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    Monday, February 27, 2006

    Randall Scott Lifestyle

    Updates in the cycling world

    It's sunny and 70 here in Boulder, CO. I am told that it's a sin to let the news about Boulder's beautiful weather out of the bag. Oh well - got to love riding in shorts and a jersey in February!! Now I am just waiting for the trails to dry out, and March is supposed to be a heavy snow month. Looks like the Tommaso road bike will continue getting some love over the next few months.
    OK - onto the cycling news!
    Floyd Landis of Phonak topped the list of an All American Podium at the Tour of California. My boy Hincapie landed a respectable 4th. I was rooting for him (however unlikely) for him to win - or at least podium. We still have the spring classics! Go George Go!
    http://www.velonews.com/race/dom/articles/9547.0.html

    Duncan Riffle and DHracers.com have joined up with Iron Horse for the 06 season. It seems everyone wants an Iron Horse Sunday! Enjoy the article - keep the rubber side down,

    - http://www.dhracers.com/media/PressRelease06.pdf



    Thursday, February 23, 2006

    Randall Scott Lifestyle

    Tour of California!

    I hope that everyone is following the tour - looks like American Cyclists have finally gotten enough attention to bring some big races to the states! Landis got the edge on Hincapie in the ITT, but it's still up for grabs! I am have been secretly rooting for Hincapie, but I'll be happy if we have a strong American showing - Maybe an All American Podium?

    Here's the story!

    Landis wins ITT, takes lead in Tour of California
    By John Wilcockson
    VeloNews editorial director
    This report filed February 22, 2006

    Landis stays aero, even in a tight corner

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    Five minutes after he crossed the line in a blur, warmed down, pulled up to his Phonak team soigneur for a jacket, and signed some autographs for a couple of fans, Floyd Landis was ready to talk. He was anxious to find out how he had done in the crucial 27km time trial stage of the Amgen Tour of California.

    "Did I get it?" he asked his team helper.

    "We'll find out in a minute," he was told, knowing he had already beaten stage favorite Dave Zabriskie of CSC by half a minute and that Discovery Channel's race leader George Hincapie was about to finish.

    "How's Levi?" Landis asked about Gerolsteiner's Levi Leipheimer, who started the day just four seconds out of first place.

    "37:05," was the answer.

    "What was I?" Landis continued.

    Zabriskie was second, 26 seconds slower than Landis

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    "35:58," he was told.

    "Oh, well," Landis said with a grin, "that took care of that!"

    At that moment, Hincapie was heading up the flat finish straightaway, urged on by an enthusiastic crowd of a couple thousand. He was coming through later than he had to if he were going to retain the overall lead. The time flashed up above the finish line: 36:53. Almost a minute back. Landis was the new owner of the Amgen golden jersey.

    Hincapie, fourth at 55 seconds, is still honing his time-trial skills

    photo: Graham Watson

    Hincapie, still toweling sweat from his long face, was philosophical about losing the lead.

    "Everything we're doing here is the first effort of the year," he pointed out. "I'm pleased though. I was fourth (behind Landis, Zabriskie and Bobby Julich). And those guys are all [time trial] specialists ... and I'm trying to become one. Give me a little time and I'll get there."

    It wasn't Leipheimer's day, out there in the wind - he finished ninth at 1:16

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    Back to basics
    Unlike time trials that these Americans contest in July's Tour de France, where thousands of fans urge on the riders every meter of the way, Wednesday afternoon's stage saw each man racing in a virtual vacuum. This was particularly true on the mostly flat final 11km, after the panhandle-shaped course turned left into a head wind following a technical up-and-down opening loop.

    The California Highway Patrol had pretty much sealed the course, so few spectators ventured beyond the start and finish areas ... unless they arrived early in the day. With no crowds to shield the wind, the lighter riders had a hard time keeping their form all the way to the finish.

    The first man to shine on this stretch was 59th starter Fabien Cancellara of CSC. The big Swiss, winner of the 2004 Tour prologue in Liège and a Paris-Roubaix specialist, set the standard at 37:01. His time was almost matched by Discovery's young Russian sensation, Vladimir Gusev, but the first to beat Cancellara was a very determined Nathan O'Neill of Health Net-Maxxis.

    The 31-year-old Aussie blazed home in 36:55. "I knew that the wind would be a factor," O'Neill told VeloNews, "so I didn't force it too much on the hills in the early part of the course. I rode it fairly steadily, but not ridiculously hard, you know. I never killed myself early, and I knew that the final 10K was going to be critical."

    Rogers, resplendent in the rainbow stripes, finished 26th at 2:18

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    One who did force it in the opening stretch was CSC's Zabriskie - who used to live on the East Bay. The 2005 Tour's opening time trial winner stopped the clock at 13:50 at the 10km point, which was 12 seconds faster than veteran teammate Julich and 16 seconds better than Landis and a surprisingly strong Cadel Evans of Davitamon-Lotto.

