Archiv der Kategorie: Tour de France

Tour de France – Etappe 1


@ASO/Alex Broadway
Nice – Nice (156,0 km)
1 ALEXANDER KRISTOFF (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 3:46:23
2 MADS PEDERSEN (TREK – SEGAFREDO) 0:00:00
3 CEES BOL (TEAM SUNWEB) 0:00:00
4 SAM BENNETT (DECEUNINCK – QUICK – STEP) 0:00:00
5 PETER SAGAN (BORA – HANSGROHE) 0:00:00
6 ELIA VIVIANI (COFIDIS) 0:00:00
7 GIACOMO NIZZOLO (NTT PRO CYCLING TEAM) 0:00:00
8 BRYAN COQUARD (B&B HOTELS – VITAL CONCEPT P / B KTM) 0:00:00
9 ANTHONY TURGIS (TOTAL DIRECT ENERGIE) 0:00:00
10 JASPER STUYVEN (TREK – SEGAFREDO) 0:00:00
11 OLIVER NAESEN (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:00
12 MATTEO TRENTIN (CCC TEAM) 0:00:00
13 CLÉMENT VENTURINI (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:00
14 LUKA MEZGEC (MITCHELTON – SCOTT) 0:00:00
15 HUGO HOULE (ASTANA PRO TEAM) 0:00:00
16 SERGIO ANDRES HIGUITA (EF PRO CYCLING) 0:00:00
17 TADEJ POGACAR (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 0:00:00
18 CONNOR SWIFT (TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC) 0:00:00
19 CALEB EWAN (LOTTO SOUDAL) 0:00:00
20 CHRISTOPHE LAPORTE (COFIDIS) 0:00:00
21 JONAS KOCH (CCC TEAM) 0:00:00

Gesamtwertung
1 ALEXANDER KRISTOFF (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 3:46:13
2 MADS PEDERSEN (TREK – SEGAFREDO) 0:00:04
3 CEES BOL (TEAM SUNWEB) 0:00:06
4 SAM BENNETT (DECEUNINCK – QUICK – STEP) 0:00:10
5 PETER SAGAN (BORA – HANSGROHE) 0:00:10
6 ELIA VIVIANI (COFIDIS) 0:00:10
7 GIACOMO NIZZOLO (NTT PRO CYCLING TEAM) 0:00:10
8 BRYAN COQUARD (B&B HOTELS – VITAL CONCEPT P / B KTM) 0:00:10
9 ANTHONY TURGIS (TOTAL DIRECT ENERGIE) 0:00:10
10 JASPER STUYVEN (TREK – SEGAFREDO) 0:00:10

Nice, Saturday, August 29th – Alexander Kristoff of UAE Team Emirates won the first bunch sprint of the 2020 Tour de France on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, beating world champion Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo) and Cees Bol (Team Sunweb). It’s his fourth stage win in the Tour de France after two in 2014 and the conclusive stage in Paris in 2018. The 33 year old is the second Norwegian to take the yellow jersey after Thor Hushovd.
SCHÄR, GAUTIER AND GRELLIER, FIRST IN ACTION
176 riders took the start of the 107th Tour de France in Nice. Michael Schär (CCC), Cyril Gautier (B&B Hotels-Vital Concept) and Fabien Grellier (Total Direct Energie) rode away from the peloton right after the flag off. They reached the finishing line for a first passage after 38.5km with an advantage of 2’40’’ over the peloton that experienced a first crash involving top sprinter Sam Bennett. His team-mate Julian Alaphilippe slipped in a wet downhill at km 65 and fought his way back afterwards while Russian rookie Pavel Sivakov (Ineos Grenadier) struggled for a while at the back after a serious crash.
SIVAKOV, EWAN, NIZZOLO AND LOPEZ INVOLVED IN CRASHES
The peloton slowed down to wait for the injured riders and avoid further damages. Sivakov crashed again after he made it across. More crashes occurred and affected top sprinters Caleb Ewan and Giacomo Nizzolo. Grellier was the first breakaway rider to get reeled in. Schär and Gautier who passed the côte de Rimiez in that order got caught at km 98. The regrouped peloton slowed down due to the rainy conditions. It enabled Nizzolo and Ewan to come back. Astana broke the gentleman agreement but as Omar Fraile sped up in a downhill, Miguel Angel Lopez lost the control of his bike and bumped into a traffic sign. The Colombian got back on.
ALEXANDER KRISTOFF ON PETER SAGAN’S WHEEL
The peloton rode slowly until Benoît Cosnefroy (AG2R-La Mondiale) launched an attack with 22km to go. He got reeled in 13km before the end. Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ) was caught in a crash with 3km to go. It was a 5km long straight line on the Promenade des Anglais. Kristoff had no lead out but he followed Peter Sagan before he timed his effort at perfection to give no chance to Pedersen and Bol to overtake him.
@ASO

