Showing posts tagged classic

Liège-Bastogne-Liège | preview

A quick overview of the contenders for the 2011 La Doyenne

Philippe Gilbert

Why he wins
Has there been a hotter favourite for La Doyenne since the days of Merckx or even Moreno Argentin? Gilbert hasn’t simply ground his rivals into the road this past week with his stunning victories in Amstel Gold and La Flèche Wallonne, he’s absolutely smashed them to smithereens. Everyone thought he was capable of winning Amstel in the way he did but no one thought he was capable of doing what he did on the Mur de Huy at La Flèche. Wow!

There are only two ways you can win a bike race - with your legs or with your head. The thing everyone loves about Philippe Gilbert is that he consistently uses both. Compare Gilbert’s wins this week with that of Cancellara in the cobbled classics. Cancellara was the strongest rider and the hottest of favourites, yet showed he didn’t have the smarts to find the top step of the podium. God knows what Spartacus was thinking at E3 Prijs Vlaanderen - Harelbeke when he showed up and blew everyone’s doors off. Surely the smarter play was to fake a cough on the start line, complain of a cold and roll over the finish line in 8th. Pressure off and you get to roll out the heroics at Flanders and Roubaix. Equally, you didn’t see Gilbert remonstrate with the Rabobank team car when they refused to ride in the closing kilometres of Amstel, instead he put himself on the front and worked to bring back the dangerous move by Andy Schleck. Smarts? Gilbert has got them in spades. And that’s why regardless of what the other teams throw at him on Sunday, he’ll combine them with his awesome form and the support of a more than handy team and win the ‘monument’ he desires the most - La Doyenne.

Why he doesn’t
Gilbert can’t follow every move and just like last year when Vino and Kolobnev got away, there’s a real danger that he might miss out again when the other favourites look at each and don’t help him chase down the counter attacks when they come. The other teams will be keen to isolate Gilbert so expect there to be a flurry of attacks in the closing 50km with Côte de la Redoute at 223km the likely scene of much of the animation as usual. The teams most likely to be active are those with more than one card to play like Leopard-Trek (Schlecks x 2), Team Sky (Gerrans and Löfkvist) Katusha (Rodriguez, Kolobnev and Di Luca) and Rabobank (Gesink and Sanchez Gil). Likewise, Liège-Bastogne-Liège has always been a much more tactical race than either of Amstel and La Flèche, so there’s a strong likelihood of a pretty decent sized break getting away. And just as Cancellera was brought undone by similar tactics in Paris-Roubaix, there is some chance that one of the smokeys in the break steals the main prize, denying Gilbert his trifecta of wins.

Alexandre Vinokourov

Why he wins
Defending champ Vino was a real surprise packet at La Flèche on Wednesday - finishing a very impressive 4th behind Gilbert on the Mur de Huy, a climb that you wouldn’t think would usually suit his characteristics. One thing we know about Vino is that he won’t die wondering when it comes to a monument like La Doyenne. And just as he did last year when he launched his winning attack with 17 kilometres to go on the descent of the Côte de la Roche aux Faucons, he is likely to be in the thick of things inside the final 20km. Vino knows that he’ll never beat Gilbert in the uphill finishing sprint so he’ll have to attack and counter attack in order to get away. Working in his favour is that there are a bunch of other riders with exactly the same plan in mind. If the likes of Gerrans, Kolobnev, Di Luca, Tony Martin and the Schlecks all have a crack, Vino will be poised to pounce on the counter at precisely the moment the rest of the field is on the rivet. Can he win Liège a third time? Yes. Yes he can.

Why he doesn’t
The one thing Vino doesn’t have at his disposal this year is a team mate of the calibre of Alberto Contador to pull the focus from his own aspirations. Last year, Vino had flown well and truly under the radar, with Contador garnering all the attention after his 3rd behind Evans at La Flèche. In fact it was only after Contador had duped his rivals by launching an attack on the climb of Côte de la Roche aux Faucons that Vino was able to counter on the descent. This year Vino will only be able to make hay on the backs of the other favourites and that is where he is likely to be undone. If he can’t get away and he’s still in the company of Gilbert in the final kilometre, Gilbert smokes him in the sprint.

