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The Duel: How Contador Made a New Friend and Won the Tour

Andy Schleck Alberto Contador Tour de France

You wake up each morning to a bike race, as if the riders had spent the night trapped in a perpetual motion machine, just waiting for you to lift the lid and peek inside. What will they do next? Lift the lid, turn the crank, watch them dance.

Of course, the Tour is no automaton, and presumably the bike racers spend their nights all tucked into their bike racer beds with their blankies pulled up under their chins and their iPods singing them sweet lullabies. Racing a bike requires strong legs, but the strongest rider doesn’t always win. Often, the outcome hinges on the interplay of personalities. It’s a game of the mind as much as it is of the legs.

This year’s Tour brought us a two-way rivalry of the sort we haven’t seen in some time. The nature of the grand tours ensures that typically only a small number of contenders have a real chance of winning and often one rider seems to ride on a level far beyond anyone else in the race. This time around, we lucked out. The Tour gave us a battle of near-equals between Andy Schleck and Alberto Contador. The leading two reached Paris with only 39 seconds separating them after a three week circumnavigation of France. That’s close. How did Alberto Contador win the Tour? He won with a combination of legs and guile and more than a smidgeon of bluff.

Star-divide

A stage race is never won in one moment, and we can trace the story of the Andy and Albi rivalry through the Ardennes, over the cobbles, up the high mountains and finally, against the watch. But in a race this tight, small things count in large amounts. The moment when Andy Schleck dropped his chain on the Port de Balès has received its share of attention, especially as the gap at the finish of that stage Andy Schleck Tour de Francematched almost exactly the winning margin in Paris. Maybe Schleck’s poor gear choice on the Port de Balès lost him the Tour, but even had his attack succeeded in distancing his Spanish rival, Schleck had still a long descent to race to the line. Time would not have stood still at the summit of the Port de Balès, and with everything to race for, Contador may well have paid back any deficit.

Of course, Schleck’s dropped chain also provoked a nearly endless debate over etiquette and rules, both unspoken and not, as Contador chose to race rather than wait for Andy to sort out his bike. It was a calculated gamble from the Spanish rider, who began this year’s race with two previous Tour victories. Contador gambled that Schleck would not find opportunity to exact revenge. In stage racing, tactical decisions are always a balance between immediate advantage and long-term costs, and even cycling’s unwritten rules pay tribute to this reality. Polemica is temporary, victory is forever.

But the more revealing moment in the rivalry between Contador and Schleck came the day before on the climb to Ax-3-Domaines. Andy Schleck attacked, Contador covered. Then, the two riders came nearly to a stop as Schleck tried to force Contador to cooperate and ride with him. Contador refused. The race regrouped and soon a small group went up the road, a group that included Samuel Sánchez and Denis Menchov.Andy Schleck Alberto Contador Tour de France Both Sánchez and Menchov stood to climb the classification if they romped up the road and ran out the clock. Menchov in particular can turn out a mean ride against the watch, and couldn’t be allowed any advantage in the mountains. Behind, Schleck tried to force Contador to ride. Though Sánchez was making a run at Contador’s second place, Schleck held the Yellow Jersey of race leader. You want to win the Tour? You have to defend it, Contador seemed to say, I’m not going to do it for you. Schleck wanted Contador to defend his second place. Contador was having none of it.

It was a classic bluff. Contador rode as if he was willing to lose in the hope of forcing Schleck to help him win. It worked. The next camera shot showed Schleck chasing down the lead group with Contador glued to his wheel. Schleck never seemed to make an attack to drop his rival. Maybe he believed it wouldn’t work. Though Schleck looked stronger on the road that day, the moment showed Contador’s dominance. In the game of the mind, Contador held the upper hand. Schleck, though nearly equal on the road, raced believing Contador was the stronger rider. It was a bluff that held all the way to the final time trial.

Conventional wisdom had it that Schleck needed an advantage of two minutes before the final time trial. On the Col du Tourmalet, he believed he faced a monstrous task of extracting a significant time gap from a rider who raced through the mountains as his equal. Schleck attacked with 10 kilometers to race, but never could shake his Spanish shadow. Alberto Contador Tour de FranceContador sat on, and as with the the race to Ax-3-Domaines, Schleck proved unable to drop him or convince him to contribute to the tempo.