Eröffnungsetappe der Tour endet nach Sturzfestival im Massensprint: Peter Sagan auf Rang fünf
Eigentlich sollte die erste Etappe der 107. Auflage der Tour de France ein Schaulaufen der Sprinter an der sonnigen Cote d’Azur sein, doch Regen machte aus der 156 km langen Etappe rund um Nizza ein wahres Sturzfestival. Die 3-Mann-Fluchtgruppe des Tages machte beide Bergwertungen unter sich aus, spielte aber sonst keine Rolle und wurde rund 60 km vor dem Ziel wieder gestellt. Nach zahlreichen Stürzen in der ersten Abfahrt des Tages ließ es das Feld in der letzten Abfahrt ruhiger angehen. Dies führte dazu, dass viele abgehängte Fahrer wieder aufschließen konnten. Einige namhafte Fahrer hatten dennoch mit ihren Verletzungen zu kämpfen. Von BORA – hansgrohe kam Lennard Kämna mit einer Schürfwunde noch relativ glimpflich davon. Auf den letzten 15 km wurde das Rennen wieder voll eröffnet und die Etappe endete im erwarteten Massensprint, der allerdings noch einmal von einem Massensturz an der 3-Kilometer-Marke beeinflusst wurde. Daniel Oss war dennoch wie geplant als letzter Lead-Out-Fahrer für Peter Sagan mit dabei. Am Ende holte A. Kristoff den Sieg, Sagan wurde Fünfter.
Reaktionen im Ziel
„Es war eine harte erste Etappe und ein verrücktes Finale. Auf den letzten fünf Kilometern war Gegenwind, darum war es im Feld am Ende extrem nervös. Solche Sprints sind immer eine Lotterie und man braucht ein bisschen Glück.“ – Peter Sagan

„Sicher anzukommen war heute nicht einfach. Es war extrem rutschig und wirklich gefährlich. Ich glaube, fast die Hälfte des Feldes war heute irgendwann mal am Boden. Das Team hat super gearbeitet und ich bin ohne Sturz durchgekommen, das war das Wichtigste. Ich kann nach dieser Etappe nicht wirklich sagen, wie es um meine Form steht nach dem Sturz bei der Dauphiné, denn ein echter Test war das noch nicht. Aber ich hatte keine Schmerzen in meiner Hüfte, das ist schon mal ein gutes Zeichen.“ – Emanuel Buchmann

„Es gab heute einige technische Passagen und in den Abfahrten war es extrem rutschig, als es zu regnen begonnen hat. Das Wichtigste war heute, ohne Sturz durchzukommen, und da hat das Team einen tollen Job gemacht. Lukas und Lennard gingen zwar zu Boden, sind aber ok, da hatten wir etwas Glück. Meiner Meinung nach war es die richtige Entscheidung, dass das Feld die letzte Abfahrt neutralisiert hat. Peter hat heute gut gepunktet, am Ende wurde er Fünfter. Ich denke, da war mehr drin, aber wir können dennoch zufrieden sein.“ – Enrico Poitschke, sportlicher Leiter
@BORA-hansgrohe

The Tour to the power of 10

2010: Reconquering the Tourmalet (10/10)
At the turn of each decade, the Tour de France has gone through organisational changes and backstage struggles that have variously turned out to be decisive or utterly inconsequential. The journey back in time proposed by letour.fr comes full circle with an ending on the Tourmalet. 100 years after the peloton launched its first assault on the Giant of the Pyrenees, a stage finish at the top of the mountain thrust the technical aspects of the Tour into the spotlight. Overcoming that logistical challenge a decade ago opened the door to summit finishes on peaks such as the Galibier and the Izoard.
The Tour de France sure knows how to celebrate its anniversaries. 2010 marked the centennial of the first appearance of high mountains on the route of the race. A hundred years after Alphonse Steinès‘ odyssey (retold in episode 1 of this series), the Tourmalet again took centre stage. This time, the plan was to draw the finish line at the top of the mountain, a whopping 2,115 metres above sea level. While it was not the first time that someone had come up with the idea —Jean-Pierre Danguillaume had won a stage here in the 1974 Tour—, much had changed in the intervening 36 years. At a time when media coverage of the Tour had boomed around the globe, the resources needed to broadcast the race worldwide were at least five times as big. „I wanted to take the Tour where sport wants us to go, gambling that we would be able to adapt our resources to the terrain“, points out Christian Prudhomme. Jean-Louis Pagès was tasked with finding a solution to the logistical conundrum. In essence, the stage finish designer was asked to fit a dozen elephants into a matchbox. „I was a bit reluctant at the time because I was an old-school man“, explains the former history and geography teacher, who joined the Tour in 1984. „Having time, place and action on the same wavelength was my core tenet. This time round, we had to enter the era of resource fragmentation.“

The team had to think outside the box to make a stage finish on the Tourmalet possible. Only a handful of structures would be set up on the mountain for radio and TV crews, who would have to get there by ski lift. Guest coaches would have to park in Barèges, while the press room was to be set up in La Mongie, on the other side of the massif. On paper, at least, it seemed possible to crowbar everything into the limited space available, „although we only had half as much room as we usually had“, says Pagès. However, the weather threw a curveball on 22 July 2010. „To top it all, it started raining, so we had to improvise from the morning to save the lorries from getting bogged down. We made room for them on the road and it worked because we overhauled the layout. Cramming everything into that space was a technical wonder, but I stayed calm. I used to send Christian a picture of the finish around 11 am to let him know the finish line was ready. This time, we were still rushing to set up the timing control room at 2:30 pm, so I didn’t send him anything.“

