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				<title><![CDATA[By James Raia - Articles - Tour de France Postcards (1997-2009)]]></title>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Tour de  France, 2007: Rest Day #2: Remembering Cycling&#039;s Pioneers]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/64/1/Tour-de--France-2007-Rest-Day-2-Remembering-Cycling039s-Pioneers/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;"><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/6-daycover.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="175" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="125"/>The 2007 Tour de France has its second and final rest day Tuesday, and like all race editions, this year's presentations has had its share of dramatic riding and odd occurrences.<br/><br/>And beyond the continuing drug accusations, the traditions of bicycle racing at its highest level has continued for yet another year.<br/><br/>The Tour is the Tour. It's the sport's most celebrated event, and its history has been well-documented.<br/><br/>Its founder and first race director, Henri Desgrange was a newspaper advertising executive and former elite track cyclist, who conceived the event as a promotion to battle a rival newspaper.<br/></span><br/>]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 23 Jul 2007 16:02:53 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Driving The Tour de France: It&#039;s A High-Speed Moving Movie]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/39/1/Driving-The-Tour-de-France-It039s-A-High-Speed-Moving-Movie/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;">Driving at the Tour de France course as a member of the media provides a moveable movie &#8212; shot from behind the windshield. The "film" is an ideal documentary of what the Tour is really all about.<br/><br/><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/Good_James.JPG" align="right" border="0" height="125" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="150"/>The last two days, my colleague and friend Bruce Aldrich and I have driven the entire direct mountain course routes. It was four hours to L'Alpe d'Huez on Tuesday and then another three hours today to the stage finish at the small, unheralded ski resort.<br/><br/>Tour organizers provide three types of driving stickers, green, blue and orange. The green sticker allows media representatives the most access, the blue the next-best access and the orange sticker the poorest access.<br/><br/>We have a blue sticker, which allows us to drive on the course. But we're not allowed to pass the caravan publicity. It's the long parade of sponsor vehicles that distributes trinkets to spectators, and it negotiates each day's route 90 minutes before the riders.<!-- Kontera ContentLinkô&nbsp; -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Sat, 23 Jun 2007 01:36:36 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Memories Of Tour de France Icon Louison Bobet]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/37/1/Memories-Of-Tour-de-France-Icon-Louison-Bobet/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;">More than a half-century later after his heyday, Louison Bobet remains a hero here in his birthplace city of 4,000 in northwestern France. Bobet won the Tour de France three times consecutively, the last in 1955. He died in 1983.<br/><br/><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/bobet2.JPG" align="right" border="0" height="150" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="150"/>But anticipating the start of the eighth stage of the Tour de France, the city put on a grand show. A huge vertical banner bearing Bobet's image was draped from the city's administrative building. Business storefront windows featured old newspaper clips and various photographs of Bobet as a boy as well as during and after his career.<br/><br/>The city had a fireworks display at midnight last night and broadcast a Tour de France highlights montage on a bigscreen television in the middle of the square. Restaurants and bars stayed open late, and it seemed as if everyone in the city wore a yellow T-shirt. In black cursive letters, the back of the shirts were inscribed "Merci, Louison. Merci, Le Tour."<!-- Kontera ContentLinkô&nbsp; -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Fri, 22 Jun 2007 01:10:57 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Track Cycling (Not Wine) On My Mind In Bordeaux]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/35/1/Track-Cycling-Not-Wine-On-My-Mind-In-Bordeaux/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;"><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/Bordeaux.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="125" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="150"/>We're in the thick of the 2006 Tour de France now and I've got track cycling on my mind.<br/><br/>While the cyclists are approaching Dax, it's a good time reflect on the Bordeuax Stadium. It's where the press room was located yesterday during the race's first rest day. It's the same location used in past years when the Tour has visited Bordeaux &#8212; one of the Tour's seven original cities.<br/><br/>The track, located near a lake in an industrial area on the outskirts of Bordeaux, was the site of the track cycling World Championships last April. It's also the site where unique cycling records like the one-hour mark have been set through the years.<!