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2011 Tour de France | Preview
A quick overview of the contenders for the 2011 Tour de France.
Alberto Contador
Why he wins Contador has only ridden four Tours de France, winning three (2007, 2009 and 2010) and finishing 31st on debut in 2005. In 2008 Contador didn’t ride the Tour but did ride the Giro and the Vuelta - winning both. Few of his contemporaries could imagine pulling off such a feat and many pundits gave him little chance at the time. But when you are the greatest Grand Tour rider of a generation such a prospect holds few fears. Now in 2011, having won the Giro in May, Contador is once again striving to win a second Grand Tour in the same year. The Giro-Vuelta double is one thing but everyone agrees that the Giro-Tour double is a whole other kettle of fish.
Make no mistake - the 2011 Giro was a beast. The final week so brutal that it may even cost race director Angelo Zomegnan his job. Contador definitely had to dig deep to win - most riders had to dig just as deep to finish - but he was never seriously threatened on GC. There has been a lot of speculation as to whether he will have recovered enough to take out the Tour. And even more speculation as to how well his key lieutenants Navarro, Hernandez and to a lesser extent Porte will have recovered.
The thing that makes Contador such a brilliant Grand Tour rider is not just his climbing and his time trialling but his unmatched recuperative powers day-to-day. If any rider has the physiology to recover well enough to be competitive in a second GT it is surely El Pistolero. Equally, Porte was instructed to keep an eye on his watts and never truly exerted himself until the final time-trial. And while Navarro and Hernandez did plenty of work in the mountains in support of their captain, they were never put in a position where they had to bury themselves day-in, day-out. Why? There was no need. Contador was so dominant in this year’s Giro that both Hernandez and Navarro were able to keep much of their powder dry - leaving them with plenty left to burn in July.
Andy Schleck has been dismissive of the strength of the Saxo Bank team - once again demonstrating that tactically he is a goose. He has underestimated just how fresh the Saxo mountain men will be. He has raised the ire of two proud Danes in Sørensen and Sörensen. And he has underestimated the burgeoning brilliance of Richie Porte. For mine, the likely revelation in this year’s Tour will be Porte and the way Riis motivates him to ride out of his skin on behalf of Contador. Porte is that good, that it could well be his efforts that are telling in the end on behalf of his team leader.
Will Contador win? Of course he will. He’s a freak. A once in a generation Grand Tour rider. The rest of the field will be battling for second.
Why he doesn’t Only two things can beat Alberto Contador this year - fatigue and the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). If Contador really did burn too many matches at the Giro the final week of this year’s Tour may just find him out. It’s not as brutal as the last week of the Giro but in Tour terms it is very tough. The competition at the Tour will be faster and fitter than anyone he faced at the Giro and if he were to falter, there are several riders with the form and strong enough teams to make him pay. Likewise, if the result at the CAS post Tour goes against him - even if he wins, he loses.
Andy Schleck
Why he wins The precocious younger of the two Schlecks is a supremely talented climber and has at his disposal an absolute juggernaut of a team.  His brother Fränk plus Cancellara, Posthuma, Gerdemann, Monfort, Fuglsang and the two old hard-heads Jens Voigt and Stuey O’Grady. If he can’t win with these guys at his disposal he never will - especially given the question mark over Contador’s fitness post-Giro.
Schleck has twice finished second in the Tour, last year missing the top spot on the podium by only 39 seconds. This year he has bet everything on the Tour and in the process has kept any semblance of form well and truly hidden. Other than his 3rd place in Liège–Bastogne–Liège where he was steamrollered by the brilliant Gilbert, his form has been somewhat bewildering. He was appalling at the Tour of California and not much better at the Tour de Suisse but given the massive investment made in him by Team Leopard Trek, surely he and Brian Nygaard must have some secret plan that will have him on form come the Grand Depart.
Schleck’s job is pretty simple really. Stay out of trouble during the early stages and concentrate on finding his rhythm ahead of Stage 12 when the fireworks begin with the stage to Luz-Ardiden. I expect to see the Leopard Trek big boys have a crack on Stages 3, 5 and 6 when there is some chance of the crosswinds blowing and potentially putting the allegedly under-gunned Saxo Bank team of Contador under pressure. If the echelons form it will be the likes of Leopard, Sky and Rabobank who are best credentialed to make some hay.
Just like last year, Schleck must take time out of Contador in the mountains if he is to prevail - and that is no easy task. He must attack early and attack often. If he leaves it all until Alp d’Huez on Stage 19 he will have left it too late. And if he arrives at Stage 20 less than a minute ahead of Contador, El Pistolero will absolutely smoke him in the Time Trial. Game over. Déjà vu all over again.
Why he doesn’t Brian Nygaard is no Bjarne Riis; and Andy Schleck is no Alberto Contador. Riis knows Schleck better than anyone and he will be more than a little motivated to see Schleck brought undone. Riis will relish the opportunity for payback after the carnage wrought upon his Team by the deserters to Leopard Trek and he will not hesitate to turn the screws when he sees his former charge under pressure.
The other big problem for Schleck is his lack of tactical smarts. The way he and brother Frank were completely outthought and out ridden by Gilbert at Liège–Bastogne–Liège was just plain embarrassing.  And Leopard Trek got it wrong in a bunch of other races including Paris-Roubaix. If Contador is El Pistolero, then Andy Schleck is Captain Feathersword. He tried to tickle Philippe Gilbert into submission in the Spring and failed miserably. Contador in July will be equally unmoved.
Cadel Evans
Why he wins The evergreen Australian has been in sensational form all year and has been without a doubt the best performed of all the genuine Tour contenders in 2011. His win in the overall at Tirreno–Adriatico was made even more special by his aggressive, bustling, brilliant win on Stage 6. Equally, the measured, mature, commanding way he went about wrapping up the overall win in the Tour de Romandie was exactly the kind of performance all of his fans will be hoping for in July.
Evans has at his disposal for the first time in 2011 three key ingredients that should make all the difference to his chances. Firstly, he has not just a decent team but a really well balanced team of genuine quality. Some excellent climbers, some big diesels for the flat and the TTT and a captain on the road who is riding his 16th Tour. Secondly, he has a maturity and a confidence born out of his time as World Champion that has finally allowed him to become the team leader he was always capable of being. Finally, he has had exactly the kind of preparation that he wanted - limited, quality racing with no Giro and no undue pressure from his team.
