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    Displaying 20401 - 20480 of approximately 22681 results

    Road Gear

    EuroBike gives a peek at 2006… and beyond

    Eurobike, the bicycle industry’s annual trade show in Friedrichshafen, Germany, opened its doors Thursday for the 14th consecutive year. Although many companies these days are electing to display their new wares earlier in the summer in a race to be the first to capture dealer interest and begin filling their order books, Eurobike is still the first collective look we get at what’s in store for the new year. Unfortunately, 2005 did not treat the European bicycle industry so well. While few companies are willing to disclose hard numbers, the general indication is that bicycle sales have been

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Road Racing

    Van Heeswijk grabs Vuelta stage win; Heras still in charge

    Max Van Heeswijk surged to victory in Friday’s seventh stage at the Vuelta a España in his biggest victory of what’s been a bittersweet year for the veteran Dutch sprinter. Van Heeswijk returned to the winner’s circle last month at the Benelux Tour after what was a season beset with personal problems and frustrations. Those are clearly a thing of the past as “Mad Max” charged to his first Vuelta stage win since 1997 in Friday’s chaotic sprint finish. “I knew I was strong today because I flatted but I was able to chase back on quite easily,” said Van Heeswijk, who outlasted Erik Zabel

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Road

    Vuelta Notebook: Tour bedevils Heras, but he’s the man to beat in Vuelta; three make all three GTs; what’s next

    With Roberto Heras showing such dominance one week into the Vuelta a España, one wonders why he falls so flat in the Tour de France. For the past two Tours, Heras has failed to deliver after making his high-profile departure from U.S. Postal Service at the end of the 2003 season. In the 2004 Tour, Heras abandoned in the Alps. This year he made it to Paris, but he was never a factor in the race. “I am feeling that my body feels 100 percent for this Vuelta,” Heras said. “And during the Tour, it just wasn’t like that, even though this year was better than last year.” The headlines Friday

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Mountain

    MTB World’s: Trofimov wins U23 XC as flats foil Schurter

    There’s a name on the international cross-country circuit that race fans will to want to familiarize themselves with. Only 19 years old, Swiss rider Nino Schurter spent 2005 as the reigning world junior world XC champion and was unquestionably the strongest man in the world under-23 cross-country championship Friday in Livingo, Italy. Unfortunately, the best man didn’t win in Livingo. Schurter took off from the start of the 3.5-lap, 43km contest, opening a gap of two minutes and riding comfortably in control of the race. But after losing tire pressure - first in his front tire, and then

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Road

    Friday’s EuroFile: Farrar wins Avenir stage

    Tyler Farrar (U.S. National) won the second stage of the Tour de l’Avenir in France on Friday, vaulting into fourth place overall. The 21-year-old Farrar outkicked Borut Bozic (Perutnina) and Hans Dekkers (Rabobank) in a mass-sprint finale to the 107.5-mile stage from Argentré-du-Plessis to Sainte-Scolasse-sur-Sarthe. Denmark’s Lars Bak (Team CSC) retained the yellow jersey ahead of Ukraine’s Denys Kostuyk (Jartazi Granville) and Spain’s Jesus Del Nero (Orbea). The day’s action kicked off early with a five-man break that went clear just 6km into the race. At 115km, with the gap up to more

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Road Culture

    Dede’s Diary: Cooling off and a chat with Allen Lim

    Vuelta Stage 7The countryside today’s stage passed through had long somewhat-shallow grade hills with wide-open and windy terrain, much like the foothills of Colorado. Michael said that the stage started at a quick pace and the field immediately splintered. The riders had to climb out of Teruel, which is situated in a valley. They raced over a four Category 3 climbs in the first 100km of the 200km stage, which some of the guys in the bunch said felt like more like Cat. 2’s, with some of the guys telling Michael that they felt like the Vuelta race organization was gypping them with the

    Published Sep 2, 2005
    Road Racing

    Hushovd takes Vuelta stage; McGee holds lead

    Winning the points jersey in the Tour de France would make the season for most sprinters. But for Thor Hushovd, the stocky Norwegian who snagged the green jersey this year without winning a stage, taking a victory in Wednesday’s 176km fifth stage at the Vuelta a España is the highlight he’ll cherish most. “This is the biggest win of the year for me,” said Hushovd, who made it over a punchy climb 12km from the finish to drive home the sprint. “I won the green jersey at the Tour this year, but to win a stage in the Vuelta is very big for me.” Hushovd came off the fifth wheel and roared to a

    Published Aug 31, 2005
    Road

    Vuelta Notebook: Ballerini confident; Barry eyes world’s; Gerdemann impressive; what’s next

    Italian national team coach Franco Ballerini can leave the Vuelta a España confident that Alessandro Petacchi is on track for the Madrid world championships. Somewhat surprisingly, Ballerini was still holding out judgment on the Italian sprinter. Back-to-back victories Monday and Tuesday went a long way toward shoring up his confidence in the Fassa Bortolo sprinter. “These victories give us confidence in Petacchi that we can build a team entirely around him. Because if he’s not where he needs to be, we might bring a team with two leaders,” he said. “Petacchi still needs to prove he’s

    Published Aug 31, 2005
    Road Culture

    Dede’s Diary: Liam’s dad gets TV time

    Today, our little Discovery team supporter, Liam, got a chance to coo for daddy, as Michael went away in the early break and was virtual leader on the road for quite a while. Although, his luck ran out when the sprinters' teams decided to chase and the break of 8 riders was caught at the base of the final climb with 15 km to the finish. For Discovery, the plan was to have Benoit Joachim, Stijn Devolder and Michael cover the early breakaways and to help Max Van Heeswijk in the final sprint. The pace was high from the start and all guys commented that it felt like the Vuelta of years

    Published Aug 31, 2005
    Road Racing

    Petacchi grabs another at Vuelta; McGee keeps lead

    Two sprints and two victories for Alessandro Petacchi. This might be the Vuelta a España, but for the top sprinters taking part in the 232km fourth stage, the 2005 Vuelta’s longest stage played out as a preview for the September 25 road world championships in Madrid. “I was better than yesterday, so that’s encouraging,” said Petacchi, who won a wide-open charge to the line ahead of Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole) and Erik Zabel (T-Mobile). “This win gives me confidence that I am in good shape.” Brad McGee (FDJeux) enjoyed a relatively easy, but hot day in the leader’s jersey as a four-man