Joaquin Rodriguez

Why he wins
Twice denied by Gilbert this week, the Spanish powerhouse from Katusha is definitely the man most likely to overthrow the King. On paper his team are probably the strongest in this year’s race and given that Liège is much more tactical than either Amstel or La Flèche, having a kick-ass team is why Rodriguez will finally over come his biggest rival. With Omega Pharma-Lotto having to burn matches to hold the break within spitting distance and then to cover the moves in the final 50kms, Rodriguez is the rider likely to have team mates at his side come crunch time. Don’t be surprised to see Rodriguez coming of the wheel of his team mate Di Luca when he finally bests Gilbert on the line.

Why he doesn’t
Sure, Rodriguez is good but unfortunately for him Gilbert is great and destined to become one of the greats. There is not a one day race that Gilbert cannot win when he sets his mind to it. I fully expect him to add the likes of Flanders and Roubaix to his palmares before he’s done. Before then, he’ll finally nab La Doyenne. What that means for Rodriguez is another 2nd, his third behind Gilbert for the week.

Other contenders

The Schlecks
Frank (3rd twice) and Andy (2009 winner) definitely have the characteristics to upset Gilbert on Sunday. Both have been on pretty good form during the Ardennes classics, though Frank raced without luck at Amstel (crashing behind Spartacus) as things were starting to hot up. As a double act and with the help of in form Fuglsang, Montfort and the irrepressible Voigt, the Leopard-Trek dream team have the firepower to take the race by the scruff of the neck. The only thing missing from the equation this year is having Bjarne Riis at the wheel of the team car. The same guys racing as Saxo-Bank won races by the truck load, yet in their new colours they seem to be lacking the tactical smarts at the decisive point in the race. Andy’s attack in Amstel was a cracker and more like what we’re accustomed to see from him. If Frank stays upright and they have both cards to play at Côte de la Redoute, there’s every chance one of them walks away a winner.

Simon Gerrans
After a terrific 3rd place in Amstel Gold last weekend, Gerro rolled his legs over and stayed out of trouble at La Flèche on Wednesday. Near the pointy end of the race approaching the Mur he was happy to let the other favourites smash up the devastating final climb. Of all the ‘monuments’ this is the one that Gerro has had his eyes on. A quite start to the year has him hitting the excellent form at just the right time. The kind of form he displayed in 2009 when he won a bunch of races including stages at the Giro and the Vuelta. The big favourites will be well advised to keep a sharp eye on the Australian. To win he’ll need to take a leaf out of Vino’s 2010 playbook and with Löfkvist as his foil there’s every chance this might just happen. Gerro outsprinting a Katusha and a Schleck the most likely scenario.

Alexandr Kolobnev
Second last year, Kolobnev is a key part of the Katusha triple-threat alongside Rodriguez and Di Luca. Just as he did last year, the Russian will need to take advantage of the tactics falling the right way for him. With a likely team mate up the road in the breakaway, Kolobnev will be able to hide out of the wind for the first 200km before having a sniff during the closing climbs. On the counter attack, the punchy Russian has the strength to stay away in the right selection. This year he’ll be hoping to do one better when it comes down to the final mad dash to the line.

Robert Gesink
Off the boil somewhat during La Flèche, more was expected of Gesink and his team on Wednesday. Tactically, Rabobank made a mess of things at Amstel, which was somewhat of a surprise as they’re much better known for getting the most out of the hand they’re dealt. Gesink was absolutely super in the early part of the year, winning the overall at the Tour of Oman and then 2nd behind Evans at Tirreno–Adriatico. La Doyenne is precisely the kind of classic that Gesink can and should win. If he gets his chance on Sunday he’s definitely in with a show.

