What a Tour
Today saw the first day in the Pyrenees and it is now turning out to be a completely awesome tour.
Since before the Tour started my money was on Alexandre Vinokourov to take the yellow; Robbie McEwen for the green and good old Michael Rasmussen for the polka dot.
Vino deserves the tour win, for so long he has sat in the shadows of some one else and now with time against him this could have been the last Tour to make his own.
McEwen is just an awesome sprinter and seems to have this ability to just appear from nowhere on the sprint to take a win.
The climbers jersey; well is there any one else that can climb like Rasmussen and consistently at that; two years running so far, seems only right to make it three.
Yet accident’s and strange team tatics have made a mess of my predictions.
On the the first stage McEwen was invloved in a crash just before the end, some how he managed to make it back up to the front and win the stage But it would later turn out to be worse then it seemed as in a mountain stage he failed to finish within time and was eliminated.
Then on Stage 5 Vino was in a accident which ended up with him having nearly 60 stitches in knees and elbow has since left him dragging at the rear of the peleton.
The only thing going for me was the reliable climber from Denmark, except that he is not only in the polka dot jersey but currently posing in a nice yellow outfit!
It all happened in the mountains; as it always does, on Stage 8 into Tignes Rasmussen went off on one of his solo rides dropping every climber in his wake. Unfortunately Vino had now dropped 8 minutes and it looked like he was out of the standings.
One name that was on my lips just before the tour was Contador. After the prologue that name was slightly higher on the list as this Spaniard can Time Trial as well as climb.
Since the Tour has been turned on it’s head each day I kept my eye on Contador and thought this could well be a Tour winner for the future. After todays stage I have a strange feeling that this boy could well be making an extreme start to cycling, it is his first Tour and as well as holding onto the White jersey he is now second in the standings.
Whilst he can climb, and very well at that I do not think he will have legs to take on Ramussen head to head but if it comes down to the last individual Time Trial then he should have the upper hand.
It would be awesome to see Contador win, with Discovery calling it quits after this year they could do with a positive exit and since Armstrong’s retirement I think they have lost the way a bit.
But then this year’s Tour has just been one confused mess after another shocking accident so expect everything to change and one of the complete outsiders will clinch the win on the line.
Here is to some good cycling.
One can make a difference
The other month I wrote about the condition of the local cycle paths and more importantly the plans to change the Highway Code in respect of the use of these paths.
Well I signed the petition to campaign against it and it turned out to be a fruitful exercise; check out the response
You recently signed a petition asking the Prime Minister to “Listen to
cyclists and not approve the revised highway code.”The Prime Minister’s Office has responded to that petition and you can view
it here:http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page12275.asp
Prime Minister’s Office
Petition information - http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/roads4bikes/
If you would like to opt out of receiving further mail on this or any other
petitions you signed, please email optout@petitions.pm.gov.uk
Just goes to show that you can make a difference if you try, power in numbers.
No Commentsend2end: redux
The idea of taking part in another end2end cycle ride has always been at the back of my mind.
In fact Dave did talk of it after last year’s ride but due to work commitments and the like it was quickly forgotten.
Now that there is a bit of a cycling buzz back in the air with the Tour currently taking place the thought of trying again is strong.
So strong in fact that we have set a date to work too; Monday September 24th.
Last year there were four of us, this year however Rob is pre-occupied with a new born and Harry is re-covering from surgery (rumor has it is was sex change related) and so that just leaves Dave and I.
Merlin and Goose hitting the road again; there is some sense behind the names, not a lot mind you.
So far we have not decided which way we will tackle this, South to North during the summer is the best to take advantage of the gulf stream winds, but during September there could be the first signs of Northern winter winds. The best option is keep an eye on the long term forecast and make a decision closer to the date.
It is un-certain if we will be going for another sponsored event, as nice as it was to raise money it don’t half get in the way of the cycling. You really need your mind on the prize and not on who owes you what. But if that does change I’m sure we will call upon Joe Public for a bit of a donation
British Cyclosportive
On Sunday the 7th July the Tour de France will start her in old Blighty; the prologue taking place around London with Stage 1 on Sunday starting in London and heading 190km down to Canterbury.
Last Sunday was the turn of the dedicated, serious or down right sucidical cyclists out there in the world. The British Cyclosportive was the chance for every day cyclists to have a go at the very same stage the pro will tackle seven days later.
Spaces on this event are limited to only 5,000 riders but Viv and I applied back in February and had secured our places.
It was a very early start, we needed to sign on in Greenwich Park before 6 in the morning for a start time of 6:30. This meant that we needed to leave Viv’s house at 4 in the morning to ensure we got to the big smoke in time.
The good news is that at this time in the morning the roads are pretty much our own, meaning we could make really good time; despite the Dartford bridge being closed and not being able to get on the A2 to get into London!
After some expert map reading we arrived, only to park next a car of riders from Ipswich!
We walked into the park to find the registration tent and sign on. Upon arrival we were given a package containing a promotional tee, some literature and a transponder for our bikes.
This clever device sits on your front wheel and will acrruately measure the times we set.
Enough of this time for a cup of tea and possibly a bacon sandwich.
After fueling ourselves we finally got our bikes ready and put some spare clothes on a transport lorry to be delivered to the finish line awaiting our arrival.
By this time they had started sending riders off; the plan is to send of around 40 riders every minute from 6 - 8:30. We finally hit the start line at around 6:40, making us about 1400 in the field. When the count down finished we were off. There was a quick tour of the park and then we finally made it out onto the main roads and on our journey down into Kent to to Canterbury.
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I have my number
Last night I recieved an email from British Cyclosportive regarding the UK etape Tour thingie I'm taking part in on July 1st. They have put together all the riders and now issued numbers; I'm rider 1394, with co-pilot Viv being 1393.