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October
14, 2009 - One
quick look at the 2010 Tour de France route reveals the severity facing
riders hoping to win the top places - and in particular the very top place.
The cycling Gods appear to have been very kind to reigning champion, Alberto
Contador, who will not have a team time trial to face up to in whatever
squad he ends up racing for. Contador will also enjoy and reap the benefits
of three mountain-top finishes, the most important and destructive one,
being up the southern side of the Col du Tourmalet where he could put minutes
into his nearest challengers... Andy Schleck, runner-up in 2009, probably
cannot make his mind up yet as to whether the next Tour suits him more
than the last - his Saxo Bank team would have made a gain for him in a
TTT of any length, but instead the Luxemburger faces racing against a Contador
quite capable of inflicting damage in the mountains as well as in that
monster TT on the penultimate day in Bordeaux. If we can assume Lance Armstrong
will be stronger, faster and more dynamic with another year's racing in
his 38-year-old body, the American might well jump over Schleck and get
a lot closer to Contador than he managed in this last comeback Tour. Armstrong
and his advisors will be studying the route announced in Paris today for
any stages where they believe they can isolate Contador - the little Spaniard
is probably unbeatable in the mountains, but every Tour route holds the
capacity to unseat even the greatest champions if they or their team take
their eye of the ball for one single moment.
No doubt Armstrong and Johan Bruyneel are already planning a thorough reconnaissance
of the first few stages in the Netherlands and Belgium. Recalling how uncomfortable
Contador was on the windswept stage to Le Grande Motte a few months ago,
the Radio Shack duo will be keen to inflict an early and very nasty pre-retaliation
on Contador as the Tour races across the North Sea bridges on stage one and
then crosses about 20-kilometres of cobblestones on stage three. It is hard
to imagine that such a tough Tour will become tough so early - but surely
Contador's luck at having so much mountain territory to enjoy will be tempered
by the threat he faces up in the north. Whether he races with Astana, Garmin,
Quick-Step or Caisse d'Epargne, Contador's rivals will be out to shake his
confidence before the Tour has really begun.
For
the second year in a row, the Tour has given the north-west of France a
complete miss, with no stages in Brittany, Normandy or Aquitaine to savour.
The Alps arrive almost as early as the Pyrenees did in 2009, and it is likely
those first ascents will change little overall with the finish at Morzine-Avoriaz
looking ever-so slightly like Arcalis, where Contador jumped a 20-second
attack on his rivals a few minutes after a lucky escape group fought out
the stage-finish. If Contador has been shaken by the two opening stages -
and lost time - this second Alpine stage gives him a chance to take a quick
revenge. It is the Pyrenees that provide the sting-in-the-tail in 2010, an
area of France so close to Spain where Contador will save his very best form
for the last week. Of course, by this time his team will have been tested
and perhaps tired out by their rivalry with Armstrong and Schleck, who are
led by two of the shrewdest managers in the business, Bruyneel and Bjarne
Riis. As tough as the last week of the 2010 Tour is, Contador's greatest
threat might well be his choice of team and team manager - one wrong move
this winter and he's liable to expose himself to all kinds of tactical prowess
and guile next July.
I like the look of
this new Tour, and I like the potential which it offers for great racing
on all kinds of terrain. Regardless of who wins and who
loses, the Tour is the pinnacle of the cycling season and we just know the
best racing happens there. Just a few months after the 2009 Tour, the sporting
world is already in a vice-like grip of fever about the prospects in 2010
- the will-he, won't-he speculation as to who will win each day and who will
win overall. I've spent the last few hours in my Paris hotel room booking
hotels on the Internet - and I've made a complete sweep with no gaps at all.
I've already spotted eating places where the gentle fall of summery nights
will spur on post-stage debate and gossip and hype, and where vast quantities
of wine will wash down succulent meals and solidify friendships for a lifetime
to come. Yes, there is nothing quite like the Tour to lift our hearts just
as we slip ever-closer to winter - besides the 2010 Tour is only nine months
away now..!
Graham
Watson
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