Former Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins will return to action for Team Sky in this week’s Tour of Poland. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Former Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins will return to action for Team Sky in this week’s Tour of Poland. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Team Sky boss Dave Brailsford would love to see the last two Tour de France winners Chris Froome and Bradley Wiggins lining up together when the race heads to Britain next year. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
By The Huffington Post News Editors
PARIS — Chris Froome won the 100th Tour de France on Sunday, having dominated rivals over three weeks on the road and adroitly dealt with doping suspicions off it.
In two years, Britain has now had two different winners: Bradley Wiggins in 2012 and then Froome, a cooler, calmer, more understated but no less determined character than his Sky teammate with famous sideburns.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post
British cyclist Chris Froome has won the 100th Tour de France, the second consecutive title for a Briton, with Bradley Wiggins winning in 2012. Froome rode into Paris in style—in the yellow race leader’s jersey he took on Stage 8 and never relinquished. In its final stage, riders raced… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home
Chris Froome retained his big race lead Saturday to all but ensure he will become Britain’s second consecutive Tour de France champion after Bradley Wiggins. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
By Associated Press Chris Froome has effectively wrapped up a Tour de France victory, putting himself in position to become Britain’s second successive champion after Bradley Wiggins. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at ESPN Headlines
The Duchess of Cambridge’s pregnancy has seen her endure illness, media frenzies, bikini shot scandals and a prank that ultimately ended in tragedy.
The news that Prince William’s wife Catherine was expecting a baby was released on December 3, after she was taken to hospital suffering from acute morning sickness.
Three days earlier, Kate had shown no sign of discomfort as she played hockey on a visit to one of her former schools.
The new arrival will be directly in line to inherit the British throne after William, who is second-in-line after his father Prince Charles.
But joy at the news of a baby tinged with concern for the duchess’s condition, soon turned to anger and then tragedy.
During her three-night stay at King Edward VII’s Hospital in London, a hoax phonecall made by two Australian radio presenters — pretending to be Queen Elizabeth II and William’s father Prince Charles — resulted in details of Kate’s condition being divulged.
The stunt, by Michael Christian and Mel Greig, triggered a global media storm of its own and sparked a backlash against the presenters and the radio network.
Jacintha Saldanha, the Indian nurse who answered and put through the call, was found hanged on December 7, having taken her own life.
William and Kate were left “deeply saddened” by her death, a spokesman said.
England’s state prosecutors eventually decided not to bring any charges against the radio hosts, saying that “however misguided, the telephone call was intended as a harmless prank”.
Looking well, Kate returned to public duties on December 16 at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards, handing Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins the main trophy.
But in February, pictures of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge holidaying on the Caribbean island of Mustique were printed in Italian and Australian publications, showing Kate in a bikini, her baby bump clearly visible.
Infuriated, St James’s Palace called it a “clear breach of the couple’s right to privacy”. It came after topless pictures of the duchess had been published the previous September, incensing the royals.
Britain’s media got themselves into a frenzy in early March, believing Kate had accidentally given away the sex of their baby while meeting members of the public on a visit to a fishing town.
National newspapers ran front-page headlines reading “It’s a girl!”.
However, recordings of the exchange revealed nothing of the sort.
“Is this for us? Oh, thank-you so much, it’s very, very sweet of you,” she said as she was handed a teddy bear.
“Did you nearly say my daughter?” a 67-year-old woman a few metres away asked shortly afterwards.
“No, no, no,” the duchess replied. “We don’t know”.
But the molecule of confusion was enough to get the papers all in a lather.
“Obviously, Will’s grown up in it, but Kate’s become very used to that kind of circus,” said Claire Irvin, editor-in-chief of Mother and Baby magazine.
The duchess carried out her final solo public engagement on June 13, launching a new liner in the southern English port of Southampton, sending a 15-litre bottle of champagne smashing into its hull.
Two days later …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
By Matt Cantor The latest Tour de France winner has some choice words about a cyclist who once inspired him. Watching Lance Armstrong claim to Oprah that he hadn’t doped in 2009 and 2010 , “I thought, ‘You lying bastard,'” Bradley Wiggins tells the Telegraph . “I can still remember going toe to toe…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home