Tour de France News Extra for July 18, 2004
Edited by Anthony Tan
Stage 14 preview: Green sea for sprinters
By Anthony Tan
"Because I can..."
Photo ©: Roberto Bettini
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After transferring from the hilltop finish of the Plateau de Beille to
the fortified city of Carcassonne yesterday, the 160 riders left in the
91st Tour de France face an about-turn and head northeast to the town
of Nimes for Stage 14.
A pancake-flat stage with no mountain in sight, riders will count their
blessings with the Pyrénées now behind them and a rest day to look forward
to. It's a direct route that hugs the coastline to Marseille, passing
through the well-known cities of Béziers and Montpellier, and containing
two hot-spot sprints at Capstang (km 53) and Villevieille (km 166.5).
Flat as a pancake
Photo ©: CN/AFP
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The team of maillot jaune Thomas Voeckler, Brioches La Boulangère,
and Lance Armstrong's USPS/Berry Floor Blue Train will be more than content
to see a break go early on, provided, of course, those in the break represent
no threat to the overall classification. This will allow the baker boys
and boys in blue to set a fast but even tempo before the sprinters' teams
take control in the final 50 kilometres or so.
With 'The Boss' looking a sure-fire bet for a sixth consecutive Tour
victory and 'Tricky Dicky' Ricky Virenque well ahead in the mountains
classification, the French housewives' favourite aiming for a record seventh
King of the Mountains title, it appears the competition for the maillot
vert will once again become the most hotly-contested item of clothing
in Le Tour's final week.
This is the last stage for the fast men before the riders hit the Champs-Elysées,
so expect to see McEwen, Zabel, Hushovd, O'Grady and Hondo rubbing shoulders
with one another as the peloton storms into Nimes at breakneck speed.
Basso the most dangerous adversary
Danger man: Ivan Basso
Photo ©: Chris Henry
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Dr. Michele Ferrari, one-time trainer and occasional adviser to defending
Tour champion Lance Armstrong, believes CSC's Ivan Basso to be the most
serious threat to the Texan's chances of taking a record sixth consecutive
win. In his latest
diary on Cyclingnews, Dr. Ferrari writes: "So far, the race
has suggested Ivan Basso to be the most dangerous adversary for Armstrong;
much improved from last year, light and powerful on the climbs."
However, the good doctor acknowledges a visibly improved Armstrong compared
to that of the previous day's stage to La Mongie. "Lance today was more
brilliant than yesterday, a sign of excellent recovery and endurance skills
that probably compensate for a minor explosiveness if compared to some
years ago. His climbing action was very fluid (90-95 RPM), while Ullrich
confirms his unhappiness, suffering on much lower cadences than those
displayed last year."
Click
here to read more from the Dr. Ferarri's Tour de France diary.
It's all good for Alessio-Bianchi
Caucchioli still in the hunt
Photo ©: Chris Henry
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Despite Scott Sunderland (and presumably many others) describing the
tempo riding by US Postal/Berry Floor as "not comfortable", our resident
diarist was still able to help his team leader Pietro Caucchioli in the
early mountains before his legs "ran out of bikkies" on the third-to-last
climb of the Col d'Agnes. Caucchioli performed solidly to finish ninth
on the stage, and in doing so, kept his position in the top 10 on the
overall classification.
Wrote Sunderland in his latest
diary entry: "I think many underestimated the Pyrenean stages. Speaking
for myself and the comments from some of the others, the tempo was not
comfortable today, even just sitting in the wheels of US Postal it wasn't.
I was happy to be up there for Caucchioli for the initial climbs. I couldn't
get to him for the final but I did everything I could for him before.
He finished a great day off with ninth place.
Sunderland also praised Iban Mayo for not quitting during his darkest
hour in the race, but would have preferred to be in a different group,
with the incessant screaming from thousands of maniacal supporters playing
havoc with his ears by the day's end.
"Mayo could have got off, it takes some guts to keep going. He's come
to the Tour to win, so it's really hard to digest what's happened. For
him to ride that last climb with so many people there to see him, while
carrying the whole weight of the Basque people on his shoulders...It's
not unless you're actually there, that you can grasp the true impact of
it all."
"I was relieved when we got to 2km to go where the tour organisation
had it all barricaded; my ears were ringing. Even though he hasn't been
going well, the people were still supporting Mayo so much; yelling out
"courage, courage". A few times I heard a surprising "boo", but 99 percent
of the crowd were cheering for Iban and all the other Euskaltel riders,"
he wrote.
Click
here to read more from Scott's Tour de France diary.
R.A.G.T. needs to buckle-up
Rinero trying
Photo ©: Caroline Yang
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As the peloton were making their way through the Massif Central a few
days ago, R.A.G.T. Semences-MG Rover team manager Jean-Luc Jonrond expressed
a strong desire for his team to "buck our ideas up and get a grip... otherwise
we'll find ourselves with the dunce's cap on." However, Jonrond also maintained
the need to be realistic, and indicated the team's selection of favouring
experience to offensive spirit may have been to their detriment. Here's
what he had to say.
Q: Jean-Luc, what is happening in the RAGT Semences- MG Rover
formation?
