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Tour aims to reduce jobless rate among veterans

December 15th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

Unemployment as a threat to national security?

Youd better believe it.

The nationwide jobless rate among veterans who served in Afghanistan and Iraq is 12 percent, well above 8.6 percent in the general population. For reservists, unemployment jumps to 14 percent. Military spouses have it worse still, with a 26 percent jobless rate.

(Military) recruiters tell young men and women every day that theyll be better off in four years if they serve our country. The fact is, thats not true, said Kevin Schmiegel, vice president of the US Chamber of Commerces veterans employment program. How are we going to recruit talented young men and women if they see those unemployment data? Why should they raise their right hand and serve in an all-volunteer force if their service isnt going to be valued or understood when theyre looking for employment after they leave? This is a national security issue.

On Friday, Schmiegel and US Department of Veteran Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki came to Las Vegas to address that issue, as the US Chamber partnered with Student Veterans of America and Recruit Military to host the Hiring Our Heroes-Las Vegas job fair. About 60 national and local companies, including The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, Walmart, Prudential and Progressive Insurance, participated, along with roughly 500 veterans attending college or technical school in Las Vegas and elsewhere.

Vet hiring is slow for a few reasons.

First is access. The Department of Defense doesnt give employers access to active-duty military members to discuss post-service employment, Schmiegel said. Nor does the military talk civilian transition before service ends.

Plus, most veterans leaving service dont have a college degree, and language that describes their experience may not translate into corporate-speak.

So theres a need to help veterans articulate their skills in terms employers recognize — something they received help with Friday in seminars and from employers — as well as a need to help the private sector realize the unique technical skills and leadership attributes veterans offer, Schmiegel said.

Its not just about polishing rÃsumÃs.

Vets must also combat perception.

Just ask Jessi Tseng and Dan Sewell.

Tseng, in town from San Francisco for the fair, served in Iraq as a human resources administrator and on the personal security detachment for a brigade commander. She graduated in 2010 with a sociology degree from the University of California, Santa Barbara, landing in the top 10 percent of her class and serving as a director for two nonprofits. After teaching English in China for a year, Tseng returned to a nonexistent job market. She said her military peers have the same problem finding work.

There are a lot of companies out there that say they are extremely vet-friendly, but Ive been applying, applying, applying, and I havent been able to find a job, said Tseng, 25. I think a lot of employers look at veterans and feel theres baggage, but I believe veterans have more potential to excel. They have the drive, they have the motivation, they are goal-oriented and they are mission-oriented.

Tseng found a temporary research job through an employment agency, but she longs for full-time work with a nonprofit where she can make a difference.

Sewell, 29, sent out hundreds of applications and attended three job fairs as he wrapped up bachelors and masters degrees in industrial engineering and business administration at the University of Missouri. He received a handful of nibbles. It got so bad that Sewell and some of his peers talked about ripping the military stuff off of their rÃsumÃs.

People think veterans are trigger-pullers, that we go around giving each other orders, or that were coming back with post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injuries, said Sewell, who served in Afghanistan as a munition-systems inspector for Air Force jets. They think hiring a veteran will be more of a hassle than an asset. But we are trained to be supervisors and to have empathy and leadership skills. Employers are not understanding our value. We need to articulate that better and tell them how our experiences have shaped us as individuals and leaders.

Shinseki said the nation will miss out if it cant sort out the hiring problem. With the economy still struggling, skilled vets could boost commerce.

These are exactly the folks you want to play a role in turning the country around, Shinseki said. Theyre smart, aggressive, project-oriented youngsters who dont watch the clock. They team-build, focus on a project and get it done. They have skills, knowledge and attributes that make them ideal for companies. Companies just need to find them.

Shinseki pointed to the 12 years following World War II, when about half of the nations 16 million war vets were educated through the first GI Bill. Those vets built the worlds biggest economy, made America a global leader and won the Cold War, he said.

We expect an opportunity for history to repeat itself. These youngsters want a chance. Theyre prepared for it. Now, the rest of us need to step up and offer them jobs, Shinseki said.

Hiring our Heroes has 21 more cities to visit on its 100-city first tour. It will place about 15,000 vets or spouses by the time it wraps up, Schmiegel estimated.

