Archive for the ‘sport’ Category

The Magic Of The Monaco Grand Prix

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

A good article appeared on the BBC’s internet site recently about the Monaco Grand Prix, by their F1 commentator Jonathan Legard.

Jonathan can be followed on twitter by clicking here throughout the Grand Prix season.

Here’s what he had to say:

Vitaly Petrov is making an increasingly impressive entry into Formula 1 with Renault this year but Russia’s first grand prix driver sounded startlingly out of step with his surroundings this weekend.

“Driving at Monaco means nothing to me”, said F1’s top rookie after 2010’s opening races.

What about the history and the tradition of one of the most famous races in the world?

“I don’t feel anything about the history,” he said.

I have to admit his answers left me lost for words. I have never come across anybody – driver, engineer, mechanic, journalist or fan – who was so dismissive and so detached about racing on the most renowned street circuit on the globe.

The Monaco Grand Prix was the first race which grabbed my attention and switched me on to F1. It was the one track, above all others, that I wanted to visit.

I remember being shocked by the prices but overwhelmed by the setting, the layout and the atmosphere, which never fail to inspire a return ticket.

Squeezed in between the jagged hills which rise so sharply and the harbour full of multi-million pound yachts on a shimmering Mediterranean sea, there appears barely enough space to park a car, never mind race 24 of them.

Yet part of the beauty of Monaco is how close to the action spectators can find themselves.

At some parts of the track, such as the sea-front chicane at the exit of the tunnel, you actually could reach out and touch the cars as they navigate the kerbs before blasting away towards Tabac corner and the spectacular Swimming Pool complex.

Rubens Barrichello has been both a racer and a resident here over the last two decades and he smiles when he recalls his first impressions of this most unlikely sporting location.

“I arrived in Monaco and was puzzled. I had to ask: ‘Where’s the track? I can’t see it,” the Brazilian said.

“I couldn’t believe it when I was told I was standing on it. It looked so narrow. I thought: ‘How could you ever go flat out round here?’”

“I took the whole of my first practice session to build up the confidence and the speed to do it.”

Few would argue with the words of Barrichello’s fellow Brazilian, Nelson Piquet, who memorably likened racing in Monaco “to riding a bicycle around your living room”.

The tightest and shortest circuit on the calendar, it’s the ultimate driving test around a layout which has hardly altered from the first race in 1929 – a world away from architect Hermann Tilke’s new designs like Bahrain, Shanghai or that deluded Monaco wannabe, Valencia.

Consider the roll of past winners and you understand why Monaco is regarded as the premier driver’s circuit.

Ayrton Senna’s won six times, Michael Schumacher and Graham Hill five times, Alain Prost four times, with those knights of the road, Stirling Moss and Jackie Stewart, both three-time winners and Juan Manuel Fangio twice.

Without their rarefied mix of concentration, confidence, consistency, courage and crucially talent, charging between the barriers at speeds of up to 170 mph can become an exercise in damage limitation.

The slightest deviation caused by one of the many bumps or markings on what are public roads for the rest of the year can wreck a car in an instant. And in a wet race, when a driver’s skill is even more critical, the white lines are like marble.

“To be so close to the wall at such a speed, to have the flow of the track is extra special”, said Schumacher this week.

“When you have big run-off areas, it allows this extra per cent in safety. Here, if you want to nail it, there is no margin for any little error whatsoever.”

Drivers frequently say it becomes almost mesmerising to complete a lap in less than 80 seconds over a race distance of 78 laps, blinkered and hemmed in by steel barriers throughout.

Nobody who was here in 1988 will ever forget Ayrton Senna’s extraordinary qualifying lap, almost one and a half seconds quicker than his McLaren team-mate, Prost.

“Suddenly it frightened me because I realised I was beyond my conscious understanding,” Senna explained afterwards.

His crash into the barriers the next day when comfortably leading only added to the mystique of Monaco. The greatest battle for drivers in sight of the chequered flag can be with themselves, maintaining the pace and precision to complete a successful afternoon.

Senna’s spellbinding duel with Nigel Mansell in 1992 (see highlights video below) also highlighted the elevated role of the driver and the importance of track position here.

Mansell’s Williams was by some margin the fastest car but Senna’s McLaren held him resolutely at bay over the final laps after the Englishman had to make an enforced pit stop. The Briton’s last chance to win in Monaco had gone.