In the end, everything was in place for Andy Schleck to outsprint Alberto Contador for the stage win on the fog-shrouded and rain-soaked Tourmalet. „Those moments were packed with strong emotions because I knew it was a test run, that it would allow us to envisage other finishes in spectacular places“, explains Pagès, who comes from the Lozère department but is now enjoying life in Nîmes. Indeed, it only took one year for the Tour to organise a stage finish on the Col de Galibier, 2,645 metres above sea level and with the technical area spread out across three levels. Sometime later, in 2017, the concept produced a spectacular finish on the Izoard, where Warren Barguil came out on top clad in the polka-dot jersey. After this string of successes, the format will be used again in the 2020 Tour, in which a similar concept was used to design the finishes on Puy Mary and the Grand Colombier.
@ASO

TOUR DE FRANCE: INFO WITH ONE DAY TO GO

Key points:
 The official start list of the 107th Tour de France has been released with 176 riders divided in 30 different nationalities. They’ll move into a bubble as part of the anti-Covid-19 measures.
 Defending champion Egan Bernal expressed his ambitions as well as Frenchman Thibaut Pinot who was forced to a dramatic abandon last year.
 Stage 1 from Nice to Nice will develop 156 kilometres. It suits the sprinters like Caleb Ewan, Sam Bennett, Giacomo Nizzolo and Peter Sagan.

ANTI-COVID-19 MEASURES ARE IN PLACE
An important protocol has been built for several weeks along with French authorities and cycling governing bodies in order to prevent the Covid-19 from entering and circulating inside the Tour de France community. The number of accredited people has been reduced by 30% compare to 2019. They all have to present a negative PCR test before getting their pass. A bubble has been created around 650 people, comprising riders, staff members of cycling teams and race officials, all subject to two tests prior to the start and one per week of racing. It’s compulsory to wear a mask all along the route of the Tour de France. Access to the climbs will be filtered. 700.000 masks are available, half of them being for the crowd, as well as two tons of sanitizer. A 20-people strong medical Covid-19 division of the organisation is constantly in alert with a mobile laboratory able to run PCR tests whenever they’re needed.

EGAN BERNAL TO TARGET TIME GAIN BEFORE THE TIME TRIAL
Defending champion Egan Bernal gave an update about his health following his precautionary abandon at the Critérium du Dauphiné. “My back still hurts a little bit but I’m fine and I’m hoping to feel better and better and to have fully recovered for the last week”, the first ever Colombian winner of the Tour de France informed. “This time around, our team has more Hispanic flavour with four of us from Latin America or Spain but this is still an English squad with the same mentality that we clearly have to respect. The tactic might change but it depends less on the team’s composition [without Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas] than the race situation. In the past, the team had leaders like [Bradley] Wiggins and Froome who gained time against the clock and could defend their position. On the other hand, I need to attack in order to gain time before the time trial. Primož [Roglič] was the strongest at the Dauphiné. He was flying. We must pay attention to him and also to Tom Dumoulin. It’s something good for the race to have another strong team. We can share the responsibilities now. It’s no longer up to Ineos only.”

10 COLOMBIANS AT THE START… BUT ONLY TWO AUSTRALIANS
The 176 riders of the 107th Tour de France carry 30 different nationalities, France leading the pack with 39 cyclists ahead of Spain and Belgium (17). Colombia enjoys an unusual high number of 10 starters, half of them having already made the podium of a Grand Tour at least once: Egan Bernal, Nairo Quintana, Esteban Chaves, Rigoberto Uran and Miguel Angel Lopez. It’s far from the record number of 26 Colombians at the 1986 Tour de France when two Colombian teams (Café de Colombia and Postobon) participated but their highest ranked rider at the end was Samuel Cabrera, 11th at more than 35 minutes from Bernard Hinault. On the other hand, only two Australians line up this year: Caleb Ewan and Richie Porte. The last time there were so few riders from the land down under was in 2001 with Stuart O’Grady and Bradley McGee. Australian team Mitchelton-Scott didn’t select any of their compatriots for the first time since their inception in 2012.

FIRST TIME FOR ISRAEL AND ECUADOR
Last year’s Giro d’Italia winner Richard Carapaz is the first Ecuadorian to start the Tour de France. He’ll have the role of right-hand man for defending champion Egan Bernal. Guy Niv of Israel-Start-Up-Nation is the first Israeli to ride the Grande Boucle. He completed the Giro d’Italia last year. In 2016, Ethiopia’s Tsgabu Grmay was the last rider to add one country in the history of the fifty plus participating nations since the first edition in 1903.

THIBAUT PINOT FEELS NO PRESSURE: “IT CAN’T BE WORSE THAN LAST YEAR”
Thibaut Pinot is back at the Tour de France after his dramatic withdrawal last year. “I believe I’m mentally stronger and more serene and I feel less pressure than last year before the Tour because the outcome can’t be worse than what happened to me last year”, the Frenchman declared. “The bad experience boosted my confidence and I feel stronger now. My goal is the same as last year though. I still want to do my best and end up the highest possible. The winner of stage 4 to Orcières-Merlette will probably get the yellow jersey. I would certainly not consider it as a poisoned gift. I never had the yellow jersey so far and it would be a miss in my career if I was to never wear it. Moreover, the peloton will be a real steamroller in the first week. We as a team don’t have to rule the race. The important will be to perform at our best in the third week.”