Tony Martin
Martin had an absolutely cracking start to the year, winning the overall at the Volta ao Algarve and then claiming the ITT and overall in a brutal edition of this year’s Paris-Nice. Pegged as the likely heir to the Time-Trial throne of Cancellara, there’s every chance that Martin might start adding ‘monuments’ to his palmares in the same way Spartacus has. The tactics will need to go his way but if he is still in the mix at the top of Côte de la Roche aux Faucons, there is every chance that Martin could power away from the field and time trial the final 17km to victory.

Ben Hermans
The young Radioshack rider has been terrific all year. First spotted showing his colours on the climbs of the Tour Down Under this year, he won at the Trofeo Inca and then finished 8th at Amstel and 18th at La Flèche. The parcours of Liège-Bastogne-Liège will suit the 25 year-old Belgian more than the other two Ardennes classics and with all the attention on team leader, Janez Brajkovic, Hermans might slip away. A smokey to be sure. But with Nuyens and Van Summeren already flying the flag, smokeys are having an awesome spring in 2011.

Paris-Roubaix | preview

A quick overview of the contenders for the 2011 Queen of the Classics.

Fabian Cancellara

Why he wins
The world’s strongest rider and two-time winner of Paris-Roubaix will be even more motivated this year having been pipped on the line twice this Spring - first by Goss in Milan-San Remo; and then by Nyuens and Chavanel in Flanders. No surprise then that Cancellara dropped his guard ever so slightly in a post-Flanders press conference this week to voice his displeasure: “I lost by trying to win, the others rode only to make me lose. And in the end the one who was always in the wheels won. Congratulations to Nuyens, but for me [winning] like that has no value.” Ouch.

Watching Cancellara ride over the pave is one of modern cycling’s great pleasures. There is something quite mesmeric about the seemingly effortless rhythm of his cadence and how it is capable of producing such brutal power. Changes to the parcours this year are more likely to suit the teams with a powerful rider able to fend for themselves more so than those relying on the tactical advantage of having the strongest team. The addition of the Millonfosse (1.4 km), a new sector of pave just 4km after the critical Trouée d’Arenberg (Forest of Arenberg), means that the team mates of the favourites shelled during the Forest of Arenberg won’t enjoy the luxury of a flat, sealed 10km in order to chase back on. What this means is that Cancellara is likely to find himself out in front one-on-one with the other big names, which is exactly the place he wants to be. All he needs to do is bide his time until Sector 10, the Mons-en-Pévèle (3km) where he rides them off his wheel in exactly the same way he did as last year. Game over. Victory number three in the bag.

Why he doesn’t
The ABC Club, ‘Anyone But Cancellara’ are still backslapping themselves after their great victory over Spartacus last week at the Ronde. They’ll fancy themselves again this week but the tactics will need to be different - they won’t be able to rely on Team BMC to do all the work to pull the field back together like it did last Sunday. Once the race hits the Forest of Arenberg and the field splits up, there’ll be no way for the likes of the strong teams to pull it back together which means that the early break will be the only way riders like Chavanel, Cooke, Hincapie, Thomas and Goss can expect to have team mates to help them in the closing stages.

The break(s) will have to go early and I expect them to be large in size with many of the top teams hoping to have at least two riders up the road in order to put them at the service of their team leaders in the closing 70km or so when the big names finally reel the remnants of the breakaway in. If they succeed they can set themselves up for the attack and counter attack and look to grind Cancellara down. They can also be safe in the knowledge that if any of them make it in to the velodrome with Spartacus, they’ll dust him in the sprint.

The other possible factor for consideration is just how much Cancellara will be affected by the heat with the forecast predicting a high of 25°C. He struggled to eat and drink enough during Flanders on a warmish day and complained of cramp in the closing kilometres. It’s also worth remembering that the last time Roubaix was run on a hot day, Spartacus struggled, opening the door for O’Grady to take his famous victory.