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Red Bull Flies At Monaco Grand Prix

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Monte Carlo CasinoThe Red Bull Racing Team lived up to its advertising slogan this year – Red Bull Gives You Wings – when their F1 team won the Monaco Grand Prix today – and came second as well.

Australian Mark Webber won his second straight race after winning last weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix – and in both races he started from pole position, and is now leading the drivers’ championship on 78 points.

His Red Bull team mate, German Sebastian Vettel, made it a day to remember by coming second – and is equal on points with Webber in the driver’s points so far this year.

And the team is now building up a lead in the constructors championship – with a lead of over 20 points over closest rival Ferrari, with McLaren in third place just five points behind.

The race itself was packed with incidents around the streets of Monte Carlo, with the safety car making no less than four appearances, but nothing stopped the Monaco Grand Prix living up to its reputation as the most glamourous of the F1 calendar.

The third place on the podium was taken by Renault’s Robert Kubica, with the trophies being presented by Prince Albert and other members of the Monaco Royal Family.

For British fans it was a disappointing race, with 2008 winner Lewis Hamilton coming in fifth, and fellow McLaren driver and current World Champion Jensen Button who won last year’s race retiring as early as the third lap.

The television audience in the UK for F1 has soared this year, with the BBC winning back the rights to televise the races after ITV televised it for a few years – and ran advertisements during races, often missing vital moments, much to the frustration of their viewers.

The glamour of Monaco was there for all to see – with F1 cars speeding past the Monte Carlo casino and the harbour with it’s multi million Euro yachts, and celebrities in the pit lane and dotted around the Principality – and with the Cannes Film Festival just up the road some no doubt will be staying in Monte Carlo for a few days to come.

The final race positions for the 2010 Monaco Grand Prix were:

1   Mark Webber      1:50:13.355
2   Sebastian Vettel 1:50:13.803
3   R Kubica     1:50:15.030
4   F Massa     1:50:16.021
5   L Hamilton     1:50:17.718
6  M Schumacher     1:50:19.067
7  F Alonso     1:50:19.696
8  N Rosberg     1:50:20.006
9  A Sutil      1:50:20.325
10  V Liuzzi     1:50:20.660

More information about Monaco is available with monacoproperty.net including Monaco property for sale and for those interested in the Principality’s tax haven status details of the banks in Monaco

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Warming Up – The Coolest Grand Prix

Friday, May 14th, 2010

With the Monaco Grand Prix 48 hours away, today’s Daily Mail have a good article in today’s edition:

Casino Square was no place for the Hermes-clad women of Monaco to walk their toy dogs.

The quadrangle’s famous Beaux Arts casino is no more than a penalty kick away from the five-star Hotel de Paris, and through that narrow gap 24 V8-powered Formula One cars screeched in practice for Sunday’s Monaco Grand Prix.

If you love motor racing – and leave your noise – sensitive pooch at home – is there any other spot on earth that so brilliantly mixes evocative glamour with high-speed wonderment?

Casino Square’s only possible rivals are other landmarks on this sinewy, swooping twomile road circuit around the yacht-lined harbour. As Lewis Hamilton, race winner here in 2008, said: ‘There is nowhere else you could experience anything like it. The driver with the biggest talent and balls should generally come out on top if he’s got the car.’

Three minutes before practice, the engines start up. The blue sky is dotted with light cloud. The first car pulls out, past the swimming pool on the right. Through Saint Devote, the first corner.

The intervals between each car are irregular: one second, then three, one, one, half a second, two, a blink, one, a blink. On foot you can also see Tabac at a point where the track almost meets. It is a spectacular vantage point.

The cars climb through Beau Rivage, a mild kink, and Massenot, a left-hander.

There is no obvious walk along the track and your correspondent instead takes the lift, from the port, six storeys up – yes, six – to rejoin the action at Casino Square through a yellow door keeping the fans safely behind.

You are now ringside, a three-foot barrier between yourself and mortality. The cars come round left, seemingly skimming the barrier, and over the kerbs on the right to start the journey out of the square.

Now it’s steeply down. From left to right, with a bobble, to left and then right around the Mirabeau turn. You hear the engines scream like a banshee as they accelerate, then growl ever lower as the speed is cut to take the corner.