Jean-Luc Jonrond: We have to admit that a degree of doubt is settling
in. And we have to get rid of this right away. We have to buck our ideas
up - and I mean the whole team. RAGT Semences-MG Rover cannot be content
just to follow, they have to be where the action is. The motto "we can
do better tomorrow" is out the window now. The team cannot sit back and
be happy with a mid-field seventieth place but give it all its got and
aim for twentieth. It's exactly the same thing. Okay, the risks are higher,
but that's where it's all at, it's where we have to be.
Q: How do you see the near future?
J-LJ: Well, we have to be realistic. Either we get a grip and
anything is possible, otherwise we'll find ourselves with the dunce's
cap on. Take a look at Richard Virenque. He's not the chap he was when
he was twenty. But just look at his determination and enthusiasm! I've
not lost hope of seeing Gilles Bouvard back on top form. He's got experience
of the Tour. He's got to use it! And even if Christophe Rinero is absent
today, I've still got confidence in him. And also Ludovic Martin, who
is still learning but could do well. There's also Sylvain Calzati. Without
any favouritism, he has certainly proved that he's deserves his place
on the Tour. Pierre Bourquenoud promised he'd make his mark in the mountains.
You'll be looking out for him - so will I.
Q: What conclusions do you draw about the team you have selected?
J-LJ: We can't bring the team into question. The team is as it
is. We favoured experience perhaps to the detriment of a more offensive
spirit. Some riders like Nicolas Reynaud have lost out due to this choice.
He came through from the amateurs and there was no guarantee that he could
finish in Paris - that's not the way we chose it to be. No regrets though,
but it means we have to change our strategy starting with attitude. We
were so stuck on the idea of not making it through to the end that we
favoured a collective finish in Paris. However, this has meant that we
have been sitting back waiting for things to happen - and that has got
to change.
McConneloug appeals for spot on U.S. Olympic MTB Team
Mary McConneloug has filed an appeal over USA Cycling's decision to nominate
Sue Haywood to the U.S. Olympic MTB Team, reports the San Francisco
Chronicle.
USA Cycling selected Haywood based on her UCI ranking for the year ending
July 12, however according to Tim Reynolds, Associated Press sports writer
for the SF Chronicle, McConneloug originally placed 23rd at the
World Marathon MTB championships in Austria on July 11, which would have
given her enough points to end the Olympic qualifying year slightly ahead
of Haywood. Official results, however, put McConneloug 24th, her corrected
position costing her at least one point.
Confusing the issue further was USA Cycling's decision to award Haywood
15 points from a race last summer in Idaho and the decision by the UCI
not to include those points in their official rankings. The UCI calculation,
which, if published on July 12, would have excluded the disputed 15 points
because those results were not forwarded to its offices.
Jennifer Miller, spokeswoman for McConneloug's Seven Cycles team, declined
to discuss the appeal or whether a hearing had been scheduled. As of Saturday,
USA Cycling's Olympic team leader Steve Johnson had not seen the appeal
from McConneloug.
Cyclist crushed to death in Iowa
43 year-old Iowan resident and avid cyclist, David L. Holmes, was crushed
to death while out training last Wednesday, July 14.
According to Kim West from Des Moines, Iowa, Holmes was out on a routine
training ride that took him through a highway construction zone. A pilot
vehicle - hired by the construction company to safely lead vehicles through
the single-lane zone one direction at a time - passed him while he rode
his bike through the zone; after the pilot vehicle passed, a semi-truck
and trailer also overtook Holmes, and reportedly cut back over too soon,
crushing the cyclist with its rear wheels.
West has said the local newspapers have made it sound like Holmes 'lost
control' of his bike. "Not hard to do when a semi is crushing you," he
wrote in an email to Cyclingnews. "David was married in April of
this year. He did Paris-Brest-Paris in the past, and organized many races
in and around Iowa. We miss him already."
A funeral service was held for David on Saturday, July 17, at the Cunnick-Collins
Mortuary Chapel in Davenport, Iowa. He was buried in Pine Hill Cemetery.
Following is an orbituary on David from a local newspaper:
David Lee Holmes was born Sept. 6, 1961, to Donald and Deanna (Lange)
Holmes in Davenport. He married Tamara L. Solbrig on April 1, 2004, in
Davenport. Mr. Holmes was employed as a journeyman electrician through
IBEW Local 145 in Rock Island. David was an avid bicyclist. He was a member
of the Quad-City Bicycle Club, the Ultra Marathon Cycling Association,
and the event director of the UMCA 24 Hour Time Trial Championships. He
had competed in the Paris-Brest-Paris in 1991 covering 750 miles in 63
hours, the Criterion races in Rock Island and many others. Survivors include
his wife, Tamera; his parents, Donald and Deanna Holmes, of Davenport;
three children, Brittni, Courtney, and David, all at home; two stepsons,
Cory Reeves, stationed at the Davis-Monthan AFB, Tucson, Ariz., and Kyle
Reeves, of Davenport. In lieu of flowers, memorials may go to the family.
Cyclingnews wishes David's family and friends our warmest condolences.
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