It was a hell of a stage. 2 cat 1 climbs and an HC to boot. And to attempt that ride plus a yellow jersey defence with a fractured elbow takes some doing. But in the end he just couldn’t muster enough pain management to get over that last mountain with the leaders. Cadel‘s GC hopes have effectively ended, although like Lance Armstrong he wants to ride on.
I must admit I wasn’t so surprised to see him crack, but the magnitude was way out of proportion. That blue tape on his left arm was a bit of a clue but otherwise it just looked like he’d absolutely had enough. The fact that Sastre and Wiggins were also in trouble made it more believable, but clearly there was more at play here – like a fractured elbow. Hopefully he can claw back some pride with a stage win from here.
Otherwise a nice show on the road with a great win by Casar. And Vino attacking, clearing the way for Contador; and Voigt doing everything to pace Schleck up to the summit. And Schleck himself doing almost everything possible to drop Alberto, to no avail. But what a chase by Samuel Sanchez. To be so close for so long, but so far…
So now it’s the Schleck and Contador show with perhaps Sami Sanchez, Menchov – maybe even Leipheimer – the most likely intruders into the party. If they can keep up. Falls aside, Contador is looking good for the overall.
Fractured Elbow Shatters Tour Hopes For Evans | Cyclingnews.com
“The team was just fantastic but I’m the one who had the crash two days ago. I’m the one that is wearing the jersey and I’m the one that is vulnerable. I’m not my normal self if I get dropped by a group like that. Normally today was a chance for the stage win and it wouldn’t have an effect on the GC. Now I’m pretty sure it’s all over for this year.”
Evans apologized to his teammates and team owner.
“This year there’s been two health problems: the Giro and now here things aren’t at my normal level. I put in a lot of work and I suffer on my bike everyday and I do it with pleasure. For the guys who have supported me and been so good, the team and Andy Rihs, the owner of the team and everyone who has believed in this project, I’m just so sorry to let them all down.”
Ochowicz explained that the fracture to Evans’ elbow was discovered during the rest day on Monday, but the team did not want to reveal the problem before the stage today.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
Evans was involved in a crash just six kilometers into Stage 8, where he apparently suffered the fracture. He nevertheless managed to stay with the leading group of yellow jersey contenders and moved into the overall lead after Sylvain Chavanel was dropped. According to the team, they kept Evans’ injury a secret during the rest day in order to see how Evans would fare today, and he did pretty well over the first few climbs of Stage 9. But the Madeleine is a brutal mountain and the pace set by Astana and Saxo Bank at the front of the yellow jersey group pushed Evans – and pretty much everyone else – over the limit. It’s a very unfortunate turn of events for Evans, as he appeared to have better overall form this year than he had at the Tour de France last year.
Cadel’s Diary | Cadel Evans 2009-2010 – The Official Site of Cadel Evans – World Champion 2009, Tour de France runner-up in 2007,2008.
A HUGE thank you to all the BMC boys who showed what they’re made of today. The staff here at the Tour, they didn’t know their leader was starting with broken arm – I didn’t want to demoralize them.
Tour De France: Stage 9, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Shortly after the catch of Vinokourov, the inevitable happened and Andy Schleck hit out with about 40km to go, the attack followed only by Contador although soon the two were joined by Samuel Sanchez, who impressively rode past the pair and with a constant grimace continued on in an attempt to put time into the group behind.
But no sooner had Sanchez rode past and BOOM, it was time for Schleck to go again and again in an attempt to break the elastic between himself and his closest rival, who was content to follow the Luxembourger’s wheel as Sanchez was quickly relegated. Ahead of them the leading quartet had opened the gap to 6:20 over the maillot jaune of Evans and 3:37 over the battling duo of Contador and Schleck.
The young pair, which is expected to fill the top places on the general classification, carried on its merry way as those behind, the other overall contenders such as Van Den Broeck, Menchov, Ivan Basso and Leipheimer – assisted ably by Lance Armstrong – maintained a steady rhythm and held the gap between themselves and the Saxo Bank-Astana alliance to 1:30 with about 35km to go.
And Robbie McEwen updates us all on his back injury…. Robbie McEwen (mcewenrobbie) on Twitter
http://twitpic.com/24zpg3 Btw, this is how my lower back is looking thanks to the tool at finish a few days ago. Hip & leg look similar
It was a hell of a stage. 2 cat 1 climbs and an HC to boot. And to attempt that ride plus a yellow jersey defence with a fractured elbow takes some doing. But in the end he just couldn’t muster enough pain management to get over that last mountain with the leaders. Cadel‘s GC hopes have effectively ended, although like Lance Armstrong he wants to ride on.
I must admit I wasn’t so surprised to see him crack, but the magnitude was way out of proportion. That blue tape on his left arm was a bit of a clue but otherwise it just looked like he’d absolutely had enough. The fact that Sastre and Wiggins were also in trouble made it more believable, but clearly there was more at play here – like a fractured elbow. Hopefully he can claw back some pride with a stage win from here.
Otherwise a nice show on the road with a great win by Casar. And Vino attacking, clearing the way for Contador; and Voigt doing everything to pace Schleck up to the summit. And Schleck himself doing almost everything possible to drop Alberto, to no avail. But what a chase by Samuel Sanchez. To be so close for so long, but so far…
So now it’s the Schleck and Contador show with perhaps Sami Sanchez, Menchov – maybe even Leipheimer – the most likely intruders into the party. If they can keep up. Falls aside, Contador is looking good for the overall.
Fractured Elbow Shatters Tour Hopes For Evans | Cyclingnews.com
“The team was just fantastic but I’m the one who had the crash two days ago. I’m the one that is wearing the jersey and I’m the one that is vulnerable. I’m not my normal self if I get dropped by a group like that. Normally today was a chance for the stage win and it wouldn’t have an effect on the GC. Now I’m pretty sure it’s all over for this year.”
Evans apologized to his teammates and team owner.
“This year there’s been two health problems: the Giro and now here things aren’t at my normal level. I put in a lot of work and I suffer on my bike everyday and I do it with pleasure. For the guys who have supported me and been so good, the team and Andy Rihs, the owner of the team and everyone who has believed in this project, I’m just so sorry to let them all down.”