It was a curiously tense finale on the Tourmalet. Contador’s decision not to contest the sprint seemed an anti-climactic finish. I think it likely that he hadn’t the legs and felt lucky to have reached the finish on equal time. But the illusion of dominance remained as evidenced by the widespread perception that Contador had given the stage win away, a stage win he could easily have taken if he’d wanted. Maybe, maybe not.

In the end, Schleck needed 40 seconds, not two minutes to win the Tour. If Schleck had ridden believing he was the dominant rider, how might the race have played out? If he’d known he only needed 40 seconds rather than two minutes, would Schleck have attacked harder on the Tourmalet? We can’t know for sure. It’s these human relationships, and the tactical choices they force that gives cycling its special fascination. This rivalry between too so closely matched riders was the gift of this year’s Tour, and it’s a gift that may well return again next year. Sometimes, it’s possible to believe that Santa Claus exists after all.

After three weeks, the Tour dissolves into kaleidoscopic images of colorful jerseys, passing landscape, sinewed legs, and shiny bikes. Spin the wheel and see Armstrong’s grim dusted face on the cobbles, Farrar’s post-crash tears by the roadside, Chavanel’s joyous victory, Voeckler’s incandescent smile, Chris Anker Sorensen’s grimpeur’s grimace. Spin again, and there’s Contador’s tears of relief after the final crono, and there’s Evans's défaillance on the col de la Madeleine. Cadel Evans Mauro Santambrogio Tour de FranceCould there be any more human moment than the desperate fight of the Australian to hold the Yellow Jersey after crashing and his team-mate Mauro Santambrogio’s impassioned effort to help him? The sport is beautiful in both triumph and heartbreak.

And so this year’s story comes to an end. There’s no bike racers riding around inside my computer, as it turns out. They’ve all gone home, at least until the next race. Too bad July only comes once a year, though perhaps we’d all go numb from a surfeit of drama. Is it possible to have too much of a good thing? As I reach for another espresso, I’d have to say no. When’s the next race?

~Gav.

Photos: Getty.

4 recs  |  161 comments

Comments

This is one of my favorite posts you've written

Indeed, I thought along the same lines as you – Andy never seemed quite confident enough to attack with the reckless abandonment needed, though he did make a huge jump in confidence from last year. I for one expect to see him even more aggressive in the mountains next year. And hopefully better equipped in the psychological arsenal – his attempts at psychological parrying were a start, but not on par with what was leveled against him.

Very nice dénouement, Gav

The “What if’s” can drive a person mad. but your question, “If Schleck had ridden believing he was the dominant rider, how might the race have played out?”, is the ‘What if" of the season and possibly Andy’s career.

nice one gav
It seemed to me that SaxoBank

made a strategic choice to focus on the Tourmalet as the stage where Andy could break Alberto. So on the other stages where seconds were to be gained (Mende, Ax-3-Domaines, Station des Rousses, etc.) Andy was riding to keep his powder dry. He gained a few seconds into Station des Rousses and lost a few into Mende, but it seemed that Saxo’s strategy was to keep things calm and then release the hounds on the Tourmalet.

It may be the Riis is fond of the single-stage knockout blow, since he broke Indurain on the Galibier in 1996 and Sastre’s ride on the Alpe D’Huez decided the 2008 TdF.

Very possible

Andy kept mentioning “sticking to the plan”. The Tourmalet was definitely a focus, and they were all smiles until Andy lost his 31" advantage.

one thing, besides crazy climbing ability,

that contador has that gives him an edge is his ability to adjust and adapt as the tour goes on and make decisions on the spot. last year’s attack in the pyrenees, for example. he doesn’t just blindly follow the ds’s instructions. he has a killer instinct that’s willing to take advantage of opportunities when they present themselves. andy seems more like a follower. maybe it’s an age/experience thing. hopefully andy will grow some fangs soon.

I think Andy has the fangs,

it may just take a little more time before he can bite AC. He seems to stand over everyone else like a pack leader right now.

i think that is right
He's a very ruthless bike racer.