The job fair will return to Las Vegas in the first quarter and stop in Reno for the first time in March or April. The idea? To reach more small businesses and to let companies know that 90 percent of the occupations in the military — from truck driver to mechanic to financial manager — can translate directly to the private sector, Schmiegel said.

If the chamber can encourage 10 percent of its 3 million members and 10 percent of the nations 3.7 million veteran-owned businesses to hire just one veteran by the end of 2014, the vet jobless rate will drop by half, Schmiegel said. And the program will have helped plug labor shortages in areas ranging from clean energy to health care, he said.

Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at
jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

Apple Grand Central Store: Quick Tour

December 14th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

Apple Grand Central Store: Quick Tour

Paul McDougall
12/10/2011
Apples latest retail outlet will pitch products like the iPad 2, iPhone 4S, and MacBook Air to commuters at one of the worlds busiest transportation hubs. Check out our visual tour.

Branstad continues jobs tour, Democratic skepticism grows

September 6th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

Half a year into Gov. Terry Branstads fifth term in Terrace Hill, Democratic skepticism continues to mount over Branstads much repeated goal of creating 200,000 new jobs in the state over the next four-and-a-half years, especially as the doors begin to close at Iowa Workforce Development field offices at the end of this month.

Today, Branstad and Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds continued their Jobs for Iowa tour through the western side of the state, a conservative-influenced demographic that live in mostly small, rural communities or on farms. The 43-city tour started in June; the western leg will cover 12 communities in three days.

On the Governors website, Branstad touted the tour where we will discuss the progress we made in the last legislative session and the plans we have to continue moving Iowa forward toward economic prosperity. In addition, the Governor has been adamant commercial property tax reform will be a top priority in the 2012 Legislative session, and that such reforms are essential to making the Hawkeye State a competitive market for businesses to either relocate or expand.

But Democrats say since Branstad took office, the opposite has happened, and claim silence from the Governors Office has only furthered their already-germinated doubt about Iowas future job growth.

The state has lost 8,200 jobs since Branstad, Iowas longest-serving Governor, took office, according to IWD statistics, and Iowa has seen the loss of 8,700 since June alone.

The figures have prompted Democrats into action: Sen. Rob Hogg (D-Cedar Rapids) said Branstad needs to call for bipartisan action on economic development next session, the Iowa Democratic Party has filed an unanswered request for the cost of the Jobs for Iowa tour and Senate Democrats have expressed concern over the quality of jobs.

IDP officials said they requested records detailing all the expenses and reimbursements connected to Branstads job tour July 6, without a reply. Party spokesman Sam Roecker said Tuesday the party will continue to push for the records as the Governor prepares for the western leg of the town hall meetings.

Branstad spokesman Tim Albrecht said there is no discrimination against the Democrats wait time for the records.

The records are in various offices and departments of government, so our office went above and beyond to obtain these records, he said. This takes time, and was communicated to [IDP] as we work diligently to grant them a full, accurate response to the request.

Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal has accused the Branstad administration of dismantling the workforce development offices, and in part, razing job growth since the offices can serve as a physical resource for dislocated workers to receive employment assistance. The field offices are being closed in order to streamline employment assistance.

Democrats are further concerned that while Branstad has pledged 200,000 new jobs, the quality and pay of the jobs is yet to be foreseen.

In the 1980?s, when Gov. Branstad was first Governor, it was about creating any job, Gronstal has said. It wasn’t about creating wealth in this state, and it did little for Iowa.

Democrats have said in addition to their own property tax reform ideas, next session may see an effort to restore more IWD field offices.

Ed Wallace, deputy director of IWD, has said the public-private partnership under Iowa Partnership for Economic Progress, called IPEP, will focus on a range of careers, including more specialized fields like bio-technology.

We have long been a financial hub, but information technology is something we’re really paying attention to here in Iowa, along with focusing on the health care industry, which has many high demand jobs, Wallace told The Iowa Independent in July.

Gov. Branstad is a pro-jobs governor who continues to work every single day to ensure every Iowan who wants a job is able to find one, Albrecht said, adding the Governor remains committed to creating jobs in Iowa, and will make his case to the people of Iowa in spite of the Democrats effort to put roadblocks in front of his job-creating solutions.

