11 posts tagged “tour”
Merckx: Cycling will recover from recent doping scandals; 3/4 are cyclists are clean
"The illness is terrible, the situation always serious, but there are some signs of life," Merckx said in Friday's edition of Gazzetta dello Sport. "There are many honest people. I think that three-quarters of the group is clean."
This year's Tour was marred by numerous doping offenses. Race leader Michael Rasmussen was expelled by his Rabobank team for allegedly lying about his whereabouts to evade doping controls, while pre-race favorite Alexandre Vinokourov and Cristian Moreni were forced out for failing doping tests.
Alberto Contador of Spain won the prestigious multistage race, but some media reports have even linked him with the Spanish blood-doping investigation known as Operation Puerto.
"At the Tour, there weren't cases of team doping but of individuals that involved their teams," Merckx said.
Vinokourov's positive test for a banned blood transfusion after winning the 13th stage led to his Astana team's withdrawal. The same happened to Moreni's Cofidis team following his positive test for testosterone after the 11th stage.
Merckx, who won the Tour from 1969-72 and in '74, said those that dope were risking more than just getting caught.
"Riders who dope are playing Russian roulette with their lives," Merckx said.
The 62-year-old Belgian added that serious doping offenses should carry lifetime bans.
"There is doping and doping. I wouldn't ban Alessandro Petacchi for a couple of sprays too many, particularly since he has a medical certificate. But I'd have no mercy for blood transfusions."
Petacchi of Italy tested positive for elevated levels of an asthma drug during the Giro d'Italia. His national cycling federation cleared him of any doping violation, saying he had a legitimate reason for using the medication. However, the Italian Olympic Committee has appealed the ruling and wants him banned for one year.
Before this year's Tour, all racers signed a new UCI charter, saying that they were not involved in doping, will not breach anti-doping rules, and promising to submit DNA samples to Spanish authorities in the Operation Puerto investigation. Cyclists also had to agree to pay a year's salary on top of a two-year ban if caught cheating.
|
Standing |
Overall of Tour De France 2007 after Stage 4
Rider |
Rider number bib |
Team |
Time |
Gaps |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 33 | TEAM CSC | 19:49:55 | ||
| 2. | 101 | CREDIT AGRICOLE | 19:50:24 | + 00:00:29 | |
| 3. | 196 | ASTANA | 19:50:28 | + 00:00:33 | |
| 4. | 201 | SAUNIER DUVAL - PRODIR | 19:50:36 | + 00:00:41 | |
| 5. | 114 | DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM | 19:50:38 | + 00:00:43 | |
| 6. | 149 | COFIDIS CREDIT PAR TELEPHONE | 19:50:38 | + 00:00:43 | |
| 7. | 141 | COFIDIS CREDIT PAR TELEPHONE | 19:50:39 | + 00:00:44 | |
| 8. | 113 | DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM | 19:50:40 | + 00:00:45 | |
| 9. | 171 | QUICK STEP - INNERGETIC | 19:50:41 | + 00:00:46 | |
| 10. | 15 | CAISSE D’EPARGNE | 19:50:41 | + 00:00:46 | |
| 11. | 73 | EUSKALTEL - EUSKADI | 19:50:44 | + 00:00:49 | |
| 12. | 191 | ASTANA | 19:50:45 | + 00:00:50 | |
| 13. | 54 | RABOBANK | 19:50:46 | + 00:00:51 | |
| 14. | 157 | LIQUIGAS | 19:50:47 | + 00:00:52 | |
| 15. | 169 | FRANCAISE DES JEUX | 19:50:47 | + 00:00:52 | |
| 16. | 14 | CAISSE D’EPARGNE | 19:50:48 | + 00:00:53 | |
| 17. | 184 | TEAM MILRAM | 19:50:48 | + 00:00:53 | |
| 18. | 151 | LIQUIGAS | 19:50:50 | + 00:00:55 | |
| 19. | 112 | DISCOVERY CHANNEL TEAM | 19:50:50 | + 00:00:55 | |
| 20. | 195 | ASTANA | 19:50:50 | + 00:00:55 | |
| 21. | 41 | PREDICTOR - LOTTO | 19:50:51 | + 00:00:56 | |
| 22. | 102 | CREDIT AGRICOLE | 19:50:51 | + 00:00:56 | |
| 23. | 77 | EUSKALTEL - EUSKADI | 19:50:51 | + 00:00:56 | |
| 24. | 21 | T-MOBILE TEAM | 19:50:52 | + 00:00:57 | |
| 25. | 11 | CAISSE D’EPARGNE | 19:50:52 | + 00:00:57 | |
| 26. | 181 | TEAM MILRAM | 19:50:53 | + 00:00:58 | |
| 27. | 139 | AGRITUBEL | 19:50:53 | + 00:00:58 | |
| 28. | 25 | T-MOBILE TEAM | 19:50:53 | + 00:00:58 | |
| 29. | 199 | ASTANA | 19:50:53 | + 00:00:58 | |
| 30. | 216 | BARLOWORLD |
The opening ceremony
© A.S.O.
