Tour du France 2012 (99th edition)

Andry Rod

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Okay so the Tour de France started last Saturday without Andy Schleck or Alberto Contador ,in this conditions the biggest favorites are Cadel Evans and Bradley Wiggins,however we need to wait the montaigne stages and the ITT stages. Who do you think will gonna win this year ?

My favorite is Gesink and even he isnt the top favorite i hope he will ride welll
 
I haven't seen any of the Tour this year, although I have followed it in previous years. Who is leading so far?
 
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http://www.letour.fr/le-tour/2012/us/

One of the reasons I replied to this post:

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46.6 miles or 75Km in 2.46.56 hrs that is 3.15 min/mile took silver. I was shooting for Gold but got smoked. We will know 12 June how we did overall. There were ate least 1,800 riders. I will shoot for a metric that is 62 miles or 100Km. I ride a Bianchi 928 C2C very good bike for distance rides, mine is considered a mid class bike.

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There were two wrecks, one rider broke an arm. The other wreck was not even a half mile into the race, very tight corner. I got my top speed to 36mph took corners tight and leaned in, what a rush but not as good as jumping out of planes.
 
Well done Tazmania, I did a little cycling in the past, the most I did was a 100K charity cycle through the Wicklow mountains. My bike is a Trek 1500, sadly it is lying up unused at the moment.
 
Thanks Fergal, I love to ride and 100km I think that is a metric 62 miles. If you ever get a chance get that bike back out and go for a ride, I know you still have it in you.

I ride a Bianchi 929 C2C absolutely awesome ride. Hope you get a chance to get back in the saddle.

Summary Update for 4 July:

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Cancellara look strong after his spring injury, i dont think he can keep his yellow after Saturday stage but however 7 days in yellow is kinda awesome + he is the main favorite for next ITT stages.

Off topic : I hate youtube video ads :|


Cavendish was unlucky today
 
Well you can't always get what you want. Youtube like any other business has to earn funds so they have ads before most vids now. Why is it, that so many hate hate hate and want want want something for nothing but when it comes to their own interest they expect expect expect lol.

This year's event is interesting and looks to be a good race thus far.


[youtube]nY9nce6HfM8[/youtube]<br /><br />-- 05 Jul 2012, 16:16 --<br /><br />That had to hurt!

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-- 07 Jul 2012, 20:18 --

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The first mountain stage of the Tour will be a complete contrast to the opening week and is was always going to be a different sort of rider who excels on the road to La Planche des Belles Filles. The peloton has been ravaged by crashes in recent days, especially the carnage that wiped out so many riders on the road to Metz. Still, some of the big pre-race favorites all survived the chaos and Wiggins, Evans, Menchov and Nibali are all still in contention for the podiumin Paris. Still many may have to accept that a win could now be out of reach. That might be the case for Fränk Schleck, Alejandro Valverde, Robert Gesink and Michele Scarponi – who were all casualties of the crash near the end of stage six. They now only have one solution to put themselves back in contention: attack!
Fabian Cancellara recognizes that his time in the yellow jersey is due to come to an end but some of the potential winners of stage seven are loathe to inherit the leader's color too soon. Evans timed his race into yellow perfectly last year, taking the lead with only one day to race. And he'll be satisfied if he manages it that way again this year. This is the stage when we're going to see who is able to keep dreaming of the top step of the Parisian podium.

yellow jerseyWIGGINS B.SKY
green jerseySAGAN P.LIQ
polka-dot jerseyFROOME C.SKY
white jerseyTAARAMAE R.COF

the day's winnerFROOME C.SKY
teamSKY PROCYCL.SKY
combativeSANCHEZ L.RAB
 
When I was living in France, I used to watch the Tour religiously.
Now, I mostly follow on the internet
 
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1. WIGGINS B. SKY 39h 09' 20''
2. EVANS C. BMC 01' 53''
3. FROOME C. SKY 02' 07''
4. NIBALI V. LIQ 02' 23''
5. MENCHOV D. KAT 03' 02''
6. ZUBELDIA H. RNT 03' 19''
7. MONFORT M. RNT 04' 23''
 
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This occurred in stage three but look at the recklessness of the rider who clearly cuts off the Pink Jersey. Cutting across three riders. I know it's an intense race but the winner of this stage clearly jeopardized the health of several riders. Look at the spills these guys took.