    Leipheimer, 24 seconds back after the two main climbs, was clearly on a bad day. "I wasn't feeling it today. I couldn't get going. I kind of knew when I woke up I wasn't having a good day."

    Things got worse for the Gerolsteiner man. "The last 12km, it just wasn't my thing," he said. "I'm 60 kilos (less than 135 pounds), and it's a head wind, dead flat. It's hard for me to compete against the bigger guys. That's just the way it goes."

    Zabriskie, who many riders had tipped to win Wednesday, also suffered toward the end. "It was all right, but I didn't really find that great of a rhythm," he said. "I pushed a big gear, and tried to go fast. I'm surprised I did as well as I did."

    Danielson, 12th at 1:43

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    Four days to go
    With Landis having a strong Phonak team at his disposal, and with an overall lead of 29 seconds on runner-up Zabriskie, many are saying the race is over.

    "It looks to me like Floyd's got it," said San Francisco prologue winner Leipheimer. "There's no one left that can really challenge the GC, so I think it's pretty much finished."

    Zabriskie opined: "I think Floyd has got a lot of friends in the race."

    But Zabriskie's senior CSC teammate Julich was more hopeful. "It's going to be hard to get back that kind of time, but we'll try," he said. "Phonak has a lot of work ahead of them, but so do we. And I'm sure Discovery, after getting blanked today, will come out ripping tomorrow.

    Even when suffering, Horner smiles

    photo: Casey B. Gibson

    Race note
    Two-time Giro d'Italia winner Gilberto Simoni (Saunier-Duval-Prodir) missed his start, reportedly because his time-trial bike was under the UCI's minimum weight. Scott USA marketing director Adrian Montgomery said that team mechanics scurried to add a water-bottle cage to Simoni's bike to reach the UCI minimum of 6.8kg, or 14.96lbs.

    "The mechanics didn't have their scales in the trucks like they do in Europe," Montgomery said. "To be honest, they didn't think it would be that big of a deal here in California. But the time-trial frame only weighs 980 grams, and if you use the wrong combination of lightweight wheels you can easily go under the limit." Or over it - Simoni lost nearly two minutes as a consequence of his technical difficulties and finished 105th on the day, at 5:27.

    What's next
    Stage 4: Monterey to San Luis Obispo - The queen stage of this year's race begins in Monterey and follows scenic Highway 1 where the mountains run into the Pacific Ocean. At 130 miles, this is the longest stage of the tour and will test the riders on consistently hilly and technical terrain. The six-hour day will see riders go through the community of Big Sur and pass by Hearst Castle before shifting inland toward the finish in San Luis Obispo. A series of climbs before the finish could bring fireworks.
    -VeloNews senior writer Neal Rogers contributed to this report.


    Results are posted. To see how the stage developed, simply CLICK HERE to bring up our Live Update window.

    Friday, February 17, 2006

    Randall Scott Lifestyle


    Iron Horse Closeouts and Sale!!! Posted by Picasa

    Randall Scott Lifestyle

    Tyler Hamilton's issues

    No one likes to see a nice guy - a hometown hero - take a fall. www.rscyle.com is based in Boulder, CO - where Tyler had his infamous collegiate cycling carrier and set numerous local records - We Want To Believe!!
    We will probably never know the truth about what happened, on one hand you have a deep desire to believe Tyler because of his background - and on the other hand you have scientific tests from the world governing body of cycling, who's job is to promote and grow cycling in an ethical way.

    Here's the story - let us know what you think!! Should Tyler have gotten his appeal?

    CAS rejects Hamilton appeal
    By Charles Pelkey
    Special to VeloNews
    This report filed February 11, 2006

    A three-member arbitration panel from the International Court of Arbitration for Sport has unanimously rejected the appeal of American Tyler Hamilton, upholding his two-year suspension for a blood doping violation at the 2004 Vuelta a España.

    Hamilton was found guilty of blood doping after samples submitted after this Vuelta time trial on September 11, 2004 indicated the presence of another person's blood.

    photo: AFP (file photo)

    The three arbitrators also ruled that Hamilton's two-year ban should have been effective from the date of his initial suspension (September 23, 2004) rather than on the date a North American hearing panel confirmed his penalty (April 17, 2005). That change may mean that Hamilton could return to the top level of the sport as early as this fall, just two days before the world road championships.

    Hamilton quickly issued a statement maintaining his innocence and expressing disappointment that the three-member panel chose to reject, his challenge of what had been a new application of an established testing technique.

    "Based on my devastating personal experience over the last year and a half, I am committed to fighting for reform within the anti-doping movement," Hamilton said." I do support the anti-doping mission and (the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency), however the current system has failed an innocent athlete and needs to change."

