View Single Post
Old 07-02-2009, 08:01 PM   #29 (permalink)
medpal
 
medpal's Avatar

Points: 1,408, Level: 22
Points: 1,408, Level: 22 Points: 1,408, Level: 22 Points: 1,408, Level: 22
Level up: 8%, 92 Pt needed
Level up: 8% Level up: 8% Level up: 8%
Activity: 12%
Activity: 12% Activity: 12% Activity: 12%
 
Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: India
Posts: 85
medpal is on a distinguished road
Send a message via MSN to medpal Send a message via Yahoo to medpal Send a message via Skype™ to medpal
Default

Top Contenders for this years tour.

this is the view of espn team.

Quote:
Here is a look at the top contenders for the 2009 Tour de France with quick takes from two retired American cyclists, Versus analyst Frankie Andreu and Saxo Bank technical director Bobby Julich, who each raced in the Tour de France nine times.

Alberto Contador (Spain), 26, Astana
This stellar talent has only raced the Tour once over the past three years, forced off the start line in 2006 and 2008 when his team was disinvited because of circumstances beyond his control. But Contador took full advantage in 2007 as Discovery Channel team leader, hanging on in the final week after presumptive victor Michael Rasmussen was fired by his team for evading drug testing.
Contador went on to capture cycling's other two Grand Tours in Italy and Spain within a 14-month span, establishing himself as the best stage racer in the world, and has clearly focused on improving his time-trial skills. The biggest question for the mild-mannered Spaniard this year is whether his team, which includes three other men who have stood on Tour podiums, will be unified behind him, or whether -- despite the official line -- he'll have to fend off an internal challenge from a certain seven-time Tour winner.
Contador has raced sparingly this season and put all his chips on the line for the Tour. He also could be trying to leverage his next contract if Astana dissolves because of financial instability; he's already had informal contact with teams including Caisse d'Epargne and Garmin.

Frankie Andreu's take: "Absolutely the favorite."
Bobby Julich's take: "He's a killer. Watching him this year, he seems to have no weaknesses. The only thing he has to worry about is that there are so many chiefs on this team."

Denis Menchov (Russia), 31, Rabobank
One of the toughest-minded riders in the peloton, Menchov will be trying to pull off what no man has done since Marco Pantani in 1998: the Giro d'Italia-Tour de France double. The wear and tear isn't easy to survive. If the racing is as conservative as it was last year (and we're betting against that), all Menchov would have to do to land on his first Tour podium is stay on the leaders' wheels -- something he's superb at -- and perform well in the last time trial and the climb up Mont Ventoux. He may also find himself continuing to fend off questions about an ongoing doping investigation in Austria that has touched his team.
Menchov is a two-time winner of the Tour of Spain, once outright (2007) and once via the doping disqualification of Roberto Heras (2005). His narrow, dramatic win in Italy was built on strong rides in two mountain stages and a win in the difficult long time trial midway through the race. Menchov started the Rome time trial on the final day with a 20-second lead, then suffered every rider's Armageddon scenario, crashing on rain-slicked cobblestones in the final kilometer. He was saved by a quick-witted mechanic who swapped out his bike in a move worthy of a NASCAR pit crew and wound up winning the race by 41 seconds.

Andreu: "If he has the same kind of form he had in the Giro, he'll be a factor."
Julich: "You can get away without having an above-average team in the Giro. You can't in the Tour."

Carlos Sastre (Spain), 34, Cervelo Test Team
Don't underestimate the late kick of this defending champion, who is almost always in the mix. Sastre took control of last year's Tour with one acceleration away from the pack on Alpe d'Huez. Then, amid open questioning of his psychological strength and time-trial ability, Sastre made his lead stick by limiting his losses on the second-to-last day.
Sastre knew his star was setting at Saxo Bank, where younger standouts like brothers Andy and Frank Schleck were set to supplant him, and surprised some by jumping to the first-year team sponsored by a well-established bike manufacturer. He laid low early in the season before emerging to log two impressive mountain-stage wins at the Giro, earning him a fourth-place finish. Cervelo will try to help previous green jersey winner Thor Hushovd excel in the sprints, but the roster is constructed to support Sastre. The non-selection of Aussie talent Simon Gerrans, a stage winner at the Giro and Tour, reflects Sastre's desire to stack the team with domestiques who have no ambitions of their own.

Andreu: "I think he'll be good. Top 5."
Julich: "Having [Mont] Ventoux on the last Saturday is to his advantage."

Lance Armstrong (United States), 37, Astana
If this megacelebrity, cancer crusader and boss emeritus of the peloton weren't in the race, Contador might have been appointed winner by acclamation. Nominally starting in a support role, Armstrong is widely expected to try to assert himself and show he deserves to be Astana's most protected rider. At the very least, he is one heckuva Plan B if Contador flags.
Do we really know where Armstrong's form is at this point? It was impossible to judge early in the season, as he was coming back from three years away from the sport and invested his energy into helping Levi Leipheimer win the season's first major race in California. The Texan had a so-so day at Milan-San Remo, then broke his collarbone for the first time in his career in a minor stage race in Spain in late March. His expectations for the Giro -- once a major target -- had to be scaled back. He appeared to get stronger as that race went on, but he still hasn't been tested in a Tour-level mano-a-mano.
Will his first race in France since his comeback nine months ago play out without controversy of some kind, on or off the bike? Unlikely, but then again, he has vast experience in dealing with it.
Andreu: "Uncharted territory. He's never done a three-week race before the Tour."
Julich: "Every time I've doubted Lance in the past, he's proved me wrong. Obviously, he made some amazing progress in the Giro."
contd in next post......
medpal is offline   Reply With Quote