    Published Aug 30, 2005
    Road

    Vuelta Notebook: Danielson keeping cool; Petacchi looks toward Madrid; but not Valverde

    In Argamasilla de Alba, Spain… Danielson’s cool with itTom Danielson said he’s holding up fine under the heat of the opening stages of the 60th Vuelta a España. The Discovery Channel rider came across the line safely in the main bunch to remain 11th overall at 1:17 back. “I’m feeling good,” Danielson said at the finish line as he grabbed a drink from one of the team soigneurs. “We’re riding as a team. We’ve had no problems at all.” Danielson said he hasn’t been adversely affected by the scorching temperatures that have cooked the peloton in the opening four days of the race. The

    Published Aug 30, 2005
    Road Culture

    Michael Barry’s Diary: Slow cooking

    The last few days have been tough, not because it has been fast, but rather because of the intense heat. The peloton is sluggish and the racing not very animated as a result. Only when the finish line is near does the pace pick up, the peloton becomes nervous and the racing gets exciting. Otherwise, the major objective of nearly every team has been to keep riders hydrated and not to expend too much energy. It’s easy to dig a hole too deep to climb out of when the temperatures rise over 35 degrees Celsius (95F) in the shade, of which there is little. Today’s stage was a little frustrating

    Michael Barry
    Published Aug 30, 2005
    Road Racing

    Petacchi shows world’s form with Vuelta win

    The sprinters got their first shot in the 153km third stage of the Vuelta a España and Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo) took full advantage. In another blistering hot day, the Milan-San Remo champion sent a message loud and clear to his would-be rivals for the upcoming world championships, taking a sprint victory ahead of three faces he’s expecting to see next month on the roads of Madrid. “To win ahead of three of best sprinters in the world is very satisfying,” Petacchi said moments after scoring his 13th career Vuelta victory. “No one could come around my sprint and no one could beat

    Published Aug 29, 2005
    Road

    Vuelta Notebook: Discovery’s youth movement; Landis hopeful; Phonak realistic; heat unrelenting

    Johan Bruyneel is signing some of the young top prospects to fortify Discovery Channel as the team enters the post-Lance Armstrong era. Five new faces will be part of the Discovery Channel team for 2006, including Australian Trent Lowe, Russian classics specialist Vladimir Gusev, Egoi Martinez (Euskaltel), Belgian hope Jurgen Van Goolen (Quick Step) and Janez Brajkovic (Krka), a young Slovenian rider who made his Discovery Channel debut at the Tour of Benelux. “These are the young riders that we can help build the future of the team,” Bruyneel said Monday morning. “There’s not going to be

    Published Aug 29, 2005
    Road Culture

    Vande Velde’s View: Africa Hot

    I thought yesterday was hot. Then came today. Between the two, I spent the hottest two days I have ever spent on the bike. Today at the top of one climb it was 45.5 degrees Celsius. That seems hot to me but when I found out that equates to about 113 Fahrenheit, I realized there was a reason why we all felt so horrible. Today we trudged through another day in southern Spain. We haven't broken any records, but we have suffered. On average we all drank about a gallon and a half and then upon arriving at the bus keep drinking like we've been in the Sahara for weeks. I thought that I

    Published Aug 29, 2005
    Road Culture

    Dede’s Diary: Watching from a cool spot and a chat with Tom Danielson

    As I sit at home in Girona watching the Vuelta on television with our new baby Liam on my lap, I am content knowing that I am not out there dealing with the heat the boys are racing in the south. Today the temperatures were once again extreme as they raced through the arid center of Spain. Michael consumed 15 water bottles in the 153 kilometer stage and still felt dehydrated. He was in a breakaway at one point today with 10 or so other riders and said that every one of the guys in the break was too hot to put forth any effort. Essentially, their bodies are using so much energy just to

    Published Aug 29, 2005
    Road Racing

    Bertagnolli takes Vuelta stage; McGee takes over lead

    Brad McGee (FDJeux) collapsed at the finish line Sunday, just like he did Saturday after coming up just three seconds short of victory, but this time the Aussie had something to smile about. McGee jetted into the Vuelta a España’s golden jersey, becoming the first Australian to wear the race leader’s jersey in all three grand tours. For the 29-year-old Aussie, the mark of distinction helps erase a season of disappointment and frustration. “I went so deep in the prologue I was vomiting for 30 minutes after the race,” said McGee, who finished second to Leonardo Bertagnolli (Cofidis) in the

    Published Aug 28, 2005
    Road

    Sunday’s EuroFile: Hincapie wins GP de Plouay; grand tours, UCI spar over ProTour

    George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) added another prize to his trophy cabinet on Sunday by sprinting to victory in the GP de Plouay, the 23rd race of the inaugural ProTour. The American outkicked Alexandre Usov (AG2R -Prevoyance) and Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner) to win the 212km race around Plouay. Hincapie almost celebrated prematurely, raising his arms as Usov bore down upon him. But he managed to hang on to edge the AG2R rider. The win came in what has been a stellar year for Hincapie. He finished second in Paris-Roubaix, then won Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne; collected two stages and

    Published Aug 28, 2005
    Road

    Vuelta Notebook: Help Wanted; Happy Canadian; Go Figueras

    Saunier Duval wants more AmericansAttention domestic pros: Saunier Duval wants you. With the imminent departure of Chris Horner at the end of the 2005 season, Saunier Duval boss Mauro Gianetti told VeloNews the team wants to keep its presence in the American market. "We want two riders," Gianetti said. "It's good for the team to have strong Americans." Gianetti said he was disappointed Horner will leave the team at the end of the season to join Davitamon-Lotto for a two-year deal, but quickly added he understand Horner's decision. Gianetti said team has been pleased with Horner's

