One of the most wonderful things about living in a climate with four distinct seasons is that each one comes as a welcome change, and with each season I find a period of time where I find myself thinking this one is my favorite. But regardless of the weather outside my window, I know Fall is here when our attention falls to the last major road races of the season; Paris-Tour and the Giro di Lomardia.
To say I’m not a fan of bunch sprints is a bit of an inaccurate statement. What I’m not a fan of is a forgone conclusion in a bike race, be it a Grand Tour, a sprint, or mountains prize. At the end of the day, I watch a bike race because I love not knowing how it’s going to unfold; I love fireworks and suspense. Given that, I don’t much care who wins the race – a good win is a good win, no matter who runs away with it. (That said, if it goes down to a sprint between a rider I like and one I don’t and the win falls to the douche, I’ll be inconsolable.)
And that’s why Paris-Tours is one of my favorite races of the year. It’s flat enough to give the sprinters a chance, while it’s run into Tours is windy and hilly enough to allow for opportunists to steal the glory. Sprinters, Rouleurs, and Grimpeurs have won here; Gilbert, Dekker, Friere, Virenque. Before that, Van Looy, de Roo, Van Springel, Maertens, Raas, Zoetemelk, Kelly, Anderson all rolled across the line first. Paris-Tours also holds the distinction of being the only Classic the Prophet failed to win.
But this isn’t the sixties, and this isn’t about Merckx. This is about another Belgian. Is Gilbert a forgone conclusion? Perhaps, but his form almost has to be wearing a bit thin. At this point, though, I’d love to see him pull it off, which means he won’t. He’s been racing at the front since de Ronde (if not before that), and has been winning since the Ardennes. Cav, assuming he’s racing, will likely want to show off his new bands at the head of the field; I can’t imagine the motivation to win a classic in the most revered jersey our Sport has.
So, get your picks in by 5am Pacific on Sunday morning; we’re giving a little bit of extra time this time round since I’m a little concerned that people might have forgotten we’re not done with the season yet.
Good luck.
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
VSP PICKS:
1. Cav
2. Gilbert
3. Phinney
4. Chavanel
5. Thor
VSP PICKS:
1. Rainbow Brite
2. Gilbert
3. McEwen
4. Sutton
5. Bennati
Who the frack (or should that be strack) knows? All I can think of is that Cav will still be drunk from the Worlds, and will help the HTC guys rather than go for it himself. And Gilbert has to crap out at some stage.
VSP PICKS:
1. Goss
2. Cooke
3. Freire
4. Bennatti
5. Degenkolb
VSP PICKS:
1. Gilbert
2. Cav
3. Thor
4. Jens
5. Mini Phinney
VSP PICKS:
1. Thorminator
2. Gilber Grapes
3. Cavtastico
4. Jens
5. Goss
when is this?
@RedRanger
Sunday morning Pacific. I don't see it on CyclingNews, but it is on the official site: http://www.letour.fr/index.html
I'd heard the race was cancelled but it appears to be on...unless someone knows otherwise...
VSP PICKS:
1. Mark Cavendish
2. Oscar Freire
3. Thor Hushovd
4. Robbie Mcewen
5. Philippe Gilbert
Just trying to get enough points to peel myself off the bottom of the pile with my late start to the season. Getting some form for next year...
Stayed just outside Tours after the TDF so I'm particularly interested to catch this race (for the first time). Its flat countryside thereabouts so I'm picking a sprintfest.
VSP PICKS:
1. cav
2. goss
3. phinny
4. Hushvod
5. gilbert