Tom Boonen

Why he wins
Perennial favourite and three-time winner already, the one thing Boonen won’t be doing in this year’s race is heading down to the back of the lead group to enjoy a snack at exactly the moment the group hits the Mons-en-Pévèle. For this is precisely what happened last year when Cancellara caught Tommeke napping and rode off in to the sunset to the sound track of Bjarne Riis cackling away in the team car.

And Boonen won’t make the same mistake as last week where his bizarre attack with his team mate up the road was the catalyst for Cancellara to blow the race to bits. His is the most simple of propositions - sit on Cancellara’s wheel all the way to the velodrome and then smash him in the sprint. OK, Tom? Keep it simple and victory is yours.

Why he doesn’t
Boonen was super strong last year and he looks in similar nick this year. Unfortunately, he seems to be in the grip of the most severe case of tactical ineptitude seen by a top rider in quite some time. I’m not sure what kind of mind-bogglingly stupid thing Boonen has planned for this year’s race but I’m sure he won’t disappoint - maybe he’ll even try to out-Spartacus Spartacus. Result? Fail. The other problem Boonen has is that previously he was usually the fastest sprinter left at the end but this year he may well be troubled by the likes of Hushovd, Goss, Thomas and Cooke who are all capable of outsprinting the Belgian on their day. If the race unfolds with some of them still in contention, Boonen will not have it all his own way.

Thor Hushovd

Why he wins
From the very moment Hushovd pulled on the Rainbow Jersey for the first time in Geelong he has been dreaming about winning Paris-Roubaix clad in the colours of the World Champion. 3rd in 2009 and 2nd last year, Hushovd is primed to climb to the top of the podium on the back of his killer finishing sprint and plenty of ground work undertaken by his team to get him in the right position. The 30km before the Forest of Arenberg will be even more insane than usual given the changes to the parcours this year and Garmin will be able to rely on the speed and sprinting smarts of Haussler and Farrar to ensure Hushovd is well placed. From here on his tactics are similar to Boonen’s. Follow the wheels and then smoke them in the sprint. And let’s not forget that Big Thor doesn’t mind the warmer weather (unlike Cancellara) having claimed his World Championship on a very warm day at Geelong.

My only advice to Garmin would be to ensure that they have hard man Peter Van Petegem at the wheel of the team car and they drop Vaughters off at a nice cafe somewhere. There is history to be made here and you don’t make history at Paris-Roubaix by sprinting for 3rd.

Why he doesn’t
If Garmin are slack and inattentive like they were in Milan-San Remo then Thor is in danger of being out of position when they hit the Forest of Arenberg. If you’re in the wrong spot here and get caught up behind a crash then there is every chance that your race is as good as over. Equally, if the Professor is more intent managing risks tactically rather than nailing the argyle to the mast, Garmin will get out foxed and out muscled by teams willing to bet the lot.

Juan Antonio Flecha

Why he wins
Mr Consistency when it comes to Paris-Roubaix (3rd in 2005, 4th in 2006, 2nd in 2007, 6th in 2009, 3rd in 2010), Flecha has looked terrific all year. What makes him look even more threatening this year is the quality, experience and depth of his team. Imagine having Arvesen, Barry, Hayman, Hunt, Stannard, Thomas and Wiggins at your service - half of them are more than capable of winning the race themselves given the right conditions.

Sky will be one of the most active teams in the early stages of the race, looking to get the likes of Hayman, Hunt and Stannard in the early break. Hard man Arvesen and powerhouse Wiggins will ensure that both Flecha and Thomas are well positioned as they approach Arenberg. With a little luck, Flecha and GT are in the mix in the closing kilometres with possibly Hayman there to help keep them there. The pair should be able to attack and counter attack to soften-up their rivals, especially Cancellara who they will be hoping is isolated and forced to chase everything. Flecha’s biggest chance will be on the counter attack in the final 20km where he will be hoping that the rest of the front group are looking at each other and hesitate. If he gets 30 or 40 seconds he’s a big chance to stay away and take a victory that has always seemed just out of reach.