    Published Aug 28, 2005
    Road Culture

    Michael Barry’s Diary: Hard racing, great food and the occasional crash

    Today’s stage to Cordoba was the one I feared the most when I looked at the course profiles a week ago, after I found out I was going to be starting the race. I feared it not because of its difficulty, but because the last time we did this stage, in 2003, I suffered unbelievably from start to finish. Back then we were racing for Roberto Heras, and we had to keep him in the front of the peloton and out of the wind while also ensuring we had representation in the breakaways. The attacks began from the start and never relented until the line was crossed in Cordoba. Today, thankfully, the race

    Michael Barry
    Published Aug 28, 2005
    Mountain

    Kabush, Hanusova clinch STXC crowns; Pruitt, Graves nail DH titles

    In a fitting bit of things coming full circle, Adam Craig (Giant), winner of the rain-soaked opening race of the 2005 NORBA cross-country series way back in March, closed out the series with a similarly damp victory in the Mt. Snow pro men’s short track, the final event of the season-long competition. And just as he did back in Texas almost seven months ago, Craig raced most of the day in Vermont with Geoff Kabush (Maxxis), the year’s most prolific winner on the cross-country circuit. Craig and Kabush made the decisive break in the short track, getting away on the fourth lap with Carl Decker

    Published Aug 28, 2005
    Road Culture

    Michael Barry’s Diary: Ready to roll

    Two weeks ago my fall schedule was changed. Originally scheduled to race the fall season classics, I am now sitting, sweating, in a hotel room in Granada waiting for the start of the Vuelta a España. I am motivated to be here, we're all in good shape and we have a team that can challenge for the overall classification and for stage wins. One thing that is different for us this year at the Vuelta is that we do not have a clear leader. In past years we have gone to the race with Roberto Heras and Floyd Landis. This year there is no clear leader on our team but we have three riders who

    Michael Barry
    Published Aug 26, 2005
    Road

    Friday’s EuroFile: Bruyneel dismisses L’Equipe charges; North Americans in Spain

    Johan Bruyneel staunchly defended Lance Armstrong against allegations that the seven-time Tour de France champion used EPO during his 1999 winning ride. In an interview published Friday in the Spanish daily La Vanguardia, Bruyneel characterized reports that samples of Armstrong’s urine taken in 1999 were tainted with the banned blood-booster EPO as a “witch hunt.” “No, it hasn’t been a surprise at all. All of this has been a witch hunt,” Bruyneel told the paper. “For some people, everything is okay to try to hurt Armstrong. They have tried a lot in the past few years and now they come out

    Published Aug 26, 2005
    News

    Friday’s mailbag: What else?

    The Mailbag 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.Let the facts do the talkingDear Velo,I am writing this amidst what is likely to become one of the most provocativeand contested issues in the Lance saga, let alone in the cycling worldin the last few decades. But the core issue to me is not about Lance'semphatic denials,

    Published Aug 26, 2005
    Road

    Thursday’s Eurofile: Heras wants another; O’Grady-McEwen row avoided?

    Heras wants revengeRoberto Heras doesn’t want to talk about the Tour de France anymore. With the Vuelta a España starting Saturday in Granada, the Spanish captain of Liberty Seguros wants to erase the disappointment of July with a record fourth Vuelta title. “I am optimistic and the ‘chip’ has been changed, because the Vuelta is a different race,” Heras said in an interview. “It has nothing to do with the (Tour) from a month ago.” For the second year in a row, Heras wilted under the pressure at the Tour and was never a factor in the overall classification. Last year’s bitter

    Published Aug 25, 2005
    News

    Fatherhood, the season and heading into the Vuelta: A conversation with Michael Barry

    Michael Barry and his wife, Dede, are now the proud parents of recent arrival, Liam, the couple’s first child. The cycling pair decided to have the baby in Spain, in part to allow Michael to remain in Europe to train and race, but also because they pleasantly discovered the Spanish national health system was quite a bit more affordable than back in the United States. With mother and son doing fine, Barry returned to racing at the recent Clásica San Sebastián. The Canadian was part of the day’s main breakaway, earning the event’s points jersey along the way. Barry will part of the Discovery

    Published Aug 25, 2005
    Road

    Wednesday’s EuroFile: O’Grady won’t ride for McEwen; Zabel for the Vuelta

    Our man in Australia, Rupert Guinness, reported in Wednesday’s edition of The Daily Telegraph that Stuart O’Grady will refuse to ride in support of Aussie team captain Robbie McEwen in the upcoming world championships. In an exclusive interview with Guinness, O’Grady said the rift between McEwen and longtime rival O’Grady is too wide to erase in time for the Madrid world title race, one ideally suited for McEwen’s brash style. The pair’s head-butting incident at the end of the third stage of the 2005 Tour de France - when McEwen was relegated for dangerous sprinting which scuttled his chances

    Published Aug 24, 2005
    Mountain

    McGrath, Hanusova take Snowshoe STXC

    The short track cross-country closed out the XC program Sunday afternoon at the NORBA National Series event Snowshoe Mountain, West Virginia, with Seamus McGrath (Haro) and Katerina Hanusova (Luna) netting the wins. With Hanusova leading the series over Sue Haywood (Trek-VW) coming into the Snowshoe round of the NORBA series, the Czech rider never strayed far from the front on a course well-suited to her powerful style. Her solo move just six laps into the race drew out Dara Marks-Marino (Ford-Specialized) and Haywood to form a three strong group at the front, while Hanusova’s Luna teammate

    Published Aug 21, 2005
    Road

    Farrar, Pic take USPRO Crit’ titles

    Less than a week after signing with the French-based Pro-Tour team Cofidis, Health Net’s Tyler Farrar scored the biggest win of his domestic career, winning the USPRO criterium championships in Downers Grove, Illinois. “I’m on cloud nine right now,” Farrar said after the podium presentation. “I’ve been up there since I signed a couple of days ago and this just adds to it.” At the helm of fastest leadout train in the domestic peloton, Farrar rode the wheel of Kiwi world track champion Greg Henderson through the final 90-degree turn before launching his sprint with 150 meters to go. But hot

