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Le Tour de France 2010

Last post 07-28-2010 10:03 PM by THY. 251 replies.
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  • 11-13-2009 4:49 PM

    Le Tour de France 2010

    Prudhomme presents 2010 Tour de France weighted with Pyrenean stages

    2010 Tour route unveiled


    Madiot wants pavés every year at the Tour de France


    Tough Tour in store for Cavendish and the sprinters

    Top riders react to 2010 Tour route



    Tour 2010: Hushovd hopeful for green and yellow




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    Finally, Carlos Sastre Candil with some words:
    Sastre: 2010 Tour is spectacular for climbers



    Haussler looking forward to cobbles
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    2010 Tour de France presents plenty of opportunities for Cervélo
    Cervélo TestTeam will have plenty of opportunities to shine in what’s a varied and challenging route for the 2010 Tour de France, unveiled Wednesday in a lavish ceremony in Paris.

    The 20-stage, 3,596km route for the 97th Tour starts in Rotterdam, Holland, on July 3 and ends on the Champs-Élysées on July 23 in the heart of Paris. In between, the season’s most important and prestigious race offers ample ground for Cervélo TestTeam to perform.

    “It’s an interesting Tour, above all for us, a very interesting first week,” said Cervélo TestTeam sport director Jean-Paul Van Poppel. “The weather conditions will mark the race and there will be some opportunities for us to do something when we are up in the north. Especially the third stage, with some cobblestones, we have a lot of riders who can do something on the cobblestones.”

    The route offers something for everyone. With an opening week across Holland, Belgium and northern France,
    Cervélo star sprinter and defending green jersey-winner Thor Hushovd will have chances to go on the hunt for sprint victories and make a run for the yellow jersey.

    “I like the parcours. It’s very difficult, especially the final week, which is good for me. A lot of the sprinters won’t be able to make it through the Pyrénées,” said Hushovd after watching the 45-minute Tour presentation in Paris. “My goals are the same as always, to win stages and try to win the green jersey again. It’s never easy, but the Tour is always hard. Last year was good for our team and I think next year, we’ll be even better. I like the return of the prologue. We haven’t had one in a few years and I always do pretty well. It’s a chance to take the yellow jersey.”

    Week two, which enters the Jura Mountains and the Alps, opens things up for stage-hunters and breakaway artists, like Cervélo’s Heinrich Haussler, who won a breakthrough stage victory across the Vosges Mountains this year.

    “It’s definitely harder than last year’s Tour. That last week won’t be easy for anyone. Carlos should be able to really do well in the Pyrénées and we’ll be working for him,” said Haussler, who also attended the presentation. “There are some very interesting stages, especially in the first half of the Tour. I’m not a pure sprinter, but with the stages that go over the cobblestones and later in the second week will present a good chance to try to win a stage. After winning a stage this year, I will only have more confidence and motivation going into 2010.”

    Week three sees the GC favorites stepping forward, with a demanding and decisive string of stages across the towering peaks of the Pyrénées.

    This year’s route underscores the historical importance of the rugged Pyrénées by setting them up as the Tour’s centerpiece in what’s the 100th anniversary of the first true mountain stages, introduced a century ago in 1910.

    That’s music to the ears of Cervélo’s GC captain and 2008 Tour de France champion Carlos Sastre Candil, who won a breakout stage victory in 2003 at Aix-3 Domaines, which is the setting of the finish for stage 14.

    A summit finish up the Tourmalet in stage 17 will prove decisive to anyone hoping to win the Tour. The stage is ideally situated for Sastre, who rises to the occasion in the third and final week of a grand tour.

    Close proximity to Spain will allow thousands of Sastre’s fans to pour over the border to cheer on the Spanish climber as he takes on the Tour after not quite having the legs to successfully defend his Tour crown in 2009.

    A penultimate-day time trial, held on a 51km flat course in Bordeaux, will keep fans and riders alike sitting on the edge of their seats until the final moments of the race.