Why he doesn’t
If he arrives with two or three others at the finish, in all likelihood it will be one of the sprinters like Boonen, Hushovd, Goss or Thomas who dust him up in the velodrome. The other scenario is that Spartacus does what he does best and he’ll have to be content with another top 5 finish a minute or so back.

Other contenders

Sylvain Chavanel
For mine, Chavanel’s was the best ride at the Ronde last weekend. Out in front early, he was then the only rider able to stay with Cancellara, before getting checked in the sprint and having to settle for a magnificent 2nd place. He’s been prominent all Spring and there is a lot to like about his chances again this Sunday. His best Roubaix finish was 8th in 2009 but after a brilliant 2010 with two stage wins at the Tour, he has raced with the kind of panache this year that might just net him his first monument.

Fillipo Pozzato
After Hushovd, Pozzato seems to be the rider under the most pressure to produce a result in Paris-Roubaix. His Russian paymasters are growing restless. They’re tiring of the negative press around Pozzato as being the great follower; and they must also be somewhat concerned that his negative tactics seem to have rubbed off on the previously furious attacking riding of his Russian team mates. Pippo used to win a lot of races, lately he seems to be settling for 2nds, 4ths and 5ths. It’s amazing what a good rider is capable of when his very livelihood is under threat - this may just be the motivator that Pozzato was looking for and the Italian might just surprise us all.

Matt Goss
The number one ranked rider in the world was under the weather at Flanders but with his cold now shaken off and some racing kilometres in his legs in the past week, the super quick, super fast, young Aussie will have a second monument in his sights. Goss isn’t just fast he’s also incredibly tactically astute, capable of keeping himself out of the wind in the early stages of a race and then able to follow the right wheels when the race is opening up and selections are being made. If Goss is still with the big guns 20km from the finish he will be all but unbeatable. This is no 50/1 outsider, the bookies have seriously miscalculated here.

Geraint Thomas
Thomas has been flying under the radar somewhat this Spring. He’s been stringing together some tidy performances in support of bigger names this year and his 10th at Flanders was a terrific ride. The young Brit knows how to take a win when he gets his chance and he’ll have some free rein along with Flecha on Sunday as well as the support of a very, very good team. The British National Champ can sprint and if he’s there at the end he is more than capable of pulling off a massive upset.

George Hincapie
The old man has looked fantastic all year. He rode his guts out for Evans at Tirreno-Adriatico and has been building and building his form throughout the northern classics. Big George was still there in the thick of it at the end of Flanders last week and ended up finishing a very respectable 6th. Hincapie forms a potent double pronged attack with Ballan and once again they have a stellar squad in support. In fact, this is probably the best team Hincapie has ever had at his disposal for any edition of Paris-Roubaix. And it’s for this very reason that I fancy him as my smokey.

No longer one of the top-line favourites as he has been in previous years, Hincapie’s desire for victory in Paris-Roubaix is unmatched by anyone, Hushovd included. Team BMC is full of smarts, and some very hard men in excellent form. Lelangue will have left no stone unturned in preparation for the race and a victory for Hincapie in this year’s race will be his way of saying thankyou to Hincapie for joining the Team BMC experiment back at the end of 2009.

Baden Cooke
This is my double extra smokey with special sauce. Cookie has now spent a couple of years at Saxo Bank under the tutelage of Bjarne Riis as he seeks to turn himself into a genuine one day classics rider. He was great last week at Flanders in support of Nyuens and will be full of confidence after the success of his team mate. Riis will be extremely motivated once again to spoil the party of Spartacus the deserter. If anyone can gee-up a rider to deliver the ride of their life, it’s Riis. And if the bookies were silly enough to frame a price on a Cooke victory I’d be keen to have the smallest of dabbles.

Liège-Bastogne-Liège | Preview

A quick overview of the contenders for the 2010 La Doyenne.

