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2011 Tour de France Quick Stats – Euskaltel-Euskadi
2011 Tour de France Preview – Spain & Portugal
Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.
One recurring theme in contemporary Tour de France coverage is the decline of French cycling. The story that’s written less often is the rise of Spanish riders in the pro ranks, led, of course, by SaxoBank-Sungard’s Alberto Contador, winner of last year’s Tour, this year’s Giro, and most of the other races he’s entered. Contador is, like Armstrong and Indurain before him, the dominant big tour rider of his generation. Unlike his American predecessor though, Contador races (and wins) smaller races throughout the year, so that by the age of 28, he has already established a palmares to rival the sport’s legends.
The small man with the big head (literally, his head is large in relation to his body) and toothy smile is, without doubt, the favorite to repeat as 2011 champion. He is the world’s top climber, despite what Andy Schleck believes he is capable of, and also one of the fastest against the clock. Though this year’s race is short on time trial kilometers, it’s all still up to Contador, as he is a notoriously aggressive racer. Schleck is more likely to respond to an attack. Contador’s standard operating procedure is to attack on the first significant climb of any race, establish dominance and a lead, and then hold that through to the end.
In the past, especially when he was dueling with Armstrong for leadership of Astana, this approach might have indicated insecurity. The sooner he could establish his superiority, the sooner he could rally the team around him. Now however, it appears that Contador simply can’t resist attacking on steep terrain. Having more than sealed the deal at the Giro this year, he continued to attack on the big climbs, turning the entire festival of suffering into a race for second place. If the Spaniard can regain the legs he had in Italy in time, look for this same scenario to play out in the Pyrenees and Alps.
Rallying around Contador at Saxo Bank is a small cadre of his compatriots, Jesus Hernandez, Daniel Navarro and Benjamin Noval. Navarro distinguished himself at the 2010 Grand Boucle as Contador’s chief lieutenant in the mountains, pacing Contador up and onto the slopes of the race’s big climbs. Noval is another extremely capable domestique, loyal to his boss and valuable in all phases of the race.
Of course, Contador and his boys aren’t the only Spanish show in town. The Basque climbers of Euskaltel-Euskadi will be ever present in the orange kits, and the Movistar squad (formerly Caisse d’Epargne) brings riders capable of stage wins, if not the overall.
Sammy Sanchez will be Euskaltel’s man for the general classification. Sanchez is an all-rounder who climbs well, but descends even better. When the road turns down there is no one, save for Vincenzo Nibali, who can harness gravity to such stunning effect. Sanchez’s supporting cast includes a couple of standout climbers in Egoi Martinez and Amets Txurruka. Martinez has a list of King of the Mountain’s jerseys to his credit, including the Vuelta, the Tour of the Basque Country, Tirreno-Adriatico and last year’s Dauphiné. In 2009, he finished second in the climber’s competition at the Tour, behind Franco Pellizotti, who was later disqualified for doping. Txurruka has no professional wins to his credit, but he is know for his combativity, attacking here, there and everywhere, narrowly missing out on Tour stages in the past.
Movistar’s Tour roster is a bit more balanced. They bring José Iván Gutiérrez as a strong all-rounder, JJ Rojas and Francisco Ventoso for the sprints, and David Arroyo for the steeper stages. Arroyo will be one to watch. As a de facto climber’s championship, the 2011 Tour holds plenty of opportunities for able ascenders. Arroyo could challenge for the polka dot jersey, and with the one-two punch of Rojas and Ventoso, Movistar could steal a sprint win from the more famous fast men, like Cavendish and Farrar.
Team Rabobank from Holland also has a tradition of hiring Spanish riders, and this year they’ll bring a trio of former Tour stage winners, Carlos Barredo, Juan Manuel Gárate and Luis León Sánchez to the party. Of the three, Gárate is mostly likely to feature, and like Arroyo from Movistar has hopes for the polka dot jersey. It will be interesting to see how Rabobank deploy León Sánchez, a strong rider who will support Rabobank’s Dutch GC man, Robert Gesink.
At Radio Shack we find Markel Irizar, Haimar Zubeldia and Sergio Paulinho, all capable climbers who will contribute to the Shack’s one-two-three-four GC effort behind Levi Leipheimer, Andreas Kloden, Janez Brajkovic and Chris Horner. With so many climbers in the race, the Shack, perhaps more than any other squad, has a chance at unsettling Contador. Irizar and Zubeldia will be key to that effort, likely driving the pace on steep roads, to thin out the lead group and set one of their big guns up for an attack. In some circles, Paulinho, who ruined 2010’s Bastille Day for the French, has even been bandied about as a potential Top-10 threat due to this year’s mountainous parcours.