    “I think the most important stages are the climbing stages to Aix-3 Domaines and the Tourmalet, but there are a lot of other stages in between where we can do something,” Jean-Paul Van Poppel said. “The time trial is long and going north, so perhaps it will be against the wind. It’s long, but we only have to do it once. It’s an interesting Tour, but from what I see now, it’s a very interesting first week. A lot will depend on the weather conditions.”


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-13-2009 4:53 PM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    THY:
    Sastre hints he might skip Tour
    “Right now, I still haven’t decided which races I am going to race next year and, until I’ve seen the Vuelta route, I don’t want to reveal anything yet,” Sastre said on audio comments posted on his personal Web page. “We’ll know the Giro route this weekend and when I’ve seen all the routes, that will be the moment to make a balance and decide which of them I will focus on as the central objective in 2010.”

    2008 Tour champion Carlos Sastre says he'll be back next year



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    Prudhomme considers boosting Tour wild cards  -  26 Teams?



    Tour wild card proposal good news for Vacansoleil


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-13-2009 11:13 PM In reply to

    • mudrock
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    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    THY:
    If they go to 22 or 26, I hope they drop the rosters to 8, or even 7 riders per team. ASO and UCI have complained about predictable racing and blame the radios as the culprit. Try smaller teams - it would open up the racing immediately. The sprinting teams would have a harder time controlling sprints, and the big GC teams would have a harder time controlling the pace on climbing stages.
    Alex
  • 11-14-2009 7:13 AM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    That is a very interesting idea.  It would also open up the road with that many fewer riders, and in particular the teams would be selective in who was picked on the team, and probably the riders would be the cream of the crop? so fewer inexperienced racers making twitchy mistakes?  I have to admit it wouldreally change things maybe as much as eliminating radios, the two together would make for really interesting racing.  Would we have had the big issue with Serge not following team instruction?  Yes I think in a stage by stage basis the racing has become more predictable, but over all the total race is still a bit unpredictable but.... when you have a Contador and a strong team backing what is the likely outcome?

  • 11-14-2009 11:55 AM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    I agree, that's a very interesting idea, but I don't want a radio-ban..
    I really hope ASO and UCI will listen to you, mudrock!
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    Ivan Basso to return to the Tour de France?


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-14-2009 4:32 PM In reply to

    • mudrock
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    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    peislc:

    It would also open up the road with that many fewer riders, and in particular the teams would be selective in who was picked on the team, and probably the riders would be the cream of the crop? so fewer inexperienced racers making twitchy mistakes?  I have to admit it wouldreally change things maybe as much as eliminating radios, the two together would make for really interesting racing.&nbsp

    Let's not forget they would only do this if they went to 22 teams or more. Currently they send 20 teams, each with nine riders, or 180 total. If they send 22 with 8 each, it's 176. 26 teams with 8 each, 208 (which I doubt will happen), or with 7 each, 182. The roads would still be just as crowded, and there would still be riders who can barely hang on, and take stupid risks. I would wager the ninth best rider on the big teams is way more experienced than the riders on the small teams that get an invite as a result of the expanded roster.

    The courses are more dangerous, with more roundabouts. A roundabout, in rainy conditions, caused that big pileup in the Vuelta in Holland this year. I think ASO will keep it at 180 or so. With 22 teams, and 16 ProTour teams with automatic invites, there would be Team Sky and RadioShack (the new PT teams), Cofidis, Bbox, CTT, and BMC vying for wild cards. I would bet that Euskatel would be scratched, with their two positives this year, one at the Tour (Asterloza and Landaluze). That might open up a spot for another continental team, like Skil.

    Alex
  • 11-15-2009 8:56 AM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    I think Vacansoleil Cycling Team is almost guaranteed a Tour-place for the next few years, the signing of the Feillu brothers was a very smart move by the management!