    Published Aug 21, 2005
    Road Racing

    Iglinsky wins German stage; Leipheimer retains slim lead

    Domina Vacanze’s Maxim Iglinsky won the 171.3km sixth stage of the Tour of Germany from Friedrichshafen to Singen on Saturday. The 24-year-old Kazakh won a frantic sprint involving nine riders, finishing ahead of Belgian Jurgen van der Broeck (Discovery Channel) and Italian Alessandro Ballan (Lampre-Caffita). Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner), sixth in this year's Tour de France, retains the yellow jersey with an 18-second lead over teammate Georg Totschnig of Austria. Germany's Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile) is third in the standings, 56 seconds behind Leipheimer. Sunday's seventh stage

    Published Aug 20, 2005
    Road

    Dominguez, Kroepsch tops at USPRO warm-up

    Hiding somewhere in Lara Kroepsch’s compact 5 foot 2 inch frame is one of the most ferocious finishing sprints in the North American professional women’s peloton. But the 26-year old from Boulder, Colorado usually keeps the goods under wraps — as a support rider for T-Mobile, Kroepsch usually plays second fiddle to teammates Kim Baldwin, Kristin Armstrong and Ina Yoko Teutenberg. But at the Pro-Am Challenge criterium, held on the eve of the USPRO criterium championships in Downers Grove, Illinois, Kroepsch let her guns do the talking, and walked away with the biggest victory of her

    Published Aug 20, 2005
    Road Racing

    Bennati doubles in German tour; Leipheimer holds lead

    Italian Daniele Bennati (Lampre-Caffita) won a sprint finish in the fifth stage of the Tour of Germany on Friday, collecting his second victory in this year's race. Roger Hammond (Discovery Channel) took the runner-up slot in the 219.2km stage from Sölden in Austria to Freidrichshafen in Germany. Baden Cooke (Française des Jeux) was third. Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner), sixth in this year's Tour de France, retained the overall lead after his triumph in Thursday’s mountainous fourth stage. He leads teammate Georg Totschnig of Austria by 18 seconds with German Jan Ullrich (T-Mobile)

    Published Aug 19, 2005
    Road Culture

    The World According to Wells: Long time no see

    I’m back before you had a chance to miss me. I haven’t done an update in I can’t remember how long. I think the last time I checked in was after the Joe Martin Stage race in Arkansas. I have done quite a few races between then and now. I’ll try to get back up to speed with the highlights/lowlights. I think I’ll start out with one of my best performances of the year, the Tour of Connecticut. It’s the perfect day here in Durango to reflect on Connecticut, cold and rainy. I managed to stay pretty high up in the overall going into the last day but was still about a minute out of the lead. That’s

    Published Aug 19, 2005
    Road

    Thursday’s Eurofile: CVV ready for Vuelta; Petacchi aiming to recover; High hopes in Germany

    Vande Velde ready for VueltaChristian Vande Velde (CSC) is pumped for the Vuelta a España, which kicks off later this month in Granada, Spain. “I’m psyched to have a good Vuelta,” Vande Velde said. “We’re going to be helping Carlos. He’s looking strong for the race.” Vande Velde will be part of a motivated Team CSC for the Vuelta, the season’s final grand tour. Spanish rider Sastre will be looking to post a strong result in the GC while the always-ambitious CSC will be on the hunt for stages. Joining Sastre and Vande Velde will be former Tour de France stage-winner Jakob Piil, Nicki

    Published Aug 18, 2005
    News

    Cycling in the News: Recognizing pioneers; Sponsorship troubles

    "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. Cycling: Robinson at heart of big night of nostalgia - August 17,2005The Huddersfield Daily Examiner -Great BritainEIGHTEEN former Tour de France riders were among a 90-plus gatheringpaying homage to the pioneering British

    Published Aug 17, 2005
    News

    A Fred’s Eye View: Group-ride junkie; The wedding crasher

    I will be the first to admit that I have long suffered from a cycling affliction — make that addiction — brought on by fast, furious local group rides. I just can’t get enough of them. Occasionally I will sit at my desk daydreaming about the week’s ride. Will I make the front group? Will I flat? Will my legs fall off? Will my lungs exit my body by way of my mouth? I, my friends, am a group-ride junkie. Now, the group-rides that have always whetted my appetite aren’t just the ol’ cruiser-bike stroll in the park with mom ‘n pop. Nope, I love the speedy ones with plenty of muscle flexing and

    Published Aug 17, 2005
    Road Culture

    Letters from Larssyn: Back in the peloton. Ouch!

    It’s good to be back in Europe. This past weekend I was back racing with my team here in Switzerland. We raced the GP Oberbaselbiet. It’s the first year for this race to take place. Going over the race info, our director told us that though the course profile looked hilly the race was actually pretty flat. He also informed us that there would be no caravan, but he wasn’t exactly sure why not. Once we arrived and warmed-up, we understood the promoter’s reasoning completely. We also realized that the hills on the profile were real. The course was actually very technical, up, down and on

    Published Aug 17, 2005
    Road Racing

    Bennati takes German tour stage; Tankink still in yellow

    Lampre’s Daniele Bennati won the 227.3-kilometer third stage of the Tour of Germany from Bodenmais to the Austrian city of Kufstein on Wednesday. A frantic sprint at the end of the Tour’s longest stage saw the 24-year-old Bennati triumph ahead of compatriot and QuickStep rider Filippo Pozatto who had won Tuesday's second stage. Pozatto’s QuickStep teammate Bram Tankink of the Netherlands retains the yellow jersey he has held since winning the opening stage. T-Mobile captain Jan Ullrich lies 23 seconds behind Tankink after finishing amongst the main group of riders. American Bobby

    Published Aug 17, 2005
    Road

    Wednesday’s EuroFile: Levi realistic; Saunier Duval optimistic; Simoni doubtful

    Leipheimer realistic about German tourGoing into Thursday’s grueling climbing stage at the Tour of Germany, Levi Leipheimer continues to have realistic expectations in what’s his final major stage race of the 2005 season. The 31-year-old Gerolsteiner captain went into Wednesday's action poised with the main leaders at just 23 seconds behind race leader Bram Tankink (Quick Step). Danielle Bennati (Lampre) won the bunch sprint while Tankink stayed in the leader’s jersey. “The Tour of Germany is hard. I didn’t even look at the profiles until last week. It surprised me – it’s like a

