Recently on Cyclingnews.com
|
Giro finale Photo ©: Bettini
|
|
|
UCI codes explained
The International (Tour de Toona) - NE
Pennsylvania, USA, July 28-August 3, 2003
2002 results
Stage List Preview
Start List Past winners
Photos
The Stages
- Stage 1 - July 28: Broad Avenue ITT, 3.5 miles
- Stage 2 - July 29: Johnstown Circuit Road Race, 74 miles
- Stage 3 - July 30: Johnstown-Altoona Road Race, 100 miles
- Stage 4 - July 31: Hollidaysburg Circuit Road Race, 60
miles
- Stage 5 - August 1: Martinsburg Circuit Road Race, 80
miles
- Stage 6 - August 2: Altoona/Blair County Road Race, 93.8
miles
- Stage 7 - August 3: Downtown Altoona Criterium, 35 miles
Photos
Images © 2003 The International
Stage
1
Stage 2
Stage 3
Stage 4
Stage 5
Stage 6
Images by James Moro
- The peloton
cuts through the thick fog that covered the countryside early Saturday morning...
- ... but
cannot escape the mist that enshrouds the countryside.
- Scottie
Weiss (West Virginia Cycling) and Eneas Freyre (Lemond Fitness) lead the
peloton through Blair county.
- Matt Svatek
(Sportsbook.com) increases the pace through the dense fog engulfing Blair
county.
- The main
bunch work hard to keep up with the change of pace.
- Setting
his sights on the first points sprint of the day, Peter Hult (Sportsbook.com)
launches a solo attack on the run into downtown Altoona.
- Saturn
rider Tim Johnson tests his legs on the rolling hills outside downtown
Altoona.
- A dangerous-looking
group containing Tim Johnson (Saturn) attacks early on as the peloton
headed towards the the first climb of the day.
- Jeremy
Spartain of Team Bianchi-Grand Performance leads the break.
- Eneas Freyre
(Lemond Fitness) does his share of the work on the approach to the first
climb.
- Scottie
Weiss and Tim Johnson lead the breakaway up the 4.1 mile climb to the
summit of the Blue Knob ski resort.
- The group
nails their lead over the chasing peloton, with the gap blowing out to
five minutes.
- Scottie
Weiss (West Virginia Cycling) keeps the group together on the tough climb.
- The road
rears up ahead… but the breakaway dial up the pace.
- Scottie
Weiss seemed to be enjoying himself a little too much on the 3,000 ft.
climb.
- The front
group soon approaches the summit.
- The chase
group screams down the long and twisting descent in pursuit of the break
up the road, reaching speeds in excess of 65 mph.
- Overall
GC leader Chris Baldwin (Navigators) leads a chase group up Sugar Run
after the peloton split to pieces on Blue Knob Hill.
- Tom Danielson
(Saturn) leads his team-mate Tim Johnson (Saturn), Mark Walters (Navigators),
and Brice Jones (7up-Maxxis) in a counterattack on the approach to the 2,500
ft. climb up Horseshoe Curve.
- Tom Danielson
sets a blistering pace with 10 miles to go, the two Saturn riders riding
with sheer strength in an attempt to drop Jones (7up-Maxxis) and Walters (Navigators).
- Brice Jones
cracks under the pressue set by Danielson, but manages to hold onto a
very respectable 6th place on today's difficult stage.
- Chris Wherry
(Navigators) drives the 12-man chase group up Horseshoe Curve, managing
to bring back the gap down to 40 seconds.
- Jason McCartney
(7up-Maxis) counterattacks the chasing group with 5 miles until the run
into downtown Altoona, but is not able to bridge up to help his teammate.
- Mark Walters
(Navigators) forces the two Saturn riders to do all of the work on the
descent into downtown Altoona...
- ... but
neither Saturn rider could find the legs to beat Walters in the sprint.
- Chris Horner
(Saturn) battles it out with Chris Baldwin (Navigators) in the sprint
for fourth.
- The stage
podium - (L to R) Tom Danielson (Saturn, 2nd), Mark Walters (Navigators,
1st) and Tim Johnson (Saturn, 3rd).
- Tim Johnson
proudly displays his King of the Mountains jersey.
- Ian Dille
(Team Snow Valley) dons the sprinter's green jersey.
- Tom Danielson
feels the confidence as he dons the last of his yellow jerseys.
- The final
podium - Tom Danielson (Saturn, M) wins the Tour de Toona, with Navigators
Mark Walters (L) and Chris Baldwin (R) takind 2nd and 3rd.
- Team Saturn
stand tall on the podium as winners of the team classification.
|
|