Ochowicz explained that the fracture to Evans’ elbow was discovered during the rest day on Monday, but the team did not want to reveal the problem before the stage today.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
Evans was involved in a crash just six kilometers into Stage 8, where he apparently suffered the fracture. He nevertheless managed to stay with the leading group of yellow jersey contenders and moved into the overall lead after Sylvain Chavanel was dropped. According to the team, they kept Evans’ injury a secret during the rest day in order to see how Evans would fare today, and he did pretty well over the first few climbs of Stage 9. But the Madeleine is a brutal mountain and the pace set by Astana and Saxo Bank at the front of the yellow jersey group pushed Evans – and pretty much everyone else – over the limit. It’s a very unfortunate turn of events for Evans, as he appeared to have better overall form this year than he had at the Tour de France last year.
Cadel’s Diary | Cadel Evans 2009-2010 – The Official Site of Cadel Evans – World Champion 2009, Tour de France runner-up in 2007,2008.
A HUGE thank you to all the BMC boys who showed what they’re made of today. The staff here at the Tour, they didn’t know their leader was starting with broken arm – I didn’t want to demoralize them.
Tour De France: Stage 9, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Shortly after the catch of Vinokourov, the inevitable happened and Andy Schleck hit out with about 40km to go, the attack followed only by Contador although soon the two were joined by Samuel Sanchez, who impressively rode past the pair and with a constant grimace continued on in an attempt to put time into the group behind.
But no sooner had Sanchez rode past and BOOM, it was time for Schleck to go again and again in an attempt to break the elastic between himself and his closest rival, who was content to follow the Luxembourger’s wheel as Sanchez was quickly relegated. Ahead of them the leading quartet had opened the gap to 6:20 over the maillot jaune of Evans and 3:37 over the battling duo of Contador and Schleck.
The young pair, which is expected to fill the top places on the general classification, carried on its merry way as those behind, the other overall contenders such as Van Den Broeck, Menchov, Ivan Basso and Leipheimer – assisted ably by Lance Armstrong – maintained a steady rhythm and held the gap between themselves and the Saxo Bank-Astana alliance to 1:30 with about 35km to go.
And Robbie McEwen updates us all on his back injury…. Robbie McEwen (mcewenrobbie) on Twitter
http://twitpic.com/24zpg3 Btw, this is how my lower back is looking thanks to the tool at finish a few days ago. Hip & leg look similar
What would you say about Paris in 2 weeks time, all things being equal from here? Schleck 1st, followed by Contador and Evans? Too early to be sure about Contador? Thinking that Evans will bleed time on key stages but gain it back on the long TT? Concerned about someone else falling, or a joker in the GC pack, perhaps 1 or even 2 minutes back, biding their time?
It feels more like the ’80s again. At least in the warm, fuzzy glow of hindsight, anyway. I mean before it got a bit too predictable, with the strongest TT rider (usually someone called Indurain or, later, Armstrong) claiming the overall win in Paris. Again. And again. Usually achieved more by ‘best average performance’ than by bold and exciting moves, too. Yes, OK, there were some classic attacking performances in the past 25 years or so, but how many tours were won more by grinding obsessives rather than mercurial pirates? (Let’s leave the pharmaceuticals out of it for the moment and just consider the drama.)
Whether the peleton has become “cleaner” or not is debatable, but we are – arguably – seeing more variation and a greater degree of suspense over the whole 3 weeks. (Yes, it is just week one but you know what I mean.) Whilst we may recognise Contador as king we also harbour doubts – we see a chink in the armour. And can Schleck keep it up? Is Sastre planning a big attack later in the tour? Will Evans keep close enough in the mountains to win it back in the TT? What of Menchov, Rogers and Basso? We can see a competition every day.
And there are so many possibilities. Whilst we can write Armstrong off overall he may well turn super-domestique for Leipheimer. Sastre and Menchov may save it all up for week 3. Evans and Basso may limit their losses. Wiggins may strike back. Even more likely, though, is that Contador may have just had his ‘one bad day’ and will come back fighting.
It’s all possible, rather than predictable.
Tour De France: Stage 8, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
“I’ve got to get my head around the position that I’m in now,” said Schleck, with a rest day ahead of him tomorrow. “There are still a lot of very hard days, but I am pretty relaxed for the moment. I’ve done my thing, and I hope I can do a great race and I hope I don’t have a bad day.”
Ten seconds behind, the group was led in by another of the day’s aggressors, Robert Gesink (Rabobank), with Roman Kreuziger (Liquigas) fourth and Contador fifth. Sixth, though, was the day’s other big winner, Cadel Evans (BMC), who survived an early fall to claim the yellow jersey.
Evans now leads the general classification ahead of Schleck by 20 seconds, with Contador up to third, 1:01 behind the Australian.
Many will expect the overall winner to come from this trio, meaning, inevitably, that one of the day’s big stories was the end of Armstrong’s challenge – indeed, the definitive end of the Armstrong era.
Schleck Gives Warning Of Things To Come | Cyclingnews.com
“I really felt good. My legs were turning well, and the team was great. On the last climb I had no problem. I thought about attacking earlier but I have a plan for this Tour and I’m going to stick to it. Pressure motivates me. I’m here for a goal, to win in Paris, but if I can win a stage, I’ll take it,” he said at the finish.
Vinokourov Fills Domestique’s Shoes | Cyclingnews.com
Vinokourov didn’t expect Armstrong to disappear so quickly from the top positions of the classification. “I think he suffered in the heat,” said the Astana star. “He also crashed quite a bit as well. Now he’s out of contention for sure. We’ll see – day after day – how we can get rid of our other adversaries.”
Saxo Bank’s Andy Schleck, who won the day’s stage, isn’t a major concern for Vinokourov. “He hasn’t taken much time on Alberto, I’m not worried,” he said.
Evans Gives BMC Its First Yellow Jersey | Cyclingnews.com
Evans played a somewhat cagey game, aware that his team will shoulder the responsibility of controlling the race before the Pyrenees start. “We’ll wait for stages after tomorrow, but I’m happy it’s a rest day. We’ll think about it and come up with plan but the Pyrenees are very hard, Andy (Schleck) is going well, (Alberto) Contador and Astana (are) really strong, so we’ll have to see and decide how to approach the mountains.”
