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The Tour de Franche-Comté and the Tour de Corse are both scheduled to start tomorrow morning. Two races in which amateur cyclists will act as trailblazers in two stage finishes due to feature for the first time in the Tour de France: La Planche des Belles Filles next July 7 and Ajaccio on June 30, 2013.
Serendipity is a special word in the vocabulary of the Tour de France, and the coincidence which will take place on Sunday, May 20 is highly symbolic. Two places which are set to become part of the history of the Tour will take the centre stage at the same time in two major amateur stage races. The Tour de Franche-Comté will visit Les Rousses resort (which has had a special place in Sylvain Chavanel's heart since he won a stage here during the 2010 Tour) before coming to a grand finale with the climb up to La Planche des Belles Filles resort. This choice of course emphasises the values shared by the various cycling disciplines and certainly makes Christian Prudhomme a happy man: "It’s exciting to see how we can draw inspiration from one another. La Planche des Belles Filles was originally visited by cyclotourists. In July it will host the Tour de France and today it will receive the Tour de Franche-Comté. The Tour de Bretagne recently had a stage finish on the Mûr-de-Bretagne too, which confirms this trend". The organiser of the Tour de Franche-Comté, Gilles Da Costa, agrees wholeheartedly with the boss of the Tour: "When the Tour was presented in October, we set ourselves the goal of organising this stage finish. I’ve seen an enormous craze for this finish grow since we revealed our race course".
Less than two months from the start of Le Tour, the editorial team of Young Reporters for 2012 came together for a full meeting. It was an opportunity to get to know each other and to look ahead to the adventure that awaits them next July.
The team of young reporters for Le Tour has now come into being: on Saturday, the six Young Reporters selected in Paris by sports daily newspaper L’Equipe, in Brussels by La Dernière Heure and in Luxembourg by the sportspress.lu web site, were invited to spend the morning at the offices of A.S.O. for an initial group meeting. The newspaper A Notre Tour (now for our tour), which will be published and distributed every two days during the race, now has an editorial team that will stand out in the Tour de France press room thanks to its composition: it will definitely be the youngest, the most egalitarian as well with three girls and three boys, and probably one of the most cosmopolitan with three nationalities represented.
After the four young people selected in Paris with the daily sports newspaper l’Equipe, Joy Mentgen has won the competition in Luxembourg to join the Young Reporters editing team on Le Tour 2012. To complete the team, all that is needed is a Belgian journalist.
Joy will not be able to go and see the Red Hot Chili Peppers, but this is good news nonetheless! The 16-year old school pupil from Luxembourg is often involved in an association that organises cultural projects, such as this journey to Paris planned for 30th June. However, her natural curiosity, rather than her interest in cycling, incited her to take part in the selection of Young Reporters organised for the first time in Luxembourg, in partnership with the press group spotpresse.lu. “To really have my finger on the pulse, I went to see my grandfather who explained lots of things about cycling and the Tour de France. He also gave me some books and I prepared for this day in the same way I would prepare for an exam”. On the face of it, she learned her lessons well, sufficiently to comfortably conduct an interview with a fake Mark Cavendish played by Bernard Hinault, or to find relevant questions in order to discover the role of a time-keeper on the Tour de France.
These are exactly the type of situations that she will encounter on Le Tour from 28th June onwards as a member of the editing team on the newspaper ‘A Notre Tour’ (Now for our Tour), because yesterday evening it was indeed the name of Joy Mentgen that was announced by the Minister for Sports, Romain Schneider, on completion of a series of exercises performed by ten teenagers from Luxembourg, all of who speak four languages! From now on, the competition winner is looking ahead to the race in July: “I really don’t know what to expect, but I can’t wait to find out. I’ll be able to meet riders, but also see how the journalists work. As a first article, I’d love to do an interview with a rider from Luxembourg… Andy Schleck”.
The organisers of the Tour de France have completed selection of the teams for thenext edition of the event, which will start from the Province of Liege on Saturday30th June and finish in Paris Champs-Elysées on Sunday 22nd July.