Contador, I mean. And that’s not a criticism. He doesn’t let much of anything stand in his way, and I think in this edition of the Tour, that may have made the difference between Andy and him. Andy has a wild talent, but I’m not sure he’s quite sorted out how to use it just yet.

I'm pretty sure this is it

The Riis gang has big faith in The Golden Moment. The one big chance to make a big difference. I’m not 100% sure they were locked into that moment appearing on the Tourmalet but it was the likeliest spot.

At the track stand moment...

Andy needed to get behind Conta in order to be able to pull off the attack. I think AS had plenty of confidence, but he’s not superhuman. I see it as Andy trying to bluff Albert, and Albert called his bluff. So at that point AS, as the yellow jersey wearer, had no other option really.

If the chain hadn’t dropped and Andy took that 31 sec advantage into the TT, I think AC would not have had the response in his legs to come back against the TT surprise from Andy. But now Andy doesn’t have that surprise up his sleeve, the cat is out, and it may be even harder for Andy to accomplish his goal now.

bluffy

Interesting. I read it the other way, but this makes a sort of sense. I tend to think that Schleck was stronger than he thought he was, and Contador weaker. That is, that Contador’s conservative tactics resulted from necessity not choice.

Polemica is temporary, victory is forever.

Indeed. Not that we can’t argue forever, but as soon as a new polemica comes along, we’re all for moving on!

Believing he was inferior

I wonder if Schleck can now get over this. I was one of the conventional voices who was completely spooked out of doubting Contador by his time trial performance last year. Now it seems like Contador’s advantage over Schleck in the time trial isn’t necessarily all that large, which means I can believe in a fair fight next time. I hope Andy can too now.

I'd expect so.

He came oh-so-close, and it’s hard to imagine he will forget it any time soon. Schlecky has an elastic talent, that I’m not sure he’s stretched all the way to its boundaries.

Sminer has a point, though, that Contador’s expectations will change also, and he’ll know what Schleck’s bringing.

i think they'll both be better next year

should be fun to watch

Indeed

Schleck a white jersey guy — so the safe bet is that he will continue to grow as a rider. Conta meanwhile should use the offseason to assemble his praetorian guard for the next five years. I am liking this duel more than I expected to…

Andy was inferior just not as inferior as last year

although he was superior to 168 riders so inferior is a tad harsh. But he was even on the climbs and lost 1 minute in the ITT. Had he won he would have won for being…wait for it….a better cobbles rider. I don’t think Bert ever doubted he could win but he was surely not as confident it was a foregone conclusion. I think one thing being ignored is the human limit, I don’t think Andy could have attacked any harder on the Tourmalet or gained any ground on the other climbs because he was at his limit.

One thing really struck me about their relationship this yea-

after Chaingate, Andy was all about “fueled with anger” and “stomach for revenge”. But after Tourmalet, where he perceived Bert let him take the stage (ignoring for the moment your question about whether that was true or not), Andy and Frank couldn’t get to twitter fast enough to tweet about what a gracious champion Bert was and repeat it in all the interviews.

I certainly get respecting the guy who was able to stay with you on the big stage, but this seemed a bit overkill He seemed so thankful for win that hitstruck me as not the sort of attitude a really competitive person has toward an equal.

maybe they realized the stomach full of revenge thing

was going a little too far and were trying to make up for it by being too nice.

You know - it is possible that AS is simply a nice guy

He saw the boos Contador was getting, thought (on reflection) they were unfair, kinda liked AC anyway, and went out of his way to calm them down. If so, i think more rather than less of him

I think we get too carried away with sport as war. It is possible to race without wanting to kill. If these two like each other, actually I think it is a good thing. May the best man win, and the winner be the best man, is a damn fine motto.

You're right

Andy could have fueled the fire against AC, done nothing, or put out the fire. What he chose to do showed you can compete hard and be a nice guy.

Well said...

