Friday, July 10, 2009

Tour de France: Stage 7


It was an interesting stage today as the Tour had its first mountain stage, in the Pyrenees. As expected Cancellara lost the yellow jersey, and surprisingly, it was a relatively unknown Italian who took it.

Most notably though near the end of the climb that ended the stage, Contador made a break on his own from the leaders and ended up second overall two seconds ahead of Armstrong. According to Armstrong in this video interview, that was not the plan. Astana was supposed to sit with Cadel Evans and others.

Personally, I welcomed seeing Contador getting ahead of Armstrong. The leadership of Astana appears to be in flux. If I were Contador, I would have expected the team to be supporting me going into this tour. However, with Armstrong in the mix and plainly up until today looking for glory himself, there doesn't seem to be any direction on who the leader is. Team director Johan Bruyneel's comments are interesting further down in this article. What they do seems to be up to the racers to plan. Is Bruyneel not going to be a part of any leadership decision making?

Of course, a team could have more than one leader, but I think lends itself to some confusion. Who are the domestiques to support? Both it seems, but that may be alot to ask, and might some domestiques have an allegiance to one leader over the other? Does one leader sometimes support the other and vica versa?

Though as a teammate might be expected to do today, Armstrong did remain with the other leaders and not help out in any chase of Contador.

Well, a couple more mountain stages in the Pyrenees and then plenty more of the Tour to come particularly in the Alps. Glad we've got Saturday and Sunday to watch tomorrow's mountain stages.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Tour de France: Stage 3




The Tour de France is on, and I'd forgotten how much fun it is to follow this race. Fortunately, I have the VS (versus) channel, catching it live in the mornings and replays in the evenings.

Today was a real interesting stage. I've only read about it. Brit Mark Cavendish won his second consecutive stage and at such a young age (24) is confirming his status as the sprinter to beat. Woo hoo! Crikey.

More interesting however was the fact that Lance Armstrong was a part of today's surprise team Columbia-Highroad-led breakaway. Armstrong is a member of team Astana whose leader is ostensibly Alberto Contador. Armstrong is now third overall, and with quotes like these here, you wonder if he's abiding by that leadership designation:


"I am not ok with that theory saying there can be only one team leader," said Armstrong.

"I have won seven Tours de France, I will have to be counted in."

Regarding that first quote, I'd be really surprised if Armstrong was not ok with that theory during his seven-year victory run. Anyway, this sets up for some real intrigue into the dynamics of the Astana team. Are they going to rein Armstrong in? Or are they going to bow to his ambitions and allow both he and Contador to battle for the title? It is impressive that at 37 Armstrong has made such a showing early on. But yes, it is early.

A real interesting post race interview of Armstrong coming up at the right hand side of this page here.