Two Romanian sisters (Eliza & Teodora) who love cycling. Cause we needed a place to share our love and passion for this sport. Hope you'll like it! As a rule of thumb, we only follow other cycling blogs, although, we do make a few exceptions. It's not personal. We just don't want our dashboard filled with non-cycling things.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
The New World Champion: Tony Martin. Bradley Wiggins was 2nd and Fabian Cancellara 3rd.
Chris Froome - Stage 10 of 2011 Vuelta a Espana
Bradley Wiggins of Skyprocycling rides during the tenth stage of the Tour of Spain in Salamanca.
Yep, Levi Leipheimer won the third stage of the 2011 USA Pro Cycling Challenge.
Are you serious, Alex? Time trialing hurts as much as how women describe childbirth? We (women) don’t think so…
Tony Martin warming up his muscles for the TT. - Stage 20, 2011 Tour de France
Tony Martin is exausted after winning the 20th stage of 2011 Tour de France.
(Source: Flickr / brakethrough)
Alberto Contador - Giro d’Italia 2011, last stage Time Trail, Milano, 29.05.2011

Tejay Van Garderen gave himself the perfect birthday gift: a win at Utah TT. On his twenty-third birthday, Tejay van Garderen scorched the hot tarmac at the Miller Motorsports Park to win the time trial and his team-mate Patrick Gretsch was third.
Levi Leipheimer stepped onto the overall leader’s spot on the podium as his second-place ride of 17:39 was more than enough to strip the jersey off the back of Sergio Henao.
(Source: velonews.competitor.com)

Jesse Sergent (Team RadioShack) pulled off a thrilling win in a rain-affected individual time trial at the Eneco Tour. The 23-year-old posted the fastest time in the Eneco Tour’s stage four time trial with 17’55”, and was the only rider to finish under 18 minutes, ahead of Alex Rasmussen (HTC-Highroad).
As expected, Edvald Boasson Hagen (Team Sky) moved into the race lead in the Eneco Tour after the 14.7km time trial around the streets of Roermond, Netherlands. He is followed by Philippe Gilbert (Omega-Pharma Lotto) at 12” and David Millar (Garmin-Cervelo) at 18”.