Brakes to marvel at, on. Still downhill, to the tight first-gear, 30mph Loews hairpin. Photographers are separated only by a palm tree as they snap the action at the track’s slowest point.

An acute right and another right into the tunnel. We’re now on the flat. Over the side a diver waits, ready to fish out any driver who careers into the Med, as legendary Italian Alberto Ascari once did. Watching from the tunnel is a shuddering experience. You first hear the car arriving. Even with earplugs, you instinctively use your fingers to reinforce the protection.

Still, you are provided with a more accurate definition of ‘ear-splitting’ than in the Oxford English Dictionary.

You feel the rumble in your feet, then through your legs until the entire chest cavity rattles. Then you get a whiff of petrolly air as cars pass.

Out of the tunnel. It is spotting with rain now. Through the chicane as revellers watch from their boats. Towards Tabac. The cars almost clip the barrier on the right at the 50-yard marker board. All make it round the left-hander. The ground is flat. To read the full article click through to the Daily Mail here

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Monaco Ready For 2010

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Casino Square Gardens

Some European tourist locations are viewing 2010 with apprehension as consumers keep an eye on the economy, but for Monaco it’s a year to look forward to. 

Monaco, known for her jet set lifestyle, has had a measured approach to the turmoil in the world economy over the last couple of years. While not immune to what’s going on, the principality is certainly resilient. On the tourist front for example there was an increase in attendance this year for the Monte Carlo Rolex Masters tennis tournament. The increase in attendance comes when many sporting venues globally are experiencing drops in attendance. 

Monaco’s measured approach is in the form of businesses offering additional amenities to traditional products and services. The worst thing Monaco could do is appear as  ‘Monaco on Sale.’ No big price reductions are happening in Monaco. This would take away from the unique character of the region. It would be akin to a French Riviera restaurant of exquisite cuisine offering fast food as a takeaway.

Monaco still means tourists paying significant euros to enjoy splendour. It still has an air of affluence and aura of extravagance. While many tourist regions are seeing fewer middle class holidaymakers, Monaco still has the rich, and even the somewhat well to do whom they can count on.

 This doesn’t mean they’re taking things for granted though. To remain competitive, Monaco businesses still promote premium service and famous events to keep the cash rolling in. Their selling point is world class events in a luxurious setting that one should experience at least once.

A prime example is the Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix. Every May, ultra-sophisticated Grand Prix racecars zip through, around, and up and down the byways of Monaco. Celebrities, including Hollywood stars, supermodels and sports figures attend the Monaco Grand Prix, often popping down for a couple of days from the nearby Cannes Film Festival.

Formula 1 cars speed along the stunning Monaco harbour area and through the tunnel as part of the course. Global television audiences see before them the quaint principality and its impressive Monte Carlo casino.

As the rich and famous cavort, holidaymakers around the globe get a sense of the special character of Monaco. This results in those vital tourist euros pouring into Monaco each year.

Essentially, this luxurious aura is what helps Monaco weather tough economic times. Many tourist regions are cookie-cutter examples of other tourist areas. Think of some tropical locales that offer beaches and oceanfront. Then think of a host of others that offer the same thing.

Located between the South of France and Italy, Monaco is different. Monaco has its fine architecture and rich House of Grimaldi royal tradition. People know the story of Prince Rainier III and Grace Kelly, the Princess of Monaco.

The Principality  is a constitutional monarchy. Prince Albert II is the head of state, the Sovereign Prince. He is the son of the late Prince Rainier III. The executive branch consists of a Minister of State. This individual oversees a four-member Council of Government.

In this regal setting reside top businessmen and women, movie stars, F1 drivers and other famous people. Of course, Monaco has a reputation for her tax haven status and most banks ensure they are represented at one of the Monaco banks.

Rich with history, Monaco, in addition to the Monte Carlo casino has the Place du Palais. This attraction offers a splendid panoramic view overlooking the Port and Monte Carlo. Every day in front of the palace’s main entrance, visitors can watch the grand changing of the guard ceremony.

Another fine attraction in Monaco is the Oceanographic Museum & Aquarium. Inaugurated in 1910 by its founder, Prince Albert I, this facility took 11 years to build. Monaco also boasts its Monte Carlo Opera, Monte Carlo Ballet and The Monte Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra. In addition, Monaco is home to AS Monaco, its soccer team that plays in the French Soccer League.