Perry set for fundraising tour

September 5th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

AUSTIN, Texas Texas Gov. Rick Perry, the most prolific fundraiser in state history, is swinging this week into the nitty-gritty of raising money for his presidential campaign, a task that will include a marathon through major Texas cities.

After his tour of early-contest states last week to introduce himself, Perry is hunkered down this week making phone calls to bolster his 10-day-old campaign. Next week, the two-a-day and even three-a-day drills begin, with fundraising events in nine cities over four days.

Our goal is to raise the resources to run a credible campaign, said spokesman Mark Miner.

Biden Wraps Up Asia Tour

September 4th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

US Vice President Joseph Biden is wrapping up his Asian tour Wednesday with a visit to US Embassy workers in Tokyo and US troops stationed at Yokota Air Base in Japan.

He returns to Washington after a stop in Hawaii Thursday where he will deliver a speech at a Marine Corps base.

While in Japan, Vice President Biden visited areas devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and praised the courage and resolve of the Japanese people.

Speaking at the airport in the hard-hit city of Sendai Tuesday, Mr. Biden said he was humbled by what he was seeing.

Japan#039;s daily Yomiuri quoted Biden as praising the US-Japan alliance, which he said will continue to serve as the cornerstone of peace and security in east Asia. Biden also expressed confidence in the future of Japan#039;s economy.

Earlier in Tokyo, he and Prime Minister Naoto Kan confirmed they will go ahead with a controversial decision to move a US military base on Okinawa to another location on the same island.

Mr. Kan thanked the vice president for what he described as the enormous assistance provided by the United States, including the deployment of a naval task force immediately after the March 11 disasters, and technical assistance in dealing with the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

The US assistance to Japan has helped to improve a relationship that was strained by the long-running dispute over the stationing of US troops on Okinawa.

The American Red Cross on Tuesday contributed an additional $15 million to the Japanese Red Cross, bringing its investments in the country#039;s disaster recovery to nearly $260 million.

Biden#039;s three-country Asian tour began last Wednesday in China. The vice president sought to assure Chinese leaders that the US economy remains strong despite an unprecedented downgrade by a debt-rating agency.

Biden spent Monday in Mongolia, where he praised that nation#039;s transition to multi-party democracy, and he thanked it for its contributions to military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as to peace-keeping operations.

Long putters on a roll on the PGA Tour

August 30th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

He quickly stopped laughing.

  • MORE: This week in golf

Although his putter was causing him nary a problem — in fact, he called it the strongest club in his bag — Simpson rapidly discovered the longer the putter, the better the putter he was.

I went on the green, made a few long ones and thought, This is pretty good, Simpson said Tuesday at Plainfield Country Club, wheres hes playing in The Barclays, the first of four events in the FedExCup playoffs. So I took it out on the course for nine holes and made everything. I knew I was going to get made fun of by my teammates, but I took it back to Wake.

He hasnt taken it out of his bag since. Last week he used the belly putter to win the Wyndham Championhsip, his first PGA Tour victory, making it three weeks in a row where a player won with a non-traditional putter. The week prior, Keegan Bradley became the first player to use a long putter — his was of the belly variety, too — to win a major championship at the PGA at Atlanta Athletic Club. The week before the PGA, Adam Scott earned his first World Golf Championships title with a long putter at Firestone.

Chatter has quickly escalated about the fairness of the club and renewed calls to the USGA and Ramp;A — the gatekeepers of the game — for a permanent ban. The arguments against the long putter are lengthy and several, many believing it takes nerves and skill out of the stroke. By anchoring the putter against the belly or sternum or chin, a third point of contact has been made and makes it easier to make the ideal pendulum stroke.

The anchoring prevents golfers from breaking their wrists or rolling their forearms — the bane of those using conventional or standard length putters.

Out of the Rough: Fairmont’s William McGirt squeaks into PGA Tour playoffs

August 29th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

By Eddie Southards





William McGirt now knows how it feels to be on the bubble for entry into the NCAA basketball tournament.

The Fairmont native spent some anxious hours Sunday in Greensboro, waiting to see if he would qualify for the PGA Tours playoffs.