One of the best things going for Evans in this year’s Tour is that once again the Schlecks will underestimate the Australian. Andy’s ego is so large and he has been so constantly dismissive of Cadel’s chances that this may just present an opportunity or two for Cadel to exploit. Yes - another tactical mis-step by Captain Feathersword. In previous Tours, his opponents could count on Evans losing chunks of time in the TTT or being isolated in the mountains - that will not happen this year. Evans will be able to preserve precious energy in the same way his opponents have been able to in previous years and when the opportunity presents itself he’ll attack with the same panache he showed in Mendrisio - then seal the deal in the final time trial.
Why he doesn’t It’s a cruel thing for an athlete to have to recognise that as good as he is, as good as he will ever be, there is another athlete that is better. In the case of Cadel, that other athlete is Alberto Contador. Just like Poulidor was the eternal second and was always denied by Anquetil, Evans is once again likely to be denied by the best Grand Tour rider in a generation.
Ivan Basso
Why he wins At the start of the year it appeared that Ivan Basso was the man most likely. He was a rider redeemed with an excellently taken win at the 2010 Giro and despite a disappointing 32nd at the Tour, his plan to focus solely on the Tour de France in 2011 was well received by fans. Basso’s early season form was tidy enough - 1st at the GP di Lugano, 4th Overall at Tirreno–Adriatico, and 7th Overall at the Volta a Catalunya - and everything seemed on track for him to be a dominant force in July. Here was a rider with the pedigree to be the first real threat to Contador in a Grand Tour and cycling fans were licking their lips at the prospect.
So can he win? Yes. But a crash in training has cast a shadow over both his preparation and his chances after he fell heavily during a training camp at Mount Etna in May. He resumed racing at the Critérium du Dauphiné where he lost chunks of time to the other Tour de France contenders on nearly every stage. The bookies seem less convinced of his chances now than they did pre-crash but they would be making a big mistake to discount his chances entirely. Why? Because you can’t discount class. Basso is a rider that has finished 2nd to Armstrong in a Tour and ahead of Ullrich. Basso is a rider that can crush rivals on a climb. Not dance away from them like a Contador or a Schleck; but actually grind them into the road through riding at an infernal, uncompromising pace kilometre after kilometre.
Also in Basso’s favour is the strength of his team. Liquigas are always one of the best performers in the TTT and there is a chance that the Italian may take some time on some of his rivals. Equally in his favour is that there is just the one individual time trial in the 2011 edition (not his strongest suit) and this comes after the best part of a week of some truly epic climbing. Basso may be underdone. His preparation may not have been ideal. But in a bike race tough as the Tour, class will always out. And Basso has class in spades.
Why he doesn’t If Basso had the same team at his disposal as he did at last year’s Giro he would be a massive threat. Unfortunately for him, he doesn’t. Nibali is not riding and Kreuziger is now a rival at Astana. Liquigas are light on in the climbing department at this year’s Tour and Sylvester Szmyd is really Basso’s only true mountain lieutenant. In a climber’s Tour like this edition, that is a major disadvantage. Then there is the big question mark over his condition. His preparation has been far from ideal - the only thing in his favour is that he is a notorious slow starter who always grows stronger as the race grows longer. Under normal circumstances his physiology is ideally suited to the tough, climbing final week of this year’s Tour. Unfortunately for Basso, his misadventure on Mt Etna in May could ultimately be the thing that cruels his chances.
Other contenders
Robert Gesink This super climbing talent from the Netherlands is just about every pundit’s smokey for this year’s Tour. A real podium chance and a genuine outside chance for the win, Gesink has an excellent team at his disposal. The 2011 Tour is ideally suited to a rider of Gesink’s capabilities. And with Alp d’Huez included in this year’s parcours, expect a brazillion orange clad Dutchys to be on hand to cheer him to victory atop the fabled finish to Stage 19. Gesink is a rider for the future and maybe, just maybe, the future starts this July.
Brad Wiggins Wiggins has had a text book preparation for this year’s Tour. 3rd Overall at Paris–Nice, 1st Overall at the Critérium du Dauphiné,  and then 1st at the British National Champs. The Brit is a brilliant rider when everything goes right. In 2009, everything went right at the Tour and he finished 4th. Last year, lots went wrong and he finished 24th. Wiggins’ plan for 2011 will be to use his finely tuned engine to measure out the climbs of the final week and to time trial his way up the slopes and onto the podium. The big risk is if he tries to attack on the climbs himself or gets suckered into trying to respond to the attacks of the likes of Contador or Schleck. If he does, in all likelihood he blows up and loses time. No podium for Wiggo and he’ll be lucky to finish top 10. If on the other hand he sticks to his game plan and only marks the moves of riders like Van Den Broeck, Danielson or Vino, he stands a chance of finishing in the top 5. His team are good enough to get him into contention. The big question is whether Wiggins is good enough to pay a dividend on all their hard work.
Jurgen Van Den Broeck Fifth place last year, Van Den Broeck looks unlikely to do better than that this year. As in previous years, Omega Pharma-Lotto are far from looking like a team capable of supporting a GC contender all the way to the top step of the podium - something Cadel Evans knows only too well. The Lotto squad are a real mixed bag this year - with the brilliance of Gilbert (who should all but dominate the first week), the ambitions of Greipel (who finally gets his cherished start at the Tour after years playing second banana to Cav) and the usual collection of Belgians who won’t be much use at all to Van Den Broeck in the mountains. Then there is the TTT. Oh dear.
Samuel Sánchez Sammy Sánchez was somewhat of a surprise with his 4th place last year. Make no mistake, he’s a super talent. And he’s more than capable of winning on all kinds of terrain. He’ll have super support in the mountains but there are two significant chinks in the armour of the likeable Spaniard this year. The TTT will do him no favours. And there is every chance he and his slightly built Basque brothers may fall foul of the echelons that could form along the coast in the first week. He’ll make up time in the final week through his climbing and even more with his daredevil descending. Top 5 a distinct possibility once again. Top step of the podium unlikely.
Horner, Kloden and Leipheimer The veteran trio may just surprise us all at this year’s Tour. Horner was sensational at the Tour of California and Leipheimer wasn’t far behind. Excitingly for Chris Horner, he’ll be given the opportunity to have a real crack at the overall - an entirely appropriate reward for his excellent 10th at last year’s race. Kloden has been in his best form for years. 1st Overall at the Tour of the Basque Country, 2nd Overall at Paris–Nice and with a couple of ITT victories as well, Kloden is in the kind of form that could see him on the podium at the Tour for the third time. Leipheimer has promised much at the Tour but has never really delivered - his best result was 3rd behind Contador and Evans in 2007. With Brajkovic also one of Radioshack’s four-pronged assault on this year’s Tour, I get the sense that Levi may end up cast in a more tactical role by Bruyneel, especially in the final week. What does that mean for Levi? Top 10 if he’s lucky.