-- Kontera ContentLinkô&nbsp; -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Thu, 21 Jun 2007 12:23:54 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Three Great Things About Driving And French Firemen At The Tour de France]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/34/1/Three-Great-Things-About-Driving-And-French-Firemen-At-The-Tour-de-France/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;"><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/roundabout.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="125" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="150"/>After 10 years of attending the Tour de France, I still know little about French ways. I speak perhaps 100 words of the language. But I have spent enough time here, including two non-Tour trips, and I've driven more 25,000 miles throughout the country, to catch on to a few things<br/><br/>I've gotten lost, stayed in chateaus I didn't want to leave and spent nights in hotels where I thought I might catch a disease. I've gotten sick in the Pyrenees. And I've met some incredibly skilled journalists, generous innkeepers and people I consider friends and who I'd invite into my home.<br/><br/>All of this said, and after having been on the open road by myself and with plenty of time to think about, I come up with three quick French customs worthy of serious consideration for import to the United States.<!-- Kontera ContentLink&ocirc;  -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Thu, 21 Jun 2007 11:21:42 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Look At Cyclist George Hincapie: He&#039;s All Grown Up]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/29/1/Look-At-Cyclist-George-Hincapie-He039s-All-Grown-Up/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;"><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/george.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="150" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="125"/>For the past few years, there were two reporters in Tour de France press rooms who still wrote their articles on portable typewriters. They either faxed their copy to editors or dictated it.<br/><br/>Both of those journalists are gone this year, but there's still plenty of reporters around who've been covering the event for more than 30 years.<br/><br/>I'm not quite in that category, but I realized yesterday I've been around the sport for a while when George Hincapie was speaking at the Tour de France press conference. He looked so poised and gave articulate answers. I suddenly remembered he's 32 now. He and his former podium girl wife have a young daughter. <br/><br/>But I can remember first covering Hincapie when he was an amateur. He was still a teenager. He was prone to giving one-word answers and he often cried at races.<!-- Kontera ContentLinkô&nbsp; -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Wed, 20 Jun 2007 13:07:41 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Hotel Cazaux In Lourdes: My Home Away From Home At The Tour de France]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/24/1/Hotel-Cazaux-In-Lourdes-My-Home-Away-From-Home-At-The-Tour-de-France/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;"><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/cazauz1.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="150" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="175"/>Each year during the Tour de France, I can't wait to get to Lourdes. A lot folks who go to the Tour despise the small city in the country's southwest corner, and there are plenty of reasons.<br/><br/>It's a place where visitors worldwide flock in an endless convoy of tourist buses. They hope for divine intervention. It's where the vision of Bernadette is located and it's where retail shops sell cheap trinkets depicting holy symbols. It's a place of desperation. Lourdes is a little like Atlantic City without gambling.<!-- Kontera ContentLinkô&nbsp; -->

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					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jun 2007 01:28:18 EDT</pubDate>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Lance Armstrong: Seven Tour Titles, One Lasting Memory ]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/23/1/Lance-Armstrong-Seven-Tour-Titles-One-Lasting-Memory-/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Verdana; font-size: 10pt;">With his pending retirement Sunday in Paris and all the celebration that will envelope him as a seven-time Tour de France titlist, people will still ask: Is Lance Armstrong a "clean athlete?"<br/><br/><img title="" alt="" src="http://www.byjamesraia.com/content_images/2/lance.jpg" align="right" border="0" height="150" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="150"/>I've reported on Armstrong for more than 15 years. I've seen him win dozens of races. I've viewed all of his wondrous and bizarre Tour moments and witnessed his interaction with fans and the media. I've seen his bravado and heard his biting wit.<br/><br/>And we know each other some, although I'm not part of his small corps of trusted "journalists," some of whom he seemingly has as employees.<br/><br/>I have no idea if Armstrong has found a way not to test positive. Maybe some report will surprise those who've reported on him or been inspired by his cancer recovery and cycling achievements.</span><br/> ]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (James Raia)</author>
					  <pubDate>Fri, 15 Jun 2007 19:06:18 EDT</pubDate>
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