Wiggins Limits Damage In Tour De France Test | Cyclingnews.com
“I felt pretty good most of the day, especially on the second climb. It was just on the last one that I was overcooked and there came a point when I had to back off so I wouldn’t completely blow. It was a damage limitation exercise,” he said at the finish.
Armstrong’s Tour Challenge Collapses | Cyclingnews.com
“I clipped a pedal [in the roundabout -ed.] and next thing I knew I was rolling on the ground at 65 kilometres per hour,” Armstrong explained after the stage. “I didn’t make it back on until la Ramaz and I was pegged.”
His jersey torn, Armstrong was slow to remount but made contact before the critical climb of Col de la Ramaz. However Sky and Saxo Bank set a strong pace, and it proved too much as the American slipped back from the leaders. At first he was assisted by Chris Horner but later Janez Brajkovic took over, as Levi Leipheimer and Andreas Klöden stayed with the leaders.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
Back in 1996, the cycling world wondered whether Miguel Indurain could become the first cyclist to win the Tour de France six times. He had dominated the race for five consecutive years by steamrolling the competition in the time trials and riding steadily in the mountains. But 1996 he struggled, and on Stage 7 he was suddenly unhitched from the lead group in the mountains. The calm demeanor and steady pedaling action were gone and Big Mig was in trouble. He lost more than 4 minutes that day, and by the time the race reached Paris, Indurain finished what would be his final Tour de France in 11th place, more than 14 minutes behind winner Bjarne Riis.
Filed under Armstrong, Cadel Evans, Carlos Sastre, Contador, Ivan Basso, Le Tour, Le Tour de France, Menchov, Rogers, Schleck, TdF by Rob.
What would you say about Paris in 2 weeks time, all things being equal from here? Schleck 1st, followed by Contador and Evans? Too early to be sure about Contador? Thinking that Evans will bleed time on key stages but gain it back on the long TT? Concerned about someone else falling, or a joker in the GC pack, perhaps 1 or even 2 minutes back, biding their time?
It feels more like the ’80s again. At least in the warm, fuzzy glow of hindsight, anyway. I mean before it got a bit too predictable, with the strongest TT rider (usually someone called Indurain or, later, Armstrong) claiming the overall win in Paris. Again. And again. Usually achieved more by ‘best average performance’ than by bold and exciting moves, too. Yes, OK, there were some classic attacking performances in the past 25 years or so, but how many tours were won more by grinding obsessives rather than mercurial pirates? (Let’s leave the pharmaceuticals out of it for the moment and just consider the drama.)
Whether the peleton has become “cleaner” or not is debatable, but we are – arguably – seeing more variation and a greater degree of suspense over the whole 3 weeks. (Yes, it is just week one but you know what I mean.) Whilst we may recognise Contador as king we also harbour doubts – we see a chink in the armour. And can Schleck keep it up? Is Sastre planning a big attack later in the tour? Will Evans keep close enough in the mountains to win it back in the TT? What of Menchov, Rogers and Basso? We can see a competition every day.
And there are so many possibilities. Whilst we can write Armstrong off overall he may well turn super-domestique for Leipheimer. Sastre and Menchov may save it all up for week 3. Evans and Basso may limit their losses. Wiggins may strike back. Even more likely, though, is that Contador may have just had his ‘one bad day’ and will come back fighting.
It’s all possible, rather than predictable.
Tour De France: Stage 8, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
“I’ve got to get my head around the position that I’m in now,” said Schleck, with a rest day ahead of him tomorrow. “There are still a lot of very hard days, but I am pretty relaxed for the moment. I’ve done my thing, and I hope I can do a great race and I hope I don’t have a bad day.”
Ten seconds behind, the group was led in by another of the day’s aggressors, Robert Gesink (Rabobank), with Roman Kreuziger (Liquigas) fourth and Contador fifth. Sixth, though, was the day’s other big winner, Cadel Evans (BMC), who survived an early fall to claim the yellow jersey.
Evans now leads the general classification ahead of Schleck by 20 seconds, with Contador up to third, 1:01 behind the Australian.
Many will expect the overall winner to come from this trio, meaning, inevitably, that one of the day’s big stories was the end of Armstrong’s challenge – indeed, the definitive end of the Armstrong era.
Schleck Gives Warning Of Things To Come | Cyclingnews.com
“I really felt good. My legs were turning well, and the team was great. On the last climb I had no problem. I thought about attacking earlier but I have a plan for this Tour and I’m going to stick to it. Pressure motivates me. I’m here for a goal, to win in Paris, but if I can win a stage, I’ll take it,” he said at the finish.
Vinokourov Fills Domestique’s Shoes | Cyclingnews.com
Vinokourov didn’t expect Armstrong to disappear so quickly from the top positions of the classification. “I think he suffered in the heat,” said the Astana star. “He also crashed quite a bit as well. Now he’s out of contention for sure. We’ll see – day after day – how we can get rid of our other adversaries.”
Saxo Bank’s Andy Schleck, who won the day’s stage, isn’t a major concern for Vinokourov. “He hasn’t taken much time on Alberto, I’m not worried,” he said.
Evans Gives BMC Its First Yellow Jersey | Cyclingnews.com
Evans played a somewhat cagey game, aware that his team will shoulder the responsibility of controlling the race before the Pyrenees start. “We’ll wait for stages after tomorrow, but I’m happy it’s a rest day. We’ll think about it and come up with plan but the Pyrenees are very hard, Andy (Schleck) is going well, (Alberto) Contador and Astana (are) really strong, so we’ll have to see and decide how to approach the mountains.”
Wiggins Limits Damage In Tour De France Test | Cyclingnews.com
“I felt pretty good most of the day, especially on the second climb. It was just on the last one that I was overcooked and there came a point when I had to back off so I wouldn’t completely blow. It was a damage limitation exercise,” he said at the finish.
Armstrong’s Tour Challenge Collapses | Cyclingnews.com
“I clipped a pedal [in the roundabout -ed.] and next thing I knew I was rolling on the ground at 65 kilometres per hour,” Armstrong explained after the stage. “I didn’t make it back on until la Ramaz and I was pegged.”