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-15-2009 7:17 PM In reply to

    • mudrock
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    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    Yes, they were clever. I think Euskaltel had the same idea when they signed Romain Sicard, the French U23 world champion ( and only non-Spaniard on the team), but their doping positives put an end to that strategy.
    Alex
  • 11-15-2009 7:31 PM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    Romain Sicard is actually a "Basque rider" (Basque Country), so not just a frenchman..


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-15-2009 8:38 PM In reply to

    • mudrock
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    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    Well, I didn't know that. I never hear much about the French Basque. I hope he didn't have Tour ambitions, at least for next year. He's got a French name; do they speak Basque where he's from?
    Alex
  • 11-16-2009 7:19 AM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    No idea, but it would be logical if he did..
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    Sastre to give full attention to Tour in 2010
    Carlos Sastre has acknowledged that his planning for the 2009 season went awry, saying he started the defence of his Tour de France title feeling "exhausted".

    "When I reached the Tour I was exhausted and I don't want to make that same error in planning again," Sastre said during a PR appearance for Ford over the weekend at Madrid's Jarama motor-racing circuit with Finnish rally driver Mikko Hirvoven.

    Sastre admitted that he is still likely to ride two major tours during 2010, but hasn't yet decided on whether he will be adding the Giro or the Vuelta to his definite appearance at the Tour. "The Tour de France has been my race and I want to perform well in it again.
    The only thing that I am certain of is that I will do the Tour," said the 34-year-old Spaniard.


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-16-2009 10:42 AM In reply to

    • mudrock
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    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    Strange that he was exhausted. He rode consecutive tours like he always did. Perhaps he didn't allow himself enough rest after the Giro, but I would think he'd have enough experience not to do that. This doesn't seem right. There are ways to measure fitness, and lack of it.

    Also odd that he saw the new Tour route, made enthusiastic statements saying that it was built for his abilities, then later said he wasn't sure. And now: " The only thing I am certain of is that I will do the Tour". His vacillation, to me, means that he is starting to doubt himself after his collapse at this years race.

    Alex
  • 11-16-2009 4:19 PM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    mudrock:
    Well, I didn't know that. I never hear much about the French Basque. I hope he didn't have Tour ambitions, at least for next year. He's got a French name; do they speak Basque where he's from?
     

    Cycling News says:

     "Sicard, a 21-year old from the Basque village of Hasparren in the southwest of France, will turn professional with Euskaltel-Euskadi in 2010, doing so on the back of victories in arguably the two biggest races for Under 23 riders: the Tour de L'Avenir and now the world title race."

    According to this wikipedia map of % fluent speakers of Basque region, the further north you go in the Basque country the more people speak Basque ... France is the upper-right  1/4. So I'm guessing Sicard is probably quite Basque ...

     

     

  • 11-17-2009 8:16 AM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    mudrock:
    Strange that he was exhausted. He rode consecutive tours like he always did. Perhaps he didn't allow himself enough rest after the Giro, but I would think he'd have enough experience not to do that. This doesn't seem right. There are ways to measure fitness, and lack of it.
    I don't think it's strange, just look at his program, he rode and completed the Tour de France 2008 (one stage win, winner overall), Olympic Games (break away, 49), the Vuelta a España (third overall) and Giro d'Italia (two stage wins, third overall) before he started Tour de France 2009.

    That's just to much, even for Carlos Sastre Candil.
    He is not getting any younger..



    mudrock:
    Also odd that he saw the new Tour route, made enthusiastic statements saying that it was built for his abilities, then later said he wasn't sure. And now: " The only thing I am certain of is that I will do the Tour". His vacillation, to me, means that he is starting to doubt himself after his collapse at this years race.

    I just hope he in the future will be realistic.. He can't expect to win overall, against Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck. Just a place in the podium would be fantastic!


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
  • 11-18-2009 1:21 PM In reply to

    Re: Le Tour de France 2010

    Armstrong a bigger Tour threat next year, says Evans
    "He's going to be bigger and more dangerous than in 2009. I think we'll see Armstrong at another level in 2010," Evans told Australian news agency AAP.


    "Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever."
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