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Free Printable Tour de France Race Stage Schedule Available from KeepandShare.com

San Francisco, California (PRWEB) May 23, 2007

KeepandShare.com (http://www.keepandshare.com) today announced a Tour de France (TDF) information center that is simple-to-use and easily printable. The center has everything fans need to watch this year’s Tour de France stage race. The Tour de France information center includes a full set of information helpful for both new and experienced race fans, including details of the schedule, each day’s stage & route. The center also includes a full history of the Tour, from its first race in 1903 through the present, all in an easily printed, one-page format.

KeepandShare’s free printable Tour de France schedule and guides are available now at:

http://www.keepandshare.com/htm/calendars/printable_tour_de_france_schedule.php

and

http://www.tour-de–france.com/

“There are thousands of sites that come up in Google when you search on Tour de France” said George Handel, a cycling enthusiast in Provo, Utah. “But by George it’s hard just to find out the dates of the race, let alone all the details of the route and stages in a single page that you can reference online or print out.”

Keep And Share’s free group sharing accounts can be accessed securely from any Internet connected computer. Users can easily access public information including the Tour de France information center, or they can store and share information privately, securely sharing with only those they chose to.

“Most Tour websites are filled with ads that clutter the schedule information, or, just as bad, they’re written in French, which I don’t read”, said Sal Monella, an New York road cyclist who uses Keep And Share. “While I’ve been a Tour fan for years, I found the seven articles on the history fascinating, especially the last one on Lance Armstrong’s seven tour wins.”

KeepAndShare.com is the free website that makes group sharing easy. The new free TDF stage guide is available now at:

http://www.tour-de-france-schedules.com/

About KeepandShare.com

KeepandShare.com (www.keepandshare.com) is the free website that makes group file sharing easy. With a few clicks, anyone can create a secure group file sharing center in 30 seconds. KeepAndshare.com is like a private “MySpace” where families, friends, clients, businesses, and groups of any kind can keep and share files, documents, calendars, lists, journals and photos safely and privately. With over 10,000 registered members, and membership doubling almost every month, KeepAndShare.com is among the web’s fastest growing sites.

Contact KeepandShare.com:

Robert Carr

(415) 307-1454

www.keepandshare.com

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More Tour De France Press Releases

How do I build a Mountain Bike from scratch?

Question by The Dood: How do I build a Mountain Bike from scratch?
I am looking to build a full suspension mountain bike. I am not looking for the absolute best, but I am looking for a relatively decent one. I would say I am looking to spend 00. Can I get more for my $$ if I build myself or just buy a bike? What I would like to see is a list of components that would get me a complete mountain built from scratch. For those items can you tell me what are the top 5 names for the component you described? Thanks.

Best answer:

Answer by El Ron Hubbard
90% of the time, you will get more bang for the buck if you purchase a complete bike. my recommendation is to buy one, ride it one season, then upgrade the components you are unhappy with. 00 for a full sus bike isn’t going to get you anything overly fantastic, though.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

What can I expect from a Mountain Bike Trail?

Question by Arman2Dito: What can I expect from a Mountain Bike Trail?
I’m planning to go biking in a Mountain Bike Trail but I’ve never been or seen a mountain bike trail, so I was wondering what will I see once I get there, I mean, are the paths always made of concrete (like a sidewalk) or is it a natural path?
Also I need to buy a bike to go there, what would you recomend me and in what price range are the Mountain Bike Trail bikes?
Thanks in advance.

Best answer:

Answer by Eddie
Full suspension is real nice but not needed. you can expect bumpy loose ground with occasional tree roots out of the ground waiting to spill you on yer head so get pads and a helmet too

Add your own answer in the comments!

Flower Power: History of the Tour De France: From 1960-1980

Flower Power: History of the Tour De France: From 1960-1980

Sponsored Teams Again

The 1960s saw a return to sponsored teams and commercialism yet the Tour still offered lots of intrigue and drama. The Tour was the most watched event in cycling and the sponsors badly needed the publicity. The Tour’s biggest rivals, Poulidor and Anquetil, truly disliked each other and this drew fans in.