His jersey torn, Armstrong was slow to remount but made contact before the critical climb of Col de la Ramaz. However Sky and Saxo Bank set a strong pace, and it proved too much as the American slipped back from the leaders. At first he was assisted by Chris Horner but later Janez Brajkovic took over, as Levi Leipheimer and Andreas Klöden stayed with the leaders.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
Back in 1996, the cycling world wondered whether Miguel Indurain could become the first cyclist to win the Tour de France six times. He had dominated the race for five consecutive years by steamrolling the competition in the time trials and riding steadily in the mountains. But 1996 he struggled, and on Stage 7 he was suddenly unhitched from the lead group in the mountains. The calm demeanor and steady pedaling action were gone and Big Mig was in trouble. He lost more than 4 minutes that day, and by the time the race reached Paris, Indurain finished what would be his final Tour de France in 11th place, more than 14 minutes behind winner Bjarne Riis.
Filed under Armstrong, Cadel Evans, Carlos Sastre, Contador, Ivan Basso, Le Tour, Le Tour de France, Menchov, Rogers, Schleck, TdF by Rob.
No so surprisingly Sylvain Chavanel had something to prove after that slightly hollow win a few days ago. And equally fittingly the main agitator for that earlier non-race – Cancellara – was spat out he back.
For the rest it was a bit of a sorting out, a prelude for tougher days ahead, but told us nothing really. We expected Cancellara and Saxo Bank to rest up, there was no need to defend the yellow on Stage 7 – but every reason to prepare to launch Andy Schleck in the mountains to come. Evans equally didn’t want yellow just yet. And the domestiques of the GC leaders had a quiet day in expectation of the real battle to come in Stage 8.
A small surprise was Kloden‘s failure to match the GC leaders, but he hasn’t lived up to expectations for some years, has he? He will be back – rehydrated – and up to the task of helping launch Armstrong‘s attack. It’s just up to the others to match Armstrong, to keep him in check and leverage any opportunity that subsequently comes along. Basso and Sastre will also want to join in, even if it’s too early in the tour to commit everything they, like Armstrong, will be keen to reduce the gap to everyone else.
Contador will also look to gain time on Schleck and Evans if that chance comes up. He may well launch Vino as a distraction… with Vino up the road Contador and Astana will hope to draw out the real GC favorites. It will put Menchov, Rogers and Wiggins to the test as well.
And then there could be the odd surprise… Hesjedal? Roche? Van Den Broeck?
Tour De France: Stage 7, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Sylvain Chavanel (Quick Step) won his second stage of this year’s Tour de France at Station des Rousses on Saturday, and completed another double, taking over the yellow jersey, just as he also did in Spa at the end of stage 2.
Unlike in Spa, however, the history books will show no asterisk against Chavanel’s name after this victory – which, again, he achieved alone.
Tour De France: Stage 7, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
But while the Croix de la Serra acted as the launchpad to Chavanel’s victory, and effectively ended Fabian Cancellara’s (Saxo Bank) spell in yellow, it told us very little about the climbing form of Alberto Contador (Astana), Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank), Lance Armstrong (RadioShack) or Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky), with last year’s top four all present, correct and looking comfortable.
Armstrong Keeps His Cool Despite Heat, Saddle Sore | Cyclingnews.com
“I suffered,” said Armstrong. “I think about everybody did. It was so incredibly hard. It was just the heat. Everybody really paid. Everybody would say it was much harder than we’d think because of the temperature. If you get a little behind on hydration and nutrition – that’s what happened to Klödi (Andreas Klöden) – the man with the hammer comes and you’re done.”
Leipheimer Keeps An Eye On Vinokourov | Cyclingnews.com
Levi Leipheimer’s task during stage 7 of the Tour de France was to mark Alexander Vinokourov (Astana). The RadioShack rider, who finished alongside Vinokourov in the lead group of GC contenders, said that the Astana rider was too dangerous to escape without company from someone on Lance Armstrong’s Radioshack squad.
Van Den Broeck Ready For Battle In The Alps | Cyclingnews.com
“Today went well,” he told Cyclingnews as he warmed down on the team bus. “It was an easy day with no problems but tomorrow will be all out war.”
Van Den Broeck Ready For Battle In The Alps | Cyclingnews.com
In Matthew Lloyd, Van Den Broeck has a strong mountain domestique and the Australian is sure that his teammate can make a serious impression on the race over the coming two weeks. “Today we made sure Jurgen was fresh all day, especially when the speed was relatively high.”
Roche Passes First Mountain Test | Cyclingnews.com
“I passed the test but I’m exhausted,” Roche told Cyclingnews as he ground to a halt after the finish line.
After downing a bottle of water, the 26-year-old looked up and gave his impression on day that saw all the yellow jersey contenders finish together.
“I was feeling good but I guess there was a big group at the finish. It just proves that it’s going to be pretty tough to stay with these guys,” Roche told Cyclingnews.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
when BBox Telecom missed the breakaway today, their team manager sent them to the front to chase. That brought the breakaway close enough to the peloton for French National Champion Thomas Voeckler to attack for a possible stage win.
- By Chris Carmichael -
Not to be outdone by his countryman, Sylvain Chavanel (winner of Stage 2) set off in pursuit. Chavanel had a great ride and won the stage, and took the yellow jersey for the second time in this year’s race, but the Battle of the Frenchmen – along with the heat – also made the stage much more difficult than many riders had anticipated.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
If the lead group of yellow jersey contenders is all together at the bottom of the final climb, I fully expect Alberto Contador to attack on the final climb of Stage 8. Right now there are too many riders who are close to him on the overall classification and he’ll take the opportunity to ‘thin the herd’. The big question is how well the others will respond. Cadel Evans is better than he was in 2009, and so is Lance Armstrong. Andy Schleck was the only man capable of accelerating with Contador last year, but his pre-Tour preparation wasn’t as perfect as in 2009. And what of the dark horse in the periphery, Ivan Basso. He’s looking to make up some serious time in the overall race for yellow, and the mountains are where he overcame a big deficit to win the Giro d’Italia earlier this year.