It came down to a 13-foot par putt by Justin Leonard on the last hole of the Wyndham Championship. When Leonard missed it, McGirt had slipped past him for the last spot, No. 125, in the FedEx Cup playoffs.

It was a nerve-wracking afternoon, McGirt told pgatour.com. It was very hard because I had no control over it. I kept checking (the scores) on my phone. Im in, I was out, I was in, I was out.

McGirt finished his final round before the leaders even teed off. To kill some time, he went back on the course and followed his friend Tommy Gainey, who was in the last group, for about five holes.

It was the longest afternoon of my life, McGirt said to pgatour.com. Q-school was a lot easier than just waiting around. Knowing there is nothing you can do, you just drive yourself crazy.

McGirt put himself in good position by shooting a 64 in the second round of the Wyndham. It was his best round of the year on tour. But rounds of 72 and 70 on the weekend put him in jeopardy of missing the playoffs.

You cant win the FedEx Cup sitting at home, he said. At least, Ive given myself a chance.

McGirt is in New Jersey getting ready for the first event of the playoffs, the Barclays. He has to finish among the top 100 players to stay in the playoffs.

Al Lewis is a member of Fairmont Golf Club and watched McGirt grow up and learn the game there.

Im real proud of him, Lewis said. He has hung in there all year long. There is a lot of pressure on a pro golfer. You have a brain lapse for a second and, boom, youre through.

Lewis is an ardent follower of McGirt, checking his score often on his computer during tournaments.

Im a William-aholic, he laughed. Ive pulled for him all year long. I think its wonderful that hes in the playoffs.

Lewis said McGirt was the topic of conversation at a chamber of commerce meeting Monday night at the Fairmont club.

Everybody is pulling for him, Lewis said. We have all the confidence in the world in him.

Mike Strange: Nationwide Tour pair seek third win, promotion to PGA

August 27th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

Every golfer who plants a tee in the ground at Fox Den Country Club on Thursday has designs on victory in the News Sentinel Open come Sunday.

For two of them, though, there is extra incentive.

Each spring, when the Nationwide Tour commences, a carrot dangles from a stick, or perhaps from a 3-wood: The Three-Victory Promotion, aka, the Battlefield Promotion.

Its a get-out-of-jail-free pass, only better. Three Nationwide wins in a season means an automatic promotion to the PGA Tour, the ultimate destination where the purses are fat.

Dont sweat the money list. Forget the torture that is Q-School. Youre in The Show.

In Nationwide history, nine players have achieved the promotion. In 2001, the Knoxville Open was Heath Slocums second win and his hat trick came in Omaha, Neb., six weeks later. The most recent was Michael Sim in 2009.

This weekend, both Mathew Goggin and JJ Killeen sit on the threshold.

Goggin, an Australian, won opening weekend, then won again June 19.

Killeen, a fourth-year Nationwide regular, won back-to-back, July 31 in Utah and Aug. 7 in Omaha. He came oh, so close last week in Kansas before landing in a fourth-place tie.

It would be real significant, Killeen said Tuesday. Not many people have done it.

But Im not really thinking about it when I play, to tell you the truth, and I think thats helped.

There are a couple of reasons not to be thinking about it at this point in the season.

For one, winning twice apiece has boosted Killeen and Goggin to 1-2 in the Nationwide money list. The Top 25 are promoted to the PGA Tour in 2012 and both are in safe range.

For another, its not as if sinking the winning putt late Sunday afternoon will bear instant dividends.

There will not be a golden helicopter swooping down to whisk Mr. Three Win to the next PGA tee box. With the FedExCup playoffs starting this week, the next available PGA event for a newbie isnt for another month.

But all that said, Goggin and Killeen would love to get their hat trick at Fox Den. Both want to finish the season strong and, by the way, win the money title.

The two share common ground, but arrived at it from different perspectives.

Killeen, 29, was a college star at TCU. In three past Nationwide seasons hes finished between 44th and 56th in earnings and then fallen just short in Q-School.

I didnt really set a time frame, he said of making the jump to the PGA. I tried to do it as soon as possible.

This is a great tour and its really taught me a lot. I wouldnt trade it for anything.