ALEJANDRO VALVERDE IS THE OLDEST, MAXIME CHEVALIER IS THE YOUNGEST
42 neophytes will discover the Tour de France in the starting area of the Masséna square in Nice. The oldest is Belgium’s Ben Hermans, 34. The most famous debutant is certainly Miguel Angel Lopez who already finished third at the Giro d’Italia and La Vuelta in 2018. It’ll be the first Grand Tour for ten of them, including the youngest participant: Frenchman Maxime Chevalier from B&B-Vital Concept, aged 21. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) and Mathieu Burgaudeau (Total Direct Energie) are yet to celebrate their 22nd birthday. The oldest starter is Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), aged 40, the same as Raymond Poulidor when he finished third overall in 1976. The Spaniard is also the most experienced with twelve participations under his belt, the first one having taken place in 2005. He’s followed by Tony Martin (11), Imanol Erviti and Pierre Rolland (10).
@ASO

The Tour to the power of 10

2000: The Tour on the archi-pedal-o (9/10)

At the turn of each decade, the Tour de France has gone through organisational changes and backstage struggles that have variously turned out to be decisive or utterly inconsequential. The journey back in time proposed by letour.fr continues with the run-up to the 2000 Tour de France, when a spectacular start on Guadeloupe, almost 7,000 km from Paris, had been planned and preparations put into motion. A transatlantic Tour was almost within the realm of possibility.
Seen from the mid-1990s, the year 2000 was an equally thrilling and daunting prospect. For the Tour de France, it was an exciting opportunity to craft a route like no other. A lot of good ideas were thrown around, but one in particular stood out from the rest, especially because it came directly from the French president. Jacques Chirac told Jean-Claude Killy, the president of ASO at the time, that he would do everything in his power to support a Tour start from the French overseas territories and, especially, Guadeloupe, then governed by his ally Lucette Michaux-Chevry. No other part of overseas France was as passionate about cycling, with a generation of track cyclists bursting onto the stage and a bicycle race that had been an integral part of the archipelago’s sporting scene ever since its launch in 1948.
For Jean-Marie Leblanc, the boss of the Tour, this left-field idea hit all the right buttons: „I liked the idea because we needed something compelling for 2000. It was a powerful symbol and a great way of showing that the French overseas territories are an integral part of the Republic.“ Meetings were soon held and reconnaissance trips organised to study the feasibility of the project. Jean-François Pescheux, who at the time served as director of competitions, took on the leading role in meticulously analysing the plan: „The key issue was taking as little material to the other side of the Atlantic as possible. We had decided to get rid of the prologue to preclude the need for time-trialling bikes, to allow each team a single car and to significantly cut down the size of the publicity caravan. The route itself was interesting and featured a flat stage in Grande-Terre and a hillier one in Basse-Terre, both of which would have finished in the same place near Pointe-à-Pitre Airport“ Indeed, the second big problem with taking the Tour to the Antilles was „shortening the distance“ and mitigating the impact of the time difference with mainland France.
The „Guadeloupe plan“ hinged on a significant logistical assumption: the Concorde was the only aircraft that could be used to transfer the riders without putting them through the wringer of jet lag.
In order to avoid throwing the riders‘ circadian rhythm out of whack, the idea was to travel to the island as late as possible and get out as quickly as possible. Furthermore, Brest was chosen to host the first European stage to gain an extra 20-odd minutes. Pescheux’s timetable covered all the bases: „If we scheduled stage 2 to finish at noon, when it was 4 pm in metropolitan France, riders could be in bed in Brest by midnight and ready to tackle a short 120 km stage to Quimper the next morning. This overcame all the problems.“ Guadeloupe had more than enough hotels to host the Grande Boucle, while ASO communications manager Philippe Sudres, at the time in charge of relations with broadcasters, had already designed the outline of the TV production set-up: „The idea was to source the helicopters used to cover the race, along with other heavy equipment, from Florida.“
However, the „Guadeloupe plan“ hinged on a significant logistical assumption: the Concorde was the only aircraft that could be used to transfer the riders without putting them through the wringer of jet lag. Pescheux recalls that the talks with Air France were what finally buried the dream: „We met with the Minister of Transport and we came to the conclusion that our plan required six Concorde aircraft. However, their fleet was not big enough and, at any rate, they could not stop all their other operations just for us. It was a real pity because it would have been amazing to use the Tour to show just how close the Antilles are.“ At the time, the waivers that have since allowed the 2009 Vuelta a España to start in the Netherlands and the 2018 Giro d’Italia to start in Israel by starting the race on Friday and/or adding an extra rest day did not exist yet. In the end, the Tour gave up on its dreams of coconut palms and got the show on the road in Futuroscope near Poitiers, where the prologue saw a promising young power rider, David Millar, seize the last yellow jersey of the 20th century in his race debut.
@ASO

Tour de France Mannschaft von BORA – hansgrohe bleibt unverändert

Trotz der erlittenen Sturzverletzungen in Frankreich bzw. Italien, werden Buchmann, Schachmann und Mühlberger die Tour de France in Angriff nehmen. Allerdings unter anderen Voraussetzungen als ursprünglich geplant.