2011 Tour de France | Preview

A quick overview of the contenders for the 2011 Tour de France.

Alberto Contador

Why he wins
Contador has only ridden four Tours de France, winning three (2007, 2009 and 2010) and finishing 31st on debut in 2005. In 2008 Contador didn’t ride the Tour but did ride the Giro and the Vuelta - winning both. Few of his contemporaries could imagine pulling off such a feat and many pundits gave him little chance at the time. But when you are the greatest Grand Tour rider of a generation such a prospect holds few fears. Now in 2011, having won the Giro in May, Contador is once again striving to win a second Grand Tour in the same year. The Giro-Vuelta double is one thing but everyone agrees that the Giro-Tour double is a whole other kettle of fish.

Make no mistake - the 2011 Giro was a beast. The final week so brutal that it may even cost race director Angelo Zomegnan his job. Contador definitely had to dig deep to win - most riders had to dig just as deep to finish - but he was never seriously threatened on GC. There has been a lot of speculation as to whether he will have recovered enough to take out the Tour. And even more speculation as to how well his key lieutenants Navarro, Hernandez and to a lesser extent Porte will have recovered.

The thing that makes Contador such a brilliant Grand Tour rider is not just his climbing and his time trialling but his unmatched recuperative powers day-to-day. If any rider has the physiology to recover well enough to be competitive in a second GT it is surely El Pistolero. Equally, Porte was instructed to keep an eye on his watts and never truly exerted himself until the final time-trial. And while Navarro and Hernandez did plenty of work in the mountains in support of their captain, they were never put in a position where they had to bury themselves day-in, day-out. Why? There was no need. Contador was so dominant in this year’s Giro that both Hernandez and Navarro were able to keep much of their powder dry - leaving them with plenty left to burn in July.

Andy Schleck has been dismissive of the strength of the Saxo Bank team - once again demonstrating that tactically he is a goose. He has underestimated just how fresh the Saxo mountain men will be. He has raised the ire of two proud Danes in Sørensen and Sörensen. And he has underestimated the burgeoning brilliance of Richie Porte. For mine, the likely revelation in this year’s Tour will be Porte and the way Riis motivates him to ride out of his skin on behalf of Contador. Porte is that good, that it could well be his efforts that are telling in the end on behalf of his team leader.

Will Contador win? Of course he will. He’s a freak. A once in a generation Grand Tour rider. The rest of the field will be battling for second.

Why he doesn’t
Only two things can beat Alberto Contador this year - fatigue and the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). If Contador really did burn too many matches at the Giro the final week of this year’s Tour may just find him out. It’s not as brutal as the last week of the Giro but in Tour terms it is very tough. The competition at the Tour will be faster and fitter than anyone he faced at the Giro and if he were to falter, there are several riders with the form and strong enough teams to make him pay. Likewise, if the result at the CAS post Tour goes against him - even if he wins, he loses.

Andy Schleck

Why he wins
The precocious younger of the two Schlecks is a supremely talented climber and has at his disposal an absolute juggernaut of a team. His brother Fränk plus Cancellara, Posthuma, Gerdemann, Monfort, Fuglsang and the two old hard-heads Jens Voigt and Stuey O’Grady. If he can’t win with these guys at his disposal he never will - especially given the question mark over Contador’s fitness post-Giro.

Schleck has twice finished second in the Tour, last year missing the top spot on the podium by only 39 seconds. This year he has bet everything on the Tour and in the process has kept any semblance of form well and truly hidden. Other than his 3rd place in Liège–Bastogne–Liège where he was steamrollered by the brilliant Gilbert, his form has been somewhat bewildering. He was appalling at the Tour of California and not much better at the Tour de Suisse but given the massive investment made in him by Team Leopard Trek, surely he and Brian Nygaard must have some secret plan that will have him on form come the Grand Depart.

Schleck’s job is pretty simple really. Stay out of trouble during the early stages and concentrate on finding his rhythm ahead of Stage 12 when the fireworks begin with the stage to Luz-Ardiden. I expect to see the Leopard Trek big boys have a crack on Stages 3, 5 and 6 when there is some chance of the crosswinds blowing and potentially putting the allegedly under-gunned Saxo Bank team of Contador under pressure. If the echelons form it will be the likes of Leopard, Sky and Rabobank who are best credentialed to make some hay.

Just like last year, Schleck must take time out of Contador in the mountains if he is to prevail - and that is no easy task. He must attack early and attack often. If he leaves it all until Alp d’Huez on Stage 19 he will have left it too late. And if he arrives at Stage 20 less than a minute ahead of Contador, El Pistolero will absolutely smoke him in the Time Trial. Game over. Déjà vu all over again.

Why he doesn’t
Brian Nygaard is no Bjarne Riis; and Andy Schleck is no Alberto Contador. Riis knows Schleck better than anyone and he will be more than a little motivated to see Schleck brought undone. Riis will relish the opportunity for payback after the carnage wrought upon his Team by the deserters to Leopard Trek and he will not hesitate to turn the screws when he sees his former charge under pressure.

The other big problem for Schleck is his lack of tactical smarts. The way he and brother Frank were completely outthought and out ridden by Gilbert at Liège–Bastogne–Liège was just plain embarrassing. And Leopard Trek got it wrong in a bunch of other races including Paris-Roubaix. If Contador is El Pistolero, then Andy Schleck is Captain Feathersword. He tried to tickle Philippe Gilbert into submission in the Spring and failed miserably. Contador in July will be equally unmoved.

Cadel Evans

Why he wins
The evergreen Australian has been in sensational form all year and has been without a doubt the best performed of all the genuine Tour contenders in 2011. His win in the overall at Tirreno–Adriatico was made even more special by his aggressive, bustling, brilliant win on Stage 6. Equally, the measured, mature, commanding way he went about wrapping up the overall win in the Tour de Romandie was exactly the kind of performance all of his fans will be hoping for in July.

Evans has at his disposal for the first time in 2011 three key ingredients that should make all the difference to his chances. Firstly, he has not just a decent team but a really well balanced team of genuine quality. Some excellent climbers, some big diesels for the flat and the TTT and a captain on the road who is riding his 16th Tour. Secondly, he has a maturity and a confidence born out of his time as World Champion that has finally allowed him to become the team leader he was always capable of being. Finally, he has had exactly the kind of preparation that he wanted - limited, quality racing with no Giro and no undue pressure from his team.

