Life is better on a bike!

Tag: TDF (Page 1 of 14)

I could never have imagined that one day I would not watch the Tour de France. Never in my wildest dreams.

In years past my life in the month of July centered on the Tour de France. I did not travel during the Tour unless I absolutely had to, which happened once. I took time off from work on key stages so I could watch live, and all told, I spent hundreds of hours each year watching, reading, and blogging about the Tour.

Before we in the U.S. had the means to watch the Tour de France on television, I followed it through print media to the extent I could, namely newspapers and Bicycling magazine. My interest in the Tour began with Greg Lemond in 1986 and only grew in 1989 when he bested Frenchman Laurent Fignon, to win the Tour by the smallest of margins – 8 seconds! Three weeks of racing, 2,000 miles, and 8 seconds separated the winner and loser! My infatuation with the Tour de France bloomed into full-blown love during Lance Armstrong’s reign.

When the Tour de France finally came to cable I lived in front of my television. Typically there were a couple of versions televised each day; live for 3-5 hours, and 2 hours recorded with analysis. I watched both. For 3 weeks. And I did my own analysis of the Tour here for several years.

When I was not watching the race I rode my bike. The month of July was typically my highest mileage month unless I did a bike tour.

I stopped last year. Until two days ago I had not really understood why or even given it any thought, other than a general awareness of the change.

Watching the Tour de France or any bike race for that matter (in the past I watched the Classics and the other two Grand Tours) reminded me of what I used to do and what I no longer can do: Ride my bike like I did before getting hit.

This year I have maybe ridden five times on our paved trails. Possibly less, maybe more? Riding on trails is not the kind of cycling I loved and although I did some of that last year, it became boring and so this year I have not had the desire to. Maybe I should, but riding on trails is maybe 20% of what cycling was for me so in some ways it is harder than not riding at all.

After getting hit in August 2021 I promised my daughter I would no longer ride on the road. I realized last year I could not ride on the road regardless of my promise. I am too scared, too jumpy, to be safe riding in traffic. No way is that doable for me.

So without realizing it, when I gave up riding on the road I also gave up the Tour de France too.

I have kept up with the general classification race on social media, but do not have the means to watch it because I did not subscribe to a streaming service. Maybe I will next year.

On the surface it may not seem like much, but no longer watching professional bike racing or writing about it here and elsewhere, is yet another consequence of the accident. Another loss of something that was important to me but is no longer available. There are many of those things. More than I ever anticipated and more than anyone else knows.

2014 Tour de France – Stage 1

Would you believe me if I told you there wasn’t a single crash on the opening stage? Didn’t think so. Of course there were crashes!

Just ask sprinter and Brit, Mark Cavendish.

The script was written: Begin the Tour de France in England, have possibly the largest crowds ever watching and cheering,  make the finish in Cavendish’s Mum’s hometown, and have Cavendish win and take the yellow jersey. His first ever. The royals were there, his family and fellow countrymen all there to witness Cavendish’s dream come true.

What transpired though was Cavendish’s worst nightmare. Not initially, his team had provided him with the perfect lead out, delivering him near the finish and the front.

All sprints are hotly contested with riders jockeying for position, but especially sprints in opening stages when a win results in the yellow jersey. Cavendish was to the outside of nemesis Marcel Kittel and to the inside of Simon Gerrans when Cavendish tried to headbutt Gerrans out of his way. They both ended up going down, clearly, Cavendish’s fault and Kittel and Peter Sagan raced for the win. Kittel won, taking the yellow jersey, which most had expected Cavendish to take, just like last year.

Unlike last year, this one was Cavendish’s own doing. Too bad.

2012 Tour de France Wrap-up

Waiting to write the final post on the 2012 Tour de France was wise. A few days to reflect and view the Tour as a whole has improved the view.

The Tour de France is more than just the fight for the yellow jersey. Every day there are multiple races occurring. Besides the race for overall GC, there is the race to win the stage, the race for sprint points for the green jersey, the race for points on climbs for the polka-dot jersey, racing for the best young rider for the white jersey, and the team classification – all occurring every day in every stage for three weeks.

So, when comments are made that the 2012 Tour was boring as hell, what most of us are complaining about is the race for yellow and the supremacy of Bradley Wiggins and Team Sky.

The race for yellow was completely dominated by Wiggins and his teammates. Once Wiggins captured the yellow jersey in the 7th stage it was never relinquished. Capturing it in the first week of the Tour set the tone for weeks two and three with nothing but controlled racing by Sky. No wasted effort, no reactive racing, just a methodical execution of their plan to win the Tour.

Wearing the yellow jersey with the expectation of keeping it is not just about being the strongest. It also requires riding defensively, preserving energy, taking calculated chances with the biggest possibility of payoff, and not taking any unnecessary risks. Wiggins and Sky did that better than anyone else.