Finally, there is Team Sky, who feature Juan Antonio Flecha and Xabier Zandio. Flecha, known as a classics specialist, took his first pro win at the Tour in 2003, and he is capable of turning any breakaway he enters into a contender. How Sky manager Dave Brailsford incorporates Flecha into their GC push behind Bradley Wiggins will be interesting.
Man of the Hour: Who could it be, but Contador? The swirl of doping controversy left over from last year’s Tour, his continued dominance of any race he chooses to win, the rivalry with Andy Schleck, all eyes are on the Spaniard with the annoying victory salute. If Contador has the same legs under him that he had in the Giro, this Tour is done and dusted.
On the Hot Seat: If Sammy Sanchez is going to stand on a Tour de France podium, it will be this one. A weak time-trialist, if Sanchez can hang in the high mountains he has a real shot at sneaking onto one of the lower steps. Consistency is key, as he is prone to show extremely well early in a race, only to see a bad day drop him down the standings.
Up-and-Comer: At 26 and 29 respectively, JJ Rojas and Francisco Ventoso represent the next generation of Spanish sprinters. The two Movistar fast men have seven race wins between them this year, and either rider has the ability to surprise the big boys at the line. It remains to be seen who will be the point of the spear for Movistar, Ventoso or Rojas, but they are two to watch in the flats the first week.
Red Kite Prayer’s Robot appears courtesy of the Pavé/RKP author exchange program, created to promote peace, understanding and better usage of the comma between cycling obsessed bloggers worldwide.
2011 Tour de France Quick Stats – Team Sky
2011 Tour de France Preview – Great Britain & Ireland
Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.
Great Britain has started to become a force on the road in particular two areas, Sprinting and Time Trails. This year the British riders have brought two from each discipline, and one really consistent all rounder. David Millar and Bradley Wiggins are both great under the clock, both with super aero positions and the power to punch out a good result on short to medium courses. Unfortunately for them, unlike in previous years, this year’s Tour has no Prologue for Time Trialists to try to bag an early Yellow Jersey. Out of the two riders the SKY Team is probably best placed to propel Brad into the Yellow Jersey on stage two. But wait a minute; let’s not forget the Manx Missile, Mr Mark Cavendish. Not only is he one of the greatest sprinters ever, he’s a mighty fine TT rider and the HTC squad packs some real Powerhouses. Mark Cavendish has 15 Tour de France stages (and 25 Grand Tour wins in total) which places him leagues ahead on any other Brit racing today or in the past. He’s talked about going for 5 this year and I’d be amazed if he doesn’t get at least four of them.
British cycling on the road really has become great over the last 5 years. No longer are lone ambassadors left to represent the nation in smaller Teams but we have some of the worlds finest on some of the biggest Teams. Traditionally we tend to produce good tough rouleurs (Sean Yates, Barry Holban), fantastic riders under the clock (Chris Boardman) and not many great climbers (except Robert Miller), but Bradley Wiggins managed a great trick when he turned himself from being the greatest Pursuiter in the World to a rider that was able to finish 4th in 2009. Many claimed that it was a flash in the pan and many felt vindicated by the lack luster performance of 2010 that they were right. Brad seems to thrive on the ‘you can’t do it’ claims that others throw at him and proved them all wrong by winning this year’s Duaphine. To lose between 8-10kg and still keep that power and the metronome pedal stroke is indeed a thing of both sheer determination and beauty.
David Millar is the reformed bad boy of British cycling. I think Millar’s role will be of a road captain. I’d expect him to take off on a loan crazy suicide mission to achieve glory, only to be pipped at the post again. Millar’s greatest chance to bag a victory will be in a TT, but I think that the days of him being able to take on the world’s best are long gone.
Ben Swift will make his TdF debut on Saturday, but is he there to support Flecha or is he the one that’ll be getting supported? He’s had a great year with some quality wins against some pretty fast sprinters. Could he be a match for Cav, maybe as he brims with confidence and is equally fearless in the sprint? He reminds me a lot of a young Robbie McEwen the way he can find a way through the peloton.
Geraint Thomas is probably the biggest rough diamond of them all. Great under the clock, strong, tough and probably the only chink in his armour is that he doesn’t climb as well as he possibly could – well, yet anyhow. G, as he’s known, held the White Jersey in last year’s Tour and made many people stand up and take notice of this likeable Welshman. I’m sure that this year you’ll see him support Bradley as much as he can and I wouldn’t be too surprised if you see him turn up in a lead out train if Ben Swift is feeling pretty good on that day.
With Ireland’s sole representative being Nicolas Roche of AG2R, the nation’s hopes are pinned firmly on the shoulders of the son of the great Steven Roche. However, Roche crashed earlier this year in the Critérium du Dauphiné and abandoned a race that should have been a big portion of his preparation for the Tour. Despite this, Roche still claims that his crash has not set him back in terms of fitness and he is not far off from where he should be with the hope of peaking his form in time for the Tour.
The Irishman was hoping to be able to win the Irish National Championships, entitling him to 12 months in the champion’s jersey and the opportunity to once again display it at the Tour. All did not go as planned, as the jersey was won by Matthew Brammeier of HTC-Columbia, who is not competing in the Tour.
Roche’s chances for overall GC contention are slim, with his team having some other strong (possibly stronger) riders such as Jean-Christophe Peraud and Maxime Bouet, who will be eager to get results. Roche should aim for breakaway success and try and net an elusive stage win to be able to call this 2011 Tour de France a success. If his hopes lie with the Malliot Jaune, he best hope not to puncture on the slopes of Alpe-d’Huez with only John Gadret as company. The pair suffered a dispute at last year’s Tour de France, where Roche punctured and asked Gadret for his wheel, but the Frenchman replied ‘non’. The young Irishman is still trying to find his footing as a possible GC contender, I certainly hope that if he does, the 2011 Tour de France will be the time.
Man of the Hour: This has to go to Mark Cavendish. The build up this year from every race he’s taken part in from Paris Roubaix to the Giro d’Italia has all been about one thing, the Green Jersey. Cav has been open about his tactics 5 stage wins, plus limiting his loses on the intermediate sprints. With Eric Zabel as his mentor, who’d bet against him that this will be the year he gets it right?
On the Hot Seat: Bradley Wiggins. After a stellar 4th place in 2009, Wiggins looks to be in great form coming into this year’s Tour. The SKY team looks to have riders which should be able to protect him on the flat and in the mountains. The big question on many lips is who will come second or third. For Brad to better his 2009 performance it will require dedication and focus. Will he do it? Well, you don’t get multiple Gold medals on the Track for being a quitter. What I do know that is he’ll give it his best shot.
Up and ComerBoth still young and with lots to prove (and win) it’s a difficult choice to choose between Geraint Thomas and Ben Swift. The SKY team mates have talent in abundance, yet if I have to place my hat on anyone I’ll go for Ben Swift as his ability to cope under pressure around some of the faster riders in the world has helped no doubt to secure him his place in the Tour this year. The best he can hope for is to bag one, maybe two stages. I can’t wait to see him and Cav go head to head.
Posted in Featured, Races, Teams
Tagged 2011, Ben Swift, bradley wiggins, david millar, Geraint Thomas, great britain, mark cavendish, preview, tour de france
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2011 Tour de France Preview – Estonia & Lithuania
Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.
Not many consider Estonia a hotbed of cycling talent, but the country’s most famous cyclist also holds one of the most underrated Tour records. While most remember Jaan Kirsipuu for his 4 Tour stage wins, or his 6 days in yellow in 1999, the former Estonian champion is also known for one more impressive Tour accomplishment: dropping out (consistently). It’s true: Kirsipuu abandoned the Tour on 13 consecutive occasions, setting a record that no one wants to match.
All kidding aside, Kirsipuu is about to be overshadowed by a potential Tour contender in Cofidis’ Rein Taaramäe. While Taaramäe’s goal of a top-10 in Paris may come as a surprise to many, his progress and results over the past few years put him on track to be a grand tour star. Taaramäe won a stage of Tour de l’Avenir in 2008 and has finished in the top-10 at the Tour de Romandie, Tour de Suisse, Volta a Catalunya, Paris–Nice and the Critérium International, just to name a few.
This year, Taaramäe took the youth classification at both the Critérium International (3rd overall) and Paris-Nice (4th overall). Needless to say, he’s seems ready, willing, and capable of a top-10 at this year’s Tour de France. TThat said, the young Estonian failed to finish the Tour last year and his Cofidis team is relatively weak–at least in terms of being able to support a legitimate GC rider.
Like Estonia, Lithuania ‘s cycling accomplishments aren’t well known–at least from the men’s side of things. But Lithuania is also home to Rasa PolikeviÄiÅ«tÄ—, Edita PuÄinskaitÄ— and Diana ŽiliÅ«tÄ—–all of whom have donned the rainbow stripes as World Champion. At this year’s Tour, Lithuania’s most famous rider, Tomas Vaitkus, will once again take the start line for Astana while neo-pro Rumunas Navardauskas makes his Tour debut as a member of the Garmin-Cervélo squad.
Vaitkus is probably best known for his U23 Time Trial World Championship in 2002. Since then, he’s been a strong rouleur but has found with little success in the grand tours aside from winning Stage 9 of the 2007 Giro d’Italia. In this year’s Tour de France, his best opportunity may be in a breakaway during the second or third week–if he can make it that far.
Garmin’s-Cervelo’s Rumunas Navardauskas has all of Lithuania on his back as he dons his nation’s colors in his first Tour. Despite being a national champion, Navardauskas is a relative unknown. To date, his best results came as a U23 thanks to a victory in the amateur Liège-Bastogne-Liège and a U23 national title in 2007 along with several top finishes in some of Europe’s toughest U23 classics. Needless to say, this will be a very interesting Tour for the young Lithuanian.
Man of the Hour: With a stack of impressive palmarès, and a ton of confidence, Cofidis’ Rein Taaramäe seems to be a solid bet on a top-10. Although he’s not French, he’s been with Cofidis his entire career and will undoubtedly have the support of the home nation’s fans.
On the Hot Seat: With only three riders from Estonia and Lithuania, someone has to be on the hot seat, right? Without a win in 2011, the honor goes to Tomas Vaitkus.
Up-and-Comer: As a first year World Tour professional, Rumunas Navardauskas is by definition an Up-and-Comer. After all, he beat-out Paris-Roubaix winner Johan Van Summeren for the final spot on what is being heralded as Garmin’s strongest ever Tour squad. While he may be used and abused as a workhorse, he’ll have his time to shine–let’s see what happens.
Posted in Featured, Races, Teams
Tagged 2011, cofidis, estonia, garmin-cervelo, kirsipuu, lithuania, navardauskas, preview, taarame, tour de france, vaitkus
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2011 Tour de France Preview – South & Central America
Pavé would like to thank Handspun, Clément, and Laekhouse for supporting our coverage of the 2011 Tour de France.
Five years from now, I suspect there will be much to say about Colombia’s Tour prospects, as a fine young crop of Colombian professionals—thanks largely to the revitalization of the nation’s once-formidable national program—is beginning to hit the sport’s upper echelon.
Right now though, Colombia only sends two riders to the 2011 Tour de France—a modest number, but one that nonetheless could produce some impressive results. First off, there’s Cofidis rider Leonardo Duque, a man most likely seeking breakaway opportunities during the second and third weeks. A handy opportunist who has several top-10 finishes in various semi-classics on his resume, Duque’s best win to date was Stage 16 of the 2007 Tour of Spain. Expect to see him off the front on more than one occasion, hoping to score an impressive win for himself and his French team.
That said, the real gem of Colombia’s Tour contingent is Team Sky’s Rigoberto Uran, one of the most underrated riders in the sport. Only 24-years-old, Uran’s been a pro since 2006! His resume already boasts top-10 finishes in the Tour of Romandie, Tour de Suisse (twice), the Volta a Catalunya (second-place in 2008), the Tour of Lombardy, and Liege-Bastogne-Liege (fifth-place this year). Those aren’t random results—this rider is quickly developing a track record of performing well in some of the world’s toughest events. Sky was smart to sign him when they had the chance.
Uran heads to this year’s Tour as one of the men charged with keeping an eye on Bradley Wiggins when things get dicey—especially in the high mountains. That said, I expect to see Uran with at least one or two chances to ride for himself, either from a breakaway, or possibly on one of the first week’s tricky, uphill finishes. I also won’t be surprised to see him finish the race somewhere at or near the top-10 overall—he’s that talented.
Man of the Hour: Juan Mauricio Soler won Colombia its last Tour stage back in 2007. This year, Cofidis’ Leonardo Duque hopes to become the latest.
On the Hot Seat: Were it not for the unfortunate accidents suffered by Movistar’s  Xavi Tondo and Soler before this year’s Tour, it’s unlikely that Costa Rica’s Andrey Amador would be racing. The youngster with a mixed-Spanish, Costa Rican, and Russian heritage won the Prologue of the 2008 Tour de l’Avenir and should be an asset to his team on the flats. Then again, the Tour’s pressure-cooker atmosphere is hard enough to handle when you’re a seasoned pro, let alone when it’s your first time.
Up-and-Comer: Sky’s Rigoberto Uran is due for a major win at some point—this year’s Tour might just be his time to shine.