One of the best things going for Evans in this year’s Tour is that once again the Schlecks will underestimate the Australian. Andy’s ego is so large and he has been so constantly dismissive of Cadel’s chances that this may just present an opportunity or two for Cadel to exploit. Yes - another tactical mis-step by Captain Feathersword. In previous Tours, his opponents could count on Evans losing chunks of time in the TTT or being isolated in the mountains - that will not happen this year. Evans will be able to preserve precious energy in the same way his opponents have been able to in previous years and when the opportunity presents itself he’ll attack with the same panache he showed in Mendrisio - then seal the deal in the final time trial.

Why he doesn’t
It’s a cruel thing for an athlete to have to recognise that as good as he is, as good as he will ever be, there is another athlete that is better. In the case of Cadel, that other athlete is Alberto Contador. Just like Poulidor was the eternal second and was always denied by Anquetil, Evans is once again likely to be denied by the best Grand Tour rider in a generation.

Ivan Basso

Why he wins
At the start of the year it appeared that Ivan Basso was the man most likely. He was a rider redeemed with an excellently taken win at the 2010 Giro and despite a disappointing 32nd at the Tour, his plan to focus solely on the Tour de France in 2011 was well received by fans. Basso’s early season form was tidy enough - 1st at the GP di Lugano, 4th Overall at Tirreno–Adriatico, and 7th Overall at the Volta a Catalunya - and everything seemed on track for him to be a dominant force in July. Here was a rider with the pedigree to be the first real threat to Contador in a Grand Tour and cycling fans were licking their lips at the prospect.

So can he win? Yes. But a crash in training has cast a shadow over both his preparation and his chances after he fell heavily during a training camp at Mount Etna in May. He resumed racing at the Critérium du Dauphiné where he lost chunks of time to the other Tour de France contenders on nearly every stage. The bookies seem less convinced of his chances now than they did pre-crash but they would be making a big mistake to discount his chances entirely. Why? Because you can’t discount class. Basso is a rider that has finished 2nd to Armstrong in a Tour and ahead of Ullrich. Basso is a rider that can crush rivals on a climb. Not dance away from them like a Contador or a Schleck; but actually grind them into the road through riding at an infernal, uncompromising pace kilometre after kilometre.

Also in Basso’s favour is the strength of his team. Liquigas are always one of the best performers in the TTT and there is a chance that the Italian may take some time on some of his rivals. Equally in his favour is that there is just the one individual time trial in the 2011 edition (not his strongest suit) and this comes after the best part of a week of some truly epic climbing. Basso may be underdone. His preparation may not have been ideal. But in a bike race tough as the Tour, class will always out. And Basso has class in spades.

Why he doesn’t
If Basso had the same team at his disposal as he did at last year’s Giro he would be a massive threat. Unfortunately for him, he doesn’t. Nibali is not riding and Kreuziger is now a rival at Astana. Liquigas are light on in the climbing department at this year’s Tour and Sylvester Szmyd is really Basso’s only true mountain lieutenant. In a climber’s Tour like this edition, that is a major disadvantage. Then there is the big question mark over his condition. His preparation has been far from ideal - the only thing in his favour is that he is a notorious slow starter who always grows stronger as the race grows longer. Under normal circumstances his physiology is ideally suited to the tough, climbing final week of this year’s Tour. Unfortunately for Basso, his misadventure on Mt Etna in May could ultimately be the thing that cruels his chances.

Other contenders

Robert Gesink
This super climbing talent from the Netherlands is just about every pundit’s smokey for this year’s Tour. A real podium chance and a genuine outside chance for the win, Gesink has an excellent team at his disposal. The 2011 Tour is ideally suited to a rider of Gesink’s capabilities. And with Alp d’Huez included in this year’s parcours, expect a brazillion orange clad Dutchys to be on hand to cheer him to victory atop the fabled finish to Stage 19. Gesink is a rider for the future and maybe, just maybe, the future starts this July.

Brad Wiggins
Wiggins has had a text book preparation for this year’s Tour. 3rd Overall at Paris–Nice, 1st Overall at the Critérium du Dauphiné, and then 1st at the British National Champs. The Brit is a brilliant rider when everything goes right. In 2009, everything went right at the Tour and he finished 4th. Last year, lots went wrong and he finished 24th. Wiggins’ plan for 2011 will be to use his finely tuned engine to measure out the climbs of the final week and to time trial his way up the slopes and onto the podium. The big risk is if he tries to attack on the climbs himself or gets suckered into trying to respond to the attacks of the likes of Contador or Schleck. If he does, in all likelihood he blows up and loses time. No podium for Wiggo and he’ll be lucky to finish top 10. If on the other hand he sticks to his game plan and only marks the moves of riders like Van Den Broeck, Danielson or Vino, he stands a chance of finishing in the top 5. His team are good enough to get him into contention. The big question is whether Wiggins is good enough to pay a dividend on all their hard work.

Jurgen Van Den Broeck
Fifth place last year, Van Den Broeck looks unlikely to do better than that this year. As in previous years, Omega Pharma-Lotto are far from looking like a team capable of supporting a GC contender all the way to the top step of the podium - something Cadel Evans knows only too well. The Lotto squad are a real mixed bag this year - with the brilliance of Gilbert (who should all but dominate the first week), the ambitions of Greipel (who finally gets his cherished start at the Tour after years playing second banana to Cav) and the usual collection of Belgians who won’t be much use at all to Van Den Broeck in the mountains. Then there is the TTT. Oh dear.

Samuel Sánchez
Sammy Sánchez was somewhat of a surprise with his 4th place last year. Make no mistake, he’s a super talent. And he’s more than capable of winning on all kinds of terrain. He’ll have super support in the mountains but there are two significant chinks in the armour of the likeable Spaniard this year. The TTT will do him no favours. And there is every chance he and his slightly built Basque brothers may fall foul of the echelons that could form along the coast in the first week. He’ll make up time in the final week through his climbing and even more with his daredevil descending. Top 5 a distinct possibility once again. Top step of the podium unlikely.

Horner, Kloden and Leipheimer
The veteran trio may just surprise us all at this year’s Tour. Horner was sensational at the Tour of California and Leipheimer wasn’t far behind. Excitingly for Chris Horner, he’ll be given the opportunity to have a real crack at the overall - an entirely appropriate reward for his excellent 10th at last year’s race. Kloden has been in his best form for years. 1st Overall at the Tour of the Basque Country, 2nd Overall at Paris–Nice and with a couple of ITT victories as well, Kloden is in the kind of form that could see him on the podium at the Tour for the third time. Leipheimer has promised much at the Tour but has never really delivered - his best result was 3rd behind Contador and Evans in 2007. With Brajkovic also one of Radioshack’s four-pronged assault on this year’s Tour, I get the sense that Levi may end up cast in a more tactical role by Bruyneel, especially in the final week. What does that mean for Levi? Top 10 if he’s lucky.