„Die Prellungen und Blutergüsse bei Emanuel haben sich als sehr hartnäckig erwiesen. Er hat einige Tage komplett pausieren müssen, und so wichtige Trainingstage verloren. Medizinisch handelt es sich um einen ganz normalen zeitlichen Verlauf, sodass wir, wenn sich die Tendenz fortsetzt in Richtung Tour auf einem guten Weg sind. Körperlich wird er zu diesem Zeitpunkt aber sicher nicht in der optimalen Form sein.
Der Bruch des Schlüsselbeins bei Max hat sich in den letzten Tagen sehr gut entwickelt. Wir haben die nötige Stabilität, um es zumindest zu versuchen. Er trainiert seit ein paar Tagen wieder auf der Straße, und das läuft unseren Erwartungen entsprechend. Aber natürlich wurde auch Max massiv in seiner Vorbereitung beeinflusst. Zum Radfahren gehören eben nicht nur die Beine, sondern auch der Rest des Körpers muss in guter Verfassung sein.
Gregor ist wohl noch am besten davongekommen. Eine schwere Verletzung des Handgelenks, die eine längere Ruhigstellung oder Operation nach sich gezogen hätte konnte ausgeschlossen werden. Er hat zwar auch noch Schmerzen, kann mit einer Spezialschiene aber wieder trainieren. Alle drei haben in den letzten Tagen eine exzellente Mitarbeit bei den intensiven Rehabilitationsmaßnahmen geleistet – auch das macht Weltklassesportler aus.“ – Jan-Niklas Droste, Medical Team

„Das war schon ein herber Rückschlag. Eigentlich dachte ich, die Tour ist gelaufen, als ich nach dem Sturz nicht mehr selbständig aufstehen konnte. Aber zum Glück war doch nichts gebrochen. Ich habe mich letzte Woche voll auf die Therapie konzentriert, und konnte erst Ende der Woche wieder aufs Rad steigen. Am Wochenende im Training lief es nicht nach Wunsch. Das Ganze hat mich ziemlich zurückgeworfen. Der Sturz ist bitter, weil ich richtig gut in Form war. Bei der Dauphiné war ich hinter Roglic der Stärkste am Berg, mit Pinot zusammen. Es gibt nun ein paar Fragezeichen, zumal es ja gleich richtig los geht. Es gibt keine Zeit zum Einrollen. Schon auf der zweiten Etappe geht es in die Berge. In wie weit ich da mithalten kann, wird man sehen. Ich kann die Tour jetzt nur von Tag zu Tagen in Angriff nehmen.“ – Emanuel Buchmann

„Natürlich hätte ich mir andere Voraussetzungen gewünscht. Ich freue mich aber dennoch, dass mir das Team trotz der Verletzung das Vertrauen schenkt und mir die Chance gibt, bei der Tour am Start zu stehen. Ich habe in den vergangenen Tagen so gut wie möglich trainiert und hoffe, dass es auch im Rennen machbar ist und ich mit den Schmerzen umgehen kann.“ – Maximilian Schachmann

No TdF 2020 for Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas

„Egan will once again target the yellow jersey in France and we are very excited to give last year’s Giro winner, Richard Carapaz, his debut in this year’s Tour also,“ Brailsford said, announcing the selection decision on Wednesday morning.
„Geraint will target the Giro and take on the opportunity to double up his Tour de France win with another Grand Tour title, with the aim of being the first Welshman to win it.

Foto: Gerhard Plomitzer
„In turn, Chris Froome will target the Vuelta. Chris is a legend of our sport, a true champion who has demonstrated incredible grit and determination to come back from his crash last year. We want to support him to compete for another Grand Tour title and the Vuelta gives him that little bit more time to continue his progress to the top level.

„I am very proud that we have several current, and I am sure future, Grand Tour champions in the team. Selecting the right leader in the right race with the right support team is critical and has meant we have had to analyse all the latest information to make sure we are in the best position possible to optimise our performances in the coming months.“
Team Ineos will be known as the Ineos Grenadiers for the Tour de France.
They confirmed that their eight riders for the Tour will be:

Andrey Amador
Egan Bernal
Richard Carapaz
Jonathan Castroviejo
Michal Kwiatkowski
Luke Rowe
Pavel Sivakov
Dylan van Baarle

„We have been analysing closely how we can win the Tour de France this year and we have a passionate team united by a common purpose, ready to get the job done,“ Brailsford said.

The Tour to the power of 10 / 1970: Leblanc, a team rider with huge potential (7/10)

1970: Leblanc, a team rider with huge potential (7/10)

At the turn of each decade, the Tour de France has gone through organisational changes and backstage struggles that have variously turned out to be decisive or utterly inconsequential. The journey back in time proposed by letour.fr continues in 1970, in the slipstream of Jean-Marie Leblanc, a rider competing in his second Tour de France after some minor successes in other races. A career in journalism beckons for the man from northern France, who has no idea yet that he will one day become the director of the Tour. Yet the seeds of the attributes needed to helm the race have already taken root in this humble team rider.