It should be enough to ensure Monaco does well in 2010.

More details about Monaco can be followed at twitter and other social media

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Monaco Top For Broadband

Friday, June 19th, 2009
Monaco - Top For Technology

Monaco - Top For Technology

With Italy just a few miles away and bordering the South of France, Monaco is known throughout the world as a country that has it all – glamour, money, security, the most famous casino in the world and more millionaires per thousand of population than anywhere else.

There’s also the fact that Monaco property is the highest priced in the world, frequent comfortable bus transport is just a Euro a journey, and has the best Grand Prix in the world too, run each May around the streets of Monte Carlo.

But not content with style and tradition, Monaco has just been named as the country with the best broadband for her people in the world, showing that the tax haven is not just moving with the times, but welcoming new technology and embracing the new opportunities it affords.

Over 40 per cent of Monaco households have and use broadband, while broadband is available to every property in the Principality – the second smallest country in the world after the Vatican.

Part of the reason for the hundred per cent coverage of broadband in Monaco could well be because of her size – just a square mile. There are few houses in Monaco, with nearly everyone living in an apartment building, which means in simple terms making broadband to all is inexpensive compared to rural areas with remote farmhouses and communities with a sparse population, where installation of broadband would be expensive and probably done at a loss if undertaken by a private company with no government subsidy.

But the ease of installation of broadband in somewhere like Monaco shouldn’t necessarily be seen as why there’s a hundred per cent availability for her citizens – while steeped in tradition Monaco under the leadership of Prince Albert is one of the world’s most forward thinking countries, and welcoming new technology is part of that outlook.

An example of Monaco’s forward thinking is that there is a first class bus service in the Principality that runs on time and regularly, cutting down the number of people who need to drive to work or for the shops. And in a country where’s there a higher density of millionaires than anyone else it isn’t expensive – one Euro.

And when it comes to the environment, low cost bus fares to encourage people out of cars onto public transport isn’t the only environmental policy being pursued – Prince Albert has visited both the North and South Poles to highlight global warming, and in meetings with other world leaders puts the environment and climate change at the top of the agenda.

The oceans have always been important to the Grimaldi family who have ruled Monaco for centuries, and Prince Albert is no exception when it comes to protecting the seas. Blue fin tuna has been voluntarily taken off the menu by all the restaurants and hotels in Monaco.

So Monaco is able to mix a concern and real action on the environment with a financial environment where the Monaco banks are sought after by the world’s wealthy, is a mecca for gamblers with the world famous casino, broadband for everyone, and one of the greatest sporting spectacles in the world at each May’s Monaco Grand Prix.

In a recent poll of British sports fans, the Monaco Grand Prix was voted the top sporting event outside the UK. The event had 18 percent of the vote, beating both the Olympics and the famed Barcelona event at Camp Nou stadium. Formula One established itself formally on the international race circuit in 1946. The first Monaco Grand Prix was ran in 1948. It was won by Nino Farina, the future world champion, driving a Maserati.

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Monaco F1 Tops the List for Global Sporting Events

Monday, April 27th, 2009

When quizzed and asked to name the world’s great sporting event, how would you respond? Sure, there’s the Super Bowl, the World Cup and the Tour de France. Would you consider the Monaco Grand Prix? Year in and year out, the Monaco Grand Prix is one of the world’s most watched sporting events.

Monaco in a recent poll of British sports enthusiasts, the Monaco Grand Prix was voted the top sporting event outside the UK.

The event garnered 18 percent of the vote, beating both the Olympics and Barcelona football club at the Camp Nou stadium. The survey was conducted by Barclays Spaces for Sports. The Monaco Grand Prix is a Formula One race held annually on the Circuit de Monaco. The first race was held in 1929. It is arguably the premier annual international racing event on the international racing circuit.

Originally conceived by Anthony Noghes, the event is often referred to as the jewel of the Formula One crown. The event rivals the Indianapolis 500 and 24 Hours of Le Mans for international fame. It is arguably held on the most beautiful course of the three races.

The first Monaco Grand Prix was won by William Grover-Willams driving a Bugatti. The narrow streets and tight course is a mainstay of the event, as it has been since its inception. It is one of the most demanding and prestigious courses in Formula One racing.