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.

Ronde van Vlaanderen | Preview

A quick overview of the contenders for the 2011 Tour of Flanders.

Fabian Cancellara

Why he wins
Cancellara was responsible for ‘the moment’ of 2010 - accelerating up and over the Kapelmuur in last year’s Flanders, blowing the doors off Tom Boonen to take the most impressive of victories. Given the form he displayed in winning E3 Prijs Vlaanderen last weekend, Spartacus has given every indication that he’s primed to dish out exactly the same kind of treatment to the rest of the field this year. When he’s on form he is unstoppable, indeed, even punctures and equipment failures couldn’t bring him undone last weekend. The strength and smarts of his team shouldn’t be underestimated either, typified by the likes of Stuey O’Grady, a tough nut on great form himself who reads a race as well as anyone in the peloton. Cancellara’s team mates will protect him all the way to the Molenberg before the big Swiss barges his way towards the front and grinds the opposition into the cobbles. Another ‘monument’ in the bag for Spartacus.

Why he doesn’t
The ABC Club. ‘Anyone But Cancellara’ will be the motto of the other 24 teams on the start line. Tactically, the only way anyone other than Cancellara wins is for all the other teams to be constantly on the attack and ensuring that it is his team, Leopard-Trek, that has to close down all the moves. If the other contenders mark each other out of the contest, Cancellara smashes them in the last 20 kilometres or so - I’m looking at you Pozzato. It is imperative that Cancellara and his team be forced to spend more petrol than they would prefer to in the first 200kms. Breakaways, more breakaways, counter attacks and even the kitchen sink - throw the lot at him. And there are plenty of teams with multiple cards to play that will be more than willing: BMC, Garmin, HTC, Omega Pharma-Lotto, Sky and Katusha the teams most likely.

Philippe Gilbert

Why he wins
His brilliance in one day races over all kinds of parcours is unmatched in today’s peloton. Gilbert wins big races - not just because he has the legs but also because he has the smarts. Even more importantly, he has the panache to combine the two to deadly effect. Third in the last two editions of the Ronde, it is inevitable that that this brilliant Belgian cyclist will one day claim this most famous of Flandrian classics. And if any cyclist is to prosper from the efforts of the ‘ABC Club’ it in all likelihood will be Gilbert. He can get himself into breakaways but it will be on the counter attack where he stakes his claim - powering away from the front of the field while Cancellara watches on in frustration as the ‘ABC Club’ refuse to chase down one of their own.

Why he doesn’t
There will be others seeking to benefit from the counter attack: Ballan, Flecha, Nuyens, Chainel and the Russians of Katusha especially. Gilbert is too classy to chase them down and tow Cancellara back into the race Pozzato style. That’s why he’ll finish 3rd for the 3rd straight year.

Alessandro Ballan

Why he wins
I love the way this guy rides his bike and the way he looks when he’s doing it. A former winner of the Ronde in 2007, the 2008 World Champ is bristling with the kind of form that brought him those kinds of victories. Ballan is a wonderful team man, brilliant on behalf of Evans in Tirreno–Adriatico this year, he has a hugely experienced team who will bury themselves for the likeable Italian this weekend. Five of his team mates have finished in the top ten at Flanders previously and Team BMC will look to play all of these cards at some stage in their efforts to soften up Cancellara. Ballan has been one of the great animators this spring with his only consolation a 2nd behind Gilbert at Montepaschi Strade Bianche and a 4th at Milan-San Remo. When the action hots up inside the final 60km expect to see Alessandro in the thick of it again. The reward for his efforts this time will be the sweet, sweet taste of victory.

Why he doesn’t
Cancellara has his day and the sprinters snag the minor placings in the bunch sprint a minute back. Alessandro finishes top five behind Boonen, a Garmin and Matty Goss.

Tom Boonen

Why he wins
Up until last year, if you were assembling a rider to win the Ronde out of spare parts laying around it would look uncannily like Tom Boonen. Boonen is a two time winner at Flanders - a cobblestone classics star with the power to get over climbs like the Kwaremont, Molenberg and the Muur-Kapelmuur and then unleash a finishing sprint to dust all his rivals at the end of 260km. Then along came Cancellara. If you were assembling a rider to win the Ronde these days, he now looks exactly like Spartacus. Boonen won’t be dismissed that easily this year, though. Tommeke was the other rider to win big last weekend, taking out Gent-Wevelgem and a swag of World Tour points for his Quickstep team in exactly the kind of way we’ve become used to at this time of year. Quickstep have more cards to play tactically this year compared to 2010 and they’ll have someone in the break early and on the counter later. Their number one plan will be to have Boonen out kick Gilbert and Cancellara in a small group and hope the Garmin three don’t spoil the party. Boonen is in just the right kind of form to do it too.

Why he doesn’t
If either of Hushovd, Haussler, Farrar or Goss are still there for the sprint finish, Boonen misses out. If the counter attack in the last 40km gets away, Boonen misses out. If Cancellara has his way again, Boonen misses out.

Other Contenders

Matt Goss
The march towards greatness of Matt Goss may well take another massive step forward this weekend. His brilliant win at Milan-San Remo this year stamped him as one of the brightest new stars in the cycling firmament. This guy can sprint; he can climb and then sprint; and he can climb, ride 300km and then outsprint some of the biggest names in cycling. If you can do that, you can win the Ronde. Unfortunately for Goss he’s been struggling with a cold for the past week or so and that may leave him a little underdone. On the plus side, the pressure is off him and his team after his victory at Milan-San Remo; and there will be lots of other teams expected to rough-up Team Leopard-Trek, meaning Goss and HTC-Highroad can follow the wheels, stay out of the wind and aim to dust them in the bunch kick.

Juan Antonio Flecha
If the break or the counter attack is the tactic that succeeds in loosening Cancellara’s grasp on this year’s race, it’s hard to discount Flecha who is a dab hand at both. There’s a lot to like about Flecha’s form this year. Slowly building in intensity since Qatar and Oman, the Spaniard is usually in the right place at the right time come April. Team Sky look very strong on paper and much like BMC and Ballan, Flecha and his team mates will be knee deep in the tactical battle to upset Leopard-Trek. With a little luck, this card carrying member of the ‘ABC Club’ may just have the last laugh, just as long as Pozzato doesn’t breach the trust.