    The CAS panel, however, rejected Hamilton's appeal, which was largely based on a challenge of the veracity of the test. The three-member panel unanimously ruled that "USADA has met its burden of proof by demonstrating that the HBT test conducted by the Lausanne Laboratory was in accordance with the scientific community's practice and procedures."

    Following his time trial stage win at the 2004 Vuelta, Hamilton submitted a blood sample that later showed signs of a foreign blood population, indicating that the former Phonak rider had injected red blood cells from a donor in order to increase his own red-blood-cell count and boost his endurance.

    The test, which employs a 30-year-old medical technology often used in hospitals to separate sub-groups in common blood types, was first applied to the doping question as part of an Australian study published in the August 2002 edition of the journal Haematologica.

    The method - flow cytometry - relies on the fact that the surfaces of individuals' red blood cells have a distinct set of antigen receptors. Blood samples are exposed to a specific set of die-soaked antigens and then individual cells are exposed to a laser beam. The resulting fluorescent patterns are studied for differences. The method has long been used by hospitals to "sub-type" blood, but the method had been applied to doping tests only since the 2004 Olympics.

    In September of 2004, Olympic officials originally reported that Hamilton had submitted a "suspicious" sample at the 2004 Games in Athens, after he had won the gold medal in the individual time trial.

    An established pattern?
    Further revelations, however, suggest that Hamilton's blood produced similarly aberrant results from samples taken in April and June of 2004. Those samples showed "strong signs of possible manipulation," and resulted in a June 10 warning letter to Hamilton from the UCI, informing him that he would be "closely monitored," throughout the 2004 season.

    According to CAS documents, the samples had already shown indications of mixed red blood cell populations, but at the time there was no formally recognized test for so-called "homologous blood doping." That test was not deployed until the 2004 Olympics in Athens.

    It was in Athens, after Hamilton won the gold medal for the individual time trial, that he apparently again submitted a blood sample that reviewers later said showed signs of a mixed population of cells. Although the test was now certified, the result of Hamilton's test was not confirmed after lab technicians froze the B-sample, destroying the red-blood cells and preventing further testing.

    IOC officials soon announced that they were dropping the case and that Hamilton could keep his medal. The Russian Olympic Committee has since filed an appeal seeking to overturn that decision, strip Hamilton of the gold and award it to silver medalist Viatcheslav Ekimov.

    Hamilton did not learn of the results of the Athens test until after he had submitted another sample at the Vuelta. IOC, UCI and World Anti-Doping Agency officials have since conceded that he had probably been targeted for additional testing after the B-sample debacle in Athens.

    Hamilton withdrew from the Vuelta on September 16 and was suspended from competition on the 23rd of that month.

    Hamilton was issued a two-year suspension, which then triggered a lengthy appeal process. Hamilton's attorneys argued that there could have been reasons, other than blood doping, for the positive flow cytometry result, including remnant DNA from a twin sibling that never developed in his mother's womb, a relatively rare phenomenon known as a "chimera."

    Hamilton's initial appeal was rejected in a split decision by a three-member panel from the American Arbitration Association last April. While the majority of that panel rejected Hamilton's challenges to the veracity of the test, arbiter Christopher Campbell said that USADA and others defending the procedure had failed to present a compelling case. Campbell pointed to what he said was a failure on the part of WADA to accurately document the actual risk of false positives in the test developed by scientists in Australia.

    Campbell argued that while WADA could have relied on a very objective and verifiable set of standards to detect such false readings, the agency took an "I know it when I see it" approach to quality control.

    Furthermore, Campbell said that the testing procedures failed to take into account other factors that could have influenced the outcome of a flow cytometry examination of a population of red blood cells, including bone marrow transplant and recent pregnancies, obviously neither of which was raised as a defense in the Hamilton case.

    Another round of appeals... and that disappearing twin
    Buoyed by that vigorous dissent, Hamilton attorney Howard Jacobs moved the case to CAS, the sporting world's highest court of appeal.
    But following a lengthy set of hearings that concluded this January, the CAS Panel unanimously found that Hamilton had committed a doping violation and that USADA had met the burden of proof.

    The three-member panel, composed of two Americans and an Australian, noted that testimony from expert witnesses, including flow cytometry specialist, Dr. Bruce Davis of the Maine Medical Center Research Institute, who is also the Chairman of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute Area Committee in Hematology. Davis told the panel that "without any equivocation . . . the blood sample from Tyler Hamilton on September 11, 2004 contained a mixed population . . . indicat[ing] a previous homologous blood transfusion."

    The panel rejected Hamilton's explanations for the positive test result including the disappearing twin, noting that Hamilton had declined to undergo follow-up testing after an initial DNA assessment of one of his earlier blood samples apparently refuted his claim of chimerism.