The biggest difference between Wiggins, Evans, and even Vincenzo Nibali (although to a lesser extent than Evans), was the difference between their teams. BMC brought a team designed for the spring classics more than a grand tour and it hurt Evans.

Did it cost Evans the Tour? Likely no, but it might have cost him a place on the podium. Evans is a guy that needs his team around him, as much for moral support as tactics. Although Tejay Van Garderen was there and supported him, Van Garderen was also concerned with keeping his white jersey and high overall GC place.

As far as Nibali, he seemed happy to have a spot on the podium. For all the talking and dissing of Wiggins, he did in the first week, Nibble really did not do much to show he was capable of winning the Tour.

It might not have been the most exciting Tour in terms of surprises and changes in the general classification but it was a Tour filled with many remarkable moments.

The Highs:

      • For starters, the yellow jersey contest was not the only lopsided jersey competition. So was the green jersey thanks to Peter Sagan. Sagan was a highlight of the Tour winning the green jersey by the widest margin in almost 30 years. He is the real deal, immensely talented, and fun to watch, especially with the victory salutes. He is not just a sprinter, the guy can climb and he is only 22! Sagan has what looks to be a brilliant future ahead of him, imagine him in the spring classic races.

      • The daily breakaways – for a change we had breakaways succeed. Some of the best moments of the Tour came from breakaways; Europcar, David Millar for Garmin winning and salvaging their Tour, LL Sanchez doing the same for Rabobank. The action in the breaks made for much of the excitement in this year’s Tour. Chris Anker Sorensen winner of the most combative rider was in numerous breakaways as was Fredrik Kessiakoff who battled Voeckler for the climber’s jersey.

      • The little team that could – Europcar. In the current climate of the super-teams like RadioShack-Nissan, Sky, and others it is nice to see a continental-caliber team do so much with seemingly so little. Big heart = big payoff for the team and Tour fans.

      • The old guys, George Hincapie, Jens Voigt, Chris Horner all had great Tours. Jens Voigt was an animal, getting in numerous breaks throughout the Tour and setting the pace at the front for the first week of the race while his teammate Fabian Cancellara had the yellow jersey. Chris Horner finished a very respectable 13th overall in the Tour and George Hincapie was just Big George. He protected his team leader Cadel Evans in the flats and shepherded him to the finish when the Tour was unofficially over for Evans. Sky provided Hincapie with a great show of respect as they had him ride at the front as the peloton rode onto the Champs.

      • The young guys like Van Garderen, Thibaut Pinot, Pierre Rolland, and Sagan, all provide us with much hope for the future of cycling and Tours to come.

      • The true grit and extraordinary toughness shown by many riders in this Tour: Tom Danielson rode for days with a separated shoulder, only dropping out of the Tour when he got a 2nd shoulder separation in the worst crash of this Tour on Stage 6. Giro winner and Tour GC contender Ryder Hesjedal finished stage 6 after injuring his hip and leg and then having to be helped off his bike, he had to abandon; Johan van Summeren crashed in stage 6 and finished not only the stage but the Tour, as did Tyler Farrar who crashed 4 times yet fought through it and finished the Tour.

The Lows:

      • The parcours – too many time-trials not enough high mountains.

      • Lack of attacks within GC. Given the circumstances, while understandable was still disappointing.

      • The carnage of the first week, so many crashes with serious results to the GC.

      • Frank Shleck’s positive test for a banned substance but also his lackluster performance this year.

      • Evans’ difficulties, not only in the Tour but the year as a whole. He just never had the form he had last year, yet he continued to battle hard throughout and stay positive – which he has had trouble doing in the past. Evans handled himself like a champ and I believe we will see him compete again.

      • Denis Menchov, great form but still the disappearing assassin of recent Tours, Philippe Gilbert.

      • Horner horning in on Big George’s moment on the Champs. Horner has been asked why he did it but has yet to answer. BMC did not ask him to apparently, I think he just did it to get in the spotlight. Poor judgment by Horner.

What we witnessed in the 2012 Tour de France was a systematic undoing of all other GC hopefuls by Wiggins and Sky. It may not have had the fireworks of previous Tours, but the way Wiggins and Sky pulled it off was masterful and impressive.

In years past, we had become used to seeing beyond-human feats; tireless climbing, and relentless attacking, this Tour did not offer that. What generated many of those memorable performances of the past whether we want to admit it or not were banned substances and the resulting parity among the top teams. Although I am not naive enough to believe this was a clean Tour, I do believe it was a clean-er Tour. Future Tours may look similar to this year’s Tour de France only with improved parcours hopefully. 

2012 Tour de France–Stage 20

Stage 20, the last stage of the 2012 Tour was part processional and part bike race. The last stage always is.