Philippe Gilbert

Why he wins
Gilbert is the winning-est classics rider going around. Last year he won four straight in October, starting with the Coppa Sabatini, followed by Paris-Tours and the Giro del Piemonte before claiming his first monument, the Giro di Lombardia. He’s in similar form this spring, finishing 3rd in both Gent-Wevelgem and the Ronde van Vlaanderen, before convincingly winning Amstel Gold last week and then finishing a very respectable 6th mid-week at La Flèche Wallonne on a parcours with a finish that really didn’t suit him.

Liège-Bastogne-Liège is ideally suited to a rider like Gilbert. He’s an out-and-out racer, which is the reason he is so popular with cycling fans of all nationalities and so respected by his peers. He’s a strong climber, has an excellent sprint and is a superb tactician. He’s stated that he’ll ride defensively today but you can guarantee that when the Russians Ivanov and Kolobnev start to animate things at Mount Theux (km 209) and then the Schlecks chime in at Côte de la Redoute (km 223), Gilbert will be all over them. He’ll also be hoping that these attacks help shake Valverde loose, as he’s the only rider Gilbert may fear in a sprint finish. When it does come time for Gilbert to make his move, he won’t hesitate. Boom! He’s gone and there’s another monument stuffed in the jersey pocket of the likeable Belgian.

Why he doesn’t
Tactics will decide today’s race. There’s a cracking field assembled, ripe with genuine GC riders and the best of the classics guys too. There’s probably at least a dozen genuine contenders and another 20 or so who could snatch victory if the cards were to fall their way. No one will out-ride Gilbert today but the teams with multiple cards to play might out-fox him.

Joaquím Rodríguez

Why he wins
Rodríguez has been threatening to snatch a BIG win for some time now. A regular winner of stages in the shorter stage races like Tirreno-Adriatico, Paris-Nice and the Vuelta a Burgos; 2009 was the year he demonstrated he was capable of more - finishing 2nd in Liège-Bastogne-Liège behind a brilliant Andy Schleck; and finishing 3rd behind Cadel Evans (pipped for 2nd by Kolobnev) at the World Championships. All that on top of a bronze medal at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. This guy is a heck of bike rider. No surprise then that the Spaniard was pried loose from Caisse d’Epargne by the cashed-up Russians at Katusha.

Team Katusha have a perfect team to cover what should be an extremely tactical race. With Serguei Ivanov and Alexandr Kolobnev able to animate the race with their wonderfully timed attacks and counter attacks, Rodríguez gets to bide his time while his big rivals are expending precious energy chasing the dynamic Russian duo down. He was a favourite at Amstel but a crash early brought him undone; and he was the 2nd fastest finisher after Evans at Flèche Wallonne, hauling in Contador just before the line. In the 2010 Liège-Bastogne-Liège, Rodríguez finally has his day in the sun.

Why he doesn’t
The problem with having such a strong team is that from time-to-time team tactics mean you have to ride defensively if one of your team mates is up the road. With either of Ivanov and Kolobnev capable of attacking and staying away, there’s every chance Rodríguez might have to do just that. Alternatively, if there’s a bunch sprint at the end comprising a handful of the top favourites, riders like Gilbert, Cunego and Valverde are more likely to prevail.

Cadel Evans

Why he wins
Cadel has been extremely impressive the past couple of weeks. Sure he took a brilliant win at Flèche Wallonne on Wednesday but he also looked super confident and very strong at Amstel Gold too - chasing down the attack by Van Den Broeck for example (the first of many scores to be settled there, me thinks). Evans might not have the strongest team in the race - we won’t see them all over the front like Saxo Bank or Team Sky - but his team mates have done everything he has asked of them. Look closely at the past two races and you’ll see two BMC riders consistently delivering him to the front of the peloton at precisely the right moments, making sure he was perfectly positioned ahead of the climbs or when accelerations were expected. His racing this past fortnight has been characterised by both patience and tactical smarts. These traits, coupled with good legs (he’s heading for a kick arse Giro) and in what is expected to be an extremely tactical race, means Cadel is very well placed to take his second classics victory within a week.