Anquetil Rules

For many years, Anquetil was the greatest time-trialist in history. He won 12 of these tests in the Tour de France and even set a world record before he first won the Tour. Anquetil had a bit of a reputation as a rebel. He once said that his idea of training included “a few whiskies, blonde cigarettes and a woman.” His wayward ways extended into his private life. He an affair with a doctor’s wife, a woman named Jeanine, and when he learned that she couldn’t bear him a child, he persuaded her to let him have a baby with her adult daughter, a woman named Annie. They had a child named Sophie. Of course, Annie and Jeanine began to quarrel. Annie moved out and Jeanine invited her son and his wife, Dominique, to move in. Anquetil promptly seduced Dominique and a son, Christopher.

Anquetil took his wild ways to his cycling events. Most riders always go for a ride on the rest day because their bodies are so used to cycling. Jacques Anquetil, however, liked to enjoy life. He would go to a picnic and enjoy himself on big portions of barbecued lamb and lots of drink.

Anquetil, the five-time winner, sat out 1965 and returned in 1966. But this would be his last Tour.

Tragedy Strikes, Doping Raises its Ugly Head

In 1967, tragedy struck and this would be the year the Tour would first become tainted by a doping scandal. Tom Simpson was the best British rider of his day. Sadly, he fell victim to doping but actually died due to the heat as he crossed Mont Ventoux. His death led to the first drug testing in 1968.

Tom Simpson was a very well regarded racer. His sole goal in life was winning the Tour. Simpson knew he had to deliver. He turned to drugs, something that wasn’t new to the Tour. For some time now many riders had been using a life-threatening cocktail of drugs: amphetamines as a stimulant, Palfium to kill the pain in their legs and then sleeping pills at night to counteract the amphetamines.

Cycling began to grapple with this problem The first races were staggeringly long and tested the limits of human endurance. Stages in the early Tour could take over 17 hours to complete. From the beginning riders took various substances to allow them to complete their ordeals. When the Pélissier brothers withdrew from the 1924 Tour and gave their famous interview to Albert Londres they described the long list of drugs they took. “We run on dynamite,” Henri Pélissier said.

Before World War Two amphetamines were synthesized and athletes immediately understood the advantage they gave. Through the fifties it was clear to observers that riders were doping. There were pictures of racers with dried foam on their faces or of riders driven mad by a combination of heat and amphetamines stopping in the middle of a race to find relief in a fountain. After riding until he collapsed Jean Malléjac lay on the ground still strapped to his bike, his legs convulsively pumping the pedals. Others would remount their bikes and go the wrong way. Sometimes one could almost follow the route of a race by the trail of syringes left by the side of the road. Roger Rivière crashed in 1960 because he had taken so much of the opiate Palfium to kill the pain in his legs that he couldn’t feel the brake levers. Bahamontes said that he loved a good hot day in the mountains because the riders juiced up on amphetamines couldn’t take the heat.

Was Tom Simpson a bad person or a hero? He was neither. He knew that riding without dope wasn’t possible,

The day after Simpson’s death. the peloton agreed to ride if one of Simpson’s British teammates would be allowed a ceremonial stage victory to honor Simpson’s memory.

Merckx Rules the Road

Eddy Merckx of Belgium won in 1969, a stunning debut that earned him the nickname “cannibal,” a rider ready to devour everything it takes to win. Merckx flew into Paris with a 17 minute lead. Merckx dominated the cycling world, winning 250 major races, one a week for six years. Without a doubt he was the most complete and capable rider alive.

In 1975 Merckx was finally beaten by Bernard Thevenet. Merckx had been punched and knocked from his bike by a jealous French fan. This is the first year that the race finishes along the Champs Elysees

France celebrated Thevenet’s second win in 1977. He was a bit of a wonder boy, with seven more home wins until the last, in 1985.

The race’s next hero was a blunt Frenchman from Brittany, Hinault, who would become the third man to win five Tours. The years between 1978 and 1984 became known as “le blaireau” (the badger’s) golden era.

Then France cheered a new hero, a sophisticated bespectacled young Parisian called Laurent Fignon. Fignon rode into his home city of Paris in yellow, beating Hinault by 10 minutes and proving that 1983 had been no fluke.