The Garmin Three
Hushovd, Haussler and Farrar are all capable of winning this race. Unfortunately, the one day classics dream team that was spawned out of the merger between Cervelo Test Team and Garmin haven’t had the luck or the success many predicted at the beginning of the year. They’ve got the right kind of team to play different cards throughout the race and I expect them to be in the thick of action early, insisting that at least one or two of their men are in the break. Garmin need to unleash their inner mongrel. No more Mr Nice Guys. They need to smash ‘em and bash ‘em and enforce their will on this race; not sit mid-field and fall victim to crashes and bad luck and poor planning like they have in previous weeks. If only Hushovd, Haussler and Farrar had Matty White in the team car yapping at their heels. If they did, they’d be all but certainties - and for that, Vaughters has only himself to blame. For mine, Farrar is the man most likely - his best bet, outsprinting the likes of Flecha and Ballan from the small group that gets away on the counter attack.

Nick Nuyens
In form, this smokey might surprise the big guns with the same kind of guile he used to win Dwars door Vlaanderen in a late breakaway a couple of weeks ago. His team mates are talking him up and he’s the kind of rider with the strength and bunch kick to make some hay if given even the slightest hint of sunshine.

TDF 2010 | Stage 18
Pancake flat, the 198km Stage 18 from Salies-de-Bearn to Bordeaux is one that the sprinters will be determined to not let get away - especially given what they’ve had to endure over the past week just to stay in the race. However, finishes in Bordeaux are occasionally pinched by the breakaway and there’s definitely a chance of that happening again - if the group that gets away is big enough.
My tip: Cav. He’s tired. They’re all tired. But he’s still the fastest man in the race.

TDF 2010 | Stage 18

Pancake flat, the 198km Stage 18 from Salies-de-Bearn to Bordeaux is one that the sprinters will be determined to not let get away - especially given what they’ve had to endure over the past week just to stay in the race. However, finishes in Bordeaux are occasionally pinched by the breakaway and there’s definitely a chance of that happening again - if the group that gets away is big enough.

My tip: Cav. He’s tired. They’re all tired. But he’s still the fastest man in the race.

TDF 2010 | Stage 17
The equation is pretty simple, really. Andy Schleck needs two minutes over Alberto Contador if he is to have any chance of not just seizing the yellow jersey from the Spaniard, but protecting it through the Stage 19 Time Trial and onwards to Paris. The tactic required is even simpler - attack!
There’s no doubt Schleck has talked a good game throughout the Tour, it’s just a shame he hasn’t let his legs do the talking and raced more aggressively. He’s tagged himself as the best climber in the world and the heir apparent to Contador but his consistently conservative tactics (showboating aside) have been more fizz than fireworks. Instead, Schleck and Saxo Bank are  betting everything on one climb - tonight’s ascent of the mighty Tourmalet. No surprise, really, as these are exactly the same tactics Bjarne Riis used successfully on Stage 17 in 2008 when Carlos Sastre launched his bid for victory on the slopes of Alpe d’Huez.
Contador on the other hand has an even simpler proposition - follow Andy Schleck everywhere he goes, everywhere except back to the Saxo Bank team car that is.
We can also expect to see some fireworks from Samuel Sánchez (02:00), Denis Menchov (02:13) and Jurgen Van Den Broeck (03:39) who are all racing furiously for the 3rd step on the podium. Sánchez will fancy keeping the other two at bay on a day like today but Menchov has looked increasingly dangerous as the race has worn on, while Van Den Broeck gave a hint the other day that his young legs may be tiring.
The break will get away early with all the KOM contenders hunting for points on the final day in the mountains. Expect to see the lieutenants of the GC big guns in amongst them too - a rider each from Saxo Bank (Fuglsang or Voigt), Lotto (Lloyd), Euskaltel - Euskadi and Rabobank for sure and possibly Vino for Contador. It’s unlikely that they’ll stay away, though - there’s just too much at stake on this, the Queen stage.
My tip: Contador. He’s out to prove a point. Bang, bang Andy. You’re dead.

TDF 2010 | Stage 17

The equation is pretty simple, really. Andy Schleck needs two minutes over Alberto Contador if he is to have any chance of not just seizing the yellow jersey from the Spaniard, but protecting it through the Stage 19 Time Trial and onwards to Paris. The tactic required is even simpler - attack!

There’s no doubt Schleck has talked a good game throughout the Tour, it’s just a shame he hasn’t let his legs do the talking and raced more aggressively. He’s tagged himself as the best climber in the world and the heir apparent to Contador but his consistently conservative tactics (showboating aside) have been more fizz than fireworks. Instead, Schleck and Saxo Bank are betting everything on one climb - tonight’s ascent of the mighty Tourmalet. No surprise, really, as these are exactly the same tactics Bjarne Riis used successfully on Stage 17 in 2008 when Carlos Sastre launched his bid for victory on the slopes of Alpe d’Huez.

Contador on the other hand has an even simpler proposition - follow Andy Schleck everywhere he goes, everywhere except back to the Saxo Bank team car that is.

We can also expect to see some fireworks from Samuel Sánchez (02:00), Denis Menchov (02:13) and Jurgen Van Den Broeck (03:39) who are all racing furiously for the 3rd step on the podium. Sánchez will fancy keeping the other two at bay on a day like today but Menchov has looked increasingly dangerous as the race has worn on, while Van Den Broeck gave a hint the other day that his young legs may be tiring.

The break will get away early with all the KOM contenders hunting for points on the final day in the mountains. Expect to see the lieutenants of the GC big guns in amongst them too - a rider each from Saxo Bank (Fuglsang or Voigt), Lotto (Lloyd), Euskaltel - Euskadi and Rabobank for sure and possibly Vino for Contador. It’s unlikely that they’ll stay away, though - there’s just too much at stake on this, the Queen stage.

My tip: Contador. He’s out to prove a point. Bang, bang Andy. You’re dead.