Robbie McEwen (mcewenrobbie) on Twitter
@bdlancaster i was swearing at you for going so quick but thanks mate. expected bigger time cut. was too delerious to work it out
really had to battle thru tday, world of hurt as they say, but made it. v sorry 4 my team+roommate StijnVdb, outside time limit.
Cadel’s Diary | Cadel Evans 2009-2010 – The Official Site of Cadel Evans – World Champion 2009, Tour de France runner-up in 2007,2008.
Why is it the roads always melt in Europe? More hot-mix less blue-metal?…feels like riding on underinflated tyres. So much so, that the GC teams did not want to lay it on the line today. Allowing break away specialist Chavanel to win the stage and reclaim the yellow jersey. It’s been a great start to the Tour for Quick-Step so far, they were not in the greatest moods with the omission if Tom Boonen. Carlos Barredo gave them all a moral boost yesterday, you have all seen the post stage ‘fight’ on YouTube? Our dinner table was entertained…. How he got away with only 400CHF in fines mystifies me.
Filed under Armstrong, Cadel Evans, Cancellara, Carlos Sastre, Contador, Ivan Basso, Le Tour, Le Tour de France, Menchov, Rogers, Schleck, TdF by Rob.
No so surprisingly Sylvain Chavanel had something to prove after that slightly hollow win a few days ago. And equally fittingly the main agitator for that earlier non-race – Cancellara – was spat out he back.
For the rest it was a bit of a sorting out, a prelude for tougher days ahead, but told us nothing really. We expected Cancellara and Saxo Bank to rest up, there was no need to defend the yellow on Stage 7 – but every reason to prepare to launch Andy Schleck in the mountains to come. Evans equally didn’t want yellow just yet. And the domestiques of the GC leaders had a quiet day in expectation of the real battle to come in Stage 8.
A small surprise was Kloden‘s failure to match the GC leaders, but he hasn’t lived up to expectations for some years, has he? He will be back – rehydrated – and up to the task of helping launch Armstrong‘s attack. It’s just up to the others to match Armstrong, to keep him in check and leverage any opportunity that subsequently comes along. Basso and Sastre will also want to join in, even if it’s too early in the tour to commit everything they, like Armstrong, will be keen to reduce the gap to everyone else.
Contador will also look to gain time on Schleck and Evans if that chance comes up. He may well launch Vino as a distraction… with Vino up the road Contador and Astana will hope to draw out the real GC favorites. It will put Menchov, Rogers and Wiggins to the test as well.
And then there could be the odd surprise… Hesjedal? Roche? Van Den Broeck?
Tour De France: Stage 7, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Sylvain Chavanel (Quick Step) won his second stage of this year’s Tour de France at Station des Rousses on Saturday, and completed another double, taking over the yellow jersey, just as he also did in Spa at the end of stage 2.
Unlike in Spa, however, the history books will show no asterisk against Chavanel’s name after this victory – which, again, he achieved alone.
Tour De France: Stage 7, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
But while the Croix de la Serra acted as the launchpad to Chavanel’s victory, and effectively ended Fabian Cancellara’s (Saxo Bank) spell in yellow, it told us very little about the climbing form of Alberto Contador (Astana), Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank), Lance Armstrong (RadioShack) or Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky), with last year’s top four all present, correct and looking comfortable.
Armstrong Keeps His Cool Despite Heat, Saddle Sore | Cyclingnews.com
“I suffered,” said Armstrong. “I think about everybody did. It was so incredibly hard. It was just the heat. Everybody really paid. Everybody would say it was much harder than we’d think because of the temperature. If you get a little behind on hydration and nutrition – that’s what happened to Klödi (Andreas Klöden) – the man with the hammer comes and you’re done.”
Leipheimer Keeps An Eye On Vinokourov | Cyclingnews.com
Levi Leipheimer’s task during stage 7 of the Tour de France was to mark Alexander Vinokourov (Astana). The RadioShack rider, who finished alongside Vinokourov in the lead group of GC contenders, said that the Astana rider was too dangerous to escape without company from someone on Lance Armstrong’s Radioshack squad.
Van Den Broeck Ready For Battle In The Alps | Cyclingnews.com
“Today went well,” he told Cyclingnews as he warmed down on the team bus. “It was an easy day with no problems but tomorrow will be all out war.”
Van Den Broeck Ready For Battle In The Alps | Cyclingnews.com
In Matthew Lloyd, Van Den Broeck has a strong mountain domestique and the Australian is sure that his teammate can make a serious impression on the race over the coming two weeks. “Today we made sure Jurgen was fresh all day, especially when the speed was relatively high.”
Roche Passes First Mountain Test | Cyclingnews.com
“I passed the test but I’m exhausted,” Roche told Cyclingnews as he ground to a halt after the finish line.
After downing a bottle of water, the 26-year-old looked up and gave his impression on day that saw all the yellow jersey contenders finish together.
“I was feeling good but I guess there was a big group at the finish. It just proves that it’s going to be pretty tough to stay with these guys,” Roche told Cyclingnews.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
when BBox Telecom missed the breakaway today, their team manager sent them to the front to chase. That brought the breakaway close enough to the peloton for French National Champion Thomas Voeckler to attack for a possible stage win.
- By Chris Carmichael -
Not to be outdone by his countryman, Sylvain Chavanel (winner of Stage 2) set off in pursuit. Chavanel had a great ride and won the stage, and took the yellow jersey for the second time in this year’s race, but the Battle of the Frenchmen – along with the heat – also made the stage much more difficult than many riders had anticipated.
PezCycling News – What’s Cool In Pro Cycling
If the lead group of yellow jersey contenders is all together at the bottom of the final climb, I fully expect Alberto Contador to attack on the final climb of Stage 8. Right now there are too many riders who are close to him on the overall classification and he’ll take the opportunity to ‘thin the herd’. The big question is how well the others will respond. Cadel Evans is better than he was in 2009, and so is Lance Armstrong. Andy Schleck was the only man capable of accelerating with Contador last year, but his pre-Tour preparation wasn’t as perfect as in 2009. And what of the dark horse in the periphery, Ivan Basso. He’s looking to make up some serious time in the overall race for yellow, and the mountains are where he overcame a big deficit to win the Giro d’Italia earlier this year.