The course weaves through city streets, curving around water and dodging at high speeds past the buildings of Monaco. The demanding course is also a dangerous one, but it has been conquered by many skilled racers. Brazil is home to the racer with the most wins at the Monaco Grand Prix, Ayrton Senna. He holds to his credit six victories, five of which occurred between 1989 and 1993.

Complications in international racing arose during the Second World War. Between 1937 and 1945 international racing waited as the world watched history unfold. In 1945, however, European racing started up again just over four months after the war ended. Formula One established itself formally on the international race circuit in 1946. The first Monaco Grand Prix was ran in 1948. It was won by Nino Farina, the future world champion, driving a Maserati. The following year, the Grand Prix was cancelled due to the death of Prince Louis II. There was also no race in 1951 and 1952. Since these unfortunate postponements, the Monaco Grand Prix has been a consistent race and the hotels in Monaco are booked a year in advance.

The years ahead were dominated by racing dynasties. In 1957, the Grand Prix saw a double winner. In 1961, Stirling Moss in his Rob Walker Racing Team Lotus 18 upped the ante with his third win in the race. In the 1960s, Britain’s Graham Hill managed to win the race five times and earn the moniker of Mr. Monaco.

The tradition of race dominance continued in the 1980s. From 1984 to 1993, only two racers won the Monaco Grand Prix: Brazil’s Ayrton Senna and France’s Alain Prost. Senna holds the record for the most Monaco Grand Prix victories with six first place finishes under his belt. He is closely followed by Michael Schumacher and his five time champion status. Schumacher made his last appearance at the 2006 event, where controversy enshrouded his performance. To this date, Schumacher had one of the most memorable finishes in the race. The Monaco Grand Prix is an event filled with drama and intrigue. Every year, fans delight in the crown jewel in the crown of Formula One racing. Sports fans can clearly see why Barclays Spaces for Sports named it first place in the list of Seven Wonders of the Sporting World recently. Barclays is one of several Monaco banks

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Monaco Resident Jensen Gets It Right Again

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Monaco resident Jensen Button began the Malaysian Grand Prix last Sunday in pole position, for the fifth time in his career, but he did not stay there very long. With a bad start, he soon found himself watching three cars ahead of him from the fourth position. He felt he wasn’t generating enough heat in his rear tyres. That, coupled with oversteer in the car, caused him to fall back in the race.

Initially, he felt his pace was fine. However, the rains came and caused havoc for all the drivers on the course. All teams then had to formulate new driving tactics.

They also had to make tyre decisions, changing to different tires to deal with the worsening conditions. Some drivers chose full wet tyres, others different gradations. Some saw their tyres destroyed quite fast in the heavy rain conditions. Tyre decisions were as vital as driving tactic decisions.

With a determined effort of strategic driving, Button climbed his way back to the third position. Subsequent maneuverings found him back in the lead once again on the Sepang course. Now, his mission was to remain there and secure the victory, whatever length the race would be.

In the end, officials called the race, not wanting to risk the lives of the drivers as the race became a bit of a casino – the 56-lap race became a 31-lap affair. Jensen Button clocked in his victory at a time of 55:30.622.

This was the first race stoppage because of inclement weather since the Brazilian Grand Prix of 2003. It was also the first race since the 1991 Australian Grand Prix where only half the points were distributed to the drivers. That race in 1991 took place under heavy rain conditions as well.

The Malaysian race results showed Jensen Button and his Brawn-Mercedes team at the top of the podium. Nick Heidfeld of the BMW team was second. Toyota’s Timo Glock secured the third spot.

The previous weekend in Melbourne, Australia, Button took top spot. His teammate on the Brawn-Mercedes team, Rubens Barrichello came second. The third spot went to Jarno Trulli of Toyota. At this, the season-opening Grand Prix, Jensen Button won the pole position. He then proceeded to lead the race from start to finish.

The Australian race ended under a yellow flag. This was due to Sebastian Vettel and Robert Kubica bouncing each other out as they jostled for the second position. However, the race was all-around good news for Jensen Button’s Brawns-Mercedes team. They were first in practice, qualifying and the actual race. They also garnered maximum points for the team, which bodes well in the standings for them.

