Thursday, 27 June 2013

100th Tour de France Preview: The Green Jersey

Last year Peter Sagan won the first road stage of the Tour that he contested. It was to be the first of three stages the Slovakian won in 2012 on his way to domination of the green jersey. After that first stage win, Sagan held green all the way to Paris. He accumulated 421 points in the sprint classification with André Greipel the closest challenger on 280 points. The classification appears to be much closer in the 100th edition of the race with 2011 green jersey winner Mark Cavendish having a whole team dedicated to the manx missile. Lotto will also be backing Greipel but stage wins are a more realistic goal for the German. Aesthetically, this competition for this classification will be between the tri-bands of Cav and Greipel as the respective new road race champions of Great Britain and Germany while Sagan will be decked out in the vertical bands of Slovakia. In the sprints, they will all be a little easier to identify before the green jersey begins to be swapped around.

For the sprinters in recent years with the removal of bonus seconds, any opportunity to pull on the first yellow jersey of the race has evaporated. 2014 will also offer the chance for sprinters to pull on yellow but it is in Corsica where the sprinters will fight for yellow. A lumpy stage with tight roads could see a crash or two with nervy cyclists and several teams all jockeying for position. Lotto-Belisol, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, Argos-Shimano, Orica-GreenEdge and Cannondale will all want their trains sorted for their sprinters while Katusha, Saxo-Tinkoff, Lampre-Merida and Movistar have all come to Tour with their sprinters to ensure a chaotic end to sprint stages. Cavendish has proved himself as the fastest man in a sprint drag but Greipel and Matt Goss on occasion have out manoeuvred the former world champion. With Cav being backed by devoted team, he should improve upon the three stages he won last year with very limited support by Sky. On the flat stages, Marcel Kittel and John Degenkolb have both notched grand tour stage wins and could gang up on Cav with a dual pronged attacked. With so many sprinters going for the win, a few protests about being boxed in will be heard at the conclusion of stages. Goss was docked thirty points last year for impeding Sagan’s sprint in one example of how tight the sprints became. With the points on offer at the intermediate sprint points, Cav will want to top up his points knowing that Sagan is the best climber of the sprinters and can grab points on the lumpier stages when his rivals are likely to bank none.

The 2011 edition of the Tour was a relatively foregone conclusion of who would win green after Cav won five stages. 2010 was a cagier affair with Thor Hushovd and Alessandro Petacchi swapping green for the last ten days of the race. The Italian won the classification by just nine points although both riders notched just one stage win. The victor in green will probably need at least two stage wins and for this reason, Cavendish appears to be slightly more favourable than Sagan for the jersey. At the Giro, Cav had a breakthrough win to take the points classification and make it a perfect three at the grand tours. His tenacity to protect the jersey will be on show during July and if he gets the jersey early he is unlikely to give it up. Sagan won’t want to give away green either. With three flat stages in the first week whoever wins these stages will be looking good for the win. However with tough last week in the Alps, a sprinter or two may just fall away and miss the time cut. If so, it could be a win by default and therefore banking several stage wins will be proof of being the best sprinter at the 2013 Tour.

100th Tour de France Preview: The Overal Favourites

In 2013 the Tour makes its 100th trip around France. Beginning in Corsica, the first three stages will be the first time the Tour has visited the island which was the last department to be visited by the race. From Corsica it’s onto the mainland and for the next twenty days the race is a wholly French affair. For the French, a general classification winner looks like being a foreigner once again but their stocks are rising with Thibaut Pinot and Pierre Rolland the espoirs. In the 99th edition Sky ruled the race to deliver yellow to Bradley Wiggins in Paris relatively untested by any rivals bar teammate Chris Froome. Talk of a Tour defence had been dogged by internal conflicts between Wiggins and Froome with the team backing the Kenyan born rider while Wiggins was suggesting otherwise. Froome enters the Tour now not only as Team Sky’s rider but as the favourite for the overall. 

In part the domination of Sky in last year’s Tour was explained by the parcours with two long time trials favouring Wiggins who also benefitted by a lack of challengers. In 2013 Alberto Contador is back after serving his doping ban, Cadel Evans is also back to his best after his failed defence of the 2011 Tour, while 2010 victor Andy Schleck is a dark horse with his form uncertain but highly ambitious to return to the winner’s podium. These three will challenge Froome while Evans’ teammate Tejay Van Garderen is looking to improve upon his fifth placing of last year as are the French duo who both finished in the top ten. Spaniard Joaquim Rodriguez is back for his second Tour after taking a stage and finishing seventh in 2010. Bauke Mollema will want to impress his new suitors at Belkin while Movistar are entering the race with the triumvirate of Alejandro Valverde, Rui Costa and Nairo Quintana.

The depth of challengers and lack of decisive time trial kilometres will mean that attacks in the mountains are a given. The Colombian climber Quintana is tipped for big things and the Alps will be his stage. Contador and Froome went tête-à-tête at the Critérium du Dauphiné with El Pistolero over four minutes down on Froome after the eight stages. The Spaniard has said his feeling good and the French race was the opportunity to fine tune his Tour preparation. Backing Froome will be Australian Richie Porte who has shown when given free reign he can win a race or two. Porte won Paris-Nice in March and will be seen as a super domestique for Froome. Should anything happen to the Sky leader, Porte could step in and fill the void as Rigoberto Uran did at the Giro in May. With a cagey beginning of the race in Corsica, general classification leaders will need all the support they can get on the island.