Robbie McEwen (mcewenrobbie) on Twitter
@bdlancaster i was swearing at you for going so quick but thanks mate. expected bigger time cut. was too delerious to work it out
really had to battle thru tday, world of hurt as they say, but made it. v sorry 4 my team+roommate StijnVdb, outside time limit.
Cadel’s Diary | Cadel Evans 2009-2010 – The Official Site of Cadel Evans – World Champion 2009, Tour de France runner-up in 2007,2008.
Why is it the roads always melt in Europe? More hot-mix less blue-metal?…feels like riding on underinflated tyres. So much so, that the GC teams did not want to lay it on the line today. Allowing break away specialist Chavanel to win the stage and reclaim the yellow jersey. It’s been a great start to the Tour for Quick-Step so far, they were not in the greatest moods with the omission if Tom Boonen. Carlos Barredo gave them all a moral boost yesterday, you have all seen the post stage ‘fight’ on YouTube? Our dinner table was entertained…. How he got away with only 400CHF in fines mystifies me.
Filed under Armstrong, Cadel Evans, Cancellara, Carlos Sastre, Contador, Ivan Basso, Le Tour, Le Tour de France, Menchov, Rogers, Schleck, TdF by Rob.
Finally we can see the hidden intent behind this year’s tour. It’s not about Boonen‘s absence, Hushovd‘s fine victory after Stage 2′s debacle or even Cadel‘s rise up the GC. It’s not even about team collusion to thwart racing. It’s about surprise.
Today Mark Cavendish surprised us all with a fine ride in the points classification, gaining his first point in the race for the green jersey. Defending champ Thor Hushovd disappointed in comparison with a gain of just 35 points, leaving him with a precarious lead overall of just 62 points on the best road sprinter in the world. If you remove the non-sprinters from that classification we have Thor (‘God of the Pebbles’ according to Mike Tomalaris) leading old man McEwen (38 points) at this early stage. Mind you, those non-sprinters include Evans on 28 points with a track record for picking up points along the way, so I’d expect more surprises as the race progresses.
Robbie McEwen has also staked a claim on GC in a stealthy move on the cobbles. By winning the 3rd-bunch-in kick to the line (leaving aside Alberto Contador‘s surprising bunch of just himself) McEwen has gained time on just about everyone (except the riders ahead of him, of course). Importantly Robbie has leapt over leaping Levi Leipheimer, leading the Californian by 1 second at 2m 52 seconds overall. Expect more suprises from the veteran sprinter as the race nears the Alps. Meanwhile Sastre and Basso (at 3m 19s and 3m 20s respectively) have their work cut out to make up ground on just about everyone (except, of course, those behind them). No surprises there, really.
Tour De France: Stage 3, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
137 Mark Cavendish (GBr) Team HTC – Columbia 1point
Finally we can see the hidden intent behind this year’s tour. It’s not about Boonen‘s absence, Hushovd‘s fine victory after Stage 2′s debacle or even Cadel‘s rise up the GC. It’s not even about team collusion to thwart racing. It’s about surprise.
Today Mark Cavendish surprised us all with a fine ride in the points classification, gaining his first point in the race for the green jersey. Defending champ Thor Hushovd disappointed in comparison with a gain of just 35 points, leaving him with a precarious lead overall of just 62 points on the best road sprinter in the world. If you remove the non-sprinters from that classification we have Thor (‘God of the Pebbles’ according to Mike Tomalaris) leading old man McEwen (38 points) at this early stage. Mind you, those non-sprinters include Evans on 28 points with a track record for picking up points along the way, so I’d expect more surprises as the race progresses.
Robbie McEwen has also staked a claim on GC in a stealthy move on the cobbles. By winning the 3rd-bunch-in kick to the line (leaving aside Alberto Contador‘s surprising bunch of just himself) McEwen has gained time on just about everyone (except the riders ahead of him, of course). Importantly Robbie has leapt over leaping Levi Leipheimer, leading the Californian by 1 second at 2m 52 seconds overall. Expect more suprises from the veteran sprinter as the race nears the Alps. Meanwhile Sastre and Basso (at 3m 19s and 3m 20s respectively) have their work cut out to make up ground on just about everyone (except, of course, those behind them). No surprises there, really.
Tour De France: Stage 3, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
137 Mark Cavendish (GBr) Team HTC – Columbia 1point
It’s hard to ignore Contador, even if he’s likely to start a bit “fresher” than he’d like after a recent respiratory infection. Andy Schleck? He’s got to be a contender, but we haven’t really seen enough to know where he’s at. Brother Frank is firing, so presumably the old 1-2 will be in action and working in Andy’s favour. Menchov and Sastre haven’t shown much lately, but they’ll be in the mix. Evans and Basso will be super-fit but tired after the Giro. They may shine at first but be ground away as time passes. Or not. It’s hard to tell until the “hard” stages reveal themselves. One bad day and your whole Tour can be wrecked, so it’s really down to minimising losses – or hiding your weakness behind a strong team – on those “off days”.
There are others who could surprise, old stagers like Vino or ever-hopefuls like Rogers. More than likely it’ll be the strongest, most motivated team that gets their best all-rounder over the line. Contador may have some troubles in that respect, as may Evans. Basso and team look strong, as does Rogers. Whilst Armstrong looks too old on paper he has a good team of old stagers and the tactical nous to take his chance when it comes.
Once again we can’t really tell until the wheels – and the dice – roll.
Here are some prognostications from around and about:
SBS: Tour de France 2010
This year should also see a few former top GC contenders eclipsed into also ran status as a new younger cohort make their move in the era of Contador.
And as I look at my favoured names I’m struggling to find a place for Lance Armstrong anywhere in my top ten.
I see Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck, Ivan Basso, Roman Kreuzinger, Cadel Evans, Christian Vande Velde, Frank Schleck, Levi Leipheimer, Robert Gesink, Bradley Wiggins, Andreas Kloden, Samuel Sanchez, Alexandre Vinokourov, Michael Rogers, Denis Menchov, and Luis Leon Sanchez as all having a solid claim to a top ten spot.
