EPAIt looks pretty good, for the time being. Tomorrow’s stage is a rolling course with a few climbs, but the only serious hump is the category 2 ascent of the Col des Ares, which comes 27 km into the 211.5 km stage. It should be a pretty easy stage to control, and won’t leave a lot of opportunities for someone to make time on the maillot jaune. In fact, it looks pretty good for Floyd until Tuesday’s Stage 15, when the stage finishes on the legendary switchbacks of L’Alpe d’Huez.
Floyd looked strong today, but so did Menchov. Kloden could be a surprise, if he can muster up some strength for the Alps. But there aren’t a lot of riders in contention at this point who might mount a serious challenge.
Realistically there aren’t a lot of opportunities for someone to assault the yellow jersey. There’s Tuesday’s l’Alpe d’Huez stage. Wednesday is a hard day with a mountaintop finish, and that’s about it. Thursday’s Stage 17 will be a tough day, with 5 categorized climbs, but it’s a downhill finish that’s unlikely to shuffle the overall standings unless the lead is a close one.
Denis Menchov is strong, has the powerful Rabobank team (including last year’s King of the Mountains, Michael Rasmussen, and today’s surprisingly powerful climber, Michael Booogerd), and he’s only 61 seconds behind Landis. Cadel Evans is riding well, conceding only 77 seconds to Landis on the overall, but his team isn’t as powerful. CSC’s Carlo Sastre has a remote chance, sitting just 1:52 behind in the overall and finishing a scant 17 seconds off the pace today. And then there’s T-Mobile’s Andreas Kloden, who may be 2:29 down but has traditionally performed very well in the Alps, and the pink jerseys of T-Mobile have been near the front on every stage.
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So Floyd and the Phonak squad have to do it. Landis has had a taste of stage race leadership, riding in support of Lance in years past and in successfully defending his lead in this year’s Tour of California. He has the form, and the course doesn’t look as though it holds any surprises.
It’s still an open race, but it’s sure looking like another American victory is possible, even without Lance.
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'Things have gone all right' July 13: U.S. cyclist Floyd Landis takes the Tour de France lead during the 11th stage and comments after the day's racing. |
2010 Tour de France |
July 3-25 |