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NEWS: Contador wins 96th Tour on SRAM RED
Astana's Alberto Contador of Spain has won the Tour de France for a second time and achieved the first-ever Tour win for SRAM RED and 12th in Tour history for a Spanish rider. "The Tour is the hardest race in the world, but this year it was particularly difficult. That's why I am so happy," said Contador, after finishing the 96th Tour with 4'11" over Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank) and 5'24" over Astana teammate Lance Armstrong.
24-year old Andy Schleck of SRAM RED equipped Saxo Bank was not only runner up, but also Best Young Rider at the 96th Tour De France. Andy credited his brother Frank, who finished 5th and won a stage for his success. "I owe part of this achievement to my brother Frank, who for three weeks sacrificed himself trying to help me," said Andy Schleck.
Next to the bike frame itself, nothing has a bigger impact on your bike's performance than your wheels. From rugged training wheels to featherweight racing wheels, upgrading to a set of Bontrager wheels is a surefire way to save weight, go faster, and improve your bike's handling.
OVERVIEW: Bontrager Inform Saddles
THE InFORM SADDLE STUDY - Bontrager commissioned a university-backed study that combined the in-depth knowledge of academic experts in human body movement with the expertise of a sports medicine physician. Only through a true scientific inquiry into these questions could Bontrager has a sound understanding of how riders and saddles interact. And only then could they translate that understanding into a line of substantially better saddles.
THE InFORM SADDLE STUDY - Bontrager started their research by asking two basic questions: What makes a saddle comfortable? And what makes a saddle healthier for a rider's anatomy over the long run? They answered these questions in their groundbreaking inForm Saddle Study, the first study of its kind regarding pelvis anatomy and saddle fit. The result is the new line of inForm saddles-the most comfortable, healthiest saddles on the market today.
Stage 21: Montereau-Fault-Yonne to Paris Champs Elysees, 164km/102mi
By Cathy Mehl
In the shadow of the Arc de Triomphe Team Astana's Alberto Contador held up two fingers on each hand to signify his second Tour de France win in what played out to be a near-perfect ride for the young Spanish champion. Contador took both a mountain stage and time trial win, along with the victory for the team time trial, making for a well-rounded Tour from the world's current best stage racer. After almost 85-hours of racing, Contador's gap to second place was a dominant four minutes, satisfying even nay-sayers that his repeat performance at the top of the podium in Paris is not a fluke. Coming in 4:11 behind Contador was Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank) and rounding out the podium was seven-time Tour champion Lance Armstrong in his return to the sport after a four year retirement. Team Astana also took the win in the Teams classification, a testament to the hard work put in by 6th place finisher Andreas Kloden, Sergio Paulinho, Yaroslav Popovych, Haimar Zubeldia, Gregory Rast, Dmitriy Muravyev and Levi Leipheimer to put two men on the podium.
Inside The Lab - Every trip to the podium starts somewhere. For Trek's teams and riders it starts in Waterloo, WI. With an ever-growing number of victories on the world's biggest stages, the Trek Race Department is solely dedicated to ensuring the continued success of Trek riders everywhere. If you've ever wondered where your Trek came from, how or who put it through its paces, than welcome to where it all begins.
Inside The Lab: An In-Depth Look at Trek's Race Department
Two Trek K.Swiss triathletes came in 1st and 3rd respectively in the Top 5 Women category of the Ironman 70.3 Boise that just concluded recently on June 11, 2011 in Idaho.
Julie Dibens came in at 4.25.14 to claim 1st. Heather Jackson came in at 4.34.58 to come in 3rd behind Linsey Corbin, in 2nd position at a time of 4.29.22.
SOURCE: ironman.com
Craig Alexander got to the line just 10 seconds ahead of Ben Hoffman at Ironman 70.3 Boise, marking the second year that the Australian Ford Ironman World Champion took the title in a close race. Defending Foster Grant Ironman 70.3 world champion, Julie Dibens, led from start to finish to take the women's title. FULL ARTICLE AT IRONMAN.COM
Chris Lieto held off Andy Potts for a narrow 24-second course-record win at K-Swiss Ironman 70.3 Kansas on the weekend, while Chrissie Wellington (seen here winning last year's race) showed she's back on her game with an impressive win by almost 18 minutes in the women's race. FULL ARTICLE AT IRONMAN.COM
Michael Raelert (GER) and Caroline Steffen continue their winning streak at the PowerBar Ironman 70.3 Switzerland, while defending champion Ronnie Schildknecht follows in second. Steffen holds off challenge from Nicole Hofer in women's race. FULL ARTICLE AT IRONMAN.COM
European Freeride Mountainbike Film - ionate films is back with its second freeride mountainbike film and takes you on a ride through dust, dirt, tarmac and snow. Lean back and enjoy the resounding scenery spanning from the heart of the Swiss Alps over mountains and glaciers down to the Ligurian coastline, the broad spaces of the Provence and the streets of Berlin. See what riders like Rene Wildhaber, Ross Schnell, Samuel Zbinden and Carlo Dieckmann do when they go riding, not racing.
Riders: Rene Wildhaber, Ross Schnell, Samuel Zbinden, Carlo Dieckmann, Romeo Volken, Pascal Breitenstein, Mischa Breitenstein, Adrian Fischer, Sacha Robert, Katja Rupf, Marco Bugnone, Vinzenz Guntern, Roman Roschi, Mathe Husler
Filmed on location in Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Austria and France.
ionate films - VAST Trailer 2010: European Freeride Mountainbike Film A Brian Gottschalk and Fabian Haf Film
So says What Mountain Bike, of the Fuel EX 8. What, you've never heard of What Mountain Bike? Wait, who's on first?
No really... WMB is represented in the US as bikeradar.com, which shares some content with both Mountain Bike UK and cyclingnews.com, which are all owned by the same media conglomerate that is... Future Publishing!
It, like all other media house, is most likely celebrating the arrival of the iPad as a way of creating stronger solvency in a market that's only seen a decline in revenue over the past few years. But I'm not here to lament the loss of print, or praise the arrival of the iPad - no, I just want to share the great news that this media powerhouse just handed out Bike of the Year to the Fuel EX.
The 1km Speed Challenge was organized jointly by Treknology Bikes 3 Pte Ltd and T3 Bicycle Gears in collaboration with 91.3 FM. The winners have won a TREK 3700 Mountain Bicycle.