For Jensen Button it’s an excellent start to a long and tough Formula One Grand Prix season. Born on January 19, 1980, in Frome, Somerset, pouring it on with speed is his raison d’etre. He takes his driving seriously.

His preparation for a season involves physical conditioning to enhance his driving skills. On a typical day, he will engage in two sessions of physical workouts. One is a cardiovascular session and one is a weights session. Grand Prix drivers know that sitting in a car doesn’t involve just sitting in a car. There is the mental and physical stress that goes along with driving a primed machine at incredible speeds.

What’s next for Jensen Button and his team? Ahead are 15 more races in the Formula 1 racing season. The next three involve races in China, Bahrain and Spain before the Monaco F1

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Monaco Rugby

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Some things Monaco is good at, and for some things Monaco is the best in the world, like the Grand Prix, the Monte Carlo Casino and the Yacht Show.

But there are some things, no matter how good and sincere the people as individuals are, that Monaco can’t claim to be best at…

To read more click to:

http://tvnz.co.nz/rugby-news/monaco-millions-no-help-rugby-team-2454080

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Lance Armstrong, the Tour de France And Monaco

Friday, December 19th, 2008

Casino Square Monaco

American Legend Lance Armstrong is back on his bike having recently announced his intention to race in 2009, and Monaco looks forward to seeing him as one of the stages of the Tour de France will include Monaco, starting from Casino Square.

He’s already hard at work preparing for a possible return to the Tour de France next summer. In fact, early in November, he won a Texas mountain bike race.

Born in 1971, Lance Armstrong’s sports career began in Plano, Texas. At age thirteen, he won the Iron Kids Triathlon.

During his senior year of high school, he was training with the U.S. Olympic cycling developmental team in Colorado Springs, Colorado. By 1991, he was the U.S. National Amateur Champion. Shortly thereafter, he joined the professional ranks.

He experienced significant success early in his professional career. He quickly earned a USPRO Championship title. He won stage victories in the Tour de France.

He also won a World Championship and garnered several wins at the Tour du Pont. On top of all that, Lance Armstrong achieved a number one world ranking and a U.S Olympic Team position.

In 1996, he was a member of the U.S. Cycling Team. That year he competed in the Atlanta Summer Olympic Games. This was also the year that Lance Armstrong signed a professional contract with the French-based Cofidis Racing Team.

However, the next battle facing Armstrong in 1996 was not on a cycling course. His next battle was a personal fight against cancer, which had taken hold inside him.

His particular form of cancer was one where his chances for recovery were considerably less than fifty-fifty. On the advice of his specialists, Armstrong began an aggressive program of chemotherapy. This course of treatment worked.

Lance Armstrong overcame the odds and beat cancer. Today, he devotes his efforts to helping others fight their personal battles with the disease.

After fighting his battle, he started the Lance Armstrong Foundation. He is a leader and activist, through this foundation, on behalf of cancer survivors.

The foundation provides information and tools that people require to battle cancer. The Foundation does this through education, advocacy, public health programs and research grants. Lance Armstrong works in this area with the same passion and determination that he brings to the cycling track.

Upon winning his fight with cancer, Lance Armstrong returned to cycling. Building his strength back up, he was back on course in 1997. He won his first Tour de France in 1999 as a member of the U.S. Postal Service team.

He wasn’t finished, though. He proceeded to win the race the next five years in a row. He retired from cycling in 2005 after winning a record seventh Tour de France title.

Now, in 2008, Lance Armstrong is spinning his wheels again. He is training and plans a full return to racing with the Astana team next year. There is the possibility that Armstrong will attempt the Tour de France race next summer.

The Tour begins in Monaco in Casino Square on July 4, 2009 with the first stage individual time-trials over a 15-kilometer or 9.3-mile stretch. On July 5, the second stage begins in Monaco-Brignoles over a 182-kilometer or 113.1-mile stretch.

Before all that, Lance Armstrong has work to do. He is aiming at competing in the first event of the International Cycling Union (UCI) Pro Tour.

He is training to prepare himself for the Tour Down Under in Australia, which takes place in January 2009. This is his first step of his comeback in preparation for a possible run at the Tour de France title once again.

Grit, determination, and a passion for sport and quality of life are what make Lance Armstrong tick. He’s a fighter on and off the cycling track. He now works to instill that same fighting spirit in others who face challenges he can definitely understand and appreciate.

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