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2013 Tour de France Route Presentation

Last night’s presentation of the 2013 Tour de France Route has given us many gems to ponder over the coming months;

From 29th June to 21st July 2013, the hundredth edition of the Tour de France will take the riders, support staff, spectators and viewers on a 3,360-km route that will remain exclusively within France’s borders. After a first stay in Corsica, the Big Loop will visit the country’s wonders and will providing the climbers in the pack with brand new challenges. After the final time-trial, there will still be 615 kilometres of road to cover before the finishing line, in particular a double ascent of the Alpe d’Huez climb!www.letour.fr

HIGHLIGHTS:
* Stage 1 – The Tour gets underway in Corsica on June 29
* Two individual time trials, significantly shorter than in 2012 being just 32km and 33km
* Stage 15 – A summit finish at Mont Ventoux on Bastille Day
* Stage 18 – we see l’Alpe d’Huez twice. OUCH!
* Stage 21 – the Champs-Elysees as night falls, with the stage finish in Paris set for 9:45PM

Les Vaches du Tour – Have you been paying attention?

After hearing the story about Tejay van Garderen (BMC) not learning Dutch at home even though he has a Dutch surname, @lesvachesdutour thought we were being prepared for a P&P quiz and tweeted;

How did Tejay learn his Dutch again? #therewillbeatest [ir]

This was soon followed up with;

There was a reminder to not let all the #TdF useless facts go to waste go to the #lvdt blog to take the 2012 quiz; and then the Les Vaches du Tour Have you been paying attention? quiz appeared.

Here at Chateau VP we read through the questions, waited for the blood:caffine ratio to return to the Tour optimum (way too high), balanced the snark levels to prime, and sent in our answers.

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 20

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 20, Rambouillet > Paris Champs-Élysées, 120 km

“A little road stage, the shortest of the Tour (120 km). But it will no doubt be an apotheosis, with the traditional finish on the Champs-Élysées. Always the same, always magnificent since 1975. We already know more or less what will happen: a festive start in Rambouillet, two short hours before things really get going, and then a sudden, spectacular acceleration to mark the peloton’s arrival in the Parisian circuit. All of this before 1.5 billion TV viewers, nothing to sneeze at! For the rest, I do not think any brave riders will be able to slip under the radar of the sprinters’ teams. On paper, Mark Cavendish can dream of a fourth straight win.Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 19 (ITT)

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 19, Bonneval > Chartres, 53.5 km (ITT)

“”The final round before the finish in Paris. What will come out of this 53.5 km time trial on rather flattish terrain, except the first part on the rolling hills of the Perche region? Personally, I expect gaps of two to three minutes between leaders. Three weeks into the race, 53.5 km are a long way to go in a time trial. This also holds true for the yellow jersey, who will probably come behind specialists such as Martin or Cancellara. Think of the Pauillac time trial in 2010, when Cancellara took the win on a similar course and Menchov, the freshest of all the leaders, propelled himself onto the final podium.”"Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 18

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 18, Blagnac > Brive-la-Gaillarde, 222.5 km

“Blagnac-Brive-la-Gaillarde: a 222.5 km hop to bring us a little closer to Paris and give leaders the chance to spin their legs before the Bonneval-Chartres time trial. This is obviously a golden opportunity for sprinters to shine again. I have already said that this Tour is not especially sprinter-friendly, since we have always chucked in one or two climbs to scatter the bunch. In fact, everything points to intermediate sprints being more important for the green jersey than the stage finishes. All in all, a race within the race, very strategic and exciting. There are 65 points up for grabs today!”Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 17

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 17, Bagnères-de-Luchon > Peyragudes, 143.5 km

“Short (143.5 km) but tough! We designed a Pyrenean counterpart to the Alpine stage between Albertville and La Toussuire. But now that we are a mere three days from the finish, if the general classification has not been decided yet this will be the last chance for climbers to build a buffer. There will also be loads of points up for grabs for the mountains classification… The course offers no respite. The first climb is the Col de Menté, famous since 1971, which will be followed by the Col des Ares and the Port de Balès. This will be the first time that the finish is decided on the Plateau de Peyragudes, a ski resort in the Hautes-Pyrénées.”Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 16

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 16, Pau > Bagnères-de-Luchon, 197 km

“Pau, a stronghold? Pau, a strategic place? On today’s menu, a 197 km classic succession of great Pyrenean cols: the Aubisque, Tourmalet, Col d’Aspin and Peyresourde. As Christian Prudhomme said, a mere four days from the finish, this stage will turn the thumbscrews on the peloton! Moreover, such a course is exactly my idea of a true mountain stage: not with a summit finish, which tends to lock up the race a bit, but an up-and-down course which calls for a mastery of all aspects of cycling. Two years ago, Andy Schleck vacillated somewhat on the descents…”Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

Stage 16 starts tonight LIVE from 7.30pm AEST online and mobile via the Skoda Tour Tracker. SBS ONE from 10pm

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Tour de France 2012 – Rest Day 2

Rest Day? Shouldn’t we start calling them arrest days?
On the first rest day for this year’s tour Cofidis rider Rémy Di Gregorio was arrested after a police raid at his team’s hotel in Bourg-en-Bresse.