In accordance with International Cycling Union rules, the following eighteen “ProTeams” are systematically selected:
AG2R La Mondiale (Fra)
Astana Pro Team (Kaz)
BMC Racing Team (USA)
Euskaltel – Euskadi (Esp)
FDJ – Big Mat (Fra)
Garmin – Barracuda (USA)
Greenedge Cycling Team (Aus)
Katusha Team (Rus)
Lampre – ISD (Ita)
Liquigas – Cannondale (Ita)
Lotto Belisol Team (Bel)
Movistar Team (Esp)
Omega Pharma – Quickstep (Bel)
Rabobank Cycling Team (Hol)
Radioshack – Nissan (Lux)
Sky Procycling (Gbr)
Team Saxo Bank (Dan)
Vacansoleil – DCM Pro Cycling Team (Hol)
In addition to these eighteen teams, the organisers have issued four invitations, meaning twenty-two teams will be present at the start of the 99th edition of the Tour de France. They are:
Argos – Shimano (Hol)
Cofidis, le crédit en ligne (Fra)
Saur – Sojasun (Fra)
Team Europcar (Fra)
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100 days before the prologue that will take place on 30th June, the Tour de France has already taken a taste of the Belgian atmosphere. Yesterday evening, Paris was the venue for the presentation of the trophy that will be awarded to the winner of the inaugural time-trial. Today, early in the morning, a prestigious delegation took the Thalys high-speed train to Liege, for a symbolic reconnoitring mission of the route which the riders will take.
“If there were trophies like that in my day, I would have wanted to win 25!” joked Bernard Hinault. Indeed, although he won five prologues in his career on Le Tour, the former champion never received a masterpiece equal to the one that will be awarded to the winner in Liege on 30th June. For the presentation of the sculpture designed and created by glass-maker Louis Leloup, a trio of winners came together in Paris. Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Bernard Thévenet, with a total of 12 Tour de France triumphs between them, teamed up for the unveiling of the creation by the artist from Liege.
Biking tales often unfold on the road, but the story of this small team continued on the train this morning, in a Thalys high-speed train decked out in Tour de France colours which whisked the former winners of the Big Loop away to Belgium. Invited by André Gilles, President of the Province of Liege, on their arrival in the sumptuous Guillemins railway station they attended the ceremonial start of one of the countdown clocks set up in the city. To get a taste of the programme that the riders will tackle in a little more than three months’ time, the former champions, also accompanied by Jean-Etienne Amaury and Christian Prudhomme, took a tour along the route of the prologue. The visit especially brought back some fond memories for Eddy Merckx and refreshed the memories of his rival from yesteryear, Bernard Thévenet: “Don’t you remember? This is where I left you in my wake on the finish of Liege-Bastogne-Liege in 1975!” The matter could be settled by a duel on the bikes on the morning of 30th June. To be continued…
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Alberto Contador was banned yesterday in Lausanne by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, following a positive test for the stimulant clenbuterol, forbidden according to anti-doping rules, on the rest day on 21st July 2010.
The CAS suspended the Spanish rider for two years. He was also stripped of the title for the Tour de France 2010 as well as his victories in 2011, including the Giro d’Italia. On the basis of this verdict, the International Cycling Union is likely to award victory for the 2010 edition to Andy Schleck, the runner-up in the race.
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Following the Corsican stages which will set in motion the 2013 Tour de France, the pack will travel to Nice for a team time trial which will inaugurate the "mainland" stages of the 100th edition of the race.
The Tour de France will explore new horizons on Corsica for the Grand Start of the 100th edition, but its return to the mainland will take it to one of the race’s most frequent stops: Nice, which already featured in the 1906 edition and has hosted the Tour on a total of 35 occasions. In addition to the many times it has welcomed the Grande Boucle, the capital of the French Riviera receives every year the elite peloton of the Paris-Nice, the first great stage race of the year in Europe.
This morning, Christian Prudhomme, director of the Tour de France, unveiled in the company of Paul Giacobbi, Chairman of the Executive Council of Corsica, the programme for the Grand Start of the race’s one-hundredth edition, in 2013. For the Tour’s first visit to Corsica, three stages have been drawn up between the sea and mountains.