The permanence and press center
The Permanence will be at ExCeL, London’s premier exhibition and convention centre.
It is located next to London City Airport and is served by two stations, Custom House and Prince Regent station.
The opening ceremony
On Friday 6th July 2007 the teams will be presented in Trafalgar Square, the very centre of London.
At the south side of the square is a plaque that marks the point that all distances to London are measured from.
In the square is Nelson’s Column, on top of which stands a statue of Lord Nelson, surrounded by fountains and four bronze lions.
The National Gallery stands on the north side of the square. The square was transformed into a pedestrian only area in front of the National Gallery in 2003 and now welcomes thousands of Londoners and visitors every day.
It is a focal point for celebrations to mark events, such as New Year’s Eve and English victories in the 2003 Rugby World Cup and 2005 “Ashes” cricket tournament.
The prologue
On Saturday 7th July 2007, starting on Whitehall, in front of Trafalgar Square, the riders will race past Downing Street towards Parliament Square on an 8 km course.
Turning at the Houses of Parliament, the route goes along Victoria Street, past Westminster Abbey and in front of Buckingham Palace.
After the Palace the riders will pass through the middle of Wellington Arch, before looping through London’s most famous park, Hyde Park.
Finally the riders will pass back around Hyde Park Corner and along Constitution Hill, before ending on The Mall with Buckingham Palace as a backdrop.
Stage 1
On 8th July 2007 the Tour will take in some of Britain’s most picturesque and historic towns. The route starts on The Mall, runs through Admiralty Arch and then proceeds alongside the Thames down to the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben. The riders will cross The Thames before riding past the London Eye and looping back to take in St Paul’s Cathedral and the Tower of London. The riders will pass over Tower Bridge, through Bermondsey and Deptford to Greenwich where they will cross the Greenwich Meridian Line, where all time zones are measured from. The route then passes through Woolwich, Abbey Wood and Erith, before leaving London for Dartford in Kent.
The route then goes through Gravesend and on to Medway, dominated by Rochester Castle and Cathedral. Passing on through Maidstone the route will take the riders to Tonbridge and then on to Royal Tunbridge Wells. The route winds through the beautiful Kent countryside, through the picturesque town of Tenterden and past Ashford to a potentially nail biting finish in Canterbury.
Getting to London
London is well served by excellent transport links from the rest of Europe and further afield.
London has five airports – Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Luton Airport and London City Airport. Long-haul travellers will usually land at either Heathrow or Gatwick. Many low-cost airlines operate from Stansted or Luton while London City offers convenient flights to Paris and is located 4 kms from ExCeL for the Permanence.
London has many rail stations. The Eurostar terminal is at Waterloo and other major stations include Victoria and King’s Cross. The main station for coach arrivals from Europe is Victoria Coach Station (close to Victoria train station).
By car, London is well served with motorways and major roads, while access from mainland Europe is both by ferry and via the Channel Tunnel.
The Tour in U.K.
It was in 1974, after a start from Brest, that the Tour de France first travelled from Brittany to England, with a circuit stage in Plymouth. It aroused interest and praise from the critics, but no more.
However, twenty years later, when the Tour crossed the Channel (via the Tunnel) to visit England for the second time, it was an immense public success on the roads leading from Dover to Brighton, and then in Portsmouth.
From a sporting point of view Bill Burl and Charles Holland were the first British riders to attempt the Tour de France in 1937, but it wasn’t until the first British team took part in the 1955 race that a British rider made it to the finish in Paris. Of the ten members of that 1955 team two men, Tony Hoar and Brian Robinson, managed to finish the race, while their team mates fell foul of saddle sores, broken bones and a plague of punctures.