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Thanks for those route updates IAAM Radio, I hope you are enjoying this year's Tour.
 
I am thanks and have been riding myself a good deal lately.

Here is the latest:
All info obtained here: http://www.letour.fr/le-tour/2012/us/

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1. WIGGINS B. SKY 59h 32' 32''
2. FROOME C. SKY 02' 05''
3. NIBALI V. LIQ 02' 23''
4. EVANS C. BMC 03' 19''
5. VAN DEN BROECK J. LTB 04' 48''
6. ZUBELDIA H. RNT 06' 15''
7. VAN GARDEREN T. BMC 06' 57''

Stage summary14.07.2012Stage 13 - Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux / Le Cap d'Agde

A long transitional stage can, at times, be a procession but the 13th stage of the 2012 Tour was anything but an stock standard sprint stage. A steep hill 23km from the finish ensured that some of the big name sprint specialists were eliminated from the rush to the line. And then, in the final kilometre we were again reminded of the strength of Bradley Wiggins who was the last lead-out man before the sprinters who were able to stay in contact with the front group over the Mont Saint-Clair opened hit the turbo buttons. It was an effort from the race leader that almost delivered Edvald Boasson Hagen to the line first but the Norwegian simply couldn't hold off the charge of André Greipel and Peter Sagan who were first and second on a day that Orica-GreenEdge had hoped it would get revenge for the decision by the race jury to penalise Matt Goss 30 points for his sprint in stage 12. Goss, however, was one of the men eliminated and he would finish well behind and his main rival for the green jersey missed out on a fourth stage win by about half a wheel. The winner of the stage is now ranked second in the points classification and his third win in the 2012 Tour sees him 29 points ahead of Goss and 34 points behind the runner-up in Le Cap d'Agde.

The progress report
The 217km stage from St-Paul-Trois-Chateaux to Le Cap d'Agde began at 11.55am with 194 riders still in the race. The intermediate sprint was in Mas-de-Londres at 128.5km and the only climb of the stage came with 23km to go: that was the category-three Mont Saint-Clair. As soon as the flag fell to signal the start, Burghardt (BMC) sped ahead but he was quickly chased down and, at 1.5km, there were five in the lead: Urtasun (EUS), Dumoulin (COF), Ladagnous (FDJ), Morkov (STB) and Curvers (ARG). This group was chased down by Bouet and Engoulvent (SAU) at 7km, by then the peloton was at 2'55” and there was one man in a counter-attack: Pineau (OPQ) who was at 1'10”. Gallopin (RNT) quit the race early in the stage citing an illness that he's had for a couple of days. Pineau joined the lead group at 15km and, around the same time, Orica-GreenEdge came to the front of the peloton. Still, the advantage of the eight at the front grew quickly: 6'00” at 29km, 9'20” at 35km.... the average speed for the first hour was 41.8km/h.

Orica-GreenEdge pursue the eight escapees
The maximum gain of the break was 9'20” and then Orica's efforts slowly but surely reeled them in: 7'05” at 53km; 6'30” at 58km... and it kept on falling until there was just 3'40” between the lead group and the bunch at the intermediate sprint. The average speed for the third hour was 42km/h. Urtasun led the escape over the line for the sprint and Orica had the strength of numbers on the approach to the race for seven points but Sagan (LIQ) easily accounted for his main rival in the points classification and led Greipel and Goss to the line 3'40” behind the escapees. The peloton was speeding along, bringing the escapees back quickly after passing through Argelliers (with 74km to go) when the escapees were just 2'10” ahead.