The hundredth edition of the Tour de France will start with something brand new. After having visited all the departments of mainland France, the Tour de France is readying itself to add the island of Corsica to that list. To bring this historical anomaly to a close, a prestigious stay has been programmed on the Isle of Beauty during which the pack will explore all its facets. Regular competitors and spectators of the Critérium International have already discovered Porto-Vecchio and the relief of Southern Corsica. It is in this seaside resort at the foot of the mountains that riders and followers of the Tour will be coming together. They will experience an episode that will symbolically be of capital importance and will continue with an equally decisive sequence, since three stages will take place in Corsica.
Before arriving in Bastia during the first stage, the pack will take a large detour to admire the cliffs of Bonifacio. On the ride up the coast, the riders will then travel along one of the rare flat roads on the island, but the very next day the change in tone will be demanding. The diagonal route over the Isle from Bastia-Ajaccio, via Corte, will give the climbers the first opportunity to express themselves with climbs up the Col de Bellagranajo, Col de la Serra and Col de Vizzavona passes. Lastly, for the third part of this insular series, the road to Calvi, with its spectacular viewpoints over the coves at Piana, will also be a stage on which to make a mark for challengers for the yellow jersey.
The Corsican stages of Le Tour 2013:
> Saturday 29th June: Porto-Vecchio - Bastia, 200 km
> Sunday 30th June: Bastia - Ajaccio, 155 km
> Monday 1st July: Ajaccio - Calvi, 145 km
Bernard Hinault, with the famous top model and actress Hasegawa Rie
Two special programmes will today be devoted to the Tour de France, in Japan and Belgium. Cycling culture is a world apart in the two nations, but through the Tour de France they will be speaking the same language…
Seven months before the start of the 99th edition, the Tour de France will be taking a great stride across the planet. Chronologically, the party will begin with the Nuit du Tour (Night of the Tour) organised in Japan in partnership with the TV channel J-Sports, which has been broadcasting the race during July since 1999. Galvanised by the event and the recent results of their representatives in 2009 (Beppu and Arashiro, the first Japanese riders to finish), the viewers from the land of the rising sun are now used to following a special presentation in December. This year, Bernard Hinault has travelled to Tokyo to present the route and the stakes of the next edition during a special programme.
The history of Belgian riders, who have won everything on the Tour de France, has nothing in common with that of the Japanese. Nonetheless, the enthusiasm that drives lovers of cycling on the country of Merckx, Van Impe or Boonen, is still as strong as ever. Just like on each of the Tour’s visits to Belgium, a warm welcome is promised from the crowds for the Grand Start in 2012. To be precise, the second edition of the Night of the Tour will take place in Liège on 2nd December. To mark the occasion, the people of Liège have been invited to inaugurate the route of the prologue on which the elite riders will do battle on 30th June next year. This bicycle ride will be followed by a sound and light show projected onto the façade of the Provincial Palace. In attendance will be Christian Prudhomme, director of the Tour de France, André Gilles, deputy president of the Liège Provincial Parliament and Philippe Gilbert, the local hero who has completed an outstanding season with first place in the world rankings.
Mister Paul Giacobbi, President of the “Collectivité Territoriale de Corse” and Mister Christian Prudhomme, Director of the Tour de France, have the great pleasure of announcing that the Grand Depart (start) of the 100th edition of the Tour de France will take place in Corsica in 2013.
It will be the first time that the ‘Beauty Island’ and its two departments will welcome the peloton of the greatest cycling race in the world. Despite the fact that many cycling events have already taken place on its territory, Corsica remains the only region of metropolitan France to have never received the visit of the Tour de France.
The details of the Grand Départ and the stages selected for it will be revealed on the occasion of a press conference held on Tuesday the 6th of December 2011 at the Hôtel de Région in Ajaccio.
The day after the presentation at the Palais des Congrès, Christian Prudhomme and Jean-François Pescheux went their separate ways to scout the roads of the 2012 Tour and explain their key points. There are just over eight months left to dissect the new features of the 99th edition.