Those who still have vivid memories of cycling in the late 1960s would no doubt argue that Jean-Marie Leblanc was a good rider despite his modest results -no offence meant to the Grand Prix d’Aix-en-Provence or the Circuit d’Armorique. He was also what journalists know as „a good customer“, someone who can be relied upon to offer a quote that will grab the reader’s attention before the start of the race and never fails to spice up conversations with anecdotes that can be used to flesh out the „news in brief“ section. A paradigmatic example can be found in the coverage of the 1970 Tour by L’Équipe. The Bic rider was working as a devoted domestique for Jan Janssen and Luis Ocaña in what was only his second Tour de France (58th in 1968), but he seemed to appear in the newspapers far more often than would have been expected from his performance on the road. The mystery was solved in the first week of racing, when author Guy Lagorce wrote A brief portrait of a future colleague and gave the floor to Leblanc: „Starting a career in journalism would also be a way for me to prove to the world that cyclists are more than just a bunch of lads with big thighs […] I won’t deny it: every time that things get tough out there and a press car overtakes me, I feel a pang of jealousy when I peek inside. You have no idea how soft the cushions of a car look when seen from the saddle of a bike.“
Just as Leblanc showed glimpses of the potential of a future journalist, he also had the makings of a man devoted to the best interests of cycling.

Aware that he would never be good enough to earn a champion’s wages, the young father and media darling was already planning his future in a different field. By 1970, he had ample experience in this area after taking advantage of the winter breaks to lay the groundwork for his transition. Half a century later, he still remembers his first foray into the sports press clearly: „I was shy, but in the winter of 1966–67 my friend Philippe Crépel persuaded me to call Émile Parmentier, the sports editor of La Voix du Nord. He welcomed me with open arms and I’ll never be able to thank him enough for it. He sent me to report on cyclo-cross, of course, and put me in charge of the boxing section. I loved it and I even obtained a coaching diploma to be a credible source in such a special world.“ A cyclist in the summer and journalist in the winter, the young Economics graduate was definitely not your average cyclist.
Jean-Marie Leblanc continued to learn in the 1970 Tour, eagerly fielding questions. „I loved hearing them talk about this profession I wanted to practise“, insisted the aspiring reporter, who would eventually be hired by La Voix du Nord in 1971, right after the end of his final season in the peloton. Just as Leblanc showed the promise of the future journalist who a few years later would receive a call from the chief editor of L’Équipe, Noël Couëdel, offering him the post of cycling editor, he also had the makings of a man devoted to the best interests of cycling. It was his thorough understanding of the matter that led to him becoming the secretary-general of the National Union of Professional Cyclists (UNCP), where he proved his mettle as a leader: „At UNCP, for example, we fought to get two-year contracts for neo-pros, which did not exist before that. I had always wanted to help organise my profession, and when I became a journalist, I took on an active role in the trade union of French sports journalists (USJSF)“. Jean-Marie Leblanc took it to a whole new level in 1988, when he became the director of the Tour de France a mere 20 years after his first participation as a rider.

Discover or rediscover the previous episodes in the series:
1960: When President de Gaulle greeted the Tour (6/10)
1950: Divorce Italian style (5/10)
1940: The Tour that wasn’t (4/10)
1930: The Tour revolutionizes (3/10)
1920: “sportsmen”according to Desgrange (2/10)
1910: Alphonse Steinès’great deception (1/10)
More information on www.letour.fr/en/
@ASO

GRAND DÉPART 2021 IN BRITTANY: BREST SETS SAILS

Passing of the peloton during stage six of the 2018 Tour de France between Brest and Mûr-de-Bretagne

Key points:
 The organisers of the Tour de France announced at a press conference at the Regional Council of Brittany in Rennes that the Grand Départ of the 2021 Tour de France will take place in Brest. Finistère’s point will host the start of the race for the 4th time in history, following 1952, 1974 and 2008.
 Four all-Brittany stages will be on the programme of the Tour beginning on 26 June, with stages that will likely be influential for the Yellow Jersey contenders.
 The Grand Départ initially planned in Copenhagen has been postponed until 2022.

It is said that when the wind blows, no one navigates turbulence better than Bretons. In the past few weeks, they have shown themselves to be up to the challenge and opportunity. They have also demonstrated their loyalty to the Tour de France when the skies darkened over Copenhagen. The congested 2021 summer sporting calendar has forced the Tour’s first visit to Denmark to be postponed until 2022. Instead of heading north, the 108th edition will travel west and its first stage will be held in Brest, which is only second to Paris in terms of hosting the Grand Départ. In previous Tour starts from the tip of Brittany, the way was paved for Fausto Coppi’s success in 1952, Eddy Merckx’s last victory in 1974, and then Carlos Sastre’s in 2008.

After the 32nd visit of the Grande Boucle in Brest, which first appeared on the race programme in 1906, the route will be laid out with the intention of exploring Brittany’s Armor coastal region and its inland Argoat territories. The diversity of the landscapes makes it possible to create selective stages and will thus put the onus on the favourites to live up to their responsibilities straight away. Details will be announced for these four all- Brittany stages during the presentation of the Tour on 29 October at the Palais des Congrès in Paris.

