AFP

Cancellara se viste de amarillo tras ganar la crono inaugural del Tour

04 julio 2009 03:20 PM
0 Recomendaciones

MONACO (AFP) - El suizo Fabian Cancellara (Saxo Bank) se impuso este sábado en la primera etapa del Tour ciclista de Francia, una contrarreloj individual de 15,5 kilómetros en Mónaco, superando al español Alberto Contador y al británico Bradley Wiggins.

...

¡Bienvenido!Ingresar | ¿Nuevo usuario? Regístrame

{l10n.maple/widgets/vitality/VITALITY_TITLE}

Últimas Noticias

test

Últimas fotos

  • Pelotas inflables de fútbol son exhibidas afuera del Centro de Conferencias Internacional de Ciudad del Cabo, Sudáfrica, el miércoles 2 de dic de 2009. El sitio será la sede del sorteo de la Copa Mundial, el viernes 4 de dic. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)Height (pixels): 372Width (pixels): 512Series ID: af1283b6-8954-4cae-97fe-4b8d3b1626e0Photo ID: af1283b6-8954-4cae-97fe-4b8d3b1626e0Asset Type: PHOTOPrevious Photo ID: Ap
  • Thirteen-year-old Youssuf holds a pair of used old cleets bought at a local market in the small village of Nyal in South Central Sudan on November 14, 2009. Youssuf was getting ready to play with his mates in a sandy patch of land also used as a landing strip for small aircraft. Thirty two countries from around the world will play in the 2010 World Cup football event hosted by Souuth Africa and marks the first time that a World Cup is played on African soil. Sixty four matches will span South Africa, from Polokwane in the northeast to Cape Town in the southwest, culminating in the final in the capital on July 11. AFP PHOTO/Roberto SCHMIDT (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images) Getty Images
  • CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - DECEMBER 02: Joseph S Blatter FIFA President speaks to the media during an Extraordinary Executive Commitee Meeting Press Conference at the Cape Town Convention Centre on December 2, 2009 in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photo by Shaun Botterill/Getty Images) Getty Images
  • A boy holds his soccer ball made from rolled cloth cuttings in front of his hut in the small village of Nyal in South Central Sudan on November 14, 2009. Thirty two countries from around the world will play in the 2010 World Cup football event hosted by Souuth Africa and marks the first time that a World Cup is played on African soil. Sixty four matches will span South Africa, from Polokwane in the northeast to Cape Town in the southwest, culminating in the final in the capital on July 11. AFP PHOTO/Roberto SCHMIDT (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images) Getty Images