The presentation of the 2012 Tour route revealed a few surprises. Next year's key points will certainly be reconnoitred in great detail by the teams selected to take part in the race. In the meantime, the Tour teams visited once again the places where the next edition may be decided. Thus, Christian Prudhomme went to the Pyrenees to meet elected representatives and journalists, all of them keen on discovering the ins and outs of the Foix, Pau Bagnères-de-Luchon and Peyragudes stages. Among other places, the scouts took their convoys and cars to explore the Mur de Péguère, a new climb due to make its debut in the 14th stage. Upon reaching Peyragudes, the resort where the final summit finish of the 2012 Tour will be decided, the general director of the Tour got an historical overview from Michel Pélieu, the President of the General Council of the Hautes-Pyrénées: "I learned that Peyragudes already submitted a bid when the Tour first visited the Louron valley in 1991, but Jean-Marie Leblanc preferred Val Louron. An additional road has since been built, which makes this finish possible, over twenty years after Claudio Chiappucci's first stage victory", explains Prudhomme.
On the other hand, Jean-François Pescheux went to northern France to join Bernard Hinault to study the different ways the Boulogne-sur-Mer stage may unfold. Indeed, all five climbs at the end of the stage could act as a launching pad for bold attacks. The next day, the race director met Jérôme Coppel to scout a big part of the Mâcon - Bellegarde-sur-Valserine stage: the climb up the Col du Grand Colombier. Although it has never been used by the Tour de France, this gruelling climb is no mystery for the leader of the Saur team, who will probably be one of those in the peloton who know the climb best: "We are not far from where I live, so I know this climb very well. I use it very often for mountain-specific training. I think it is the toughest climb in the area. Of course, this stage attracts me, and I also think it could be the right place for a big attack. That is because the finishing line is far from the climb, but the remaining terrain is still rough. Just after the descent, cyclists will immediately tackle the Col de Richemond, and there is yet another small rise just before the end."
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The 2012 Tour de France route, revealed this morning in Paris' Palais des Congrès, casts the spotlight on the potential of intermediate mountain ranges. Christian Prudhomme has turned to novelty and to the cyclists' fighting spirit to keep the race for the Yellow Jersey open for as long as possible.
Place and date: Liège, Saturday, June 30, 2012. This will be the fourth time that the Tour de France kicks off in Belgium, a country which has always known how to instil a sense of panache into the peloton. It is precisely this sense of courage which inspired the design of the route of the 99th edition, one in which fortune will favour the bold, even in places where no-one expects it. Punchy riders will get their chance to shine on the rolling terrain of the Province of Liège and, later, Northern France. Those vying for the final victory will be able to go head-to-head before the end of the first week. They may even be able to open gaps if they make the most of the mountaintop finish at the Planche des Belles Filles (which makes its debut in the Tour) or the finale of the Porrentruy stage, right in the heart of the Swiss Jura.
While the favourites to win the Tour will be expected to dig deep on mountains which until now were labelled "intermediate", they will also have their work cut out for them on the Alpine and Pyrenean stages, whose profiles are especially dynamic. The 140-km-long stage between Albertville and La Toussuire - Les Sybelles will offer no respite to those poor riders who choose to play the waiting game. In the Pyrenees, the discovery of the Mur de Péguère, right before diving to Foix, together with the Aubisque-Tourmalet-Aspin-Peyresourde sequence on the Bagnères-de-Luchon stage and the Peyragudes summit finish, will give climbers the opportunity to shine. Cyclists will have no choice but to spring into action at the decisive moments. Indeed, the Liège prologue and the stages in Besançon and Chartres will force them to defend their positions in the race against the clock over a combined length of more than 100 kilometres.
SPORTS PRIZES
Stage win - Powerbar. Every day, the Tour de France honours the first rider across the finishing line.
Yellow Jersey - LCL. This jersey is worn by the leader of the general classification. This year, this and the other ones will be dressed by Le Coq Sport, which makes its return to the Grande Boucle.
Green Jersey - PMU. This jersey is worn by the leader of the points classification. The changes introduced in 2011, with just one intermediate sprint but with more points on offer, will be kept for the 2012 edition.
