
| May 8 - 31: Giro d'Italia | |
| May 18: Rest day 2 | |
| May 17, Stage 9: Cervia - Corno alle Scale |
1. Jonas Vingegaard 2. Felix Gall 3. Davide Piganzoli |
| GC leader: Afonso Eulalio | |
| May 19: Classique Dunkerque | |
| May 19: Dunkerque - Mont-Saint-Eloi |
Start list with back numbers, course map & profile posted |
| May 17: Rund um Köln | |
| 1. Laurence Pithie 2. Fred Wright 3. Aimé De Gendt |
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| May 16: Tour du Finistère | |
| May 16: Quimper - Quimper |
1. Jon Barrenetxea 2. Alex Molenaar 3. Clément Venturini |
| May 10: Tro-Bro Léon | |
| May 10: Lannilis - Lannilis |
1. Filippo Fiorelli 2. Alexis Renard 3. Lewis Askey |
| Apr 28 - May 3: Tour de Romandie | |
| May 3, Stage 5: Lucens - Leysin |
1. Tadej Pogacar 2. Florian Lipowitz 3. Primoz Roglic |
| GC winner: Tadej Pogacar | |
| Apr 26 - May 3: Presidential Tour of Turkey | |
| May 3, Stage 8: Ankara - Ankara |
1. Tom Crabbe 2. Jelle Vermoote 3. Stanislaw Aniolkowski |
| GC winner: Sebastian Berwick | |
| May 1: Eschborn - Frankfurt | |
| May 1: Eschborn - Frankfurt |
1. Georg Zimmermann 2. Tom Pidcock 3. Ben Tulett |
| April 26: Giro dell'Appennino | |
| April 26: Novi Ligure - Genova |
1. Ludovico Crescioli 2. Thomas Pesenti 3. Domenico Pozzovivo |
| April 26: Liège-Bastogne-Liège | |
| April 26: Liège - Liège |
1. Tadej Pogacar 2. Paul Seixas 3. Remco Evenepoel |
| April 23 - 26: Vuelta a Asturias | |
| Apr 26, Stage 4: Lugones - Oviedo |
1. Edgar Cadena 2. Adria Pericas 3. José Diaz |
| GC winner: Nairo Quintana | |
| April 20 - 24: Tour of the Alps | |
| Apr 24, Stage 5: Trento - Bolzano |
1. Giulio Pellizzari 2. Egan Bernal 3. Michael Storer |
| GC winner: Giulio Pellizzari | |
Use the menu above to access all the other races and everything else in our site.
News:
May 12: No news post today
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Each week I'm posting a photo of Paris-Roubaix, in year order.
Here is a photo of 2016 Paris-Roubaix winner Mathew Haymen just beating Tom Boonen.
It seemed Tom Boonen and Sep Vanmarcke were the strongest riders, but it was Hayman's day. At 37, after 15 participations and despite a recent arm fracture at the Het Nieuwsblad, he was unexpectedly the fresher of the lot and he gave Australia their second victory in the Queen of Classics after Stuart O'Grady's in 2007.
We have complete results for every edition of Paris-Roubaix. You can find them here.
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What’s the big idea? Former slave Epictetus argues that since we cannot control the external world, true freedom comes from the reasoned control of one’s own desires and passions.
This is the core of stoic thought that Epictetus taught in Western Greece about 100 AD. Stoicism became the dominant moral philosophy of the Hellenistic and Roman world and Epictetus became its dominant and most respected teacher.
Though Epictetus wrote nothing that has survived, writer Arrian attended his lectures and took those notes that preserved Epictetus’ teachings. Besides Arrian, Epictetus had another notable listener, the young Publius Aelius Hadrianus, who would go on to become Roman Emperor Hadrian, reigning from 117 AD to 138.
You can get Epictetus' Golden Sayings in Kindle eBook & audiobook versions here on Amazon.
What you'll find in our site:
The Tour de France. Lots of information, including results for every single stage of every Tour.
Other important bike races: the Giro d'Italia, the Vuelta a España, along with the classics, stage races, national championships, world records, and Olympics.
We keep a running record of the races going on in the current year, with results, photos, maps, etc. We've been doing this since 2001, so the results for this year as well as previous years are available here.
This site is owned and run by McGann Publishing. We're a micro-publisher specializing in books about cycling history. Interested? Here's information on our titles in print.
We are devoted to cycling and all of its characters and events. The sport's past matters to us. We've been interviewing anyone who will sit down and talk to us, then writing up the interviews, and collecting other stories about cycling. We have rider histories—the stories of individual riders, many by the great cycling writer Owen Mulholland. We have our oral history project—the results of our interviews. And we've collected lots of photos over the years, of racers, racing, manufacturing, etc., which we have arranged into photo galleries for your enjoyment.
Being in the bike business for many years, we had to opportunity to travel a lot in Europe, riding bikes, attending trade shows, etc. We've written up many of our travels, and had some contributions from others whose travels differed from ours.
What would the day be without the funnies? Our friend Francesca Paoletti has drawn a series of comics about bike related stuff, poking fun at us along the way.
If you are interested in bikes, sooner or later you will want to know some technical information about bikes. We have articles here about bike weight, how bike frames are prepped and assembled, selected bike parts, and others.
And then there's food! The bicycle runs on the human engine, and the human engine runs on food, so of course we're interested in that.
Along the way we've been privileged to meet many people in and around the bike business who do things we like. The folks whose ads are up there on the right are friends of ours who we believe conduct their business knowledgably and honorably; here are a few others who do stuff we like.