Not that Armstrong can’t perform. His Tour de Suisse performance shows that on the right day and circumstances he can, but the head of this years field looks like a competitive one.
SBS: Tour de France 2010: Reshuffling the 2009 deck
If I were to take the top 10 riders who finished the 2009 Tour de France, placed each name on a card, shuffled them around a little – or maybe not at all – added one or two names, and told you this would be final classification on July 25 this year, I imagine few would bat an eyelid.
This is not to say the 2010 Grande Boucle will not be a spectacular one – it is the Tour after all!
But what I don’t see is a revelation popping up near or on the podium when the peloton reaches the Champs Élysées, like Bradley Wiggins did last year. Or a surprise winner, like Carlos Sastre in 2008.
The ‘one or two names’ not in last year’s top-10 that I’m referring to would include Levi Leipheimer, who last year was forced to abandon after breaking his wrist and may be – or become – RadioShack’s main man this time round.
Cadel Evans and my dark horse podium pick Michael Rogers, who deservedly finds himself back to his best and by simply doing his own thing, may well profit from the tactics played by Astana, Saxo Bank and RadioShack.
Tour De France: 10 Riders Who Need A Result | Cyclingnews.com
As the Tour de France approaches, Cyclingnews takes a look at 10 riders who need a result to save their season.
Dental issues, illness, crashes and accusations have left some of the sport’s biggest names in the shadows and out of the results. It could be because some of their careers are nearing an end or simply because they’ve said they’d do better but failed to deliver. One way or another, these guys will be looking for a strong performance in France.
Top Twelve Tour Contenders | Cyclingnews.com
With less than three weeks to go until the Grand Départ in Rotterdam, the 97th Tour de France is shaping up to be one the best. With one of the most spectacular routes and a host of big names riders set to start, Cyclingnews casts an eye on the 12 most likely to figure in the overall.
2010 Tour De France – Predictions
2010 Tour De France – Predictions Moderators: dalessit
Jump to page : 1 Now viewing page 1 [20 messages per page]
It’s hard to ignore Contador, even if he’s likely to start a bit “fresher” than he’d like after a recent respiratory infection. Andy Schleck? He’s got to be a contender, but we haven’t really seen enough to know where he’s at. Brother Frank is firing, so presumably the old 1-2 will be in action and working in Andy’s favour. Menchov and Sastre haven’t shown much lately, but they’ll be in the mix. Evans and Basso will be super-fit but tired after the Giro. They may shine at first but be ground away as time passes. Or not. It’s hard to tell until the “hard” stages reveal themselves. One bad day and your whole Tour can be wrecked, so it’s really down to minimising losses – or hiding your weakness behind a strong team – on those “off days”.
There are others who could surprise, old stagers like Vino or ever-hopefuls like Rogers. More than likely it’ll be the strongest, most motivated team that gets their best all-rounder over the line. Contador may have some troubles in that respect, as may Evans. Basso and team look strong, as does Rogers. Whilst Armstrong looks too old on paper he has a good team of old stagers and the tactical nous to take his chance when it comes.
Once again we can’t really tell until the wheels – and the dice – roll.
Here are some prognostications from around and about:
SBS: Tour de France 2010
This year should also see a few former top GC contenders eclipsed into also ran status as a new younger cohort make their move in the era of Contador.
And as I look at my favoured names I’m struggling to find a place for Lance Armstrong anywhere in my top ten.
I see Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck, Ivan Basso, Roman Kreuzinger, Cadel Evans, Christian Vande Velde, Frank Schleck, Levi Leipheimer, Robert Gesink, Bradley Wiggins, Andreas Kloden, Samuel Sanchez, Alexandre Vinokourov, Michael Rogers, Denis Menchov, and Luis Leon Sanchez as all having a solid claim to a top ten spot.
Not that Armstrong can’t perform. His Tour de Suisse performance shows that on the right day and circumstances he can, but the head of this years field looks like a competitive one.
SBS: Tour de France 2010: Reshuffling the 2009 deck
If I were to take the top 10 riders who finished the 2009 Tour de France, placed each name on a card, shuffled them around a little – or maybe not at all – added one or two names, and told you this would be final classification on July 25 this year, I imagine few would bat an eyelid.
This is not to say the 2010 Grande Boucle will not be a spectacular one – it is the Tour after all!
But what I don’t see is a revelation popping up near or on the podium when the peloton reaches the Champs Élysées, like Bradley Wiggins did last year. Or a surprise winner, like Carlos Sastre in 2008.
The ‘one or two names’ not in last year’s top-10 that I’m referring to would include Levi Leipheimer, who last year was forced to abandon after breaking his wrist and may be – or become – RadioShack’s main man this time round.
Cadel Evans and my dark horse podium pick Michael Rogers, who deservedly finds himself back to his best and by simply doing his own thing, may well profit from the tactics played by Astana, Saxo Bank and RadioShack.
Tour De France: 10 Riders Who Need A Result | Cyclingnews.com
As the Tour de France approaches, Cyclingnews takes a look at 10 riders who need a result to save their season.
Dental issues, illness, crashes and accusations have left some of the sport’s biggest names in the shadows and out of the results. It could be because some of their careers are nearing an end or simply because they’ve said they’d do better but failed to deliver. One way or another, these guys will be looking for a strong performance in France.
Top Twelve Tour Contenders | Cyclingnews.com
With less than three weeks to go until the Grand Départ in Rotterdam, the 97th Tour de France is shaping up to be one the best. With one of the most spectacular routes and a host of big names riders set to start, Cyclingnews casts an eye on the 12 most likely to figure in the overall.
2010 Tour De France – Predictions
2010 Tour De France – Predictions Moderators: dalessit
Jump to page : 1 Now viewing page 1 [20 messages per page]
It’s a proven Grand Tour formula, come in just slightly underdone and improve as the weeks pass. Even if it doesn’t always work – you can surely be too underdone and just weaken as the race progresses – Basso is clearly operating along these lines and peaking when it matters. It doesn’t hurt his chances that his team is way out in front, either. Liquigas has put together an even team who have all progressed along a similar path to Basso, graduallly getting it all together and meshing in the 3rd week. Ideal, really, apart from the risky first week or so when everything seemed in upheaval. Point is that Sastre, Evans and Vinokourov each have what it takes to win this race but they have all suffered to varying degrees from crashes, loss of teammates and a gradual loss of form after some horrifically arduous stages. With a stronger team protecting him Basso has had an easier run and has saved more gas in the tank for when it matters. Just a couple of percent difference means a lot. If he doesn’t have a horrible day tomorrow he’ll take this race, deservedly.