Morkov insists with escape
On the five year anniversary of his father's death, Morkov was insistent on trying to win a stage of the Tour. He attacked the lead group with 64km to go and within 2km he had a lead of 20” on the seven other escapees. With 55km to go, he was 30” ahead (while the peloton was at 2'40”). There was a tailwind at the time of his attack but it would turn to crosswinds inside the final 40km. The average speed for the fourth hour was 47.2km/h.
With 36km to go, BMC moved to the front of the peloton and caused a split in the peloton but all the GC favourites made the first selection. Morkov had a lead of 40” at the base of the final climb but the gradient was too much for him. He was caught before the top.

Mont Saint-Clair eliminates sprinters
Zingle (COF) and Caruso (KAT) attacked the peloton early on the climb but the steep gradient was too much for these opportunists to hold off the GC men. Van den Broeck crested the Mont Saint-Clair hill in first, with Evans second. There were about 25 in the lead group after the climb but Goss, Farrar, Cavendish and a large group lost contact with the first peloton. Vinokourov (AST) attacked the front group with 16km to go and Albasini (OGE) chased him down. With 10km to go they had a lead of 25” on the yellow jersey's bunch that was led by five Lotto-Belisol riders, with Sagan right on the wheel of Greipel. And these two riders would contest the sprint for stage honours.

Wiggins leads out the sprint
With 2.5km to go, Vinokourov and Albasini were caught and this prompted an attack from Sanchez (RAB) but he was caught as the bunch passed under the 1km to go banner. With 900m to go, Wiggins was in the lead as he had Boasson Hagen on his wheel and the Sky team looked like it might just be able to grab its fourth stage win but the Norwegian couldn't hold off the charge by Greipel and Sagan who drag raced each other to the line with the German winning this battle with a late lunge to the line. It is Greipel's third stage win in the 2012 Tour.
Boasson Hagen was third and Wiggins was home safely in 12th place; he will wear the yellow jersey in stage 14.
 
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A day of rest will have served the riders well but nothing can really prepare someone for the prospect of what it's like to race a stage of the Tour de France with four huge mountain passes. The race from Pau to Luchon-de-Bagnères ends in a valley town and it's one that all riders would be afraid of. Those who are tired will suffer enormously on the challenging 197km route that takes in four mythical mountain passes – the Aubisque, Tourmalet, Aspin and Peyresourde; those who are challenging Bradley Wiggins for the yellow jersey will be worried that he's shown no sign yet of cracking; and the race leader himself we will concerned about what is bound to be a volley of attacks up and down the climbs that have helped create the legend of the Tour since they made their debut on the itinerary 102 years ago.

It might not be a summit finish but this is arguably the Queen Stage of the 99th Tour de France when there's a lot at risk but also big prizes to be won.

1. WIGGINS B. SKY 68h 33' 21''
2. FROOME C. SKY 02' 05''
3. NIBALI V. LIQ 02' 23''
4. EVANS C. BMC 03' 19''
5. VAN DEN BROECK J. LTB 04' 48''
6. ZUBELDIA H. RNT 06' 15''
7. VAN GARDEREN T. BMC 06' 57''
 
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1. WIGGINS B. SKY 74h 15' 32''
2. FROOME C. SKY 02' 05''
3. NIBALI V. LIQ 02' 23''
4. VAN DEN BROECK J. LTB 05' 46''
5. ZUBELDIA H. RNT 07' 13''
6. VAN GARDEREN T. BMC 07' 55''
7. EVANS C. BMC 08' 06''
 
20 Jul 2012

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1. WIGGINS Bradley 101 SKY PROCYCLING 80h 20' 21''
2. FROOME Christopher 105 SKY PROCYCLING 80h 22' 26'' 02' 05''
3. NIBALI Vincenzo 51 LIQUIGAS-CANNONDALE 80h 23' 02'' 02' 41''
4. VAN DEN BROECK Jurgen 111 LOTTO-BELISOL TEAM 80h 26' 14'' 05' 53''
5. VAN GARDEREN Tejay 9 BMC RACING TEAM 80h 28' 51'' 08' 30''
6. EVANS Cadel 1 BMC RACING TEAM 80h 30' 18'' 09' 57''
7. ZUBELDIA Haimar 19 RADIOSHACK-NISSAN 80h 30' 32'' 10' 11''
8. ROLLAND Pierre 29 TEAM EUROPCAR 80h 30' 38'' 10' 17''
9. BRAJKOVIC Janez 181 ASTANA PRO TEAM 80h 31' 21'' 11' 00''
10. PINOT Thibaut 146 FDJ-BIGMAT 80h 32' 07'' 11' 46''
11. ROCHE Nicolas

