominguez power out of the last turn and throw his bike across the line for the win. Van Gilder nipped Ina Teutenberg

    Published May 29, 2005
    Road Culture

    Dede’s Diary: A real nail-biter

    Stage 19 was a nail-biter to watch - all the protagonists were fighters, giving every ounce of energy on the road. Discovery’s Paolo Savoldelli looked to be in danger on the Colle delle Finestre, steadily losing time to Lampre’s Gilberto Simoni, Selle Italia’s José Rujano and Liquigas’s Danilo Di Luca, but he fought back, flew down the descent and chased all the way up the final ascent into Sestriere and essentially won the race, as Sunday’s final stage is sure to be a parade commandeered by the sprinters in the final meters. Rumor has it that on the final stage of the Giro, townspeople stop

    Published May 28, 2005
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