…I especially like your repudiation of the sport as war thing. It’s often been likened to war, and often is in order to justify certain kinds of tactics, but in a lot of ways I think the better goal is to try to have it be as unlike war as possible. There are forms of struggle where asserting your own superiority doesn’t mean destroying or diminishing an opponent. Sport, at its best, is one of them.

on the sport as war question

it’s funny because they were talking to Hinault sunday before the stage and his attack on the last stage one year – they asked how it was he managed to be so audatious and to dare to attack all the time and so on – his answer was basically that for him (and back then) it was just a game and that things are more serious now.

i agree

it seems the fear of failure, especially at the tour, cripples the competition. i was watching some videos on velonews before the tour. the usual " what does the tour mean to you?" videos. the most common answer… the tour is so big, means so much, is so important, etc.. the race makes or breaks seasons, teams, contracts, and careers. Horner said something similar in an interview after the TT. he implied that results in other races dont mean much until you get a result in the tour to validate the other results.

i think money has a lot to do

with having made a lot of sports way more serious business than they used to be too.

Andy Schleck may still have a bit of that mentality

“It’s only a stupid bike race, you know?” http://www.sporza.be/permalink/1.832829

love those schleck brothers

nice video

i think he likes contador

and also respected him for being able to stay with him – and you know, the feeling is mutchual and all

The stomach full of anger things was said right after the stage

can’t expect much rationalization to have taken place yet. They are buds and like to complement each other, doesn’t mean Andy didn’t try his hardest to win the Tour in the ITT.

I'm not focused so much on the quotes from Chaingate

because they were a heat of the moment thing. There was just something about the comments that struck me as a little too thankful – more of the attitude someone has to a boss or superior rather than someone you view as an equal competitor.

I don’t think you need to be a jerk to win, and I agree Andy seems like a genuinely nice person from what I can tell in interviews. But I’d sort of expect someone who genuinely thought that he could win the overall to be mad that he wasn’t able to capitalize on the opportunity to get ahead rather than being so happy for being given a win. If the positions were reversed, I don’t imagine Bert would have been all smiley on the podium after that stage.

But what do I know – I’m sure there is a level of exhaustion that I can’t comprehend after riding that stage as part of a three week non-stop stress fest.

Yeah, those comments made me a tiny bit cross with him

mainly because it made me wonder whether or not he had truly believed he could win.

I do think the point about strategy is a good one, that Saxo were focussing on the Tourmalet stage all along (look how they used the team) whereas Contador was more able to improvise (chaingate et al).

I think you need to just read some press quotes of his to see how much he thought he could win

actually they were starting to get annoying.

I've read those quotes.

But what I am trying (possibly not terribly effectively) to say is that when I saw the interview Katiek refers to, it made me wonder how much he had actually believed it. I’m not saying he didn’t, just that it made me wonder.

agree they were starting to get annoying

perhaps he was talking that way to try and convince himself

why should he be mad?

if he wasn’t fast enough, he wasn’t fast enough. cyclists are accustomed to losing as contador points out – you usually lose, it’s normal to lose. Winning is rare and difficult.

I don't think he should be mad.

But I thought he overdid the gratitude to Contador for the win a bit.

yeah that's possible

on the other hand, you know, it’s a press conference and all – have to take it with a grain or two of salt.

(by the way was referring to Katiek who said she might have liked if he were mad – though granted it was a bit of an off-hand comment on her part perhaps)

yep. him and frank were a bit too effusive on saying Contador is a true champion because he gifted Andy the stage
Compare to Armstrong "gifting" Pantani on Ventoux

Pantani was POd at any implication he’d been gifted the stage

lol, yeah

Speaking of polemica…

mad may not be the right word

but he seemed sort of giddy on stage, so happy with his win and so thankful. I like the fact that Bert and he exhibit mutual respect and can be gracious in disappointment, but Andy didn’t even seem all that disappointed. I wouldn’t want to see him storming around tossing helmets out the team bus, but it didn’t strike me as the reaction of someone who had just lost his best chance to win the TdF.

But I’m probably reading too much into it.

yeah thinking back on it,

i think i see what you mean – maybe he’d kind of had time to digest it and adapt – even ahead of time. He knew that was his last chance but he also knew based on their performances up to that point that it wasn’t likely he’d manage to take a bunch of time off bert. I surely didn’t think he could do it at that point. I thought there was a slim chance bert might grab a bit of time but they looked so even.

