2011 Tour de France – Stage 21 Wrap-up

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Stage 21 from Creteil to Paris marked the end of the Tour de France. Going in to the stage, every major classification – general, young rider, team and mountain – was finalized, save the points classification. HTC-Highroad’s Mark Cavendish entered the stage 15 points ahead of Movistar’s JJ Rojas, which meant that while Cadel Evans was sipping champagne, Cavendish and crew would need to control the peloton heading in to both the intermediate and final sprints. HTC was able to avoid excess work by allowing a break of six to go up the road, eating up the major points available in the intermediate. Cavendish was first out of the peloton following the break, and grabbed 2 additional points over Rojas, who came in 9th. Apparently this was enough to discourage any further aggression from Movistar, who barely participated in the final sprint handily won by Cavendish.

Here’s what we noticed:

1) Usually, given the TV broadcast schedules, we join races where a break has often been established. Today’s broadcast started at the beginning of the stage, and we got to see the establishment of the break once they hit the Paris loop. It’s nice being able to see the break rather than just be told one happened prior to transmission starting.

2) Just as the breakaway was bring swallowed by the peloton on the final lap of the circuit, Ben Swift made a last ditch attempt to ride off, gaining a little time on the charging peloton. Lars Bak went up to join him, and actually ended up dropping him. For a second it looked like Bak might be making an attempt of his own to win the stage, before he sat up and went back in to the pack. It’s more likely he was sent up front to shut down Swift, as well as patrol the front end in case any team – like Movistar – attempted a last minute break that could have a detrimental affect on Cavendish’s jersey or stage win. That break never materialized.

3) After the intermediate sprint, JJ Rojas and all of Movistar must have decided that despite bold words in recent days, they were tired of fighting. The top-placed Movistar rider in the stage was Francisco Ventoso, who finished 15th. Rojas finished 21st.

4) Are baby national champion jerseys the next big thing? Frank Schleck’s daughter was decked out in a Champion of Luxembourg onesie on the podium today – very cute – and Champion of Belgium Philippe Gilbert’s son was seen sporting his father’s stripes yesterday. Maybe we should make some baby Pavé jerseys. Thoughts?

5) Garmin-Cervélo took the stage to receive their team classification prize with a cardboard Dave Zabriskie cutout. We can only assume we’ll be seeing a steady stream of pictures on Twitter from his teammates as they bring the cutout with them on their celebrations tonight. Hopefully nothing too sordid.

6) Vacansoleil’s Johnny Hoogerland made it to Paris. Someone buy this man a big magnum of De Zeezuiper – brewed in his home province of Zeeland. And someone buy Sky’s Juan Antonio Flecha the drink of his choice too – while he avoided the barbed wire, he was the one actually hit by a car. Tough guys, the both of them.

In many ways, the Tour de France is a race of the underdogs, no matter who enters it a favorite. An ill-timed crash, a split failed to be covered – all can change the face of the race in a split second. This Tour was so much fun to watch because of its underdogs – Hushovd and Voeckler defending the Maillot Jaune despite everyone expecting them to lose it at any moment. Garmin, after 3 tours, finally getting their stage wins. Cavendish getting beaten in a sprint by Farrar and Greipel, but taking the green jersey. All said and done, the most important underdog in the race was two time runner-up Cadel Evans. Discounted by many heading in to the race as a B-contender against the likes of Contador and the Schlecks, Evans rode boldly, never falling below fourth on the leader board. In an age where overall wins have mostly come from establishing a lead and limiting loss, Evans broke the mold and took his win in a hard fought battle, in one of the most exciting Tours we’ve seen in years. Thanks, Cadel!

Today brings our last stage wrap-up. It’s been a long, exciting, and busy 3 weeks – thanks for choosing to spend some of your time with us. We’ll have a whole slew of post-race analysis in the upcoming week to close out our Tour coverage. Let us know in a comment below what you thought of today’s stage, and the Tour overall, as well as what you’d like to hear us expound on – we’ll gladly oblige in order to keep our Tour fever going for another few days.

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2011 Tour de France – Stage 20 Wrap-up

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Going into today’s Stage 20, the names Fignon and Lemond were on everyone’s mind, as people pondered whether Leopard-Trek’s Andy Schleck would fall, Fignon style, to BMC’s Cadel Evans by the scantest of margins in this final individual time trial. As predicted, Schleck did lose the yellow jersey to Evans, but not by the handful of seconds many expected. Rather, Evans recorded the time trial of his life, finishing second to TT wunderkind Tony Martin of HTC-HighRoad by a mere 7 seconds. While Schleck performed as well as we’ve come to expect–finishing 2:38 behind Martin–it was not enough to defeat the powerful Australian. He ended the day in second-place on GC, 1:34 behind the man who will be wearing the maillot jaune in Paris, Cadel Evans.