    "During the course of the hearing, DNA testing was carried out by Dr. Busch, which indicated that (Hamilton) was not a chimera... while (Hamilton) submitted a reply concerning this testing (he) did not participate in (additional)testing, as he was invited to do," the panel's decision noted.

    The panel said that while Hamilton and his legal team had raised "general criticisms" of the methods employed, the complaints were "not backed up by facts."

    "The Panel considered each of the excuses and found each to be completely without merit," Terry Madden, CEO of USADA, said in a press release issued Saturday. "It is sad that Mr. Hamilton resorted to conspiracy theories rather than just accept the consequences of his doping."

    Madden added, "the development and implementation of this test and the confirmation of its validity would not have been possible without the dedication and efforts of the scientific community and the world anti-doping movement."

    But Hamilton suggested that the entire process - from test approval all the way to the hearing process - was rife with conflicts of interest.

    "Out of respect to fairness and the rights of all athletes, there should be clear separation between the agencies that develop new tests and those that adjudicate anti-doping cases," he wrote Saturday. "Credible, independent experts, not those who funded or developed the original methodology, should be charged with properly validating new tests.

    "I don't believe any athlete should be subjected to a flawed test or charged with a doping violation through the use of a method that is not fully validated or generates fluctuating results. I will also continue to support the formation of unions to help protect the rights of athletes. My goal is to keep other athletes from experiencing the enormous pain and horrendous toll of being wrongly accused."

    End in sight?
    Hamilton did achieve a minor victory in the CAS appeal in that the panel determined that the two-year suspension handed down by the American Arbitration Association/North American Court of Arbitration for Sport (AAA/CAS) was inappropriately started on the date of the decision - April 17, 2005 - instead of the date of the original infraction - September 11, 2004.

    That means that Hamilton will be eligible to compete again later this year. Strict anti-doping provisions in the charter of the new UCI ProTour require that a rider be banned from participating at that top level of the sport for a period twice that of any suspension handed out by a rider's national federation.

    Under the original suspension, Hamilton would not have been eligible to ride for a ProTour team until April of 2008. Now that the suspension date has been shifted, he might be eligible to ride at that level after September 22 of this year, coincidentally just two days before the start of this year's world road race championship.

    Wednesday, February 15, 2006

    Randall Scott Lifestyle

    Hello All!!

    My Name is Philip Bice, I am the Director of Sales and Marketing for the Randall Scott Cycle Company in Boulder, CO. We thought that a good way to keep our customers informed would be to have a blog about our business, lifestyle here in Boulder, and Cycling in Colorado. We will probably have several people posting lots of different material - so don't be afraid to email me about the content! I'll put up some news stories, tech tips, ramblings from the road (I also run our race program) and so on,

    phil@rscycle.com for suggestions! www.rscycle.com for our company!

    We just moved to Boulder, and we are in the process of building a "Concept" showroom to compliment our operations center and 2 warehouses. The staff is loving our new headquarters and cycling lifestyle in Boulder!

    So - introducing our core staff might be a good way to start the Blog off!

    Michael Gleason - our Director of Purchasing, and resident "Steel is Real" authority. I share an office with this guy, and can tell you that he is all about the east coast riding culture. He hails from all over New England (and has lived everywhere else) and loves his muddy cross bike, his Ted Wojcik steel commuter, and has a Basset Hound. Hmmm......

    Eric Butler - Head Mechanic. Eric is from Northern Indiana, but don't let that fool you. This guy used to be General Manager at Foes - he can wrench with the best of any pro mechanic, is a wonder with Suspension and Wheels, and a gravity fool! If you want to talk tech, engineering, suspension design, frame material, etc; Eric is your man!

    Chris DeLauro - Director of Customer Service - When there's a problem it's Chris to the rescue! Our customers love him - our staff relies on him. He used to be a Scout in the Marine Corps, and is a fitness freak. He's an XC racer and a pigskin fanatic.

    Sam Mishkin - Director of Operations - Sam's the man behind the scenes. He's responsible for making everything run smooth and flawlessly. He's into enduro, motocross, hockey, and snowboarding. Sam is an all mountain rider and just picked up a brand new Iron Horse Hollowpoint MKIII Team; it's a bike of beauty!

    Philip Bice - Director of Sales and Marketing. That's me! I am responsible for our advertising, company image, teams, philanthropy, and corporate partnerships. I am from the Chicago area, but spent my youth (and later) traveling, racing, and riding. I would describe myself as jack of all trades, I have spent time racing road, crits, tri's, XC, DH - I do it all. I spend more time on my road bike than anything else, but I get on my DH rig every chance I get.


    Thanks for the read - and feel free to email me at anytime for anything!!
    Check back for updates and pic from riding spots and ski trips!

    Phil
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