Evans Admits Giro Podium May Be Out Of Reach | Cyclingnews.com
“Like they’ve done all week, Liquigas was really strong and can ride a really high rhythm on the climb. There’s five of them and there’s one of me and the rest of us are all left as the best of each of our team. They’ve got the strength in the numbers and also the strength of their leader.”
Evans admitted that Basso has improved in the second half of the Giro, while he has faded.
“Ivan has been consistent and a little bit better than me in the second half of the Giro,” he said.
“I had a few problems, which I’ll speak about in Verona. It seems I’m not at the same level as I was at the start. But there’s still another day tomorrow. We’ll see.”
It’s a proven Grand Tour formula, come in just slightly underdone and improve as the weeks pass. Even if it doesn’t always work – you can surely be too underdone and just weaken as the race progresses – Basso is clearly operating along these lines and peaking when it matters. It doesn’t hurt his chances that his team is way out in front, either. Liquigas has put together an even team who have all progressed along a similar path to Basso, graduallly getting it all together and meshing in the 3rd week. Ideal, really, apart from the risky first week or so when everything seemed in upheaval. Point is that Sastre, Evans and Vinokourov each have what it takes to win this race but they have all suffered to varying degrees from crashes, loss of teammates and a gradual loss of form after some horrifically arduous stages. With a stronger team protecting him Basso has had an easier run and has saved more gas in the tank for when it matters. Just a couple of percent difference means a lot. If he doesn’t have a horrible day tomorrow he’ll take this race, deservedly.
Evans Admits Giro Podium May Be Out Of Reach | Cyclingnews.com
“Like they’ve done all week, Liquigas was really strong and can ride a really high rhythm on the climb. There’s five of them and there’s one of me and the rest of us are all left as the best of each of our team. They’ve got the strength in the numbers and also the strength of their leader.”
Evans admitted that Basso has improved in the second half of the Giro, while he has faded.
“Ivan has been consistent and a little bit better than me in the second half of the Giro,” he said.
“I had a few problems, which I’ll speak about in Verona. It seems I’m not at the same level as I was at the start. But there’s still another day tomorrow. We’ll see.”
It’s been a great Giro, full of drama – and it’s not over yet. But I can’t help feeling that it could have been better if the teams had been on a more equal footing. To me Liquigas looks strongest and has acted tactically and strategically as though they want to win. Whilst Evans, Vino and Sastre have had to rely on individual brilliance to stay in – or out of – contention. Now I can’t blame Liquigas for bringing the strongest team, working with other Italians or choosing a strong combo like Basso and Nibali, but it does weaken the competition overall. To me the simultaneous running of the Tour of California overly distracted the other teams and caused a split of resources – not just riders but of all resources – that has dented the Giro and made it both wonderfully diverse and pathetically predictable at the same time. Diverse in the individuals who have made it happen, predictable in that the “super team” will win. I hope I’m wrong (much as I’d like to see Basso win) but I just feel it’s become a race for the minor places. Still better than Le Tour but way less exciting than it could have been. Oh well, who knows – tomorrow’s horror stage may indeed be the bloodbath when the weaker teams get away.
Giro D’Italia: Stage 19, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Ivan Basso blasted open the 19th stage and the Giro d’Italia itself, shedding his rivals on the Motirolo with the help of his Liquigas-Doimo teammate Vincenzo Nibali, and donning the maglia rosa for the first time since 2006. The third man in the group, Michele Scarponi (Androni Giocattoli – Diquigiovanni), took the stage win..
The attack from the Liquigas pair took place on the day’s biggest climb, the Mortirolo, with over 40km and another unclassified hill-top finish still to go. One by one, the morning’s leader David Arroyo (Caisse d’Epargne), Cadel Evans (BMC), Carlos Sastre (Cervelo) and Alexander Vinokourov (Astana) were ridden off the train, while only Scarponi could hold the pace of Basso and Nibali.
It’s been a great Giro, full of drama – and it’s not over yet. But I can’t help feeling that it could have been better if the teams had been on a more equal footing. To me Liquigas looks strongest and has acted tactically and strategically as though they want to win. Whilst Evans, Vino and Sastre have had to rely on individual brilliance to stay in – or out of – contention. Now I can’t blame Liquigas for bringing the strongest team, working with other Italians or choosing a strong combo like Basso and Nibali, but it does weaken the competition overall. To me the simultaneous running of the Tour of California overly distracted the other teams and caused a split of resources – not just riders but of all resources – that has dented the Giro and made it both wonderfully diverse and pathetically predictable at the same time. Diverse in the individuals who have made it happen, predictable in that the “super team” will win. I hope I’m wrong (much as I’d like to see Basso win) but I just feel it’s become a race for the minor places. Still better than Le Tour but way less exciting than it could have been. Oh well, who knows – tomorrow’s horror stage may indeed be the bloodbath when the weaker teams get away.
Giro D’Italia: Stage 19, Route Maps & Results | Cyclingnews.com
Ivan Basso blasted open the 19th stage and the Giro d’Italia itself, shedding his rivals on the Motirolo with the help of his Liquigas-Doimo teammate Vincenzo Nibali, and donning the maglia rosa for the first time since 2006. The third man in the group, Michele Scarponi (Androni Giocattoli – Diquigiovanni), took the stage win..
The attack from the Liquigas pair took place on the day’s biggest climb, the Mortirolo, with over 40km and another unclassified hill-top finish still to go. One by one, the morning’s leader David Arroyo (Caisse d’Epargne), Cadel Evans (BMC), Carlos Sastre (Cervelo) and Alexander Vinokourov (Astana) were ridden off the train, while only Scarponi could hold the pace of Basso and Nibali.
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