2010 Tour de France – Stage 11 Wrap-Up

2010 Tour de France - Mark Cavendish Wins Stage 11

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Mark Renshaw got a bit cheeky today, butting heads (literally) with Julian Dean and then slamming the door on Tyler Farrar in the final dash to the finish line in Bourg-les-Valence.  Renshaw clearly veered from his line to cut-off Farrar and was sent home from the Tour for his actions—not that it mattered though, as no one was going to get Cavendish.


Credit a visibly shaken Farrar for not taking the bait in his post-race interview; while he clearly blamed Renshaw for his actions, he refused to say it was done on purpose.  As for Renshaw, he seemed to admit that what he had done was a bit dangerous, without going so far as to apologize for it.


Unfortunately for Renshaw, in the eyes of the UCI commissaries, Renshaw’s actions were enough to warrant to dismissal.  One official compared his action to that of a gladiator, calling his behavior “deplorable”.  But for a rider who has failed to register the slightest blip on the radar of dangerous sprinters or lead-out men, the severity of the punishment has to be considered a bit of surprise.  A time penalty?  Certainly.  A fine? Definitely.  But banishment?  Too much.


Ultimately, Renshaw’s punishment begs an interesting question: is he paying for Cavendish’s past sins?  And who will benefit the most now that he’s gone?


Perhaps the final word is best left to Michael Rogers.


Here’s what else we noticed:


1. With the win, Cavendish has reasserted himself as the fastest sprinter in the world.  It’s now time to forget any doubts we had earlier in the year—Cav’s the best, hands-down.  And he’s now creeping-up the green jersey classification—with a few more wins he could take the jersey by Paris.


2010 Tour de France - Petacchi Takes Green Jersey After Stage 11

Fotoreporter Sirotti


2. As for Alessandro Petacchi, his second place today is enough to vault him over Thor Hushovd and into the green jersey.  Petacchi’s clearly the biggest sprint surprise of this year’s race, taking two stages and contending in several more.  Now he says he wants the green jersey in Paris.  I’m not counting him out anymore.


3. And Thor?  Well, he’s starting to seem out-classed by the rest of the field sprinters.  While his team is certainly a rung below those of the other green jersey contenders, there are others who are scoring points with less than ideal support.  I think we might be seeing the final phase of Thor’s transition from field sprinter to classics hard man.  Need further proof?  Look no further than his win in Stage 3.


4. Does anyone else think Jonathan Vaughters is sweating bullets right now (and not because of the heat wave currently suffocating France)?  Looking over the rest of the parcours, Garmin has two more chances to get Tyler Farrar across the line first—and one of those is the super-competitive stage finishing on the Champs-Elysées.  Yes, Garmin has dealt with a lot of bad luck in this year’s race, losing several riders to broken bones.  But regardless, should Garmin end-up finishing three Tours without a stage win, Vaughters will have a lot of explaining to do.  And don’t expect to Christophe Le Mevel to help.


5. And for the historians out there, here are two videos from the 1997 Tour de France in which there were not one, but two stages that ended with disqualifications—just in case you never saw them: Stage 6 and Stage 19.



Have a great day—and share your comments below.

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

2010 Tour de France – Stage 10 Wrap-Up

2010 Tour de France - Paulinho Wins Stage 10

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Team Radio Shack continued to try and salvage its 2010 Tour de France with a stage win by the former Portugese champion, Sergio Paulinho.  Today’s 179km ride through the foothills of the Alps took the riders over the steepest climb of the race and down the descent that ended Joseba Beloki’s 2003 Tour—and career.


While today’s race finished well after the estimates and the riders appeared to be going quite softly, sometimes it’s harder to go slow than fast—especially when it’s hot and there’s a headwind.  I have a feeling today’s stage was harder than it looked.


1. For Paulinho, it was biggest win following his silver medal in the road race at the 2004 Athens Olympics.  By far the strongest—and most savvy—rider in the breakaway, it was a hardly a surprise to see him take the win.


2. What was surprising however, was Vasil Kiriyenka’s willingness to lead-out the sprint.  For a former points race world champion, he should have done a better job.


3. And the French on Bastille Day? Rien. I wonder if Remi Pauriol was ordered off the front as punishment for missing the move of the day.  I bet Bernard Hinault’s been spending the last hour or two handing out face-punches in team hotels.


2010 Tour de France - N. Roche in Stage 10

Fotoreporter Sirotti


4. And speaking of going off the front, I have a feeling that Nicolas Roche made some new enemies at the end of today’s stage when he attacked to leap over a few of the riders ahead of him on GC—all outside the top-10 I might add.  While Anglo-American fans are applauding Roche for his cleverness, crafty-riding, etc… I think it’s an amateur move from a rider who obviously isn’t too confident in his abilities when the bunch is actually racing.  I hope his father gives him a good lecture tonight. If you want to gain time, Nicolas, do it in Mende.


5. As for the field, Mark Cavendish won the sprint, perhaps fine-tuning his leags before tomorrow’s mainly downhill trek to Bourg-les-Valence.  Alessandro Petacchi also took a few more points from Thor Hushovd today, so look for some fireworks tomorrow.


6. And does anyone else feel Tyler Farrar’s trying to be a bit coy regarding his wrist?  He seemed a bit shy in his post-race interview regarding his healing—I wonder if his bluff might pay off.


Until tomorrow—share your comments below.

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , , , | 15 Comments

2010 Tour de France – Stage 10 Live Blog

Come on over and join me today in today’s Live Blog for Bicycling Magazine.  I’ll be sharing duties with Joe Lindsey, Bicycling contributor and writer of The Boulder Report.