Also - he makes the point that he was pleased to win on the Tourmalet

It’s a great win in and of itself

And – since it has never been raced to the summit before, it is at least as good a palmares as the Alpe and probably mroe so

Some riders would make a career out of that win

I think any rider who wasn't seriously planning to win the GC

would be thrilled with that win and rightly so. I could absolutely understand just about any other rider being beyond giddy with that win and I certainly don’t want to minimize the accomplishment.

it had been raced to the summit once before. in 1974. won by Jean-Pierre Danguillaume
ah _ i didnt know that

Cool

I thought lack of space for cameras etc made it impossible

clearly wrong

That might have changed since 1974

Seems a lot more cramped on top of Galibier than Tourmalet: they don’t have an extra road going up from the col. On the other hand, they do have a tunnel and a few parking spots a bit further down. I don’t know, I guess it could happen.

this is the thing i think is entirely difficult to comprehnd

you have very good professional cyclists who go through their entire careers and never win ONCE – and yet are both respected and contended. Amazing

Then again

a lot of people live very good lives, just like that.

+1

I’ve been trying to unsuccessfully say the exact same thing for the past week. You don’t need to be a jerk to win, and you can be uber competitive, not give your rival an inch, and still show mountains of class. But Andy’s comments and Frank’s tweets post Tourmalet were a bit odd, and not of someone that thought they could win the Tour.

I think one issue is constantly overlooked

Bert and the Schlecks are both tied to Specialized. All private likes and dislikes aside they are all going to be heavily influenced by this commercial responsibility. Mudslinging and vendettas between their top names are not in the corporate interest of Specialized and the riders representatives will have been made well aware of that no doubt.
I think anyone who has followed pro soccer the last decade will be fairly used to these kind of ties .

Definitely overlooked. I've actually never thought about that aspect.
Oh yes.

I do think the shared bike sponsor was super key in the way their relationship played out in the media. LOL, there’s a whole post there, for sure. You know the huggy podium photos, those have to show up in an ad eventually. How could they not?

Yes

I did have that perception also, like Schleck was slipping into a younger brother role there almost.

I’d agree you don’t have to be a jerk, for sure. But I do think the most successful bike racers have a ruthless streak on the bike. Even Basso, for all his nice guy image, has a killer instinct when it’s race time.

cf the Little Bald Nugget of Santa Rosa . . .
Ha!

That LBNSR for short, eh?

And still not as short as Levi

!

back in the day

(oh oh warning, another geezer post), early on in martina navratilova’s career, the women on the tennis tour were mostly friends and always partied together and so on. Martina was languishing, unable to match up to Chrissy. Finally she took on a new ambition to make it to number one and one thing she did was stop hanging with Evert. Get a little distance, stop feeling like friends and so on. Well it wasn’t the only thing she did – she also worked really hard on her conditioning and physique and etc., but anyway not always so good to be friends with someone you’re trying to topple.

i think andy gave it all he had

a great performance – he’s just not quite there yet. Of course there are always questions like could he have just gone a little harder here or there – it’s a bit of game as you’re riding – how hard can you go without going over the limit and exploding?

This is just beautiful...

…and captures the subtleties that made it really compelling so well. Thank you.

your welcome :)
Andy and Albi Show

which is a recognized Spanish diminutive for Alberto.

Or you can call him Al, as per Paul Simon.

Can I call him Guido?

I think I’m going to call him Guido.

Ouch, the urban dictionary has a much uglier def for guido than I thought.

Guess I can’t use that.

Ahem

Thank you. Move along now.

why am i not surprised?

the urban dic is very weird (yes i did that on purpose)

The people on jersey shore call themselves that

which shows how low of a blow it is to call someone it.

For reals?

Sweet. I’ll change the spelling up there. I had no idea that they used it in Spain, I just liked the sound of the two names together.

I keep wanting to call Andy, Ernie

so it can be Bert and Ernie

And Lance and Johan

me and yeehoo
get off my lawn!
seriously

I was going to note that if ever there were a representation of PdC posters . . .

you little whippersnapper, i'll show you!

just a minute while i get out of my chair …

For some reason

this post brings Fedrigo to mind…

Ha!

That’s some serious nose. Good thing he’s a fast bike racer.

personally I prefer the top 2 riders liking each other

versus macho intimidation stuff.

I did find the X3 stage very bizarre as people rode away from the two dueling leaders.
Gavia’s take on the battle makes sense. And it seemed to me a sign that Contador – while strong – was possibly vulnerable.