The Tour de France in Brittany: key numbers
– 170 stages held with the start or arrival in the region since 1906
– 33 different cities in Brittany have hosted a stage
– 6 Grands Départs have taken place in Brittany: in Brest (1952-74-2008) and in Rennes (1964), Plumelec (1985) et Saint-Brieuc (1995).
– 153 Breton riders have raced in the Tour between 1905 and 2019 (record participation in 1958: 14)
– 4 Bretons have won the Tour de France: Lucien Petit-Breton (1907-08), Jean Robic (1947), Louison Bobet (1953-54-55) and Bernard Hinault (1978-79-81-82-85)

The Brittany and the Tour de France
© A.S.O.
More information about the Tour de France on www.letour.fr/en/

LA COURSE BY LE TOUR DE FRANCE 2020 with FDJ : LADIES IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Key points:
 The 7th edition of La Course by Le Tour de France avec FDJ will take place next month on a 96-kilometre course with the start and finish in Nice, for the first time before the Tour de France riders head into action.
 While the sprinters cannot be ruled out, the route chosen for the ladies also offers opportunities for punchers capable of breaking away and resisting the return of the peloton just until the Promenade des Anglais.
 The most prominent champions in the peloton have already circled 29 August on their calendar, starting with the four winners of La Course by Le Tour de France avec FDJ, Marianne Vos, Anna van der Breggen, Chloé Hosking and Annemiek van Vleuten, who will have to contend with the likes of Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig, Katarzyna Niewiadoma, Ashleigh Moolman-Pasio et Marta Bastianelli.

The women’s peloton was welcomed for the first time on the Tour de France at the conclusion of the 2014 edition and started to make the Champs-Elysées their stomping ground. They then discovered the high mountains with a finish at the Col d’Izoard in 2017, followed in Marseille by an atypical pursuit race on the time trial course. At the Grand-Bornand in 2018, then on a „championship“ type circuit format around Pau last year, the women’ race then experimented with different scenarios. In 2020, it is in Nice where the world’s elite female racers will come together this time with the honour of starting the competition even before the men set off on their Tour de France.

On the 96-kilometre course, which will use part of the route prepared for the men’s race, the women will probably not be expected to compete in a large group sprint, according to Jean-Marc Marino, the event’s sporting director. “The race will consist of a loop to be completed twice. The côte de Rimiez will allow for a solid group to break away. All the more so as after reaching the line drawn for the mountain points, there will actually be several kilometres of climb left to the village of Aspremont. This springboard is perfect for really strong girls who get along well, especially since the descent is technical and not very conducive to organizing a chase“. The four champions who have already put their names on the list of winners, namely Marianne Vos, Anna van der Breggen, Chloé Hosking and Annemiek van Vleuten, can now start to fine-tune their strategy.
Amel Bouzoura, FDJ Director of Sponsoring and Partnerships: „with a considerable presence in French sport and as a sponsor of a men’s cycling team for over 20 years, FDJ is proud to continue its support of elite women’s cycling. Since 2017, the Group has been supporting the women’s cycling team FDJ – Nouvelle-Aquitaine – Futuroscope, and has strengthened its commitment to ensure the team’s UCI World Tour license in 2020. The team will participate in „La Course by Le Tour“, of which FDJ has been a „Major Sponsor“ since 2016. The company is committed to the promotion and encouragement of women’s sport with its „Sport pour Elles“ programme. In addition to professional cycling, FDJ supports the French Cycling Federation in the development of amateur cycling for all. »

23 teams, the leading participants (as of 29/07/2020) in alphabetical order:
ALE‘ BTC Ljubljana (ita)
Aromitalia – basso Bikes – Vaiano (Ita)
Astana Women’s Team (Kaz)
Bizkaia – Durango (Esp)
Boels Dolmans CyclingTeam (Nld)
Canyon / /Sram Racing (Ger)
CCC – Liv (Pol)
Ceratizit – WNT Pro Cycling Team (Ger)
Charente – Maritime Women Cycling (Fra)
Cogeas Mettler Look Pro Cycling Team (Rus)
FDJ Nouvelle – Aquitaine Futuroscope (Fra)
Hitec Products – Birk Sport (Nor)
Lotto Soudal Ladies (Bel)
Mitchelton Scott (Aus)
Movistar Team Women (Esp)
Parkhotel Valkenburg (Nld)
Paule Ka (Che)
Rally Cycling (Usa)
Team Arkéa (Fra)
Team Sunweb (Ger)
Team Tibco – Silicon Valley Bank (Usa)
Trek – Segafredo (Usa)
Valcar – Travel & Service (Ita)

All information about La Course by Le Tour de France with FDJ on
www.lacoursebyletourdefrance.com/en/
@ASO

The Tour to the power of 10

1950: divorce Italian style (5/10)