Winners

* 1960 Gastone Nencini (Ita)

* 1961 Jacques Anquetil (Fra)

* 1962 Jacques Anquetil (Fra)

* 1963 Jacques Anquetil (Fra)

* 1964 Jacques Anquetil (Fra)

* 1965 Felice Gimondi (Ita)

* 1966 Lucien Aimar (Fra)

* 1967 Roger Pingeon (Fra)

* 1968 Jan Janssen (Ned)

* 1969 Eddy Merckx (Bel)

* 1970 Eddy Merckx (Bel)

* 1971 Eddy Merckx (Bel)

* 1972 Eddy Merckx (Bel)

* 1973 Luis Ocana (Spa)

* 1974 Eddy Merckx (Bel)

* 1975 Bernard Thevenet (Fra)

* 1976 Lucien Van Impe (Bel)

* 1977 Bernard Thevenet (Fra)

* 1978 Bernard Hinault (Fra)

* 1979 Bernard Hinault (Fra)

* 1980 Joop Zoetemelk (Ned)

If you liked this article, you’ll find more Tour de France history articles and this year’s Tour schedule at:

Tour de France stags & schedule & history

2007 tour de france

World’s greatest bicycle race – Le Tour du France

Gary Hayduk has a passion for web research, building communities with web technology, and generally cool stuff that makes life fun. Some favorite web resources include:

List of Adjectives
Free biographies – 1 page printable

Schedule of this year’s Tour de France

Arlington police log from July 12 to July 18

Arlington police log from July 12 to July 18
Reports of stolen bikes, malicious destruction of property at the Arlington Center for the Arts and taxi fare evasion.
Read more on The Arlington Advocate

Mountain Biking in New York Parks
Mountain bikers don’t need to leave New York City to find good trails.
Read more on New York Times

Boonen Banned From Tour De France

Boonen Banned From Tour De France

Belgium’s former world cycling champion, Tom Boonen, has been forced out of this year’s Tour de France.

The rider was barred after it was revealed that he had tested positive for cocaine use outside of competition in May.

So drugs are yet again making the headlines of cycling’s annual “jewel in the crown” and it has not even started. It does not get underway until July 5.

There again drugs and cycling seem to be two words that are almost synonymous in a sport that is riddled with doping scandals.

The winners of the last two Tours, Spain’s Alberto Contador in 2008 and US rider Floyd Landis in 2007 – have both been at the centre of doping allegations.

Indeed last year’s event overall degenerated into what was termed a “Tour de Frauds” with several top riders forced to drop out during the race after failing controls.

Organisers of the Tour seem to make an annual effort to clean up what is considered by many to be the sport’s showpiece but clearly face an uphill battle.

Reacting quickly to the news of Boonen’s positive test for cocaine, the Tour’s general race director Christian Prudhomme said the actions of the rider had brought disgrace upon cycling and the Tour itself.

And he is not kidding. Boonen is yet another high profile rider to make the headlines for the wrong reasons. He was world champion in 2005, took last year’s green jersey as the best sprinter on the Tour and just last April won the prestigious Paris-Roubaix race when he beat Switzerland’s Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland in a sprint finish.

While Boonen might be out of this year’s race his team, Quickstep, will still take part.

It is perhaps it’s a little hard to believe that Proudhomme actually thought and apparently still thinks the sport’s image hadn’t been tarnished almost beyond repair.

News of yet another drugs scandal, albeit outside of competition and therefore under the circumstances not considered performance enhancing, will hardly rock the nation or the sport.

Officially even though cocaine is classed as a stimulant, it is only considered a prohibited substance by the World Anti-Doping Agency if taken during competition.

The Tour’s organisers and the sport’s governing body, ICU, defend themselves, claiming the very tests they carry out prove how much more of an effort they are making to rid the sport of its shame.

This year’s 21-stage Tour de France will get rolling on July 5 from Brest in western France. Unusually there will be no prologue, but in keeping with tradition the race will wind its way around the country before ending up in the nation’s Capital, Paris, on July 27. There it’ll be a race to the end passing the Eiffel Tower before a last sprint up the world famous Champs Elysees to cross the finish line.

Of course whether it will be free from further unwelcome revelations is a matter of conjecture, but it is a fair bet that drugs will in some way be making the headlines yet again before, during and probably after the event.

Johnny Summerton is a Paris-based broadcaster, writer and journalist specialising in politics and sport. Visit his site for a look at some the stories making the headlines here in France http://www.persiflagefrance.com

Kraftwerk – Tour De France

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