Here’s what we noticed:

1) The White Jersey Race: Europcar’s Pierre Rolland successfully held on to his lead in the Young Rider’s classification. Up against Estonian time trial Champion Rein Taaramäe, just a scant 1:33 off of Rolland’s time before the start of the stage, it wasn’t a given that Rolland would be able to hold him off. While Taaramäe bettered Rolland by 48 seconds in the time trial, it wasn’t enough to unseat him, making Rolland the first winner of the White Jersey since Benoît Salmon in 1999. Are we looking at a future French GC contender?

2) Mishaps abound: While none of the GC favorites were affected by mechanicals during today’s time trial, there were a number that affected race favorites. Philippe Gilbert nearly rode off the ramp at the start house, and then came close to crashing when his chain slipped. Edvald Boassen Hagen ended up making a number of bike changes, at least the first of which was caused by a broken crank arm. In spite of his difficulties, he ended up finishing the stage in 12th position, + 2:10 off the blistering time set by Tony Martin, who also had his own difficulties when he nearly collided with a Team Sky car. When you win the stage, you’re allowed to be so singularly focused as to miss a 2,000 pound impediment in front of you.

Did we mention Alberto Contador unclipped in the start house? Seems the official holding his saddle may have been taken by surprise at Contador’s sudden burst of power, and held on for a second too long. Fortunately, it didn’t seem to affect him either, and he notched the third best time of the day.

3) While the lack of time trial skills possessed by the Andy Schleck isn’t news, the utter predictability of his ride might be. Most pundits felt that the former time trial Champion of Luxembourg (World Tour rider population: 4) had the potential to lose 2-3 minutes to Evans, but tempered all such comments with the caveat that the yellow jersey unlocks heretofore unknown strength in its wearer, as demonstrated by Thomas Voeckler during this tour. Andy, having never reconned the time trial, rode in the team car during Fabian Cancellara’s turn on the course, taking the opportunity to hear sage advice from World Champ as to how to ride – possibly the reason Cancellara rode such a mundane TT himself. In spite of this, Andy lost a fairly predictible 2:31 to Evans. Maybe riding the course beforehand would have been a wise idea, though it doesn’t seem likely to have helped with such a severe differential in times.

4) In the countries from which we watched today’s coverage (US for Jeremy, Ireland for Ciaran), both sets of commentators claimed that the rolling terrain of the time trial was to the advantage of the Schleck brothers. We’re pretty sure the Schleck’s don’t excel in the rollers, but require long climbs to use their legs to their advantage. Seems like pretty elementary commentary on the part of people who get paid to know better – or who at least have a staff who’s paid to know better.

5) While everyone was rushing to compare the Evans/Schleck battle to Lemond’s 1989 win over Laurent Fignon by a scant 8 seconds, we noted two things: first, the last time a Tour was won in the final time trial was not 1989, but 1990*, when Greg Lemond won the tour in a stage 20 time trial over then yellow Claudio Chiapucci, beating him by 2:21 and relegating ‘El Diablo’ to second place. The second thing we noticed is that, much like Schleck, Chiappucci never managed to climb to the top step of the Paris podium, going on to place third the following year, and 2nd in 1992. Fortunately for Andy, he will get another opportunity next year to better his finish.

With tomorrow a mere formality, Cadel Evans is poised to wear yellow into Paris. Many had discounted his chances going in to this Tour, given his relatively dismal showing the last two editions as well as the perceived superiority of Contador and the Schleck’s. Clearly they were wrong.

While the yellow and white jerseys contests are largely over, the race for the green jersey still hasn’t ended. HTC’s Mark Cavendish holds a 15 point lead over Movistar’s JJ Rojas. Such a close race will see both trying to maximize their share of the intermediate points available (20 to the winner), and tip the odds in their favor before the final sprint, where 45 points will go to the first over the line. It should make for an exciting finish to one of the best Tours in recent history!

* To paraphrase Joe Martin: Yeah, yeah, yeah, Floyd Landis, Le Creusot – Montceau-les-Mines, 2006.

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The Sticky Bidon – July 22, 2011

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, July 22, 2011

Seen any cool links we missed? Share ’em in the comments below!

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2011 Tour de France – Stage 20 Preview

Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.

Fotoreporter Sirotti

 

For a preview of tomorrow’s time trial, head here to read my latest piece for Bicycling.com. For obvious reasons, I can’t reproduce the text here, but I think you’ll find it informative nonetheless. (And yes, I know I overlooked Tony Martin–it’s been a long Tour…)

And don’t forget to join me tomorrow at 8:30EST in the Live Blog over at Bicycling.com for what’s certain to be an exciting stage!

Thanks for reading–feel free to share your comments below.

