Professional Cycling For the Fans - Tour de France Route Presentation tomorrow

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LittleSally
10-21-08, 04:40 PM
According to cyclingfans.com there is going to be live online coverage of the presentation for the first time this year. Of course stateside it's very early (5:30am ET), but it should be fun to watch and see whether it's suited to any particular rider(s).

Check http://www.cyclingfans.com for links


Sci-Fi
10-22-08, 07:49 AM
From AP:

PARIS -- The 2009 Tour de France will feature a tough mountain stage on its penultimate day, a change in tradition that could complicate Lance Armstrong's possible return.

The route, aimed at keeping suspense going to the very end of the 106-year-old event, was unveiled Wednesday in Paris. Often, the Tour finishes with a time trial before what is largely a ceremonial ride on the final day. The steep climb up the notorious Mont Ventoux could pose a particular challenge for Armstrong, who has never won on the rocky slopes of the fabled ascent in the south of France. The seven-time Tour champion is making a comeback after three years of retirement, but it's still unclear whether he will race in the event. Armstrong's odds of riding in next year's Tour are "50-50 for the moment," his Astana team manager Johan Bruyneel said on Wednesday. "We have to see if he is physically able to cope with it. Personally, I think he is capable.

"Today is Oct. 22, 2008 and I can tell you he is in better shape than on October 2003 or 2004 because he used to take a big break after the Tour. He now needs to get this extra one percent that will make the difference" Bruyneel added.

The three-week Tour begins July 4 and will cover 2,141 miles with 20 major mountain climbs -- slightly fewer than the average of 22-23 climbs in recent years.

Mont Ventoux will be the 20th of 21 stages. After 19 days of racing, the climb on which a British rider died in the 1960s promises to be a test for tired legs and minds, and possibly decisive in determining the winner.

"The Ventoux will blow things up," said Jean-Francois Pescheux, who helped design the route as director of competitions for ASO, the company that organizes the Tour.

From its start in the principality of Monaco, the Tour will go across flatlands of the Mediterranean coast to Barcelona, Spain, then head sharply uphill into the Pyrenees. The first Pyrenean stage, to the Arcalis mountain station, is also the longest of this year's Tour at 139 miles. The long ride and steep uphill finish should give the first indication of the favorites.

After two more trying days of ascents in the mountains that form the border between France and Spain, the Tour goes through central and eastern France before tackling the Alps. Three days of climbs in those mountains, including the Tour's high-point at 8,113 feet on the Grand Saint-Bernard pass, followed by a time trial should further separate the field.

Then comes the Mont Ventoux.

Organizers also have revived the team time trial, which had fallen out of favor in recent years. The highly technical discipline will be run on Day 4, but its relatively short distance of 23.6 miles should not be a major factor in the determining the favorites.

Armstrong initially said when he announced his comeback last month that he would aim for an eighth Tour victory, stunning the cycling world.

But a less-than-enthusiastic response from Tour organizers and renewed discussion in France of whether Armstrong used performance-enhancing substances -- he insists he did not -- are now reportedly giving him reason to reconsider. Armstrong has said that he will race the Giro d'Italia in May, but is sounding less certain of riding the Tour in July.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme again Wednesday offered only a guarded response to the prospect of Armstrong's return to the race, saying it would be "neither a good nor bad thing" for the Tour.

"It is up to him to decide whether he wants to come or not," Prudhomme said. "His return would neither be a bad, nor a good thing. Of course he is a special character, but for the Tour he is a rider like others."

Pescheux expressed doubts that the 37-year-old cyclist, who won a record seven Tours from 1999-2005, could contend after three years away from cycling.

"I think he will rapidly realize that things are not the same," Pescheux said.

Pescheux added that Armstrong always managed to adapt to the yearly route changes of previous Tours, and he thinks the Texan would again if he chose to race in 2009.

Suzie Green
10-22-08, 09:38 AM
Here's a link to VeloNews (http://www.velonews.com/article/84428/2009-tour-route-revealed) and a list of the stages...


bbattle
10-22-08, 11:29 AM
Might as well hand Contador the win now. Mount Ventoux on stage 20 benefits him greatly. Team time trial with Leipheimer and Lance on his team? What a gift.

SamDaBikinMan
10-22-08, 12:07 PM
I just don't see Lance riding in the tour unless it is to wn it.

Just my .02

Hezz
10-22-08, 06:00 PM
Might as well hand Contador the win now. Mount Ventoux on stage 20 benefits him greatly. Team time trial with Leipheimer and Lance on his team? What a gift.

Very true, but what about the rest of the Astana team. Are they as strong as Garmin with the whole team. And not just thier top four guys.

silver bullet
10-23-08, 02:30 AM
Armstrong will not ride the 2009 TdF. Merckx said so.

bbattle
10-25-08, 05:33 AM
Very true, but what about the rest of the Astana team. Are they as strong as Garmin with the whole team. And not just thier top four guys.

Astana roster 2008 (http://www.astana-cyclingteam.com/Rider_Overview.aspx)

I could pick a pretty good team from these guys. Somehow, they helped Contador win the Giro and Vuelta this year. :)