    Published Aug 17, 2005
    Road Racing

    Tankink takes German tour opener

    QuickStep’s Bram Tankink won the 164.2km first stage of the Tour of Germany from Altenburg to Plauen here on Monday. The 26-year-old Tankink crossed the finishing line in just over four hours to claim his first major victory since turning professional five years ago. With 15 kilometres to go the Dutchman accelerated away from Spaniard Jose Cobo Acebo and Austria's Bernhard Eisel finishing around a minute ahead of the duo. Germany's Jan Ullrich, the favorite for the overall Tour victory here, finished in the main field, three minutes behind the stage winner. T-Mobile captain

    Published Aug 15, 2005
    Road Racing

    Reed romps at track nationals

    Carson, Calif. (August 13, 2005)-Jennie Reed rode to her third individual national championship of the week with a victory in the women's keirin, adding another stars and stripes jersey to her earlier wins in the 500 meter time trial and the sprint as the 2005 USA Cycling Elite Track National Championships concluded in Los Angeles on Saturday. Reed's sweep of the three sprint-oriented events clearly distinguished her as the strongest sprinter in the field and earned her the title of most decorated rider of the week - man or woman - in terms in individual elite performances. In

    Published Aug 14, 2005
    Mountain

    Prokop, Kintner tops at Jeep KOM

    Blakeslee, Pennsylvania – August 14, 2005 – Mountain bike racing’snew guard, Michael Prokop of the Czech Republic and Jill Kintner of Seattle,Wash., placed an exclamation point on their amazing racing seasons by earningthe title of World Professional Champion at today’s grand finale of theJeep King of the Mountain 2005 Professional Mountain Biking World Championshipsin the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. The pair, who have sat at or near the top of the world rankings allyear, maintained top form throughout the entire series, each winning twoof the three competitions and never finishing

    Published Aug 14, 2005
    Road Racing

    Reed, Hammer and Alfred add to stars-and-stripes collections at track nats

    All three individual event winners on Friday captured their second elite national championships of the week as Jennie Reed (Kirkland, Washington) took a win in the women’s 500 meter time trial to go with her sprint title; Sarah Hammer (Temecula, California) won the women’s 20km points race to match her individual-pursuit victory; and Stephen Alfred (Capitola, California) took the men’s sprint crown in an encore performance to his keirin win as the USA Cycling Elite Track National Championships continued in Carson, California. After riding to the national title in the sprint on Thursday, Reed

    Published Aug 13, 2005
    Road Racing

    Zaballa wins San Sebastian

    The only question coming into the final 20km of the 25th Clásica San Sebastián on Saturday wasn’t whether a Saunier Duval rider was going to win, but rather which one. At least that’s how Chris Horner read the finale of the hilly 227km race in Spain’s Basque Country on a beautiful summer afternoon. “We just triple-teamed everyone,” Horner said after celebratory hugs at the finish line along San Sebastián’s posh Boulevard. “I hit first, then they hit after that, we started hitting and we got two in the group. I sat on everything in the back and just shut it down. It was

    Published Aug 13, 2005
    Road

    Battle of the cycling stars slated in San Sebastián

    A star-studded line-up is expected for Saturday's Clásica San Sebastián, where the likes of Alexandre Vinokourov (T-Mobile) and Ivan Basso (Team CSC) will saddle up for the one-day classic, once part of the 10-race World Cup. Now part of the UCI ProTour series, the Clásica has lost none of its allure for the big names of the sport - and with good reason. Some of cycling's biggest champions, from Laurent Jalabert to Lance Armstrong, have won the hilly race and then donned the Basque beret traditionally given to the winner. Italy’s Basso won the Tour of Denmark barely two weeks ago,

    Published Aug 12, 2005
    Road Racing

    Stahl wins kilo’, Lea doubles in points race at U.S. track nats

    With virtually no event-specific training over the course of the last year, Christian Stahl (Bethany, Connecticut) clocked a personal best time of 1 minute, 4.242 seconds in the men’s kilometer time trial on Thursday to take both the elite and U23 national titles at day two of the USA Cycling Elite Track National Championships at Carson, California. The 22-year-old Athens Olympic Team member beat second-place finisher Aaron Kacala (Racine, Wisconsin) in the day’s penultimate heat by nearly two seconds as Kacala posted a 1:06.180. “I haven’t trained specifically for the kilo since before

    Published Aug 12, 2005
    News

    Quinn claims the women’s scratch race in the final sprint

    Quinn claims the women's scratch race in the final sprint

    Published Aug 12, 2005
    Road Racing

    Hammer scores impressive win at track nationals

    After taking a year off from competitive cycling, Sarah Hammer made a triumphant return to the sport with an impressive victory in the women's 3km individual pursuit as the USA Cycling Elite National Track Championships got underway in suburban Los Angeles. Hammer clocked the second-fastest time ever recorded at the ADT Event Center velodrome, a remarkable feat considering the venue was the site of both the elite world championships and a world cup event since opening its doors a year ago. The 21-year-old Hammer clocked a time of 3 minutes, 41.177 seconds to sweep both the elite and U23

    Published Aug 11, 2005
    Road Racing

    Wednesday’s EuroFile: Julich wins Benelux Tour with strong TT; Contracts, contracts, contracts

    American Bobby Julich grabbed his CSC team's second stage race victory inside a week after winning the inaugural Tour of Benelux asit finished in Holland on Wednesday. Julich stormed to victory in the final stage time trial, held over 26.2km, to leave Dutch favorite Erik Dekker, down in second place in the general classification. The 33-year-old Julich started the time trial with a 37-second deficit on overnight leader Rik Verbrugghe of QuickStep. However Julich has become something of a specialist in the race against the clock over the past two years - and by the halfway mark he had

    Published Aug 10, 2005
    Road Racing

    Tuesday’s EuroFile: Van Dijk takes Benelux stage; No world’s for Oscar? Missing Cuban; CSC goes to Britain