Hope to see you there!

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

2010 Tour de France – Stage 9 Wrap-up

2010 Tour de France - Casar Wins Stage 9

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Today’s stage was quite possibly the most exciting I’ve ever seen.  The only letdown: what once seemed to be a wide-open Tour now appears to be a two-horse race.


Here’s what’s what:


1. Sandy Casar’s win renders moot the huge tactical gaffe committed by the 4-man break in allowing itself to be caught by Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck, and Christophe Moreau within the final kilometer.  Had Schleck and Contador a bit of time to catch their breath before the sprint, they just might have taken the stage—as it was, they looked set to ride right by the original four had a corner not interrupted their plans.


2. For Casar, it was his third Tour de France stage win (he was declared the winner of last year’s Stage 16 after Mikael Astarloza’s DQ), and the first this year for La Francaise des Jeux.  After a rather anonymous first week, it’s easy to see why Madiot had his boys following wheels until now.  And those kits…magnifique!


3. As for Luis Leon Sanchez, we really expected more from a rider we thought might make a serious bid for the GC.  True, he sits eighth currently, but one has to wonder if he’ll remain there for long.  As for the stage, Sanchez and Cunego were the two favorites to take the win—had they better knowledge of the finale.


4. As for the rest, it’s become abundantly clear that Andy Schleck and Alberto Contador are the two main contenders for the 2010 Tour de France.  Samuel Sanchez is doing his best to spoil the party, but after what we saw today, it’s hard to see anyone other than Schleck and Contador on the first two steps of the podium in Paris.


5. Behind Schleck, Contador, and Samuel Sanchez, the rest of the top-10 began to shake itself out as well, as Rabobank’s duo of Robert Gesink and Denis Menchov pulled Radio Shack’s Levi Leipheimer and Katusha’s Joaquin Rodriguez away from Jurgen Van den Broeck, Ivan Basso, and Lance Armstrong (who appeared to rebound quite nicely after Sunday’s 12-minute loss).  The effort bumped Menchov into fourth over VDB2, and Levi, Gesink, and Rodriguez into sixth, seventh, and ninth.  Not a bad day for them.


6. Rabobank is now the only team with two riders inside the top-10, after Roman Kreuziger lost time to slip to 11th—one spot behind his teammate, Ivan Basso.  While Kreuziger’s performance certainly wasn’t terrible, it’s a bit disappointing that he was unable to stay with one of the first three groups of overall contenders.  For a rider many were looking to challenge for a top-5 placing in Paris, things aren’t looking very promising at the moment.


7. And speaking of teammates, at what point are people going to lay-off Alexandre Vinokourov?  His acceleration seemed to be un-choreographed, a brash show of defiance from a rider many would love to see derail Contador’s Tour.  But to Vino’s detractors, I say this: give the guy a break!  You are more than welcome to hate the rider, but his tactics appear sound.  His attack forced an already thinning peloton to up the pace just a bit, shedding several secondary contenders and the yellow jersey.  And with Vino still lurking in 13th-place on GC, he’ll remain just enough of a threat to warrant attention from other teams—giving Contador a tactical advantage over Schleck and Saxo Bank.


2010 Tour de France - Evans After Stage 9

Fotoreporter Sirotti


8. As for Evans, it was revealed after the race that he rode the stage with a broken elbow sustained—we are to assume—in his crash early in Sunday’s stage.  The news seemed to stop many of Cuddles’ detractors  in their tracks, quickly turning snickers of “we knew he was too good to be true” into sighs of  “wow, what a rider”.  On second thought, maybe I was wrong.


2010 Tour de France - Wiggins in Stage 9

Fotoreporter Sirotti


9. And last but not least, at what point will everyone admit that Bradley Wiggins is a bust for Team Sky?  Wiggins lost another five minutes today and has never been relevant in this year’s race.  His performance this year proves what many of us—Jonathan Vaughters included—suspected: Wiggo is not a grand tour contender.  Hey Brad, Wayne Rooney’s on the phone.


2010 Tour de France - Contador in Stage 9

Fotoreporter Sirotti


10. My final thought for the day: Alberto Contador has Andy Schleck—and his team—right where he wants him.  With several hard transitional days before the Pyrenees, Schleck and his Saxo Bank mates will once again be faced with the burden of protecting and maintaining the race lead.  At this point in the Tour, there are few men out of contention enough to take yellow in one these next few stages, thus making it difficult for Schleck to turn over the jersey to another squad.  All Contador—and his team—need to do now is follow Schleck’s wheel and wait for the next major mountain rendezvous.  With only 41 seconds in his pocket, things don’t look good for Andy.


Have a great day—share your comments below!

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , | 16 Comments

2010 Tour de France – Stage 9 Live Blog

Come on over and join me today in today’s Live Blog for Bicycling Magazine.  I’ll be sharing duties with Joe Lindsey, Bicycling contributor and writer of The Boulder Report.

Hope to see you there!

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

2010 Tour de France – Rest Day Report

Like many I’m sure, I’ve been taking advantage of today’s rest day to catch-up on all the things I might have been doing over the past 9 days.


So in lieu of an official report from me , I thought I would leave you with this great Rest Day report from The Inner Ring.


And for the podcast fans among you, I just finished recording a podcast with Bicycling Magazine–so head to their site in the next few hours to give it a listen.  (Unless you don’t want my real voice to ruin the one you’ve given me in your head.)


Any predictions for tomorrow?  Share them as comments below.

Posted in Races | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments