88th Tour de France - Grand Tour

France, July 7 - 29, 2001

 
2000 Tour de France    Preview    Start List    Team Selection    Initial Announcement    Reactions

International Television Schedule

France

            
		

FRANCE 3         Autour Du Tour                  Live broadcast daily except Stage 1            11:00
                 Le Journal Du Tour              Live broadcast daily                           20:15
                 Le 19/20                        Daily summaries & headlines
                 Soir 3                          Daily summaries & headlines
FRANCE 2         En Attendant Le Tour            Live  daily except stages 1,10,12,14-16 & 21   13:30-13:50
                 Stage direct                    Live broadcast daily                           15:00-15:30
                                                 Stages 10,12,15,16 & 21 uninterupted           10:30-12:00
                 Le Velo Club                    Each day live except Stage 1                   17:30
                 Telematin                       Daily summaries & headlines                    6:00-9:00
                 Journal 13H                     Daily summaries & headlines                    13:00
                 Journal 20H                     Daily summaries & headlines                    20:15
                 Le Journal De La Nuit           Daily summaries & headlines                    0:00

TF1              Extracts of JT. 13h-20h-00h     Daily summaries & headlines

L'EQUIPE TV      Extracts of JT.
                 Daily highlights

i-TV             News and programs

M 6              News and programs

America

United States



OLN              Live stage coverage             7-14,16,18,24-28 July                          09.30-11.30
                                                 17,20,21 July                                  07.30-11.30
						
                 Repeat of live coverage         7-14,16,17-21,23-26 July                       15.00-17.00
                                                 19,23 July                                     09.30-11.30
                                                 22,23 July                                     21.00-23.00
						
                 Commentary & analysis of
                 day's stage                     7-18,20,21,24-28 July                          21.00-23.00
		
                 Commentary & analysis of
                 race's first 11 stages          19 July                                        21.00-23.00
		
                 Commentary & analysis of 
                 race's critical mountain
                 stages                          23 July                                        21.00-23.00
		
                 Post-race show                  30 July                                        21.00-22.00
	

US Postal Service Telekom   1 Lance Armstrong (USA) 11 Jan Ullrich (Ger) 2 Roberto Heras (Spa) 12 Udo Bölts (Ger) 3 Viatjeslav Ekimov (Rus) 13 Giuseppe Guerini (Ita) 4 Tyler Hamilton (USA) 14 Jens Heppner (Ger) 5 George Hincapie (USA) 15 Andreas Klöden (Ger) 6 Steffen Kjaergaard (Nor) 16 Kevin Livingston (USA), 7 Victor Hugo Pena (Col) 17 Alexandre Vinokoerov (Kaz) 8 Jose Luis Rubiera (Spa) 18 Steffen Wesemann (Ger) 9 Christian Vandevelde (USA) 19 Erik Zabel (Ger)   ONCE Festina   21 Joseba Beloki (Spa) 31 Christophe Moreau (Fra) 22 Santos Gonzalez (Spa) 32 Florent Brard (Fra) 23 Alvaro Gonzalez De Galdeano (Spa) 33 Angel Casero (Spa) 24 Igor Gonzalez De Galdeano (Spa) 34 Pascal Chanteur (Fra) 25 Ivan Gutierrez (Spa) 35 Felix Garcia-Casas (Spa) 26 Jörg Jaksche (Ger) 36 Pascal Lino (Fra) 27 Mikel Pradera (Spa) 37 Luis Perez (Spa) 28 Carlos Sastre (Spa) 38 Arnaud Pretot (Fra) 29 Marcos Serrano (Spa) 39 Sven Teutenberg (Ger)   Fassa Bortolo Rabobank   41 Francesco Casagrande (Ita) 51 Michael Boogerd (Ned) 42 Fabio Baldato (Ita) 52 Bram De Groot (Ned) 43 Ivan Basso (Ita) 53 Steven De Jongh (Ned) 44 Wladimir Belli (Ita) 54 Erik Dekker (Ned) 45 Sergei Ivanov (Rus) 55 Maarten Den Bakker (Ned) 46 Nicola Loda (Ita) 56 Marc Lotz (Ned) 47 Alessandro Petacchi (Ita) 57 Grischa Niermann (Ger) 48 Oscar Pozzi (Ita) 58 Geert Verheyen (Bel) 49 Matteo Tossato (Ita) 59 Marc Wauters (Bel)   Lotto-Adecco Cofidis   61 Rik Verbrugghe (Bel) 71 David Millar (GBr) 62 Mario Aerts (Bel) 72 Daniel Atienza (Spa) 63 Serge Baguet (Bel) 73 Inigo Cuesta (Spa), 64 Jeroen Blijlevens (Ned) 74 Andrei Kivilev (Kaz) 65 Fabien De Waele (Bel) 75 Massimiliano Lelli (Ita) 66 Guennadi Mikhailov (Rus) 76 Nico Mattan (Bel) 67 Kurt Van De Wouwer (Bel) 77 David Moncoutié (Fra) 68 Paul Van Hyfte (Bel) 78 Christophe Rinero (Fra) 69 Steve Vermaut (Bel) 79 Guido Trentin (Ita)   Mapei iBanesto.com   81 Daniele Nardello (Ita) 91 Francisco Mancebo (Spa) 82 Michele Bartoli (Ita) 92 Santiago Blanco (Spa) 83 Paolo Bettini (Ita) 93 Thomas Brozyna (Pol) 84 Davide Bramati (Ita) 94 José Vicente Garcia-Acosta (Spa) 85 Paolo Fornaciari (Ita) 95 Eladio Jimenez (Spa) 86 Stefano Garzelli (Ita) 96 Denis Mentchov (Rus) 87 Bart Leysen (Bel) 97 Jon Odriozola (Spa) 88 Tom Steels (Bel) 98 Javier Pascual Rodriguez (Spa) 89 Stefano Zanini (Ita) 99 Leonardo Piepoli (Ita)   Credit Agricole Euskaltel-Euskadi   101 Bobby Julich (USA) 111 David Etxebarria (Spa) 102 Frédéric Bessy (Fra) 112 Angel Castresana (Spa) 103 Sebastien Hinault (Fra) 113 Inigo Chaureau (Spa) 104 Thor Hushovd (Nor) 114 Txema Del Olmo (Spa) 105 Christopher Jenner (Fra) 115 Unai Etxebarria (Ven) 106 Anthony Morin (Fra) 116 Iker Flores (Spa) 107 Stuart O'Grady (Aus) 117 Roberto Laiseka (Spa) 108 Jonathan Vaughters (USA) 118 Alberto Lopez De Munain (Spa) 109 Jens Voigt (Ger) 119 Haimar Zubeldia (Spa)   Ag2R-Prevoyance CSC - Tiscali   121 Benoit Salmon (Fra) 131 Laurent Jalabert (Fra) 122 Christophe Agnolutto (Fra) 132 Michael Blaudzun (Den) 123 Stéphane Bergès (Fra) 133 Francisco Cerezo (Spa) 124 Alexandre Botsjarov (Rus) 134 Marcellino Garcia (Spa) 125 Ludovic Capelle (Bel), 135 Nicolas Jalabert (Fra), 126 Sébastien Demarbaix (Bel) 136 Nikolai Bo Larsen (Den) 127 Jaan Kirsipuu (Est) 137 Jacob Piil (Den) 128 Gilles Maignan (Fra) 138 Nicki Sörensen (Den) 129 Ludovic Turpin (Fra) 139 Rolf Sörensen (Den)   Jean Delatour Kelme   141 Laurent Brochard (Fra) 151 Santiago Botero (Spa) 142 Jérome Bernard (Fra) 152 Felix Rafael Cardenas (Col) 143 Gilles Bouvard (Fra) 153 Laurent Desbiens (Fra) 144 Stéphane Goubert (Fra) 154 Aitor Gonzalez (Spa) 145 Patrice Halgand (Fra) 155 José Enrique Gutierrez (Spa) 146 Christophe Oriol (Fra) 156 Javier Pascual Llorente (Spa) 147 Laurent Roux (Fra) 157 Oscar Sevilla (Spa) 148 Eddy Seigneur (Fra), 158 Antonio Tauler (Spa) 149 Olivier Trastour (Fra) 159 José Angel Vidal (Spa)   Bonjour Lampre-Daikin   161 Didier Rous (Fra) 171 Marco Serpellini (Ita) 162 Walter Bénéteau (Fra) 172 Raivis Belohvosciks (Lat) 163 Franck Bouyer (Fra) 173 Rubens Bertogliati (Swi) 164 Sylvain Chavanel (Fra) 174 Ludo Dierckxens (Bel) 165 Damien Nazon (Fra) 175 Matteo Frutti (Ita) 166 Olivier Perraudeau (Fra) 176 Robert Hunter (RSA) 167 Franck Renier (Fra) 177 Marco Pinotti (Ita) 168 Jean-Cyril Robin (Fra) 178 Jan Svorada (Cze) 169 François Simon (Fra) 179 Johan Verstrepen (Bel)   Française Des Jeux Domo-Farm Frites   181 Sven Montgomery (Swi) 191 Romans Vainsteins (Lat) 182 Jimmy Casper (Fra) 192 Enrico Cassani (Ita) 183 Jacky Durand (Fra) 193 Servais Knaven (Ned) 184 Frédéric Guesdon (Fra) 194 Axel Merckx (Bel) 185 Emmanuel Magnien (Fra) 195 Marco Milesi (Ita) 186 Bradley McGee (Aus) 196 Johan Museeuw (Bel) 187 Christoph Mengin (Fra) 197 Fred Rodriguez (USA) 188 Daniel Schnider (Swi) 198 Max Van Heeswijk (Ned) 189 Nicolas Vogondy (Fra) 199 Piotr Wadecki (Pol)   Bigmat Auber 93   201 Stéphane Heulot (Fra) 202 Guillaume Auger (Fra) 203 Ludovic Auger (Fra) 204 Christophe Capelle (Fra) 205 Thierry Gouvenou (Fra) 206 Xavier Jan (Fra) 207 Loïc Lamouller (Fra) 208 Alexei Sivakov (Rus) 209 Sébastien Talabardon (Fra)

Pantheon Power; or Fat Lady Sings the Déjà Vu

By Tim Maloney, cyclingnews.com correspondent
Lance Armstrong - Photo: ©Patrick Kovarik/AFP Photo
Lance Armstrong
Photo: ©Patrick Kovarik/AFP Photo

After his recent win in the Tour Of Suisse and ascension to the #1 slot in the UCI rankings, Lance Armstrong now seeks entry to the "pantheon" of Tour De France greatness as he looks for his third straight win in Le Grande Boucle. Only four other cyclists have ever achieved this lofty goal; Louison Bobet (53-54-55), Jacques Anquetil (61-62-63), Eddy Merckx (69-70-71-72) and Miguel Indurain (91-92-93-94-95).

Indurain went on to post an unprecedented 5 consecutive wins, Merckx and Anquetil added one more to their triples before they faltered and Bobet never won another Tour. In 2001, Armstrong has followed his usual meticulous preparation and reinforced his United States Postal Service team in the off-season with top talent like 2000 Tour of Spain winner Roberto Heras to be ready for the challenge. If one examines the history of the Tour De France on paper, the odds are against Armstrong that he will post three straight wins. Lots of doubles, so few triples...but overcoming insurmountable odds is nothing new for Armstrong; his winning struggle against life-threatening testicular cancer is well know around the globe.

It is said that world class athletes at the top level of sport are so close in ability that it's often the mental game that counts for victory. Simply stated, no one in cycling today has the mental acuity and determination of Lance Armstrong when it comes to the Tour De France. Can Armstrong's main rival Jan Ullrich and his powerful Deutsche Telekom team be a threat to prevent Armstrong from winning a third straight Tour? Ullrich, the newly crowned German champion said after his win that "my form is good and my morale is even better."

Should Lance have a bad crash or a "jour sans" at a crucial moment, or if Ullrich rides to his true potential as he did in the 2000 Olympic Road Race, he can be a real danger man for Armstrong.
Jan Ullrich - Photo ©: Joel Saget/AFP Photo
Jan Ullrich
Photo ©: Joel Saget/AFP Photo

It's simply part of the legend and lore of the Tour and why it's the greatest cycling event on planet earth. There is so much at stake, every day, all day in the Tour. Every rider is totally keyed up, ready to race each stage like a World Championships. Lance's meticulous preparation, laser-like focus and an uncommon ability to suffer will serve well should a shadow of misfortune fall on him or the hammer man come to take his blows on the defending champion. It ain't in the bag yet folks, the fat lady don't sing 'till Paris, but barring bad luck or an unexpected defaillance, Lance will gain access to hallowed ground, those Elysian Fields of three time Tour de France winners Indurain, Merckx Anquetil and Bobet.

Against the backdrop of Lance Armstrong vs. Jan Ullrich, the drama of the 2001 Tour De France will feature four acts. The curtain rises on Act One in the opening week of this years Tour in Dunkerque, with an 8km prologue time trial. The first week will certainly will feature the Battle of the Beastly Belgians, with a hungry and dynamic Domo-Farm Frites team, a well-prepared Lotto squad ready to fight for the Maillot Jaune as the Tour traverses their homeland.

Prologue specialist and rouleur extrordinaire Rik Verbrugghe (Lotto) will have a great shot at grabbing the Yellow Tunic early on, as will newly crowned Italian Champ Daniele Nardello (Mapei-Quick Step). While Mario Cipollini is relaxing at the beach in Viareggio during this year's Tour, look for Belgian super-sprinter Tom Steels (Mapei-Quick Step) to battle emerging Italian Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa Bortolo), World Champion Romans Vainsteins and German powerhouse Erik Zabel (Deutsche Telekom)

After 5 days of racing comes the entr'acte spectacular of the Team Time Trial on Stage 5, and a transition day on Friday 13th's Stage 6, where French teams will be looking for their moment of glory while all the other teams are relaxing.

Act 2, the Backbone Blues opens on Bastille Day, July 14th. Woe to any rider who isn't on his game on this tough, intense stage from Strasbourg on the French-German border that traces bumpy backbone of the Vosges Mountains into Colmar; A perfect stage for LFDJ's up and coming climber Sven Montgomery to show his stuff.

Then on to the redoubt of the Alps. After another long transition stage to Aix-les-Bains, where Armstrong retired from the TDF in '96 on a cold, wet day, a pair of crucial mountain stages in the Alps will shake up the classement and show which rider has the best chance of taking the Maillot Jaune back to Paris. Stage 10 encompasses 208km from Aix-les-Bains to L'Alpe D'Huez over climb two tough passes (Madeleine and Glandon) before the mythical assault of L'Alpe.

Day 12 will show who has the legs to win the 2001 Tour De France; a 32km individual time trial on Stage 11 from Grenoble including a tough 18.7km climb to the summit of the Col de Chamrousse, a winding 7.1% average gradient. Following his recent win the uphill TT in the Tour de Suisse, Lance Armstrong should be a favourite to take both the stage win and the Maillot Jaune of Tour De France leadership. But with the Pyrenees looming ahead, Lance and his USPS boys will now have a major challenge to keep the Maillot Jaune all the way to Paris.

Act 3 might be called Summit Meeting or A Pyrenees Passion Play. After a long rest day transfer to Perpignan on the Mediterranean coast, the next three stages (12-13-14) should determine the 2001 Tour. Three consecutive mountain stages with three mountaintop stage finishes present a difficult challenge for both the defenders of and the pretenders to le Maillot Jaune.
Erik Zabel - Photo: ©Pascal George/AFP Photo
Erik Zabel
Photo: ©Pascal George/AFP Photo

Stage 12 is short and intense, with the first-time climb of 9.4km at 7% to the Bonsacre Plateau near Ax-Les-Thermes. Bound to see some fireworks. But Stage 13 is the key to winning the Pyrenees. With 7 climbs totaling 68.4 km over a distance of 222 km, Stage 13 presents a huge challenge, especially four major ascents including the mountaintop finish of Pla d' Adet in the last 70km. Armstrong will be counting on his USPS boys to counter the onslaught of attacks from Ullrich, O.N.C.E’s Joseba Beloki, Francesco Casagrande (Fassa Bortolo), Haimar Zubeldia (Euskatel-Euskadi) and whichever riders have the legs to go after him on the tough Pyrennees climbs.

After the second rest day at the conclusion of the Pyrenees, it's Act 4, the Final Countdown, the true test of the 2001 Tour De France. Whomever has the Maillot Jaune on the morning of Stage 16 in Pau will have three difficult 200km+ stages up through the corrugated underbelly to defend the race lead until the decisive 61km final time trial in Montlucon on Stage 19. Once the final results of the fast, rolling time trial are known, the Tour De France 2001 peloton will take the TGV train to Orleans for the final two stages.

189 riders will assemble in Dunkerque, France this Saturday for the 2001 Tour and as always in the Tour De France, anything is possible in the toughest, most unpredictable cycling circus on Planet Earth. But as the fat lady sings from the top of the Eiffel Tower about 5pm on Sunday July 29th, don't be too surprised if you get that déjà vu feeling as the strains of the Star Spangled Banner waft once again across the Place De La Concorde.

The final selection - 21 teams for le Tour

By Gerard Knapp

Paris, May 2, 11am: After weeks of speculation, the 2001 Tour De France race director Jean Marie Leblanc told the assembled media at the Masion du Nord this morning that the final four wildcard selections for the Tour this year would be actually be five, as he unexpectedly increased the number of teams in this year's Tour to 21.

The lucky final five are Lotto, Euskaltel-Euskadi and CSC World Online, with two French teams, Big Mat and La Francaise des Jeux making up a total of 21 teams to contest the 2001 Tour de France.

LeBlanc first announced Lotto, selected due to its fine early season form. The Belgian team was the only real favourite based on results to gain selection. The next team he announced was the Spanish Euskaltel-Euskadi outfit, which features multiple Tour stage winner David Etxebarria. LeBlanc praised the team for its efforts in reaching Division 1 status this year (Div 2 last year) and it features some promising young riders for the mountains.

The selection of CSC World Online was no real surprise, given that it contains French legend Laurent Jalabert and is managed by former winner Bjarne Riis. But LeBlanc also pointed to Rolf Sorensen, Arvis Piziks and Jacob Piil as all quality riders who would ride well.

Then came the hotly contested fourth wildcard, and LeBlanc dropped the bombshell on the hopes of the Italian squads, the emerging US team of Mercury-Viatel, and cycling fans around the world who will not see Mario Cipollini in action, nor a showdown in the mountains with Marco Pantani.

Instead of announcing the fourth spot, LeBlanc announced that two French squads - La Francaise des Jeux and Big Mat - Auber 93 - would be the final two selections for the 2001 Tour.

Out of the 21 teams to ride the Tour this year, eight will be French and five will be Division 2, which puts a different spin on the race only featuring the best teams in the world. However, if lower-ranked French teams do not get a start in the Tour, then their existence is threatened and given the lobbying by the Big Mat and FDJ management, both teams were given their start. Cyclingnews learned at the press conference that Big Mat had committed an additional five million French francs to ensure the team could compete in this year's Tour.

LeBlanc made mention of the Italian squads, such as Mercatone Uno and Saeco. However, LeBlanc said he could not be confident of Marco Pantani's condition in July and also recognised Mario Cipollini's record of having the most stage wins of any current rider in the Tour de France. However, although Saeco have performed well in the early season LeBlanc said that they and Mercatone Uno would have their chance in the Giro d'Italia, which starts later this month.

As for the emerging US squad of Mercury-Viatel, LeBlanc said they had performed well early on in the season, but did not offer any further reasons for non-selection.

Following the press conference, cyclingnews online editor Jeff Jones spoke with Mercury team director John Wordin, who believed the final selections by the Societe "were not in the best interests of the sport".

"It's their race, they should do what they want, you have to respect their decision. But at the same time the race takes on a certain 'globalness' and by not having the best teams in the race, it's not in the best interests of the sport," Wordin said.

While not looking outwardly shattered, selection in the Tour de France was vital for Wordin and Mercury-Viatel, which also had triple Tour winner Greg LeMond on hand for additional input and lobbying. Wording said. "We'll still be around," he said of the team's future. "The reasons that he gave shows a lack of respect on his (LeBlanc) part for our program."

"All along they said they were going to make the selection criteria on who could ride well for three weeks. They took five teams and didn't use that criteria," he said. "I think they should have the right to take a certain number of French teams and they did that with the first selection (in January) when they took six teams.

"He (LeBlanc) said at the beginning of the year that six French teams will ride the Tour de France and now there's eight. I suppose they have the right to do that but I don't know if they can do that at the expense of better teams."

Ultimately, the aspirations of the Mercury-Viatel squad, and that of Mercatone Uno and Saeco, were set aside for the benefit of French cycling. Wordin said: "The selection was all about politics, and not about the quality of the teams."

Selection criteria

Earlier this year, Leblanc discussed the new formula for team selection for Le Tour, which will also be adopted by the organizers of the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta d'Espana. There were meant to be 20 teams of 9 riders chosen in two rounds: January 2001 and May 2001, with the criteria based on "sporting and ethics." Leblanc said that "we are looking for good performances from good teams." The new team selection criteria are as follows:

  • The team of the winner of the Tour de France 2000
  • The team winner of the teams classification of the Tour de France 2000, Giro 2000 and Vuelta 2000
  • The team winner of the UCI 2000 World Cup
  • The first 10 teams of the UCI Classification on 15th November 2000, under the condition, however, that they are still among the first 16 teams of the classification after transfers.
  • The UCI regulations will apply this procedure from the 2002 season for the three major Tours (Spain, Italy, France)
  • 4 remaining wild cards will be attributed at the end of April 2001.

This is to avoid the problems of the TDF 2000, where French teams were left at home during their national tour .

Top 16 Teams (January 23, 2001)

Team Deutsche Telekom (Germany)
Domo - Farm Frites (Belgium)
Banesto (Spain)
Kelme-Costa Blanca (Spain)
O.N.C.E. (Spain)
U.S. Postal Service (USA)
Ag2R Prevoyance (France)
Bonjour (France)
Cofidis Le Credit Par Telephone (France)
Credit Agricole (France)
Festina (France)
Jean Delatour (France)
Fassa Bortolo (Italy)
Lampre - Daikin (Italy)
Mapei - Quick Step (Italy)
Rabobank (Netherlands)

Wildcard selections (May 2, 2001)

Lotto-Adecco (Belgium)
CSC-Worldonline (Denmark)
Euskaltel-Euskadi (Spain)
La Francaise des Jeux (France)
Big Mat (France)

Short, intense climber's Tour De France for 2001

Paris, January 23, 2001: In announcing the 2001 Tour De France, race director Jean Marie Leblanc told his audience gathered in Le Palais De Congres that, "As the Tour De France enters a new century, it does so with a return to its roots - to Dunquerque, where in the early part of the century, the Tour often visited as a stage start or finish."

That may be true, but not much else about the 2001 Tour De France is traditional or ordinary. In fact, the short distance of 3462 km and difficult, unorthodox Tour parcours may be the most testing in the last decade. As the TDF video camera panned across the concerned faces of many the top riders seated in the front row of the hall, their serious expressions showed how much suffering would be on the menu for next July's Tour.

Starting in far northwest France on the English Channel coast, called the "Cote d'Opale", Dunkerque will be the site of the opening 8 km prologue. Kind of ironic, since was the site of the British WW2 panic evacuation in 1940, with prologue pro Brit, David Millar the favourite to take the first Maillot Jaune. After a weekend on the windy, hilly terrain of the coast of Le Manche, the Tour then heads into Belgium with a stage finish in Antwerp, with a few pavÈ sections of East Flanders on the menu. Then it's across Belgium in the only stage that's 100% outside of France with a few tasty "cÙtes" from Liege-Bastogne-Liege thrown in for good measure before the finish in Seraing.

The parcours dives due south back to France on Stage 4 from Huy, the start city of La Fleche Wallone to Verdun through the leg-sapping climbs of the Ardennes Mountains. A spectacular, rolling, Team Time Trial stage of 67 km from Verdun-Bar-Le-Duc will provide Stage 5 and already, the '01 TDF will certainly be finding its weak sisters.

Stages 6 and 7 will then traverse the Vosges Mountains to arrive at the foot of the Alpes; sleeper stages that don't look too hard on paper but both will put a major hurt on the legs of the TDF peloton, especially Stage 7 to Colmar with four Cat. 2 climbs in 162 km!

Unlike the previous few years, Stage 10 from Aix-Les-Bains to L'Alpe D'Huez will be the only point-to-point stage in the Alpes. With 208 km and the ascents of the 24 km long, 2000m high Col de la Madeleine and the steep 19.9 km long, 1924m Col du Glandon before the famous 14 km, 21 hairpin turn climb up to l'Alpe D'Huez, this alpine stage will be very tough.

But there will be still no rest for the peloton of Le Tour '01. The next day, Stage 11 is an uphill 32 km individual time trial from Grenoble up the steep ascent of the Chaine de Belledonne to Chamrousse; 18.7 km of climbing at 7.1% average gradient to reach the ski resort of Chamrousse. With tired legs from Stage 10, this uphill TT will be the first real moment of truth in Le Tour '01.