Why he doesn’t
It’s going to be impossible to cover every move and with Evans playing a sole hand (with Kroon out after his sickening crash on Wednesday) there’s every chance a move could get away without him.

Ryder Hesjedal

Why he wins
This kid is a super talent. I had him pencilled in as my smokie for Amstel and he put in a fantastic ride to claim 2nd behind a rampant Gilbert. Garmin come in to Liège with a pretty handy team and with Christian Vande Velde on the start list it both takes some of the pressure of the young Canadian and provides wily DS Matty White with an opportunity to play a few cards of his own. Garmin will be keen to get some-one in the break (Trent Lowe or Cam Meyer possibly) to be on hand for Hesjedal when the fireworks start on La Redoute. Sometimes riders destined for great things show their class early in their careers - Hesjedal is that kind of rider.

Why he doesn’t
There’s a chance that the longer climbs in Liège might prove to be a little too long for the younger legs of someone like Ryder compared to the shorter climbs of Amstel. It’s the flip side of the same coin that also means an old dog like Chris Horner is in with a big show in a race like this. Hesjedal’s lack of experience also means that he’ll likely be wasting energy at the wrong times while the old, hard-heads will be conserving it. Experience counts.

Alberto Contador

Why he wins
Contador wins bike races. That’s what he does. He’s a brilliant stage racer who could easily snag a bunch of one day wins if he set his mind to it. Lack of experience cost him Flèche Wallonne - just as it did for Cadel Evans in 2008 but the parcours for Liège-Bastogne-Liège suits him a whole lot more. He’s got a very strong team at his disposal and he’ll be extremely well motivated after getting bested by Evans (his Poulidor) at Flèche. Victory will be his when he out dances Andy Schleck up the Cote Saint-Nicolas to the finish.

Why he doesn’t
There’s every chance that Contador will be riding for Vinokourov today - a small lien in order to have Vino behave himself and work for Contador come Tour time. Vino is a previous winner of Liège and has decent enough form to be a genuine threat. For the good of cycling, let’s hope he doesn’t prevail.

Schleck, The Brothers

Why a Schleck wins
As in the other Ardennes classics, Saxo Bank will be happy to burn some matches mid-race to put much of the field in the hurt bag before unleashing the brothers to attack and counter-attack on the closing climbs. Andy rode a brilliant race last year to claim victory and will be heavily marked this year. Saxo Bank may be inclined to fox with Andy this year in order for brother Frank to skip away. Either way, they’ll both be in the thick of things and in the finale, weight of numbers may just mean one of them is holding the winning ticket.

Why they don’t
The Schlecks have been ever so slightly a notch below the form of last year. Injuries and crashes have seen them slightly underdone in terms of form - though Flèche hinted that they might be getting close. But with such a cracking field assembled this year, if you aren’t on super form you don’t win - it’s as simple as that. There’s also a feeling among some pundits that Andy’s loyalty to brother Frank may be the reason he hasn’t won even more races than he has. On some days, Andy + Frank is less than Andy on his own. Today might be one of those days.

Other contenders

Team Katusha - Serguei Ivanov and Alexandr Kolobnev
The best cycling tag team in the business - two great racers who love to attack and attack and attack. There’s a chance that one of them will finally snag a win and if they do it’ll be entirely deserved.

Alejandro Valverde
A two-time winner who definitely wins the bunch-kick if he’s in the top six. His legs seem fine but there’s a question mark over his mental state given the possible two year suspension hanging over his head. Anything is possible.

Damiano Cunego
There’s a sense that The Kid isn’t quite the bike rider he was - for whatever reason. But the Kid can climb and the Kid’s got kick. If he’s on a good day and the tactics fall his way he’s a big chance.

Chris Horner
The old dog has got plenty of tricks. He’s on good form and knows how to win a bike race.