Tag: TDF (Page 6 of 14)
The Tour is under way and no surprise that Fabian Cancellara (Radio Shack-Nissan) will start tomorrowââ¬â¢s stage in the yellow jersey after winning the prologue time trial today. Cancellara annihilated the rest of the field, Bradley Wiggins was second, finishing 7 seconds slower, but with a course this short thatââ¬â¢s a big time gap.
Other prologue favorite, Tony Martin (Quick Step), had bad luck when his rear tire flatted forcing him to change out bikes. You canââ¬â¢t recover the time you lose changing out a bike in a time trial. Fortunately for him, heââ¬â¢ll have two more tries to best Cancellara in a time trial.
Sylvan Chavanel (Quick Step) had a phenomenal ride, holding first place until the likes of Bradley Wiggins (Sky) and Cancellara knocked him off.
Denis Menchov (Katusha) looked strong and could be a sleeper for a high overall placement.
Wiggins, aka Wiggo, looks strong, confident and loose.
Last yearââ¬â¢s Tour champion, Cadel Evans (BMC) had a good time today and is close to his main competitor Wiggo.
Wiggins will be a force to be reckoned with for Evans and other Tour hopefuls.
I was impressed with Evanââ¬â¢s teammate on BMC, T.J. Van Garderen, finishing in 4th place and claiming the white jersey for best young rider.
Prologue Top 15 Finishers:
1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 7:13
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2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
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3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
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4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
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5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
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6. Brett LANCASTER, Orica-GreenEdge, at :11
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7. Patrick GRETSCH, Argos-Shimano, at :12
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8. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
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9. Philippe GILBERT, BMC Racing, at :13
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10. Andriy GRIVKO, Astana, at :15
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11. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at :16
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12. Peter VELITS, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :17
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13. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
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14. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :18
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15. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
Stage 1 Prediction:
Tomorrowââ¬â¢s stage is likely to be won by either Phillip Gilbert (BMC) or Peter Sagan (Liquigas). Iââ¬â¢ll put my money on Gilbert.
It’s Tour de France time again!
The 2012 version of the Tour starts up Saturday, June 30th in Liege, Belgium – 23 days and 2,148 miles later it will end on the Champs E’lyse in Paris.
In between will be:
*9 flat stages
*9 mountain stages with 3 summit finishes
*2 individual time-trial stages
*prologue (time-trial)
*numerous crashes
*unparalleled sports drama
*and countless displays of courage and athleticism
Relative to the 2011 Tour, this Tour will challenge less through climbing and more through the time-trial abilities of the riders. There will still be plenty of tough climbs obviously in the Pyrenees and Alps, but less grueling than last year.
Which is to say, the climbs will be tortuous but less so than last year. Right…
From my perspective, with two of the best climbers and overall GC contenders out this year (see my TDF Guide for definitions and info on how to follow and understand the Tour) it takes away something from the Tour. Andy Schleck is out because of injuries to his spine sustained in the Criterium du Dauphine when he was blown off his bike during the individual time-trial by a gust of wind. And of course, Alberto Contador, winner of is out because of doping. How is that for bad luck, Schleck’s nemesis on the bike is not allowed to race the Tour this year due to a doping suspension and Schleck can’t take advantage of it due to injury.
Speaking of doping, French team Europcar, is being investigated by French officials for possible doping in last year’s Tour. They are the team of Thomas Voeckler, my favorite Frenchman and one of my very favorite bike racers. Voeckler has been dealing with a knee injury, but is supposed to compete in this year’s Tour along with teammate, Pierre Rolland, who in the not too distant future could be a serious contender for the Tour – something France has not had for a long time – other than Voeckler. Before you laugh, remember Voeckler finished 4th last year.
Pre-race favorites are last year’s winner Cadel Evans, Bradley Wiggins, Vincenzo Nibali, Frank Schleck, Robert Gesink and Ryder Hesjedal among others. One rider that is an American favorite that could figure into the mix for overall GC is Levi Leipheimer. Speaking of Americans, George Hincapie will be racing in his last Tour, a record 17th.
Wiggins looks to be strong and peaking at the right time with a strong team to match. Evans hasn’t had as noteworthy an early season as Wiggins (no one has) but he has as strong a team as Wiggins if not stronger. Both Wiggins and Evans are strong time-trialest too as well as elite climbers.
This year’s Tour seems to be more wide open than in previous years which could make for added excitement. There is always unexpected drama in every Tour and this one will certainly be no different.
Hopefully it will follow last year’s Tour and center around the racing NOT doping.
Always interesting is how the race unfolds, favorites can get injured and go out (Wiggins last year) or a racer you wouldn’t expect to contend for the overall win can step up and threaten to take it away from the favorites (Voeckler last year).
One thing is for sure: there will be great racing, no shortage of crashes and plenty of drama and excitement. Nothing compares to the Tour de France in terms of difficulty. You can catch it all on Versus/NBC sports.
You can also catch a wrap-up of each stage here, just like I did in 2010 and 2011. Check them out, I just re-read last year’s – what an unbelievable Tour that was.
As all those 60+ posts show, I LOVE the Tour de France – Viva le Tour!
It’s a sad day for the sport of professional bicycle racing when the most successful team, HTC-Highroad, can’t find a sponsor and is forced to fold.
Something that isn’t even feasible in any of the prominent sports in the U.S., football, baseball, basketball, or hockey.
Jonathon Vaughters, director of Garmin-Cervelo, has spoken about the problems with the sport of cycling and feels revenue sharing – or lack of – is a key part of the problem.
From Bonnie Ford, ESPN.COM:
Garmin-Cervelo director Jonathan Vaughters said the demise of HTC-Highroad is symptomatic of the deep structural dysfunction in the sport.
"To me, it’s just ludicrous that the team currently ranked No. 1 in the world is forced to disband because of a shortfall in corporate sponsorship," said Vaughters, who is also president of the professional teams’ association known by the French acronym AIGCP. "Every successful professional sport has revenue sharing from merchandising and TV rights, and long-term guarantees."
Vaughters said it distressed him to see what he termed Garmin’s "sister team" fold because Stapleton was intent on helping to change the way cycling is run.
Read the rest of the article here.