Goggin would. A two-time Nationwide winner in 1999, the 37-year-old native of Tasmania graduated to the big tour in 2000 and figured hed never look back. He hit the $1 million mark in 2008 and jumped to $1.9 million in 2009.

In 09, there he was paired with Tom Watson in the final group of the British Open at Turnberry. He fell short of a playoff and tied for fifth.

I was on a nice trajectory, he said, starting to feel comfortable, giving myself chances to win.

And it all came to a halt.

Come 2010, he fell down the money list and back to the Nationwide tour. There was a simple explanation, although it took the entire season to figure it out.

After his big move in 2009, Goggin signed with an equipment sponsor, Callaway, and took up new clubs. Long story short, the clubs were too long and threw off his shot.

When the problem was identified, Goggin said, It was like it was fixed the next day and it was a load off to know it wasnt me.

I wondered if he was kicking himself that it took a whole season to figure it out.

Not really, he said. Thats one thing you learn playing golf your whole life. Thats in the past.

You train yourself to be in the present — OK, thats done, next year is going to be a good year.

And 2011 has been. Goggin is returning to the PGA Tour in 2012. Its only a matter of by what avenue.

The Three-Victory Promotion would suit him fine. Even without the golden helicopter ride.

Mike Strange may be reached at strangem@knoxnews.com. Follow him at http://twitter.com/strangemike44 and http://blogs.knoxnews.com/strange.

USA Pro Cycling Challenge – Stage 2 Live

August 24th, 2011 Posted in Tour Tags:

USA Pro Cycling Challenge – Stage 2 Live
Break leads with a gap of 1:25 with 40 km to go…

Stage 1: Salida – Crested Butte/Mt. Crested Butte
160 km
Welcome to the second stage of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge or the Tour of
Colorado. The stage is 160 km long in distance and brings the riders from Salida
to Crested Butte/Mt. Crested Butte. HTCs German Patrick Gretsch started the
stage in the leaders jersey after winning yesterdays prologue.

The USA Pro Cycling Challenge kicked off Monday with the prologue
in CO Springs. The course undulated through the beautiful Garden of the Gods and
then took in a straight shot back into central CO Springs.

Patrick Gretsch of HTC-Highroad was the fastest on the day and gave HTC one
of their last wins of the 2011 season. Home town fave Tejay Vangarderen rode
himself into 8th place and remains within striking distance of the overall. The
top 10 riders are all within a few seconds of each other as we head into
tomorrows stage leaving from Salida and finishing in Crested Butte.

While there is a significant amount of climbing, there are only two really
sharp peaks and the GC probably wont be solidified this early in the race.

Christian Vandevelde, Brent Bookwalter, Robert Forster, Jens Voigt, George
Hincapie, Levi Leipheimer, Tejay Van Garderen, Cadel Evans and Ryan Roth
finished second to tenth in that order overall.

The riders have already climbed Monarch Pass the first mountain climb of the
tour; itreaches 11,315 feet in elevation. This first climb forces the riders to
gain 3250 feet in elevation over 13 miles, and will be their first taste of the
oxygen-deprived Colorado high altitude. The stage will close out the day with an
uphill finish from the lower area of Crested Butte to the finish line on Mt.
Crested Butte ? the USA Pro Cycling Challenge?s only mountain top finish.

We join the stage in progress with a break of two Jay Thomson (Bissell) and
Bradley White (United Healthcare). 39 km to go the gap 1:25. HTC and Garmin are
setting the pace in the bunch. Colorado isnt flat so the roads are constantly
up and down; more importantly its a high altitude dance with most of the stage
contested at over a mile in altitude.

HTC and Garmin are easy pacing. Gap down to 1:!5.

This afternoon the penultimate stage in the womens Trophee Dor was won by
Hitecs Norwegian Emilie Moberg. For Moberg it was her first pro win in her
career. She was the best of a small break over Dutchies Chantal Blaak and Loes
Gunnewijk. Russian Tatiana Antoshina remains in the overall lead.

Back to Colorado. 30 km to go. If we take a look to the field its a world
class field with Evans, Leipheimer, Vandevelde, Schleck, Schleck, Basso,
Zabriskie, Gesink, Van Garderen, Hesjedal and others.

All are in the States already for the two Canadian World Tour races in early
September.

