Velominati Super Prestige: Tour de France 2016

A lot has happened in the last ten years of le Tour, and a lot of it stemmed from the race that took place in 2006. At the time it seemed like yet another “Tour of Redemption” as the organisers liked to claim every few years after something had happened to tarnish the race’s image, yet again. In 06, we were coming off the back of a seven year reign of very little in the way of competition, with most of those races decided in the Prologue and followed by a three week procession. 06 was anticipated as the start of a new era, we just didn’t know at the time how significant it would become many years further down the track.

The pre-Tour build-up had fans frothing with anticipation of an Ullrich vs Basso battle, but that was scuppered at the 11th hour by Operacion Puerto, just what incoming Director Christian Prudhomme didn’t need. Also ditched were Fransisco Mancebo, a young Alberto Contador (yet to be considered a GC contender), and one Alexandre Vinokourov (while not one of the Puerto accused, still unable to start as most of his Astana teammates were pulled, leaving him without a sufficient team). With the two favourites out, the race was anyone’s for the taking. Of course, there was more drama to come.

A crazy break was let go and produced a surprise leader in Oscar Pereiro, who then conceded the yellow to Floyd Landis, who then blew to bits and handed it back to Pereiro, before making the biggest comeback since Lazarus the next day and riding away from the race in a solo effort that still ranks as one of the best ever, no matter how juiced he was. I remember watching the stage live and talking to a mate on the phone, and his incredulity at what we were witnessing. As Landis drank with the fervour of an alcoholic and manically poured water over his head during his escapade, my friend (an ex-road racer at a high level himself) professed that Landis was “cooking” from some sort of drug cocktail and was doing his best to dilute whatever concoction he’d taken, and not blow a positive or do a Tommy Simpson on live tv. How prophetic his words proved.

Of course, that was just the beginning, and the resulting fallout became one of the biggest sporting stories of all time. Landis just about brought down the entire sport with his revelations, and no Tour since has been without some form of scuttlebutt, yet not on that scale. The last few years, while tame by comparison to those preceding them, have been pretty well dominated by each winner and not offering too much in the way of exciting competition; although last year’s end result was closer on paper than the actual race was… which once again leaves us in the same state of anticipation that grips us every year in the month leading up to the start, and then promptly lets us down about two weeks after that, and wondering when the Vuelta starts.

This Tour has all the hallmarks of potentially being a great one, with three guys who have to be considered genuine contenders, yet just one who is most likely to win. We really do need a positive test to liven this one up, or someone to juice themselves so comprehensively that the motor in their seat-tube can’t handle the power from their legs and melts the carbon around the bottom bracket and drops onto the road at the summit of Mont Ventoux. Maybe try and blame it on a chimera twin that drank too many whiskeys the night before and left their bike in the team truck with a bag of someone else’s piss strapped to it. That would bring the crowds back. But seriously, if each of the contenders is on form, we could have one of the best races of the last ten years with some real proper drama played out on the roads, not in the labs or courts and not two, three or seven years from now.

We’re giving you plenty of time to ponder the possibilities, and maybe come up with your own hare-brained scenarios as to what may unfold, or what will most likely bring you those precious VSP points and the honour of wearing the Maillot Jaune for the next year. Will you be daring and go out on a limb that doesn’t resemble that of an anorexic spider? Will you take short odds on a short-ass? Will you stake your claims on claims of a steak? Or will you tear yourself apart with internal conflict like a couple of bitchy Italians?

Whatever you do, there is absolutely no excuse to Delgado this one, we’re giving you plenty of time and it’s not like you can claim you didn’t realise that the race was this week… and don’t whinge if this Start List changes before the racing gets underway, it is provisional after all. Good luck and may the best, or second best, man win.

[vsp_results id=”49193″/]

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • @Geraint

    Chapeau to Froomey and Sky. They did a superb job as a team, stuck around him and helped him when he had a problem, Ventoux excepted but that was into the very final of the stage. He showed some extra depth with the win on a descent, gaining time on a flat stage in the wind, running up Ventoux and then finishing with the other GC contenders on a borrowed bike.

    I think he’s shown himself to be a more complete and determined competitor than many would have given him credit for. He’ll have his haters but I say he gave it 100% and did a superb job and you can’t really knock him for that.

    Be great to see him back at the Vuelta, but good luck in Rio first.

    Agreed. Sky have one job - to get Froome in yellow and keep him there. BMC must be regretting their poor job of looking after Richie P. Imagine if Froome had been isolated when he crashed on the wet descent? He could have lost minutes.

    Highlights for me of the Tour?

    Cav back to his winning ways

    The incredible number of photo-finish sprints

    Dumoulin's win in the hail

    Tony and Julian's big adventure - then finishing last with smiles

    Froome's new attitude and aggression

    Showing respect to Jocky Rodriguez and letting him lead onto the Champs Elysees

    Steve Cummings' win

    The beautiful countryside of France

  • @wiscot

    @Geraint

    Chapeau to Froomey and Sky. They did a superb job as a team, stuck around him and helped him when he had a problem, Ventoux excepted but that was into the very final of the stage. He showed some extra depth with the win on a descent, gaining time on a flat stage in the wind, running up Ventoux and then finishing with the other GC contenders on a borrowed bike.

    I think he’s shown himself to be a more complete and determined competitor than many would have given him credit for. He’ll have his haters but I say he gave it 100% and did a superb job and you can’t really knock him for that.

    Be great to see him back at the Vuelta, but good luck in Rio first.

    Agreed. Sky have one job – to get Froome in yellow and keep him there. BMC must be regretting their poor job of looking after Richie P. Imagine if Froome had been isolated when he crashed on the wet descent? He could have lost minutes.

    Highlights for me of the Tour?

    Cav back to his winning ways

    The incredible number of photo-finish sprints

    Dumoulin’s win in the hail

    Tony and Julian’s big adventure – then finishing last with smiles

    Froome’s new attitude and aggression

    Showing respect to Jocky Rodriguez and letting him lead onto the Champs Elysees

    Steve Cummings’ win

    The beautiful countryside of France

    Agreed, BMC really let Porte down, a couple of instances of bad luck cost him dear as his teammates weren't about when he needed them. He could well have been on the podium otherwise.

    Cav was a revelation, seemed to make the most of the sketchy finishes where it was more about having a sixth sense and surfing the right wheels than having a sprint train dropping him off with 200m to go. V stage wins for Dimension Data between him and Steevo was a fantastic effort for a smallish team.

    I am properly proud of the whole British effort - overall win, white jersey, and won a third of the stages. Chapeau fellas.

  • @Geraint

    I think what we saw with Cav was a couple of things: clearly on top form, but perhaps more/most importantly, top mental and strategic form. The big lead-out train wasn't there, instead he had to rely on pure experience and instinct - whose wheel to follow, when to move. He seems to know the styles and habits of his competitors very well too. He knows when Kittel and Greipel are going to go and how they sprint. You don't get to 30 stage wins just by being the fastest.

    I think he would have won on the Champs Elysses too. That was big, wide open run-in and he would have slipstreamed Greipel.

1 57 58 59
Share
Published by
Brett

Recent Posts

Anatomy of a Photo: Sock & Shoe Game

I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Men’s World Championship Road Race 2017

Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Women’s World Championship Road Race 2017

The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Vuelta a España 2017

Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…

7 years ago

Velominati Super Prestige: Clasica Ciclista San Sebastian 2017

This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…

7 years ago

Route Finding

I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…

7 years ago