TDF 2010 | Stage 16
Peyresourde, Aspin, Tourmalet and Aubisque are four words that you never want to hear in the same sentence. Yet the 199.5km Stage 16 from Bagneres-de-Luchon to Pau insists that the 174 remaining riders in this year’s Tour climb them all in one day. Vous êtes des assassins! Oui, des assassins!
This is the kind of stage ripe for another breakaway. These are mythic climbs and this is the kind of stage that deserves to be won by a rider of stature and class - just as Voeckler did yesterday. The big boys out of GC contention must surely put their hands up today. A last hurrah from Armstrong, perhaps? Or will the likes of Wiggins, Kloden, Moreau or Kreuziger look to reclaim some pride after the disappointments of the first two weeks?
Let’s not forget the other fireworks promised at the conclusion of Stage 15. Will Schleck finally attack and show us what he is made of? Is this the day he finally reveals his ‘big plan’? Surely he couldn’t be any more motivated. Maybe that ‘belly full of anger’ might finally be the catalyst for him deciding to race. Because the prancing and dancing, and mountain side track stands and trips to the team car were never going to win him the Tour. Race, Andy. Only then will you have any chance of earning back the respect you’ve lost with your constant whining when things haven’t gone Saxo Bank’s way.
My tip: Lance. He’s either going to win today or tomorrow. Might as well tip him today.

TDF 2010 | Stage 16

Peyresourde, Aspin, Tourmalet and Aubisque are four words that you never want to hear in the same sentence. Yet the 199.5km Stage 16 from Bagneres-de-Luchon to Pau insists that the 174 remaining riders in this year’s Tour climb them all in one day. Vous êtes des assassins! Oui, des assassins!

This is the kind of stage ripe for another breakaway. These are mythic climbs and this is the kind of stage that deserves to be won by a rider of stature and class - just as Voeckler did yesterday. The big boys out of GC contention must surely put their hands up today. A last hurrah from Armstrong, perhaps? Or will the likes of Wiggins, Kloden, Moreau or Kreuziger look to reclaim some pride after the disappointments of the first two weeks?

Let’s not forget the other fireworks promised at the conclusion of Stage 15. Will Schleck finally attack and show us what he is made of? Is this the day he finally reveals his ‘big plan’? Surely he couldn’t be any more motivated. Maybe that ‘belly full of anger’ might finally be the catalyst for him deciding to race. Because the prancing and dancing, and mountain side track stands and trips to the team car were never going to win him the Tour. Race, Andy. Only then will you have any chance of earning back the respect you’ve lost with your constant whining when things haven’t gone Saxo Bank’s way.

My tip: Lance. He’s either going to win today or tomorrow. Might as well tip him today.

TDF 2010 | Stage 15
Another tough day in the Pyrenees, the 187.5km Stage 15 from Pamiers to Bagneres-de-Luchon may not necessarily be won by the best climber today but it could well be won by the best descender. The final descent is highly technical, extremely dangerous and may see the speed of the fast descenders top 100 km/h. Yikes!
Another big break should get away eventually but it remains to be seen whether it will stay away. Astana rode with some urgency on the front yesterday, taking the weight off the shoulders of Saxo Bank - and to what end? Contador took no time out of Schleck and instead got caught up in a game of silly buggers with the yellow jersey wearer on the final climb. If Contador decides to have a crack and his team ride for him like yesterday then there is every chance that the  break will be reeled in. Though there is a sense that Contador and Schleck may be saving some petrol for the final day in the Pyrenees which concludes atop the Tourmalet.
I still fancy some of the big names who are out of the overall to have a dig - stage glory all that is left to salve their wounded pride now that they are out of contention. It was Sastre yesterday, maybe some of the Radioshack boys will chance their arm today.
My tip: Luis Leon Sánchez. A brilliant descender who is in excellent form.

TDF 2010 | Stage 15

Another tough day in the Pyrenees, the 187.5km Stage 15 from Pamiers to Bagneres-de-Luchon may not necessarily be won by the best climber today but it could well be won by the best descender. The final descent is highly technical, extremely dangerous and may see the speed of the fast descenders top 100 km/h. Yikes!

Another big break should get away eventually but it remains to be seen whether it will stay away. Astana rode with some urgency on the front yesterday, taking the weight off the shoulders of Saxo Bank - and to what end? Contador took no time out of Schleck and instead got caught up in a game of silly buggers with the yellow jersey wearer on the final climb. If Contador decides to have a crack and his team ride for him like yesterday then there is every chance that the break will be reeled in. Though there is a sense that Contador and Schleck may be saving some petrol for the final day in the Pyrenees which concludes atop the Tourmalet.

I still fancy some of the big names who are out of the overall to have a dig - stage glory all that is left to salve their wounded pride now that they are out of contention. It was Sastre yesterday, maybe some of the Radioshack boys will chance their arm today.

My tip: Luis Leon Sánchez. A brilliant descender who is in excellent form.

TDF 2010 | Stage 14
This is it. The first of four incredibly difficult stages in the Pyrenees and there is absolutely nowhere for any of the riders to hide. It doesn’t matter whether you are 1st on GC or 181st - make no mistake - you’re going to suffer all the way to the brutal, bitter end.
Today’s 184.5km Stage 14 from Revel to Ax-3 Domaines is one of two stages that has the added difficulty of being a hilltop finish; the second is the Stage 17 finish atop the mythical Tourmalet. Chunks of time will be lost by GC hopefuls today. Bucketloads and basketfuls of time will be lost by others.
We had always expected that these four days in the Pyrenees would be decisive for riders racing for the General Classification in this year’s Tour, though there was never any guarantee that the racing would be as exciting as we might hope. Often, with so much at stake and with riders aiming to defend their place on GC - 1st against 2nd; 3rd against 4th, 5th and 6th; and 7th against 8th, 9th and 10th - the pointy end of the peloton can get caught up in a giant game of follow that wheel for as long as you can. This year, I suspect we might be in for something different.
With the overall already down to two and with some big names having already lost large chunks of time in the preceding week, there are now plenty of classy bike riders who will be searching for a stage win in the Pyrenees unburdened by the need to preserve a minor placing. The likes of Armstrong, Evans, Basso, Wiggins, Sastre, Rogers, Kloden and Horner won’t derive any satisfaction from a plucky 10th place finish on the overall. But they’ll be more than happy to add a Tour stage win in the Pyrenees to their already bulging palmares.
These guys will attack and counter attack and race each other to a standstill. Then they’ll back up and do it all again the next day. This is a nightmare scenario for Saxo Bank and Astana - there will be so  many great climbers trying to get up the road on the attack it’s going to make keeping track of them all a near impossibility. A giant, mountain climbing smash-fest courtesy of some of the biggest names in the sport. It doesn’t get any better than this - and in addition to that we get to see Contador and Schleck duke it out for the Maillot Jaune. Superb.
My tip: Basso. The Italian mountain climbing machine and recent Giro winner has been biding his time and today he’s opening up a can of whoop-ass.

TDF 2010 | Stage 14

This is it. The first of four incredibly difficult stages in the Pyrenees and there is absolutely nowhere for any of the riders to hide. It doesn’t matter whether you are 1st on GC or 181st - make no mistake - you’re going to suffer all the way to the brutal, bitter end.