Today we hear that Fränk Schleck has withdrawn from the Tour after Xipamide was found in his urine sample from three days ago.

After being informed by the UCI about the presence of xipamide in the urine sample of Fränk Schleck on July 14, the team has decided to immediately withdraw Fränk Schleck from the Tour de France.
Even though an abnormal A sample does not require these measures, Mr. Schleck and the team believe this is the right thing to do, to ensure the Tour de France can go on in calm and that Fränk Schleck can prepare his defense in accordance with the legal timing to do so.
On the subject of xipamide the team can declare the following: it is not a product that is present in any of the medicine that the team uses and the reason for the presence of xipamide in the urine sample of Mr. Schleck is unclear to the team. Therefore, the team is not able to explain the adverse findings at this point.
However, the team is fully determined to collaborate with the anti-doping agencies in order to resolve the matter.

Fränk Schleck statement [RadioShack-Nissan]

Luxembourg’s Frank Schleck, who finished third in last year’s Tour de France, has left this year’s race after testing positive for a banned diuretic, the International Cycling Union (UCI) has revealed.
Schleck leaves Tour after positive test [SBS Cycling Central]

PAU, France (AFP) — Luxembourg’s Frank Schleck, a former podium finisher, was being questioned by police at the Tour de France Tuesday after testing positive for a banned diuretic, his RadioShack team said.
Schleck, who has already quit the race, went to a local police station of his own accord after being told police would be coming to take him in for questioning, according to a team official.

Schleck talking with French police [velonews]

Earlier today, the UCI advised Luxembourger Fränk Schleck (RadioShack-Nissan) of an Adverse Analytical Finding in a urine sample collected from him at an in-competition test at the Tour de France on July 14, 2012.
The WADA accredited laboratory in Châtenay-Malabry detected the presence of the diuretic Xipamide in Schleck’s urine sample.
According to UCI anti-doping rules the finding does not require a provisional suspension, but in a statement the UCI said, “the UCI is confident that his team will take the necessary steps to enable the Tour de France to continue in serenity and to ensure that their rider has the opportunity to properly prepare his defense in particular within the legal timeline, which allows four days for him to have his B sample analyzed.”
Xipamide, the substance found in Schleck’s urine, is not specifically mentioned on WADA’s prohibited substance list.

UCI announces adverse analytical finding for Fränk Schleck at Tour de France [cyclingnews]

Xipamide is about 40 years old and quite an uncommon diuretic – the World Anti-Doping Authority reported no positive tests for it in 2010, and don’t mention it at all on their website (although it is most assuredly considered a “substance … with a similar chemical structure or similar biological effect” to other diuretics).
Typically, xipamide would be used for the treatment of oedema (fluid retention) or related conditions and has no therapeutic exemption. That is, there is no condition under which you are allowed to test positive to it.

Frank Schleck, the Tour de France and doping: so what’s xipamide? [The Conversation]

Tour de France 2012 – Stage 15

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 15, Samatan / Pau, 158.5 km

“A tip of the hat to provincial France, the France of the Tour. Our caravan will set off from Samatan, a large town with 2,200 inhabitants which is the main town of the Gers canton. It will probably be a calm start, as the stage is not particularly tough. A sprint finish would be the logical outcome, and I actually hope it happens, because pure sprinters will not get many chances to shine in this Tour. The finish in Pau will be beautiful, like always. This is the 64th time that the Tour visits this city, which is almost a record. Let us pay homage to this city, which we see as a stronghold and a strategic place.”Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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Tour de France 2012 – Stage 14

Stage Details:

Tonight is Stage 14, Limoux > Foix, 191 km

“We have reached the Pyrenees! But this is more of an appetiser than a mountain stage proper. Things will get going at kilometre 116 with the ascent to the Port de Lers, with 11.4 km at 7%. Then comes the Mur de Péguère, which is making its Tour debut and could deal some serious damage too: some sections are close to an 18% gradient, with 10.8% at the finish! Nevertheless, the distance to Foix will make great climbers hesitate. In my opinion, this is more of a stage for all-rounders such Voeckler and Chavanel. Or maybe a 50 man strong group with the freshest riders in it…”Jean-Francios Pescheux Analysis

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