Garmin and HTC still controlling. Race leader Patrick Gretsch is going
to ride for Skil-Shimano next year together with Marcel Kittel and John
Degenkolb Skil will become a very good team next year in the classics, sprints
and time trials.

Jay Thomson is a South African. He is 25 years old and was 2nd (ITT) and 5th
(RR) at the national championships this year. Its his first year for Bissell
after riding for Fly V and MTN before.

Bradley White is a 29 year old American. In his second year for United
Healthcare. Not much to report on regarding results this year. But the
brave two have a 1:15 lead. Thomson is 23 seconds behind Gretsch on GC and White
is 31 seconds behind on GC.

24 km to go. Not much happening in the
bunch. But as the finish is uphill we can expect attacks in the end.

Rabobank comes to the front too for Gesink. HTC and Garmin got some help in
the chase by Team Exergy. The team of good old Freddie Rodriguez… Thats Fast
Freddy Rodriguez one of the winningest sprinters in the USA Peloton who got
bored with retirement and returned to racing this year.

18 km to go – Gap down to 45 seconds for
White and Thomson.

25 seconds now. The peloton can see the break on these long straight roads.

Team Exergy put three riders in front. The team is here with Andres Miguel
Diaz, Carlos Eduardo Alzate, Fred Rodriguez, Matt Cooke, Sam Johnson, Sebastian
Salas, Erik Slack and Kai Applequist.

Looking to sprinters in the bunch well see not many. If it comes to a
sprint look for Ben Hermans, Daniel Oss, Juraj Sagan, Elia Viviani, Robert
Forster, Kenny van Hummel, Fred Rodriguez. And Ive probably I forgotten
some riders from the USA scene.

The break has been caught. Gruppo Compatto. Not sure what the intention
of Team Exergy is besides just riding in front and showing their sponsors flag.

14 km to go – Brad White drops off the
back of the bunch. Seems the guy has some cramps after his efforts in the break
today.

10 km to go – UnitedHealthcare
takes over. Intermediate sprint to come. It seems Juraj Sagan (Peter
Sagans brother) takes the sprint ahead of Förster. Juraj Sagan pulls through
but has been caught now.

The pace is high with 5 km to go… Patrick Gretsch in front too….
the peloton is stretched out single file moving fast now.

Rabobank takes the lead. Some riders drop off Rovny from RadioShack in front
now to pace – The Schlecks in front too

The bunch has split – 3 km to go slightly going uphill now; the wind plays a
factor too.

2 km to go – Andy Schleck on the move –
Schleck has company of Danny Pate and a Colombian rider. The bunch not far

Break been caught

RadioShack leads followed by Evans and Schleck
final kilometer

About 10 riders in front – 13 leaders, Frank Schleck attacks, Leipheimer
and Evans reacts

Leipheimer pulls through, nobody can follow

Henao tries but doesnt succeed – Here they come…. 200 meters to go…. 200
meters

100 meters…

and the winner is LEVI LEIPHEIMER!!! (RadioShack)

The Tour of Utah guys are on top as it seems Sergio Henao and Oscar Sevilla
finished in second and third.

Here comes Gretsch over 1 minute down. Leipheimer should be the new yellow
jersey

It was Frank Schleck in third; not Sevilla.

todays top 10 of the stage is:
1. Levi Leipheimer
2. Sergio Luis Henao 0.04
3. Frank Schleck 0.07
4. Cadel Evans
5. Christian Vandevelde
6. Tejay Van Garderen
7. Javier Alexis Acevedo 0.10
8. Robert Gesink 0
9. Oscar Sevilla
10. Tom Danielson 0.18
Riders are still coming in over 7 minutes down already.

The new top 10 overall is:
1 Levi Leipheimer
2 Christian Vandevelde 0.11
3 Tejay van Garderen 0.17
4 Cadel Evans 0.17
5 Robert Gesink 0.30
6 Brent Bookwalter 0.34
7 Rory Sutherland 0.35
8 Geroge Hincapie 0.37
9 Tom Danielson 0.37
10 Jeff Louder 0.41

That concludes our live coverage of the very new Tour of Colorado – USA Pro
Challenge Stage 2 for today. Thanks for joining us.

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