Polka Dot Jersey - Carrefour. This jersey is awarded to the leader of the mountains classification. The points scale was modified in 2011. The same one will be used again with a few changes. For example, points will be awarded to the first ten riders to reach the summit of an hors catégorie climb.
White Jersey - Škoda. The rider aged 25 or under who ranks highest in the general classification gets to wear the white jersey.
Team classification - Digital. This classification is calculated by adding the times of each team's three best riders on each stage. Riders belonging to the leading team wear yellow back numbers.
Brandt Combativity Award. Every day, a jury made up mainly of journalists selects the most deserving rider, one who has stood out for his attacking spirit, braveness or fair play. The winner gets to wear a red back number on the following stage. A super-combativity award is also given out at the end of the Tour.
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In what was a 2011 edition packed with twists of fate and pivotal moments, Cadel Evans navigated through France with the confidence of a mature and pondering champion. The Grenoble time trial put him in the yellow jersey, which he wore for only one stage this year: the day he reached Paris and the Champs-Elysées to be crowned as the first Australian winner of the Tour.
"It was in 1991 that the idea first crossed my mind, watching the Tour de France for the first time and seeing Miguel Indurain blow the field apart." Twenty years on, it was Cadel Evans' turn to climb onto the podium on the Champs-Elysées and get a whiff of this yellow glory whose sweet scent is coveted by all the cyclists in the world. Evans enjoys his national anthem with his eyes closed and his body wrapped in the Australian flag, witness to this honour for the very first time. This is not a dream. The 34-year-old has just conquered the race which has always escaped him, the race which has been so close to being his but has always left him with a taste of disappointment.
The teenager who was raised in an aboriginal community showed extraordinary physical abilities from a ripe age, which came to the light during his first tests on mountain bike trails. He was only 17 years old when he became the youngest rider ever on the podium of a leg of the World Cup. He would go on to win this competition two years straight, in 1998 and 1999. He made his road race debut in 2001, when he was still a young cyclist ready to learn from his first experiences at the top level. The reserved young rider had quite an unassuming Tour debut, but he finished a promising 8th. He got a podium place two years later, when he finished 2nd, just 23" behind Contador. The disappointment of having to settle for the tantalising 2nd place was even more bitter the following year, when he looked poised to storm to the win in the final time trial but was unable to dislodge Carlos Sastre from the top spot. Most importantly, this new setback typecast him as the eternal runner-up, which he seemed to confirm by losing the leader's jerseys at the Tour of Italy, the Tour of Spain and the Critérium du Dauphiné. His breakthrough moment came in September 2009, when he seized the Road World Championship thanks to what cynics call the only attack in his life. Say what they may, the colours of the rainbow jersey heralded a new Evans who stepped up his game. The Australian won the Flèche Wallonne and assumed the mantle of a champion.
But his objective of winning the Tour de France depended on perfection and success. Lady Luck turned her back on him in 2010, when he finished the race with a fractured elbow which prevented him from defending his yellow jersey. This year round, the new Cadel has been able to fully exploit his conquering mindset and his vast racing experience. He showed a great deal of courage, especially on the final climb of the Mûr-de-Bretagne, where he grabbed his first road stage victory. Watchfulness and consistency were two more arrows in his quiver, which he proved by avoiding falls, peloton break-ups and potentially dangerous breakaways. Thomas Voeckler might have had a bigger advantage at Saint-Flour without the work of Evans' BMC teammates. Aware of his limits, the big favourite among the outsiders waited until the last possible moment to give it his all. This moment came during the climb up the Col du Galibier, when Luxembourger Andy Schleck was on his way to pull off a coup in the race's queen stage. Evans pulled by himself a not-too-cooperative peloton which broke into pieces in the last ten kilometres up the climb, reducing his rival's advantage to more manageable levels. Two days later, it was his turn to launch an all-out attack on the Schlecks, when Andy slipped on a yellow skin suit for the all-deciding time trial in Grenoble. Evans rose to the challenge this time, forcing the two brothers to settle for the lower steps of the podium. A testament to patience.