Homepage > The news > Wiggins: in charge at Chartres
Wiggins: in charge at Chartres
Stage summary21.07.2012Stage 19 - Bonneval / Chartres

The dominant team of the 2012 Tour de France finished the second long time trial with three men in the top five. Any doubts about the ability of Bradley Wiggins were put to rest today when he dominated the 53km time trial from Bonneval to Chartres to win his second stage of the Tour de France and increase his lead in the general classification. He got to throw a victory salute, punching the air with his right hand as he crossed the line to beat the rider in second place overall, Chris Froome, by 1'16�?� in the stage. The top five was rounded out by an early starter Luis Leon Sanchez (RAB), followed by Peter Velits (OPQ) and Richie Porte (SKY). Wiggins was the success story on a day when the defending Tour champion suffered a humiliating defeat. Cadel Evans (BMC) was passed by his young team-mate with 20km to go and the Australian would eventually finish 5'54�?� behind the heir to the Tour's throne. The objective of the team with the blue line has been achieved: victory in the Tour de France. The parade to Paris is all that's yet to come in Le Tour 2012.

The progress report
The 53km 19th stage of the Tour de France – a time trial from Bonneval to Chartres – began at midday with the ‘Lanterne Rouge', Jimmy Engouvlent (SAU), the first to start. The first 44 riders were separated by one-minute intervals, then it was two minutes between starters until the final 14 who had three minutes between each other. The sun was shining and a light breeze was blowing in the stage that was contested entirely in the Eure-et-Loir department.

Gretsch sets the early standard
The 10th rider to start the time trial set the best time at all three intermediate checks (at 14km, 30.5km and 48km) and established the time to beat in Chartres, covering the 53km course in 1h06'41”. It wasn't under the arrival of Luis Sanchez (RAB) that the German's time was beaten. The Spanish TT champion caught his two-minute man before the 14km mark and beat Gretsch by 3” at all intermediate checks (by 3” at 14km, 16” at 30.5km, and 31” at 48km). Sanchez covered the 53km course at an average speed of 48.6km/h.

Van Garderen shines, Evans fades
The defending champion of the Tour offered one of the big surprises of the day; Evans (BMC) reached the 14km mark 1'10” behind Sanchez (55th best at the time). Meanwhile, the rider who started three minutes behind him – Tejay van Garderen (BMC) – was the fastest, beating Sanchez by 3” at the first check. But Froome took 23” off the time of the American but Wiggins, once again, was the fastest clocking 16'49” for the opening 14km.
Evans' collapse was confirmed when van Garderen caught him with 20km to go in the stage; by then, the leader of the BMC team was over three minutes behind the time set by Sanchez.

Wiggins: an emphatic second stage win!
As impressive as Sanchez's return to top form has been, the Spaniard who limped through the first week of the Tour in 2012 because of a crash in stage one, was beaten by the final two starters in the time trial to Chartres. Froome beat Sanchez at every time check but then came the yellow jersey who was in a class of his own, being the only rider to finish the stage at over 50km/h. He was 12” ahead of Froome at 14km, 54” ahead at 30.5km, 1'15” ahead with 5km to go and then saluted his second stage victory as he crossed the line 1'16” ahead of Froome and 1'50” ahead of Sanchez. Evans finished the stage in 52nd place 5'54” behind the rider who will wear the yellow jersey for the final stage tomorrow. The changing of the guard is complete and this battle has been won by Britain.
 
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