Tour de France
By Robert Ferringo of
DocSports.com
ALSO: Check out the latest
Tour de France odds.
Will Lance Armstrong go out on
top?Over the
last six years, Lance
Armstrong winning the Tour de
France has been the surest bet in sports. Armstrong has dominated the
180-plus rider field for more than half a decade, winning a record six
straight titles and elevating himself to near mythical stature in the
process. The 2005 Tour de France begins Saturday, July 2 and runs until
Sunday, July 24, and Armstrong has already announced that this will be his
farewell to the event. This leaves us with one question: will Lance write
the storybook ending to his career, riding off into the Texas sunset with a
seventh title, or will he be usurped, passing the torch to another rider to
complete the cycle?
We all know Lance’s story,
so I won’t waste your time rehashing his bouts with a life-threatening form
of cancer and his courtship of Sheryl Crow. We know he’s a machine, and his
efforts at the Tour de Lance have been nearly super-human. Therefore, you
would have to be a fool to bet against Armstrong. He’s the heavy favorite,
and if he was able to claim the yellow jersey last year when he was at his
most vulnerable – enduring a slow start and a nearly devastating crash – he
should be able to take the title again this year.
Well, it’s not that easy.
And as any seasoned gambler knows, anything that seems too good to be true
usually is.
Armstrong is 33-years old,
and has not been that impressive leading up to the race. In fact, this is
the first time that Lance hasn’t won any races entering the Tour de France.
He had a sub-par showing at the Paris-Nice race in March, and was fifth in
the Tour de Georgia in April. He also finished a disappointing fourth in the
famed Mount Ventoux climb at the Dauphine Libere on June 9.
However, Armstrong has the
benefit of running with a Discovery Channel team that is simply the most
efficient and powerful in the world. His crew is made up of eight
world-class riders who understand that their glory lies in paving the way
for The Man. Six of the eight riders from last year’s team are back, and
they have added Giro d’Italia winner Paolo Savoldelli and Tour of Catalonia
champ Yaroslav Popovych. However they will be without Armstrong’s most
experienced mate, injured Russian Viatcheslav Ekimov.
There is nothing blatantly
wrong with Armstrong (-110) as he approaches his final race (though he did
suffer some bumps and bruises resulting from a crash while training last
week). However, he will face as stiff a set of competitors this year as he
ever has. Jan Ulrich, the Coyote to Armstrong’s Road Runner, and his
teammates with T-Mobile are headed into the world’s premier cycling event
with only one goal – beat Lance. They have mountain specialists, domestics,
and all-arounders, and have perhaps the most top-to-bottom talent of any
competing club.
23-year-old Damiano Cunego,
an Italian rider who was expected to compete for the crown, was diagnosed
with mononucleosis on June 8 and won’t race. Here’s a look at five riders
that will be taking part in the 92nd running of the Tour de
France, which will run from July 2-24. I believe that these five will offer
the most resistance for Armstrong:
Jan Ulrich (+275) – Imagine what the careers of Patrick Ewing, Charles
Barkley and Karl Malone would have been like if there had never been a
Michael Jordan. That’s a bit what it’s like for Ulrich, who did win the
event in 1997 but would probably have three or four yellow jerseys by now if
not for Armstrong. Ulrich has an exceptional team behind him, but some
opposing riders have questioned whether he is in top form. However, he knows
that this is his last chance for revenge against Lance, and you can never
underestimate what type of motivation that can be for the German.
Ivan Basso (+600) –
Basso is a tough bet at this spot. The 27-year old finished third in the
2004 Tour, and is still running with the CSC team out of Denmark. Basso has
expressed his intent to “attack” Armstrong and challenge him in the
mountains, but he has said himself that Lance is “unbeatable”. That may be
just playing possum, but I don’t know if that’s the type of attitude I’m
laying my money on.
Alexandre Vinoukarov
(+800) – This guy is the wild card. He blew up in 2003, when Ulrich was
riding for Bianchi, but crashed in the Tour of Switzerland last year and
didn’t race. He won the Mount Ventoux climb last month, and placed third in
France in 2003. He has done a lot of altitude training in the last 14
months, but he’s admitted that his goal is to put his own ambitions aside
and assist Jan in his quest for the top of the podium. But if Ulrich
falters, Vinoukarov hopes to be close enough to make a move.
Andreas Kloden (+2000) –
This is the final member of the T-Mobile triumvirate. The skill of this
three-man constellation calls to question exactly how the hierarchy will be
structured. Everyone insists it will be Ulrich, the team’s captain and
admittedly most accomplished rider. However, Kloden finished second last
year and though he hasn’t had a very notable 2005, he is still a serious
threat. It’s hard to imagine riders such as Vinoukarov and Kloden setting
their own aspirations aside for Ulrich, but that’s what they claim going
into the race.
Iban Mayo (+2500) –
This guy fills the role of the sleeper. Running for the Euskaltel-Euskadi
team out of Spain, Mayo is a wild card. He was having an exceptional
pre-Tour run last year, tearing up Lance at the Dauphine Libere. However, he
flopped in the main event, crashing in the third stage before coming down
with mononucleosis. He has been training alone this year, without a power
meter or heart rate monitor, and rumor has it he’s ready to roll.
It’s easy to take for granted how dominant Armstrong has been. He has been
automatic for these six years, and it is hard to think that he would leave
cycling in any way other than with the yellow jersey. However, such reckless
faith denigrates what he has accomplished over that stretch. There is a
tremendous amount of luck and will that is involved in any such streak. His
run has been amazing exactly because the race is so grueling and difficult.
Rome fell, streaks end, and dreams die. How will Lance ride off into the
sunset?
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