 

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2011 Tour de France – Stage 19 Wrap-Up

Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Today’s 108km stage 19 was billed as a mountain sprint. True to form, the first 14km saw some furious racing before a big breakaway went away. They didn’t last long, though, as Alberto Contador lit up the Telegraphe climb to set off an exciting day of racing. The speed and difficulty of the stage suggested a shake-up of the Green Jersey competition, and as predicted, the autobus finished outside of the time cut and thus was docked Sprint Points. Thus, Movistar’s JJ Rojas is within striking distance of the Points Competition Victory on the Champs Elysess. However, today was a mountain stage, and on the mountains, an incredible race unfolded. Here’s what we noticed:

When Contador attacked early on the Telegraphe and formed a group of him, Frank and Andy Schleck, Voeckler, and Evans formed, it was immediately obvious that it was a serious move. Contador’s resurgence changed the calculus of the GC contenders. His timeloss yesterday may have saved enough energy for the strong move today. On the Telegraphe he made everybody suffer, as Frank and then Voeckler were dropped. Meanwhile, Cadel Evans lost a minute due to a mechanical, and eventually lost another minute with an ineffective chase. It could have been a Tour-changer – another “chaingate,” as Evans lost a maximum of almost two minutes.

Alliances emerged as Euskaltel’s Inxausti and Movistar’s Rui Costa worked with Contador on the Telegraphe and Galibier. Behind, Evans found some cooperation on the Galibier, as Voeckler – after much chasing alone – finally dropped back to the peloton (he may have been better served dropping back ealrier), and Liquigas drove to support Basso, who had missed the move on the Telegraphe. Toward the top of the Galibier, after following a Samuel Sanchez move, Evans was only :30 behind Andy and Contador (who had been climbing with Rui Costa and Riblon, the only survivors from the breakaway). Sanchez bridged up on the descent, but the Evans group made contact with 24.4km to go, with the Voeckler group making contact coon afterward. More alliances emerged on the road. Trench teams rode together for the opposite ends – Europcar pushing for Voeckler, Cofidis for Tarramae’s spot on the White Jersey competition.

The White Jersey race heated up again – when Voeckler cracked (first on the Galibier, and then again, after reconnecting in time for the Alpe d’Huez), he sent Pierre Rolland up the road to continue his fight for the white jersey. Behind, Europcar showed incredible dedication to Thomas Voeckler – perhaps in return for Voeckler’s dedication to the team, staying on even in the late hours of Bernaudeau’s doomed-looking sponsorship search. Their performance this Tour should give them greater value to potential sponsors in upcoming years. Speaking of side competitions, Garmin-Cervelo placed Ryder Hesjedal, Tom Danielson, and Christian Vande Velde in the lead group before the Alpe d’Huez, and they climbed their way into solidifying Garmin-Cervelo’s likely win in the Team Competition.

On the Alpe d’Huez, chaotic racing set to immediately, but the big move was another Contador attack that quickly gained a minute over the Schleck/Evans group. Contador was going after saving his Tour – either with enough time to race on to the podium in the time trial, or with a stage win on the Alpe. Between Contador and the Schleck/Evans group, Samuel Sanchez joined with Pierre Rolland in pursuit of Contador, with Peter Velits and Thomas de Gendt chasing them. Contador’s attack was clearly dangerous, as his time trial threatens both Schlecks, and his climbing threatens Evans. It’s hard to bet against him safely in the time trial. This meant that everybody was racing for the Tour up the Alpe d’Huez – what could be more beautiful? The Schlecks who took up the pacemaking, needing to limit their losses with a Time Trial staring them in the face.

Ahead, Sanchez asked Rolland to work to catch Contador. Rolland said no, but when Sanchez made the catch, Rolland attacked, opened up a gap, and rode to an incredible French win on the Alpe d’Huez. Pierre Rolland is the standout young rider of this year’s Tour – shepherding Voeckler through ten days in the maillot jaune, winning the Young Rider’s Competition, and taking the first French Victory on top of Alpe d’Huez since Bernard Hinault in 1986. It’s an incredible Tour in anybody’s book, I think.

Behind, Evans attacked several times, dropping one or both Schlecks more than once. Nothing stuck and after sprinting to the finish, was credited with the same time as each Schleck. When was the last time anybody sprinted to the finish of Alpe d’Huez? Evans once again rode a gutsy, smart, and well-timed ride – today and yesterday he capably steadily fought back from significant defecits, which requires strength of the brain as well as strength of the legs.

Andy Schleck takes over the Yellow Jersey, and will wear it in a 42.5km time trial. Behind are Frank Schleck at :53, Cadel Evans at :57, and Thomas Voeckler at 2:10. If I were Cadel Evans, I’d like my odds, but the Tour de France is not yet won.

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The Sticky Bidon – July 21, 2011

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, July 21, 2011

Seen any cool links we missed? Share ’em in the comments below!

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