The Tour is Froome’s to lose due to the early season form that he has shown. The time spent in leaders jersey’s answering to the media packs and dealing with all the extra attention riders receive in that position will be invaluable. Wiggins proved last year that Sky’s plan to put their man in yellow paid dividends as he largely appeared comfortable protecting yellow. Froome appears less likely to reply to calls of doping in the manner of Wiggins but after a tough day in the saddle, he may crack in the press room. Contador has a strong team around him and will test Froome. However his form has been far from his best thus far this season. Evans proved he is worthy of BMC dedicating their team to him but a podium place looks like the best bet for cuddles. Valverde and Rodriquez will also battle for the podium but Froome and Contador are a head above the chasing pack.

Friday, 21 June 2013

100th Tour de France Teams

OPQS: Mark Cavendish, Sylvain Chavanel, Michal Kwiatkowski, Tony Martin, Jerome Pineau, Gert Steegmans, Niki Terpstra, Matteo Trentin, Peter Velits.

BlancoBelkin: Lars Boom, Laurens ten Dam, Robert Gesink, Tom Leezer, Bauke Mollema , Lars-Petter Nordhaug, Bram Tankink, Sep Vanmarcke, Maarten Wynants.


Cannondale: Maciej Bodnar, Alessandro De Marchi, Kristijan Koren, Alan Marangoni, Moreno Moser, Fabio Sabatini, Peter Sagan, Ted King, Brian Vandborg.


RadioShack-Leopard: Jan Bakelants, Laurent Didier, Tony Gallopin, Markel Irizar, Andreas Klöden, Maxime Monfort, Andy Schleck, Jens Voigt and Haimar Zubeldia.


Orica-GreenEdge: Brett Lancaster, Cameron Meyer, Daryl Impey, Matt Goss, Michael Albasini, Simon Clarke, Simon Gerrans, Stuart O’Grady, Svein Tuft


Saxo-Tinkoff: Michael Rogers, Roman Kreuziger, Nicolas Roche, Matteo Tosatto, Daniele Bennati, Sergio Paulinho, Alberto Contador, Jesus Hernandez, Benjamin Noval



Team Vacansoleil-DCM: Kris Boeckmans, Juan Antonio Flecha, Thomas De Gendt, Johnny Hoogerland, Sergey Lagutin, Wout Poels, Boy van Poppel, Danny van Poppel, Lieuwe Westra

Team Sky: Chris Froome, Richie Porte, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Peter Kennaugh, Vasil Kiryienka, David Lopez, Kanstantsin Siutsou, Ian Stannard, Geraint Thomas


Lotto-Belisol: Lars Bak, Bart De Clercq, André Greipel, Adam Hansen, Greg Henderson, Jürgen Roelandts, Marcel Sieberg, Jurgen Van den Broeck, Frederik Willems.

Katusha: Pavel Brutt, Alexander Kristoff, Aliaksandr Kuchynski, Alberto Losada, Daniel Moreno, Joaquim Rodriguez, Gatis Smukulis, Yuriy Trofimov, Eduard Vorganov



Europcar: Pierre Rolland, Thomas Voeckler, David Veilleux, Kevin Reza, Jerome Cousin, Yukiya Arashiro, Davide Malacarne, Cyril Gautier, Yohann Gene 

Lampre: Damiano Cunego, Matteo Bono, Davide Cimolai, Elia Favilli, Roberto Ferrari, Adriano Malori, Manuele Mori, Przemyslaw Niemiec, Josè Rodolfo Serpa Perez 

Euskatel-Euskadi: Igor Antón, Mikel Astarloza, Gorka Izaguirre, Ion Izaguirre, Juan José Lobato, Mikel Nieve, Juanjo Oroz, Rubén Pérez, Romain Sicard 

Sojasun: Anthony Delaplace, Julien El Fares, Brice Feillu, Jonathan Hivert, Cyril Lemoine, Jean-Marc Marino, Julien Simon, Maxime Mederel, Alexis Vuillermoz

Movistar: Alejandro Valverde, Rui Costa, Nairo Quintana, Andrey Amador, Jonathan Castroviejo, Rubén Plaza, Imanol Erviti, Iván Gutiérrez, José Joaquín Rojas

Garmin-Sharp: Andrew Talansky, Christian Vande Velde, Dan Martin, David Millar, Jack Bauer, Ramunas Navardauskas, Rohan Dennis, Ryder Hesjedal, Tom Danielson

Cofidis: Daniel Navarro, Rein Taaramäe, Christophe Le Mével, Jérôme Coppel, Yoann Bagot, Egoitz Garcia, Guillaume Levarlet, Luis Angel Maté, Rudy Molard

Ag2r:Jean-Christophe Péraud, Romain Bardet, Samuel Dumoulin, Maxime Bouet, Blel Kadri, Sébastien Minard, John Gadret, Hubert Dupont, Christophe Riblon

FDJ: Nacer Bouhanni, William Bonnet, Murillo Fisher, Jérémy Roy, Pierrick Fédrigo, Arnold Jeannesson, Alexandre Geniez, Thibaut Pinot, Arthur Vichot

Argos-Shimano: Roy Curvers, John Degenkolb, Tom Dumoulin, Johannes Fröhlinger, Simon Geschke, Marcel Kittel, Koen de Kort, Albert Timmer, Tom Veelers

Astana: Assan Bazayev, Janez Brajkovic, Jakob Fuglsang, Enrico Gasparotto, Francesco Gavazzi, Andrey Kashechkin, Fredrik Kessiakoff, Alexey Lutsenko,Dmitri Muravyev

BMC: Brent Bookwalter, Marcus Burghardt, Cadel Evans, Tejay van Garderen, Philippe Gilbert, Amaël Moinard, Steve Morabito, Manuel Quinziato, Michael Schär