The first 50k or so is for pictures, offers of congratulations, conversation, and to give the guys time to soak up the final moments of this epic bike race. Just finishing the Tour is a remarkable feat, especially this year. Of the 198 riders who started the race this year, only 153 finished, the lowest number in many years. Most of them abandoned due to injuries suffered in the many crashes this Tour.

Today was a day for all the remaining riders to celebrate not just those that won 1 of the 4 jerseys or finished in one of the top 3 places on the podium.

In the Tour de France – to finish is to win.

 

The 4 jersey winners: Van Garderen, Wiggins, Sagan & Voeckler.
 


champagne getty

Champagne is always present on the last stage of ever Tour, hard to tell if Wiggins had any. 


sky team shot getty images

Winner Bradley Wiggins, 2nd place Christopher Froome and Sky teammates.
 


best eifel letour

The peloton making their way to Paris.



george goodbye ansel

George Hincapie riding in his last, a record-setting 17th Tour de France.
 


stage 20-gens roadcyclinguk

Jens Voight doing what he does – fighting for a stage win in a breakaway.


stage 20 racing christope ena ap

All the winning jerseys and the world champ, Cavendish.

the sprint stage 20 getty

Cavendish wins, Sagan 2nd, Goss 3rd

The last part of the race is all-out racing. This year the team of the yellow jersey was also racing to win the stage so  they had to stay at the front of the peloton more than is typical for the…. Sky also had to do most of the work initially to chase down the break, but eventually got Liquigas and Saxobank to pull. I never thought the break would make it even when it was getting down to the wire. It rarely happens on the Champs-Elysées and it certainly wasn’t going to happen this year – not with Cavendish going for a record-setting 4th win here.

With a lead-out of Tour winner Bradley Wiggins, then teammate Edvald Boasson-Hagen, Cavendish got the win he seemed destined for. Green jersey wearer Peter Sagan came from the pack to pass Matthew Goss from the winless GreenEdge team who got 3rd.

 

cav wins

Cavendish is the first to win 4 times on the Champs-Elysées


Everything today worked as planned for Sky just as the whole Tour has.

George Hincapie raced in his 17th and final Tour de France. He will be sorely missed, there aren’t many like him: loyal and devoted to his team and a leader to his younger teammates. Having Hincapie on the road is like having a director sportif on the road. I hope he stays involved with professional cycling. This was not a close Tour – the time gaps were the largest I can remember. More about that later.

Check back later this week when I post my thoughts on this year’s Tour – its winners and losers.


Final General Classification:

1. WIGGINS, Bradley (SKY PROCYCLING) 87:34:42
2. FROOME, Christopher (SKY PROCYCLING) + 3:21
3. NIBALI, Vincenzo (LIQUIGAS-CANNONDALE) + 6:19
4. VAN DEN BROECK, Jurgen (LOTTO BELISOL) + 10:15
5. VAN GARDEREN, Tejay (BMC RACING) + 11:04
6. ZUBELDIA, Haimar (RADIOSHACK-NISSAN) + 15:43
7. EVANS, Cadel (BMC RACING) + 15:51
8. ROLLAND, Pierre (EUROPCAR) + 16:31
9. BRAJKOVIC, Janez (ASTANA) + 16:38
10. PINOT, Thibaut (FDJ-BIG MAT) + 17:17
11. KLÖDEN, Andreas (RADIOSHACK-NISSAN) + 17:54
12. ROCHE, Nicolas (AG2R LA MONDIALE) + 19:33
13. HORNER, Christopher (RADIOSHACK-NISSAN) + 19:55
14. SÖRENSEN, Chris Anker (SAXO BANK-TINKOFF BANK) + 25:27
15. MENCHOV, Denis (KATUSHA) + 27:22
16. MONFORT, Maxime (RADIOSHACK-NISSAN) + 28:30
17. MARTINEZ, Egoi (EUSKALTEL-EUSKADI) + 31:46
18. COSTA, Rui Alberto (MOVISTAR) + 37:03
19. VORGANOV, Eduard (KATUSHA) + 38:16
20. VALVERDE, Alejandro (MOVISTAR) + 42:26

 

Stage 20 Results:

1. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, in 3:08:07

2. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
3. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
4. Juan José HAEDO, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank, at 0
5. Kris BOECKMANS, Vacansoleil-DCM, at 0
6. Greg HENDERSON, Lotto-Belisol, at 0
7. Borut BOZIC, Astana, at 0
8. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol, at 0
9. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at 0
10. Jimmy ENGOULVENT, Saur-Sojasun, at 0
11. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 0


2012 Tour de France-Stage 19

wiggins stage 19 joel sagetToday’s time-trial, the third and longest of this Tour, ended the way most of us thought it would. The soon-to-be anointed 2012 Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins won today finishing 1:29 ahead of his closest rival – no surprise here either – Chris Froome, his Sky teammate and 2nd place finisher overall.