At the turn of each decade, the Tour de France has gone through organisational changes and backstage struggles that have variously turned out to be decisive or utterly inconsequential. The journey back in time proposed by letour.fr continues in 1950, marked by the collective departure of the Italian riders after incidents that resulted in Gino Bartali being threatened and assaulted by French spectators in the Pyrenees. Between the resurgence of the old internal squabbles within the „Squadra“ and the diplomatic consequences of the Col d’Aspin affair, the 1950 Tour extended well beyond the roads of France.
A quarrel between neighbouring countries on the Tour de France is both simple and, at the same time, much more complex than an anecdotal overzealousness and wine in the ranks of the supporters of both sides. In 1950, traces of World War II remained and the memory of the Mussolini regime’s collaboration with Nazi Germany was still fresh. On the political front, there was a genuine desire to reintegrate Italy into the community of nations on both sides of the Alps, but progress was slow and sport had its place in this process. In the world of cycling, the Italian federation (UVI) was not readmitted into the UCI until 1947. In concert with the authorities, the organisers worked to bring consistency to the peloton and to provoke a maximum number of encounters between the champions of the two countries, for example with the creation of the Desgrange-Colombo Challenge, in tribute to the founders of the Tour de France and the Giro d’Italia. As a symbol of the newfound friendship, Sanremo hosted a stage finish on the 1948 Tour, where Gino Sciardis won ahead of Urbain Caffi… two French riders of Italian origin!

The understood interest of the two organizing newspapers, L’Equipe and La Gazzetta was to ensure that their races had the highest possible density, coexisting with the chauvinistic fibre that also sold newspapers. But this approach tended to heat up controversy and in the 1949 Tour, the French riders were copiously insulted, pushed and targeted by stone-throwing Italian supporters during the stage leading to Aosta. After the domination of Bartali and Coppi in the two previous editions, and a minimalist strategy that hardly made Italian riders popular in France, the 1950 Tour began in a climate of hostility towards them. Heralded as the rider to beat when Coppi was unable to ride, Gino Bartali felt threatened from the very first days, when the Italians won three of the first five stages. In the time trial in Brittany, he narrowly avoided falling after a spectator threw a stick into his wheels, but his team manager, Alfredo Binda effectively negotiated with the Italian journalists present not to worsen the situation. Gino himself declared in La Gazzetta on the eve of the Pyrenees that „it is better not to win“, just to ease tensions.

Jacques Goddet paid a visit to the Hotel de France in Loures-Barousse. The boss decided to meet the Italian delegation and convince Bartali to stay in the race. But his arguments didn’t change a thing. The leader of the „Squadra“ felt he was in danger.

The fears of the two-time winner were well-founded and the atmosphere grew increasingly tense in the Pau-Saint-Gaudens stage. On the Col d’Aspin climb, the pressure of the crowd sent both Robic and Bartali off their bikes, then the situation degenerated. Accounts of this scene of confusion varied greatly, but the limits of simple intimidation were largely exceeded and there were certainly punches thrown. In any case, Bartali, enraged, managed to get back to the leaders of the race and won the sprint in Saint-Gaudens, while his young team-mate Fiorenzo Magni claimed the Yellow Jersey, and immediately afterwards decided to leave the Tour where he felt in danger. That night, Jacques Goddet paid a visit to the Hotel de France in Loures-Barousse. The boss decided to meet the Italian delegation and convince Bartali to stay in the race. But his arguments (including financial ones, according to some…) didn’t change a thing. The leader of the „Squadra“ felt he was in danger and explained himself diplomatically in L’Equipe: „In many circumstances, I’ve been wonderfully welcomed in your country. But I think it only takes one crazy person for a disaster to happen. And that’s the madman I’m afraid of. Please understand, I have children and a family. Why take such risks? No, it’s for Italy that I’ll leave tomorrow“.

In fact, opinions were divided in the Italian camp. Fiorenzo Magni, who led the general classification, could legitimately believe in his chances of going for the greatest victory of his career. Bartali did not like this, partly because of Magni’s militia past. Alfredo Binda, who coached the team, rather thought about the need to maintain friendly relations with the French, but finally agreed with Bartali’s position and assumed the group withdrawal of the two Italian teams, taking the „Cadetti“ with him. The situation helped Ferdi Kübler, the new rider in the Yellow Jersey, but more than anything else caused a lot of upheaval. Very soon after the departure of the Italians, it was decided to cancel the arrival in Sanremo scheduled four days later for fear of reprisals from the tifosi. In the rush, Goddet and his services took on the logistical challenge of preparing a fallback arrival in Menton, with more than 1000 people to house and feed.

Practical considerations were quickly relegated to the back burner, as the Aspin affair entered the judicial arena with the opening of an investigation, and political considerations as soon as the stability of Franco-Italian relations was compromised. The diplomats of both countries were much less heated than their respective supporters and tried to calm things down. The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Robert Schuman, first of all hastened to send a message to the Italian ambassador, expressing his „deep regret at the incidents of which the Italian riders were victims“. The issue also came up in parliamentary debates in both countries, with Edouard Bonnefous, the Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, solemnly declaring that „the Italians are friends who came to our country to demonstrate their class, not to be insulted. We cannot allow a handful of scoundrels to jeopardise good relations between the two countries“. In the same spirit of appeasement, the Italian Ambassador in Paris replied that „the regret expressed by the French Minister for Foreign Affairs served as a reminder that such incidents could never disrupt the friendly relations between the two governments and the two peoples, whose collaboration will increasingly develop in all areas“. As far as cycling was concerned, the presidents of the two federations, Adriano Rodoni and Achille Joinard, met in the second week of August with the Tour de France organisers to talk about the future. The Italian riders would definitely come to the 1951 Tour de France.
More information on www.letour.fr/en/
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