I like the bromance, too :)

I like ruthless bike racing though, I have to confess. And yes, I did see Albi’s unwillingness to work at Ax-3-Domaines as a sign of vulnerability, and that’s why Schleck’s reaction stood out.

As a side note, I’d been storing up a story like this for a while, but I wanted to see how it all turned out before I wrote it.

If Andy had convinced Alberto to work on Ax-3-Domaines. . .

    It could have been in anticipation of an attack the following day that was planned anyway. If he could get some work out of AC he may have been able to make his attack the following day stick, or the one on the next day… Andy did remarkably well if you consider how little time he had to rewrite his playbook. He had to be thinking about Frank and their 12 months how they were going to work AC over, but now he had to do it solo. And it’s to Andy’s credit that he didn’t to my knowledge ever use the excuse that it would have been different if Frank was there.
    Nice article Gav. ;-)

i think the frank and andy duo would have been tough

i don’t think they care which one wins and they both seemed in great form this year.

Hot stuff
Just stay away from the hot sauce :)
This is lovely Gav... I see the same things through my kaleidoscope.
Great read as always Gav

One thing I’ve been wondering since the end of the race is whether or not I think Andy will ever win the TdF? If I had to bet money, I’d say no. I hope I’m wrong because I’d love to see him win.

He could be another eternal second

but he is getting stronger – and only Lance gets enough luck not to Schleck™ once in seven years

Hmm

i think he wins, and wins soon. He’s still only 25, early days yet.

My sentiments exactly.

I’d hate for him to never win it. How many times can a man come up just short before it undermines him mentally. Anyone ever ask Poulidor?
It’s the TTing aspect of this year that has kept me thinking. Only the one real TT. Andy I think, surprised himself and should now drive him to improving further in this discipline. Bert’s ‘mere mortal’ TT surprised everybody, and again should drive Andy forward.
BUT, how long before another Tour contains under 60k of TT? And that is why I fear for Andy over the next 2 or 3 editions.

On a positive note

ASO might sense a posibility to make the coming TdFs more unpredictable. They obviously don’t want 5 years of certain AC wins and might think after this edition that limiting the nr of TT kms might be the way to go?

entirely possible

I’d be happy if they limited the cronos, as I really like grand tours that don’t include an early long crono. I like the closer time gaps we get when the early time trial stages – both individual and team – are relatively short. I’d be sorry to see a return of the long team time trial. Buzzkill.

The long team time trial is a tough one

It is a wondrous thing to behold, but the rich teams can buy their way to victory. Equipment, testing, and specialized training mean much more in the ITT and TTT than climbing up a mountain, so the rich teams with budgets for wind tunnel time (for workers, not just stars) and multiple bikes for all their riders, and aerospace materials research can quite literally buy seconds in the TdF GC. So someone from a little team (say Sammy Sanchez from Euskaltel) will be at a significant disadvantage even if his talent and training are superior to the rich team’s guy.

i see the money/success correlation for TTT

but at the same time, if you stack you team to get time in the TTT, you may well end up screwed in the mountains. i’d like the time losses in the TTT to be proportional to losses in the mountains. i’d be nice to see teams have to choose between TT guys and climbers, and have some teams go one way, and others the other.

Bleh

I can’t stand them, for exactly these reasons. But also, hmm, it can really blow apart the race really early in the game. I’m a fan of keeping the time gaps close for as long as possible. It’s rare for long bomby attacks to work, really, so if someone is 5:00 out of the gc, it’s one less rider in the mix.

In an interview with Menchov made during this Tour

he was asked about his failure last year and I got the distinct impression he wasn’t at all as physically out of form in 2009 as it looked. He mentioned the mental blow it meant to lose that much time early and how it de-moralised him. I remember thinking it was time he could very well make up but he was clearly out of the race mentally already at that stage.

That makes a ton of sense, honestly.

It’s a little like the scenario with Andy on the Tourmalet – even if you believe you have good legs, you look at the clock and it can seem insurmountable. That is, that the time gaps have a psychological weight beyond their reality. Under 2:00, and you can still feel in with a chance, beyond that, it becomes more of a long shot, and for some riders, likely increasingly harder.

Totally agree...