    Dutchman Stefan Van Dijk (Mr. Bookmaker) dominated the sprint finish of a 196-kilometer race from St. Truiden to win the sixth and penultimate stage of the Tour of Benelux in Hoogstraten near Brussels on Tuesday. Belgian Rik Verbrugghe, (QuickStep), retained the race lead going into Wednesday's final stage - a 26.3km individual time trial in Etten-Leur in the Netherlands. Van Dijk sprinted to victory ahead of Discovery Channel's Max Van Heeswijk - who has already won two stages in the event.-Agence France Presse Results in the 195.9km sixth stage of the Tour of Benelux between

    Published Aug 9, 2005
    News

    Van Dijk takes the sprint

    Van Dijk takes the sprint

    Published Aug 9, 2005
    Road

    Van Heeswijk sprints to win in Benelux stage

    Dutchman Max Van Heeswijk (Discovery Channel) dominated a bunch sprint to win the fifth stage of the Benelux Tour held over 194km between Verviers and Hasselt in Belgium on Monday. Belgium's Rik Verbrugghe (Quick Step) retained the lead in the general classification ahead of Tuesday's penultimate stage held over 196km from St Truiden to Hoogstraten. Van Heeswijk thus claims his second stage of the race following his victory in the first stage last Thursday. The Dutch rider finished ahead of Italian Alberto Ongarato (Fassa Bortolo), fellow Dutchman Stefan Van Dijck (MrBookmaker) and

    Published Aug 8, 2005
    Road Racing

    Haedo, Teutenberg claim Charlotte crit

    With one lap to go in the $125,000 Bank of America Invitational in Charlotte, North Carolina, Health Net-Maxxis looked well in control of the race. The crowd, packed six deep along the course, roared with enthusiasm as the green train barreled down the back straight. But lurking behind them, the Colavita-Sutter Home sprinters waited to pounce.

    Published Aug 7, 2005
    Road

    Sunday’s EuroFile: Bungling in Benelux; Basso wraps up Denmark; Castaño wins Burgos opener

    Confusion in Sunday’s fourth stage of the Tour of Benelux cost Christian Vande Velde (CSC) and Jason McCartney (Discovery Channel) a possible shot at victory. The two Americans, along with Belgian Bart Dockx (Davitamon-Lotto), were on the attack in Sunday’s hilly, seven-climb 232km march across Belgium’s Ardennes, nursing a comfortable six-minute lead, when the main bunch accidentally went the wrong way. Vande Velde and Co. were already over the day’s fourth climb at the Côte de la Haute Levée with about 60km to go when the peloton accidentally went off course coming down the descent on

    Published Aug 7, 2005
    Road

    Cadamuro sprints to Benelux win; Van Heeswijk holds lead

    Italy's Simone Cadamuro won the 178.5km second stage of the Tour of Benelux between Geldrop and Sittard on Friday. The Domina Vacanze rider prevailed in a sprint with Liquigas-Bianchi teammates Marco Zanetti and Enrico Gasparotto. Max van Heeswijk (Discovery Channel), winner of Thursday's first stage, held on to the leader's red jersey, extending his lead over Belgian Rik Verbrugghe (Quick Step) to three seconds. In rainy conditions French duo Rony Martias (Bouygues Telecom) and Fabien Sanchez (Française des Jeux) tried to slip the main pack, at one point building up a

    Published Aug 5, 2005
    News

    Monday’s Mailbag: Injured racer; dumb ads; George in green; and our cover boy

    The Mailbag 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.Injured racer could use some cheering upEditor:Joe Trujillo, a 15-year-old junior rider and one of the Reno Wheelmen's rising stars, was badly injured when he struck a tree during a Cat. 3/4/5 support race at the NorCal/Nevada Masters Championships. Joe’s injuries include a torn

    Published Aug 1, 2005
    Road Racing

    Pozzato grabs HEW win in Hamburg

    Quick Step won Sunday’s HEW Cyclassics race in rainy Germany, but it wasn’t sprinter ace Tom Boonen taking the honors. Instead, it was Italian superstar-in-waiting Filippo Pozzato winning the rainy, hard-fought 250.5km race in and around Hamburg. Luca Paolini grabbed second to give Quick Step the double while Aussie Allan Davis (Liberty Seguros) rounded out the podium. “I’ve done a lot of work over the past few weeks to get myself in top condition, even doing some intense altitude training in the mountains surrounding Livigno,” said Pozzato, who took his first win of the season. “At last it

    Published Jul 31, 2005
    Road

    Moninger, Jeanson win at ‘toona

    With a handful of time bonuses and some tight GC races to be settled at the International Tour de Toona, Sunday's final criterium stage proved exciting for both the men and women, and resulted in changes to the overall classification. Greg Henderson (Health Net-Maxxis) took the final stage criterium. As expected, teammate Scott Moninger maintained his yellow jersey - his second overall win at the Tour de 'Toona - having won it back in 1994. In the women’s race, the bonuses had a far more significant impact as Geneviève Jeanson (The Bicycle Store/RONA) moved into the overall lead as

    Published Jul 31, 2005
    Road

    Moninger takes over at ‘toona; Thorburn holds jersey

    Saturday's 93 mile road race featured two dirt road climbs in the Pennsylvanian hilltops and proved decisive in shaking up the men's general classification at the International Tour de Toona, as Health Net’s Scott Moninger soloed the final 20 miles to take the stage win and yellow jersey from teammate Chris Wherry. The women also saw a surprise winner in France’s Marina Jauantre (MS2R-Honey Stinger), who crossed the line 2:47 ahead of the chase group containing all the GC favorites, a gap small enough to leave Webcor’s Christine Thorburn in the overall lead. It wasn’t until peloton

    Published Jul 30, 2005
    Road

    Friday’s EuroFile: A FrancoFailure at the Tour? Moreau bails; DiLuca ready to rumble

    French decry malaiseRecriminations are flying as French cycling officials grapple for a reason to explain France’s less-than-stellar presentation in the 92nd Tour de France. David Moncoutie was the only French rider to win a stage and Christophe Moreau, 11th at 16:26 back, was the only French rider in the top 20, enough to make any Frenchman cry in his pastis. In an interview published in L’Equipe, French cycling federation officials are decrying a variety of reasons for France’s dismal showing. Excuses range from too many foreign riders, a different attitude about training and winning,