As impressive as Cavendish was yesterday in his win, Wiggins was just as impressive on that black and yellow TT bike. He looked like a machine turning the cranks, completely aerodynamic, powering forward and setting the best time at every single time check. Sky has the biggest budget of all the pro ranked teams and it shows. Sky claimed 3 of the top 5 spots in Stage 19: Richie Porte, another so-called domestique took 5th.

The biggest disappointment today was Cadel Evans who finished in 52nd place and worse than that he got passed by his teammate, Tejay Van Garderen who started the time-trial 3 minutes after Evans. Must have been a horrible moment not just for Evans but for Van Garderen too. Evans slipped from 6th overall to 7th but at least he stayed in the top 10. I hope Evans can recover and redeem himself (for himself, not fans) in the Olympic games. What we saw in this year’s Tour is not typical of Evans, hopefully he’s okay. He was a great Tour champion last year and hopefully can come back one more time and truly compete. He will not want this to be his final mark on the Tour de France.

Van Garderen had a solid time-trial finishing in 7th place for the stage. His effort wasn’t enough to move him from 5th to 4th but 5th place overall in what’s just his 2nd Tour was outstanding. Especially when you consider he wasn’t riding for himself until late in the Tour. It’s likely he would have podiumed if he had been protected instead of Evans.

Nibali, in 3rd place overall had a good time-trial for him, finishing in the top 20 and securing the 3rd spot on the final podium. Nibali didn’t race in his home country’s grand tour, the Giro in order to give himself the best shot at the Tour de France and his finishing 3rd is a victory.

Otherwise there isn’t much left to say about Stage 19. After 3 weeks of racing there were tired legs and bodies and guys just wanting to finish. The sprinters and teams (other than the top finishers like Wiggins, Froome, Nibali and Van Garderen) were saving their legs for the biggest sprint of them all – the sprint along the  Champs-Elysées tomorrow in Paris.

Tomorrow’s stage is more of a processional than a race – until they get to Paris and the real racing occurs for one last time in this year’s Tour. It is every sprinter’s dream to win on the Champs-Elysées, but with Cavendish looking for a record setting 4th win tomorrow, it’s unlikely anyone else’s dream will be realized. Stage 20 will likely be just another example of the domination in this Tour by team Sky.

I love the Tour and will enjoy the celebration by Wiggins, Froome and their teammates as they toast their success with champagne while riding their bikes – something I have yet to ever do but thinking I should. I’ll also love watching Peter Sagan, Van Garderen, and of course Voeckler on the podium claiming their jerseys – and I’ll love watching  all of the riders celebrate their victory – finishing the Tour de France.

Vive le Tour!

Stage results

  • 1. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, in 1:04:13
  • 2. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 1:16
  • 3. Luis Leon SANCHEZ GIL, Rabobank, at 1:50
  • 4. Peter VELITS, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 2:02
  • 5. Richie PORTE, Sky, at 2:25
  • 6. Patrick GRETSCH, Argos-Shimano, at 2:28
  • 7. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 2:34
  • 8. Vasil KIRYIENKA, Movistar, at 2:46
  • 9. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at 2:50
  • 10. Jérémy ROY, FDJ-BigMat, at 3:05
  • 11. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 3:12
  • 12. Matthieu SPRICK, Argos-Shimano, at 3:20
  • 13. Ruben PLAZA MOLINA, Movistar, at 3:24
  • 14. Daniel OSS, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 3:27
  • 15. Anthony ROUX, FDJ-BigMat, at 3:34
  • 16. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 3:38
  • 17. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 3:40
  • 18. Bert GRABSCH, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 3:43
  • 19. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:49
  • 19. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:49
  • 21. Christophe KERN, Europcar, at 3:56

General classification

  • 1. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, in 84:26:31
  • 2. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 3:21
  • 3. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 6:19
  • 4. Jurgen VAN DEN BROECK, Lotto-Belisol, at 10:15
  • 5. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 11:04
  • 6. Haimar ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, RadioShack-Nissan, at 15:43
  • 7. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at 15:51
  • 8. Pierre ROLLAND, Europcar, at 16:31
  • 9. Janez BRAJKOVIC, Astana, at 16:38
  • 10. Thibaut PINOT, FDJ-BigMat, at 17:17
  • 11. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 17:54
  • 12. Nicolas ROCHE, Ag2r La Mondiale, at 19:33
  • 13. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 19:55
  • 14. Chris Anker SÖRENSEN, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank, at 25:27
  • 15. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 27:22
  • 16. Maxime MONFORT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 28:30
  • 17. Egoi MARTINEZ DE ESTEBAN, Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 31:46
  • 18. Rui Alberto FARIA DA COSTA, Movistar, at 37:03
  • 19. Eduard VORGANOV, Katusha, at 38:16
  • 20. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 42:26
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