Brian Robinson from the 1955 team went on to complete a further 6 Tour de France races, winning 2 stages in 1957 and 1956. Tom Simpson followed Robinson into riding in the Tour and rode 7 times. Barry Hoban rode an impressive 12 Tours between 1964 and 1978, winning 8 stages over this time. Michaël Wright competed in 8 over the same period and won 3 stages.
In the late 70s and early 80s, Paul Scherwen participated seven times in the Tour de France and Graham Jones five times. Robert Millar was present at the start eleven times between 1983 and 1993, winning three stage victories, along with the Best Climber classification in 1984. As for Max Sciandri, he took part in seven editions of the Tour in the 1990s and won one stage victory.
In 1994, Chris Boardman broke a record by winning the prologue in Lille at a staggering average speed of 55,152 Km/h. The “yellow shirt” was worn by Sean Yates that same year.
British riders have won 23 stages in total and the first to wear the Yellow Jersey was Tom Simpson in 1962. He was also ranked sixth in the overall final classification that year. David Millar was the last British rider to wear the Yellow Jersey, in 2000. That same year, during the time trial at the Start of the Tour from the Futuroscope, he won the first of his three stage victories on the Tour.
Saunier Duval-Prodir announce Tour riders
Daily Peloton | Tour de France: Saunier Duval/Prodir Squad Announced
Saunier Duval/Prodir is chasing stage wins at this year's Tour, as they've chosen an experienced squad with an eye on the mountains.
- Suanier Duval/Prodir 2007 Tour roster:
- Iker Camano (Spain)
- Juan José Cobo (Spain)
- David de la Fuente (Spain)
- José Angel Gomez Marchante (Spain)
- Ruben Lobato (Spain)
- Iban Mayo (Spain)
- David Millar (Scotland, UK)
- Christophe Rinero (France)
- Francisco Ventoso (Spain)
Reserves are David Cañada, Angel Gomez, and Jesus del Nero.
Mayo won Stage 8 up Alpe d'Huez in the 2003 Tour and Stage 19 of this year's Giro d'Italia. David de la Fuente was the most combative rider of last year's Tour, after long attacks on Stage 2 and Stage 11. Rinero took the King of the Mountains in the 1998 Tour.
TMobile cycling team fires Ukrainian rider Serhiy Honchar after blood tests
Germany (AP) -The T-Mobile cycling team fired Ukrainian rider Serhiy Honchar on Tuesday following the results of unannounced blood tests.
T-Mobile said the 36-year-old Ukrainian, who won two stages at last year's Tour de France, had been suspended from competition since May 11 when the blood tests were taken at the Tour de Normandie. He had been under internal investigation since then.
T-Mobile said Honchar violated the team's code of conduct. The German team and Danish team CSC have installed what they call the toughest anti-doping program of the 20 ProTour teams that compete at the sport's big races." With respect the right to privacy of all parties and cannot release any further information at this time, said T-Mobile General manager Bob Stapleton. In this case its seems another dirty cyclist has come to the forefront of teams, seeking to change the appearance in the sport. Though I am sad to see another cyclist caught up in the swwp of El Porto, it goes to show you, team in the pelotin are doing their best to police themselves.
With past experience showing that cyclist are very secretive in their training, it comes to show how team like Team Slipstream are presenting more and more evidence of science being used in cycling for prevention of abuse, in doping or use of sysnthetic ways to enhance cycling. This years Tour De France is still under a shadow, and will continue till the which hunt is over with, and cyclist become clean. Hear Hear to TMobile doing what was needed, after Jan Ullrich and Bjarne Riis bad press.
Danielson to miss 2007 Tour
Buried in the VeloNews coverage of today's stage at the Dauphiné Libéré, there's a story:
Tom Danielson's illness will keep him out of the Tour de France this year.
“Tom is off the Tour team,” Discovery Channel boss Johan Bruyneel told VeloNews's Andrew Hood. “He’s sick. We’re trying to find out exactly what the problem is. He’s had stomach problems throughout the year at several key moments. It’s definitely a disappointment.”
Danielson, 29, won the 2005 Tour de Georgia, and led Discovery Channel at the 2006 Vuelta, where he won Stage 17, and was 6th overall. He was expected to make his first Tour start this season.