    Published Jul 29, 2005
    News

    Friday’s mailbag: Workday distractions; Bonuses? T-shirts; The joke that keeps on giving

    The Mailbag 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.Slackers Unite!I have really enjoyed your coverage. It has made it possible for me to follow the Tour while at work. Any plans for similar coverage for the world’s?Jack HalesTampa, FloridaYes, Jack, we plan to offer Live Coverage and race reports from the world’s and, of course, daily

    Published Jul 29, 2005
    News

    Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood: Life after Lance

    I am glad to see Armstrong go. With him there are no heroes, only victims.A German fan on the Col du Galibier I got a good laugh out of this, even if I didn’t actually hear it in person. My buddy Kirk, who was over at the Tour de France with some pals riding the cols of the Alps and Pyrénées alongside the race, relayed the quote to me. But I think the sentiment was shared by many fans along the roads of the Tour, as well as by a majority of journalists I spoke with during the week I spent in France. As amazing as Lance Armstrong’s feats at the world’s biggest bike race have been, the same

    Published Jul 29, 2005
    Road

    McCormack, Pic take ‘toona circuit race

    The Martinsburg circuit race has traditionally been the day for sprinters to steal the spotlight at the International Tour de Toona, giving GC riders to rest up for Saturday's mammoth road stage. Friday's 76-mile race featured four 19-mile circuits of ice-smooth roads through bucolic Mennonite farms and dairy pastures. In the men's race Colavita-Sutter Homes played their hand right and swept the entire podium. Mark McCormack took the win, and more importantly, gained a 15-second time bonus. The effort paid off as McCormack moved from eighth to sixth on general classification,

    Published Jul 29, 2005
    Road

    Wherry, Thorburn keep jerseys at International

    Thursday's fourth stage of the International Tour de Toona, a circuit race in Hollidaysburg - the only city in America where the Slinky is manufactured - was held on the same course that an up-and-coming Chann McRae beat a young Lance Armstrong for the national amateur championship title back in 1992. Both men and women's fields seemed content to keep Thursday's fourth stage a status quo affair for the GC contenders and let the rest take their best shot. As a result, Webcor’s Christine Thorburn and Health Net’s Chris Wherry held on to their overall leads as Kori Seehafer

    Published Jul 28, 2005
    News

    Stage 21 – Corbeil-Essonnes to Paris (Champs-Elysées) >144.5km

    Course: After looping around the Chevreuse valley south of Paris, the course heads into the city on the right bank of the Seine to reach the traditional Champs-Élysées finishing circuit after 92.5km. Eight laps of the 6.5km circuit complete the 2005 Tour just 400 meters after the final turn from the Place de la Concorde. History: This is the 30th anniversary of the Tour first finishing on the Champs-Élysées. It previously finished in the velodromes at Vincennes (1968-74) and the Parc des Princes (1904-67). The first Tour, in 1903, finished at Ville d’Avray in the Paris suburbs. Favorites:

    Published Jul 24, 2005
    News

    Vino’ conquers Paris; Armstrong collects No. 7

    For a Tour de France finale that was supposed to be a fait accompli — with Lance Armstrong virtually guaranteed a seventh win and the stage supposedly promised to the sprinters — Sunday's stage 21 into the city of Paris hardly fit the bill. That the 144.5km stage began under gray skies and with cold rain should have been a sign that the race that brought the curtain down on 3593km of racing would have something special to offer. And it did. Foremost of the day's surprises was the winner on the Champs-Élysées, the most attacking rider of the peloton, the ever-popular Kazakhstan

    Published Jul 24, 2005
    News

    Our annual Tour de Web Awards

    Stick a fork in it – the 2005 Tour de France is over. It’s been a long, yet wonderful three weeks in France (with a day in Germany and time enough for a quick coffee in Spain). Sometimes the pace of the Tour leaves little time for reflection. So as Lance Armstrong celebrates a magnificent seventh win, we offer VeloNews’s annual web awards for the best moments of the 92nd Tour de France. IT’S A HORSE RACE Best Reason Why You Better Win a Sprint: Robbie McEwen, after Davitamon-Lotto gave chase for more than 100km in stage 13, catching Chris Horner and Sylvain Chavanel about 150m from the line.

    Published Jul 24, 2005
    Mountain

    Snowmass NORBA: Kabush, Marks-Marino grab STXC wins

    A weekend sweep, two first time winners, and another tough day for mountain cross, highlighted a full slate of racing at the Snowmass NORBA on Sunday in central Colorado. Canadian Geoff Kabush made it 2-for-2 in Snowmass, taking a convincing short track victory a day after winning the cross-country by more than a minute. Kabush (Maxxis) is now the series leader in both disciplines, and is well on his way to duplicating his two-title effort of a year ago. In the women’s STXC race, Dara Mark-Marino finally broke through with her first NORBA win. The former third-grade teacher has been

    Published Jul 24, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Zabriskie comes to Paris; Levi: Vino’ was stronger

    Zabriskie resurfaces for the end of the TourDave Zabriskie reappeared at the Tour de France, showing up in preppyclothes to join his teammates on the leisurely, ceremonial, post-race ridedown the Champs-Élysées.He has mostly been hanging out in Spain in the few weeks since a mysterious spill in the team time trial forced him to relinquish the yellow jersey. He said he had four or five stitches, and only watched a little of the Tour on television.“I was really tired,” said Zabriskie, asked about his feelings after the crash. “It took awhile to decompress and come back up.”The Utah native still

    Published Jul 24, 2005
    News

    Mighty Robbie has eye on Champs win

    Australian Robbie McEwen will become one of the Tour de France's all-timegreats if he wins a fourth stage in Paris on Sunday. If McEwen wins the 144.5km 21st and final stage of the 3607km Tour onthe Champs Élysées, he will be only the 14th rider – andseventh sprinter – in the post-war era to win four or more stages on theone Tour. “He would be a hero,” said McEwen's Davitamon-Lotto team manager, HendrikRedant. “To win four stages in one Tour is amazing. There are not a lotof guys except those like Eddy Merckx. It will be really, really special.” Merckx, who won the Tour de France