Today’s 184.5km Stage 14 from Revel to Ax-3 Domaines is one of two stages that has the added difficulty of being a hilltop finish; the second is the Stage 17 finish atop the mythical Tourmalet. Chunks of time will be lost by GC hopefuls today. Bucketloads and basketfuls of time will be lost by others.

We had always expected that these four days in the Pyrenees would be decisive for riders racing for the General Classification in this year’s Tour, though there was never any guarantee that the racing would be as exciting as we might hope. Often, with so much at stake and with riders aiming to defend their place on GC - 1st against 2nd; 3rd against 4th, 5th and 6th; and 7th against 8th, 9th and 10th - the pointy end of the peloton can get caught up in a giant game of follow that wheel for as long as you can. This year, I suspect we might be in for something different.

With the overall already down to two and with some big names having already lost large chunks of time in the preceding week, there are now plenty of classy bike riders who will be searching for a stage win in the Pyrenees unburdened by the need to preserve a minor placing. The likes of Armstrong, Evans, Basso, Wiggins, Sastre, Rogers, Kloden and Horner won’t derive any satisfaction from a plucky 10th place finish on the overall. But they’ll be more than happy to add a Tour stage win in the Pyrenees to their already bulging palmares.

These guys will attack and counter attack and race each other to a standstill. Then they’ll back up and do it all again the next day. This is a nightmare scenario for Saxo Bank and Astana - there will be so many great climbers trying to get up the road on the attack it’s going to make keeping track of them all a near impossibility. A giant, mountain climbing smash-fest courtesy of some of the biggest names in the sport. It doesn’t get any better than this - and in addition to that we get to see Contador and Schleck duke it out for the Maillot Jaune. Superb.

My tip: Basso. The Italian mountain climbing machine and recent Giro winner has been biding his time and today he’s opening up a can of whoop-ass.

TDF 2010 | Stage 13
Although the sprinters may have pencilled in the 196km Stage 13 from Rodez to Revel as one last chance for glory before the Pyranees, it’s unlikely that they’ll get their chance.
This stage is ripe for a successful breakaway to build up a big time gap and keep the peloton at bay. Last time a stage raced near here, Paolo Savoldelli finished more than 22 minutes ahead of the main bunch. The undulating terrain and tricky finishing kilometres may also pose some problems for the riders high on GC and they’ll need to be attentive. If they’re caught out napping there’s every chance they could lose 20 to 30 seconds if the teams of their opposition wind it up near the end.
Perfect territory for one of the rouleurs from a team like Katusha who will be full of confidence after the brilliant win by Rodriguez the day before. Or maybe finally Federigo or Hincapie make it in to the move.
My tip: Serguei Ivanov. Katusha make it two from two in two days.

TDF 2010 | Stage 13

Although the sprinters may have pencilled in the 196km Stage 13 from Rodez to Revel as one last chance for glory before the Pyranees, it’s unlikely that they’ll get their chance.

This stage is ripe for a successful breakaway to build up a big time gap and keep the peloton at bay. Last time a stage raced near here, Paolo Savoldelli finished more than 22 minutes ahead of the main bunch. The undulating terrain and tricky finishing kilometres may also pose some problems for the riders high on GC and they’ll need to be attentive. If they’re caught out napping there’s every chance they could lose 20 to 30 seconds if the teams of their opposition wind it up near the end.

Perfect territory for one of the rouleurs from a team like Katusha who will be full of confidence after the brilliant win by Rodriguez the day before. Or maybe finally Federigo or Hincapie make it in to the move.

My tip: Serguei Ivanov. Katusha make it two from two in two days.

TDF 2010 | Stage 12
Definitely not a run of the mill transitional stage, the 210.5km Stage 12 from Bourg-de-Peage to Mende includes three category 3 and two category 2 climbs and has the potential to throw up a few surprises.
This is a stage for a real strongman to steal a win from a break but only if they’re prepared to roll the dice and hang it all out there. Once again guys like Fedrigo and Voekler should be in the thick of a stage like today but they’ve been passengers just about this whole Tour. The only Frenchman racing with any real panache is Chavanel but surely he can’t be expected to fly the tricolore solo.
It will be interesting to see how hard Columbia-HTC are prepared to ride on the front today. They’ll be more than a little pissed off at the antics of Lampre, Garmin and Cervelo. None of these three teams have been keen to do much of the work to pull back the break; and then they’ve raced increasingly cynically in the closing kilometres, more intent on disrupting the Cavendish train than racing to set up the win for their own men. Julian Dean’s performance in roughing up Renshaw yesterday and then succeeding in having him thrown off the race must have had the Professor and his argyle clad goofballs thighslapping and guffawing all the way back to the hotel on the team bus. Columbia are right to hold them in contempt.
If somehow it all comes back together it won’t necessarily be the usual suspects that will figure prominently in the sprint. Perhaps better suited to the likes of Hushovd and Freire me thinks. Especially if there are counter attacks on the closing category 2 climb.
My tip: Freire. Oscar can get over the lumps better than most and he was in the thick of things yesterday.

TDF 2010 | Stage 12

Definitely not a run of the mill transitional stage, the 210.5km Stage 12 from Bourg-de-Peage to Mende includes three category 3 and two category 2 climbs and has the potential to throw up a few surprises.

This is a stage for a real strongman to steal a win from a break but only if they’re prepared to roll the dice and hang it all out there. Once again guys like Fedrigo and Voekler should be in the thick of a stage like today but they’ve been passengers just about this whole Tour. The only Frenchman racing with any real panache is Chavanel but surely he can’t be expected to fly the tricolore solo.

It will be interesting to see how hard Columbia-HTC are prepared to ride on the front today. They’ll be more than a little pissed off at the antics of Lampre, Garmin and Cervelo. None of these three teams have been keen to do much of the work to pull back the break; and then they’ve raced increasingly cynically in the closing kilometres, more intent on disrupting the Cavendish train than racing to set up the win for their own men. Julian Dean’s performance in roughing up Renshaw yesterday and then succeeding in having him thrown off the race must have had the Professor and his argyle clad goofballs thighslapping and guffawing all the way back to the hotel on the team bus. Columbia are right to hold them in contempt.

If somehow it all comes back together it won’t necessarily be the usual suspects that will figure prominently in the sprint. Perhaps better suited to the likes of Hushovd and Freire me thinks. Especially if there are counter attacks on the closing category 2 climb.

My tip: Freire. Oscar can get over the lumps better than most and he was in the thick of things yesterday.