…the spectacle doesn’t compensate for the race destroying aspect, at all.

the rich teams with budgets for wind tunnel time

But haven’t you heard about Alan Lim’s new on-the-road wind-tunnel? Lil bits of ribbon stung outta a rider and viddy-ed for later analysis.

Poulidor

ran up against Anquetil, then Merckx, then Hinault. Ha ha. (not sure he found it so funny)

And then Zoetemelk, that other eternal second, married his daughter. D'oh!
Argh! Not true. (too good to be true..)

Poulidor’s daughter married Adrie van der Poel.

the original story was better :)

the not true one, i mean. truth, bah!

And adrie was second a few times in cross worlds

But he also won it, which makes it all ok.

random thought

I wish Nibali had gone to the Tour as intended…

+ 28 billion

(if he hadn’t done the Giro first)

That's a fine for improper +numeral usage
yep, that's what I meant
And flame out like Basso?

On a team with 3 leaders? Meh get rest and go for the Vuelta win and not top-15 Tour finish.

eh, sorry, Jens is right. I meant "as intended"

in the sense of not having done the Giro first.

Ah but I think it helped his confidence(to see he can compete for a GT podium already)

when it is all said and done I think it was a blessing in disguise. Now we can see a fully fit Nibali do well at two GT’s instead of average at one.

Plus

now Kreuziger will be the tired one and Vinny can show him up for saying he has a small motor.

Bingo

I’ve been anticipating the Vuelta just for this. “Small motor” indeed.

Ha!

I do like a little team-mate smack talk.

Cadel truly was beautiful and inspirational in his suffering as he fought to stay in Yellow and even beyond that.

yep

If Frinking does the pics of the year thread again that Evans-Santambrogio one would be at the top of my list.

Mine too... but Frinkles is allergic to Cadel..
He just doesn't like Australians

(You might be the exception, Seahorse.)

I am not sure why this is; perhaps he had a childhood accident involving a rotary lawnmower.

Or the Hills Hoist? I'm not the exception, but Lou may be ;)
good stuff

other writers will analyze this and that and break it all down technically but once again Gav manages to capture the pathos too.

i don't do technical ;)
^ BAN HAMMER time, ^
What's your problem with Nick, huh?

:)

ooh

did I miss one? bummer…

Alby

Calling him Alby makes me think of one of the characters in a couple of Martin Millar’s books.

Ha!

He’s going to save the universe, for sure. Right after the starvation diet.

I only looked at the titles, but it definitely made me laugh.

After the fact analysis

Nice post – but there is always the tendency to read too much into events and things afterwards. After all, this is just one interpretation; and if events had unfolded just slightly differently, then that would have changed this whole post-hoc analysis thing.

Nobody knows how close Contador was from cracking on Tourmalet. Contador certainly looked vulnerable on stage 9, when Andy gained those 10s; and I have my doubts that he would have ever caught Andy when the attack came on stage 15, if his chain hadn’t popped, that is. After Andy got back on the bike he gained like 20s on Contador just for those last 5 minutes to the top, which I would say is clear indication that he was the stronger rider that thay. So, Andy could easily have ended up the winner this year and then the post-race perspective would have been completely different.

Welcome I think :)

I’m in the ‘If wishes were fishes, beggars would ride.’ We’ll never know will we?

(stage 8, not stage 9)
Welcome!

The 20 seconds Andy gained are generally interpreted as evidence that Contador didn’t push the pace but I’m inclined to agree with you there.

Er... right.

The point of a writing a column about a bike race is to offer an interpretation and stuff. If it had turned out differently, I’d have written a different story ;)

flip flopper
Why yes, I'm wearing a pair right now :)
if you were any good

you’d write one of these up to where all you had to do was fill in the names once the race was over. Plus then you could use it again next year. Pfft, amateurs.

rofl

Well, I suppose we could write one for next year. You first ;)

Fooled by randomness?

Yeah, your point is well taken :-)

I just disagreed with the idea that Schleck lost the tour becuase he thought Contador was the superior rider. I don’t think it’s a very robust interpretation, as it basically hinges on the outcome of a couple of random events.

Robust interpretation, ha!

I’m having flashbacks to graduate school right now… When’s the exam?

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