Wednesday, 21 October 2015

The 2016 Tour de France Route: Does It Favour Froome?

http://ift.tt/1kpfOL6

The organisers of the Tour de France, ASO, revealed next year’s course on Tuesday — and previous victors are already reacting. - By AFP/Bicycling

TDF

The 2016 edition of the Tour de France will cover 3,519 km starting from Mont Saint-Michel on July 2 and finishing in Paris three weeks later. Here are the 21 stages revealed by organisers ASO on Tuesday:

Stage 1: July 2, Mont Saint-Michel to Utah Beach Sainte-Marie-du-Mont, 188km
Stage 2: July 3, Saint-Lo to Cherbourg-Octeville, 182km
Stage 3: July 4, Granville to Angers, 222km
Stage 4: July 5, Saumur to Limoges, 232km
Stage 5: July 6, Limoges to Le Lioran, 216km
Stage 6: July 7, Arpajon-sur-Cere to Montauban, 187km
Stage 7: July 8, L’Isle-Jourdain to Lac de Payolle, 162km
Stage 8: July 9, Pau to Bagneres-de-Luchon, 183km
Stage 9: July 10, Vielha Val d’Aran (ESP) to Andorre Arcalis (AND), 184km
First rest day: July 11
Stage 10: July 12, Escaldes-Engordany (AND) to Revel, 198km
Stage 11: July 13, Carcassonne to Montpellier, 164km
Stage 12: July 14, Montpellier to Mont Ventoux, 185km
Stage 13: July 15, Bourg-Saint-Andeol to La Caverne du Pont-d’Arc, 37km (individiual time-trial)
Stage 14: July 16, Montelimar to Villars-les-Dombes Parc des Oiseaux, 208km
Stage 15: July 17, Bourg-en-Bresse to Culoz, 159km
Stage 16: July 18, Moirans-en-Montagne to Berne (SUI), 206km
Second rest day: July 19
Stage 17: July 20, Berne (SUI) to Finhaut-Emosson (SUI), 184km
Stage 18: July 21, Sallanches to Megeve, 17km (individual time-trial)
Stage 19: July 22, Albertville to Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc, 146km
Stage 20: July 23, Megeve to Morzine, 146km
Stage 21: July 24, Chantilly to Paris Champs-Elyees, 113km

Tour de France champion Chris Froome sent an ominous warning to his rivals after seeing the route for next year’s edition on Tuesday, saying it suits him more.

Froome won this year’s race by 1min 12sec from Colombia’s Nairo Quintana, but he thinks next year’s route will favour him. “It certainly suits me better than this (year’s) Tour did,” said a delighted Froome. “This year obviously went really well for us, it’s great that it’s a well-rounded Tour next year.”

In the immediate aftermath of last year’s announcement, Froome questioned whether he would even ride the 2015 Tour, saying it favoured specialist climbers. But he gradually warmed to the route and eventually triumphed in July after proving the most able to handle a multitude of challenges that saw all his main rivals lose time at unexpected moments.

“It’s not necessarily that I was disappointed with the lack of time-trialing but more that I was disappointed that, to me, the Tour de France has always been a race that needs to challenge every aspect of a rider,” explained the 30-year-old Team Sky leader. “You’re not just going to get a pure climber or a pure time-trialist winning it. It always has been a race for me that the best all-round rider can win, so next year’s route is definitely much more that kind of Tour.”

One of the key stages will be the 12th on Bastille Day (July 14) which finishes on Mont Ventoux, and Froome sees a positive sign in that. “I won the stage in yellow on Bastille Day in 2013 & 2015… Good omen I hope!” he said on Twitter.

He won the 15th stage finish on Mont Ventoux in 2013, when he won his first of two Tour titles, and was also victorious this year on July 14 when the first mountain stage finished at La Pierre-Saint Martin. But he was not the only one celebrating as two-time former winner Alberto Contador also saw good signs in the route. “Mountainous Tour from the start with 2 hard ITT (individual time-trials). Beautiful, attractive, that encouraged me, from today thinking on it!” he said on Twitter.

With the route generally considered more balanced than this year’s edition, there are more chances for the sprinters. Although Briton Mark Cavendish, a winner of 26 Tour stages in his career, was still daunted. “The whole race is relentless—to go after a few days into the Massif Central and then the Pyrenees…. I look at it now and it scares me!” he said.

German Andre Greipel was the top sprinter of this year’s race, winning four stages, including the final one on the Champs Elysees in Paris. “There are no easy stages in the Tour de France, but I’m happy that the first stage is going to be a possibility for the sprinters,” he said.

The first stage from Mont Saint-Michel to Utah Beach is pan flat and should end in a bunch sprint, meaning a sprinter could start the second stage in the race leader’s yellow jersey, just as German Marcel Kittel did in 2013 and 2014. That’s the aim for Cavendish, who has never enjoyed the honour of wearing the yellow jersey, although he’s donned the race leader’s jersey at both other Grand Tours, the Giro d’Italia’s pink number and the Vuelta a Espana’s red one. “It’s very important to try for the yellow jersey on the first day,” said the sprinter, who will ride for the African Qhubeka team (Team Dimension Data) next year. “It’s great that they give the opportunity for the sprinters to wear the yellow jersey. Obviously it hasn’t played out for me the last two times I’ve gone for it, but it would be nice to try in the first stage in a bunch sprint.”

Watch the route reveal in 3D >>



via Bicycling » Tour de France http://ift.tt/1kpfOLa

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...