After the TT, it's rest day number 1, with a transfer to Perpignan at the foot of the Pyrenees Mountains. Unlike the last few years, the Pyrenees will be the stage where the '01 TDF is won or lost, with three consecutive mountaintop finishes on Stages 12, 13 and 14.

Stage 12 from Perpignan to Ax-Les-Thermes will conclude with an unknown final ascent to Plateau de Bonascre, 9.4 km climb at 7%; similar to the Plateau de Bielle climb where Marco Pantani won in a TDF stage in '98. 222 km Stage 13 will be the unlucky number for some riders in the '01 TDF, as it's likely to be truly the toughest test of the Tour. Six major cols with 80 km of climbing are on the menu before the mountaintop finish in Pla d'Adet.

The Pyrenees end with Stage 14; a short, sharp 144 km to the 7.5%, 13.7 km ascension of Luz Ardiden via the 1498 m Col d'Aspin and 2115 m Col du Tourmalet. Next year's Tour de France offers a tough trio of terrible Pyrenees stages, with back to back to back mountaintop finishes that will separate the men from the boys and set the stage for the final week back to Paris.

But when the Pyrenees are finished, Le Tour '01 offers No easy ride for the peloton to arrive back to Paris. Au contraire, the Tour heads straight back to the capital via center of France, on the tiny, twisting roads on the corrugated terrain and baking temps though le Massif Central. After a rest day in Pau and transition Stage 15, the subsequent two stages will be a major tempo test for whatever team that holds Le Maillot Jaune. Once Le Tour '01 arrives in the heart of France, the final race of truth will be Stage 18's 61 km Individual Time Trial from MontluÁon to Saint-Amand-Montrond. Then there are only two stages left before the finish in Paris of a short, intense Tour de France.

Prizemoney

Next year's prize list has been beefed up by ASO, the Tour organizers. The total prize list will be FF16,000,000 ($US2,285,000), with the winners of the classment general's share at FF2,500,000 ($US360,000).

More comments

On the subject of doping, Leblanc repeated his request of the previous year, "vite messieurs, vite," to Hein Verbruggen, UCI president and Daniel Baal, French Federation boss to come up with stronger controls on doping. "My conviction is that we will eventually find the right way to solve the doping problem," said Leblanc. Perhaps this was an aside to remind the assembled elite of world cycling just who was not attending the bash for the 2001 Tour; self-declared black sheep Richard Virenque and his ex-Festina mob, who were a few hundred kilometers north in Lille, enjoying the attentions of criminal prosecutors as the Festina court case continues.

With a short and difficult parcours, 12 new stage cities and a new formula for team invitations, the 2001 Tour De France promises to be intense. Lance Armstrong and his newly reinforced USPS squad will have to face the onslaught of the challenge from Olympic Champion Jan Ullrich and his Telekom team. As always, cyclingnews.com will be at Le Tour 2001, 24/7 with the best cycling content on the internet.

Reactions:

Jan Ullrich: "This is a Tour I like. I will do everything I can to start well prepared. My 2001 season has one big target: the Tour de France. And I like the stage with the Alpe d'Huez."

Walter Godefroot (Telekom): "The Tour is short and intense. I expect the decision in the Pyrenees. But maybe some big names will already be tired before the Alps."

Christophe Moreau: "I'm thinking about a top 3 place in Paris, a stage victory and I dream about the yellow jersey."

Joseba Beloki: "Many mountains, many time trials. I like that."

Christophe Agnulutto: "It's a pity the final stage isn't completely in Paris. It was a great happening in July."

Johan Bruyneel: "This Tour isn't made specially for Lance Armstrong. It is important to have a strong team."

Bjarne Riis: "The stage in the Vogeses could be very important and is a good stage for Laurent Jalabert. I am hoping for the first 10 days, including the team time trial."

Bernard Hinault: "I think the mountain time trial in Chamrousse is the most important stage."

Manulo Saiz: "I'm happy with the three stages in the Pyrenees. A lot of Spanish and Basque people will be there to motivate us."

Vicente Belda: "It will be a harder Tour than this year. We shall not lose so much time in the team time trial. We are hoping for Botero and Sevilla in the important mountain stages."

back to top