    Published Jul 23, 2005
    News

    A look ahead to Stage 21: Lance on cruise control in finale – but watch out for McEwen and Vino’

    With his seventh consecutive Tour de France victory locked up, Lance Armstrong is ready to ride the final stage of his final Tour and the very last competitive event of his professional cycling career. He did say Saturday night that after retirement he might show up to race a local cyclo-cross or mountain-bike race, or even a 10K run or triathlon. But this is it for Lance the pro cyclist. Stage 21 of the 92nd Tour de France finishes on the Champs-Élysées for the 30th year. It previously finished in the velodromes at Vincennes (1968-74) and the Parc des Princes (1904-67). The first Tour, in

    Published Jul 23, 2005
    Road

    Moninger tops on Mt. Evans

    Scott Moninger (Health Net-Maxxis) won the annual Bob Cook Memorial Mount Evans Hillclimb on Saturday. Run under warm temperatures and sunny skies, the 28-mile race – which starts at 7540 feet in Idaho Springs and climbs to the 14,264-foot summit of Mount Evans - was a far cry from last year’s cold and stormy conditions. But that doesn mean Moninger's win came easily. Team TIAA-CREF went on the attack early, sending national champ Ian MacGregor up the road. A chase group containing Moninger, former world mountain bike champion Ned Overend (Specialized), Boulder racer Burke Swindlehurst

    Published Jul 23, 2005
    News

    Great win for T-Mobile’s tireless veteran Guerini

    This time Giuseppe Guerini saw the people who wanted to take his photo. En route to winning Friday's stage 19, a hilly 153km from Issoire to Le Puy-en-Velay, Guerini enjoyed a clean run to the finish line. That’s something he didn’t get on his way to winning at L'Alpe d'Huez in 1999. Back then, a fan - the now infamous "Erik the Photographer" - capturing Guerini’s victorious pedal strokes about a kilometer from the line forced the Italian to fall before finishing. “Yes, L’Alpe d'Huez is more dangerous,” said a smiling Guerini, 35, when reminded at his post-stage press

    Published Jul 22, 2005
    News

    Tour Tidbits: Cipo’ on Eurosport? McEwen ready to rage; Pound pops off; and after Lance, what?

    Second act for Cipo'?The recently retired Italian champion Mario Cipollini may make a second career as a television personality. According to Eurosport, the deep-voiced playboy was close to accepting an offer to work as one of the broadcaster’s “consultants” for the Tour de France – the expert commentators narrating the broadcast. “We wanted to have Cipollini too,” says executive producer Patrick Chassé, who oversees the Eurosport coverage. “He wanted to spend the holidays with his family, so it was not possible.” “Maybe next year,” says Chassé. McEwen ready to rage on

    Published Jul 22, 2005
    Road Culture

    Letters from Larssyn: Back on the bike, racing for training

    I just competed in my hometown race, the Alpenrose Velodrome Challenge (AVC). The AVC has always been one of my favorite races, but it wasn’t in my plans for the season until I broke my back and was given a leave of absence my team in Switzerland. I returned to Portland, thinking there’s no place like home to recover. I got back on the bike after a couple weeks, and figured that since I was here and on the bike again, maybe I’d be able to race. My coach argued that normally, one should get a full month of just riding before even thinking about the sort of intensity that a race like this

    Published Jul 22, 2005
    News

    Casar took the sprint for second, not the prize he was after.

    Casar took the sprint for second, not the prize he was after.

    Published Jul 22, 2005
    News

    Serrano overpowers break to win Tour stage; Armstrong holds lead

    The third week of the Tour de France often becomes many races within one. Thursday's 189km stage 18 from Albi to Mende was one of those days. Riders desperate for a stage victory to "save" their Tours were off the front attacking over the hilly, five-climb course through France's Massif Central. And the overall contenders were cooling their jets until the day's final climb, anxious to either drop rivals ahead of them on the GC, make up time they've lost on previous days or, at least in the case of Ivan Basso, take one last swing for the fences. Marcos Serrano, a Spanish

    Published Jul 21, 2005
    News

    Stage 17 – Pau to Revel >239.5km

    Course: At 239.5km, this is the longest stage of the 2005 Tour. There’s rolling terrain throughout, but the key to victory could be the closing 12km loop at Revel, which includes the Cat. 3 St-Ferréol climb 7km from the finish line. History: The last two times that a stage has finished in Revel, two-man breakaways have arrived to contest the finishing sprint. In 1995, it was Sergej Uchakov who outthought a youthful Lance Armstrong, while in 2000, on an almost identical course as this year’s, Erik Dekker got the better of Santiago Botero. Favorites: Long-distance specialists like Rabobank’s

    Published Jul 20, 2005
    News

    A look ahead to Stage 17: The longest stage

    With five stages to go and with 10 teams still without a stage win, competition is again going to be fierce on Wednesday’s 239.5km jaunt from Pau to Revel, which is the longest stage of the 2005 Tour de France. As on virtually every other road stage to date, expect attacks right from the start until the right combination of riders and teams is together. On Tuesday, the first substantial move by 13 men didn’t work because Discovery Channel’s Yaroslav Popovych was in the mix. The next, from 11 riders, also seemed a little suspect because then 12th-placed Cadel Evans slipped into the break. In

    Published Jul 20, 2005
    News

    Savoldelli pips Arvesen for stage; Armstrong in yellow

    Two-time Giro d’Italia champion Paolo Savoldelli finally left his mark on the Tour de France in his fourth start in the race by winning Wednesday's stage 16 from Pau to Revel. Under a cloudless sky, the 32-year-old Italian and Discovery Channel teammate of race leader Lance Armstrong, won the 239.5km stage by coming from behind to outlast CSC’s Norwegian Kurt-Asle Arvesen. In third place, eight seconds back, was Australian Tour rookie Simon Gerrans (AG2R), followed at 11 seconds by Frenchman Sébastien Hinault (Crédit Agricole).He was the last member of a four-man splinter group that was

    Published Jul 20, 2005
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