Showing posts with label Pinerolo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pinerolo. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Tour de France: Stage 17 Debrief

What a difference a day makes...

It looks like yesterday's worries about Andy's
performance may have been a false alarm.
Well, to the weather anyway - today didn't make a lot of difference to the General Classification. A change in the weather, as we suspected it might, made a big difference to Andy Schleck too as he was in much better form compared to yesterday, coping with the extremely hazardous descent without problems.

The sun was out and it was warm (apart from at the really high points) as the race officially got under way at 12:36, so the peloton pedaled away from the start line looking considerably happier than they did yesterday when the knew there was a soaking to come. As ever, a few riders tried to attack right off the mark but with the pack rattling along nicely they had no room to move and were reabsorbed even before they'd got out in front. It took about ten minutes for anything to happen, after which a group of ten managed to build up a small lead - with a respectable line-up featuring, among others, Geraint Thomas, Linus Gerdemann, Sandy Casar, Edvald Boasson Hagen and Tejay van Garderen it looked to have legs. This proved to be the case when they upped the gap to 40" at the 20km point.

Meanwhile, with Garmin-Cervelo trying to jolly the peloton along a bit to catch up, Thor Hushovd and Nicholas Roche went on the attack and succeeded in reducing the leader's advantage, a combined effort that successfully brought the gap down to 25". However, it split the peloton in two and resulted in a group of 15 riding some 10" off the front, creating confusion which saw the counter-attack fail and leave the frontline gang of ten with a 40" lead by 34km. There was no way a breakaway consisting of riders of that sort of calibre - half of them previous stage winners - was going to go unchallenged though and the peloton kept driving hard, reducing the gap to 28" within the next 3km and then 18" in the 3km after that; and they were caught very soon afterwards.

Nicholas Roche has been hard at work all day.
By now, small autobus was beginning to form as riders found themselves unable to keep up the high pace over the first noticeable - though uncategorised - climb of the day. Jerome Pineau was the first to go but he wasn't alone for long, as other riders soon fell back to join him. Nicholas Roche, having spent too much of his daily energy quota trying to match the mighty Thor in the earlier counter-attack, was also dropped and found his back too. Tyler Farrar ended up among them too, but only briefly because once the climb was over they clawed their way up to the pack once more. Up at the front, the escapees were still leading and holding the peloton at about 20".

Another counter attack group formed around Bauke Mollema and Sylvain Chavanel, the latter being a possible contender on this stage due to his skill in the descents, and after a chase succeeded in linking up with the escapees, boosting the breakaway population to 14 riders, plenty enough to push the dial up a notch or two so that the were soon 1'14" ahead by 60km, just as news came across that Astana's Paolo Tiralongo had been forced to abandon the race. Over the next 2km, taking advantage of a nature break by the peloton, they'd got it up to more than three minutes and then added another minute by 64km.

Going at that sort of speed, they soon reached the first Cat 3 climb and hardly even slowed down. Chavanel took 2 points and Julien El Fares 1 point. There was now little doubt that the escapees were going to get the pick of the points at the intermediate sprint too, roughly 10km from the summit of the climb. Sandy Casar got through first for 20 points. 2. Edvald Boasson Hagen 17pts; 3. Ruben Perez Moreno 15pts; 4. Maarten Tjallingii 13pts; 5. Bjorne Leukemans 11pts; 6. Julien El Fares 10pts; 7. Dmitriy Fofonev 9pts; 8. Maciej Paterski 8pts; 9. Bauke Mollema 7pts; 10. Sylvain Chavanel 6pts; 11. Borut Bozic 5pts; 12. Dmitry Muravnev 4pts; 13. Jonathon Hivert 3pts; 14. Andrey Amador 2pts; 15. Mark Cavendish (first of the peloton, not bothering to sprint) 1pt.

Chavanel proved fastest up the second Cat 3 as well, earning himself another pair of climbing points. The escapees were still keeping an excellent rate, increasing their lead to more than seven minutes up the long Cat 2 climb to Montgenèvre. Down at the start of the climb, Nicholas Roche found a second wind and attacked, leading Johnny Hoogerland and another rider out with him and managing to get a little way ahead of the peloton just as Chavanel crested the mountain for his third climbing victory of the day, taking five points for his trouble this time. Very shortly afterwards, they crossed the border into Italy, a frontier where nowadays no passport is required and travelers don't get stopped by officials - a situation that can be held up in comparison to the large and fearsome forts high above the Col de Montgenèvre, built to maintain control over the region and who passed through, as an example of the remarkable progress made in Europe since WW2.

Of course, it's not just the military who use mountainous terrain to achieve an advantage over the foe. The Cat 1 climb to Sestrières at 2035m is long and arduous, a route which as we explained earlier would undoubtedly be an Hors-Categorie were it not for the extremely high quality roads, the sort of ascent that suits those freaks of nature the pure-bred grimpeurs such as Contador and the Schlecks well - any of whom would have used this one to devastating effect were it not for the fact that they can do a lot more damage with the HC mountains in the coming days. This didn't stop the assorted non-GC contenders from scrapping all the way up though, with Perez Moreno attacking 2km from the top - perhaps Euskaltel's reputation as a tribe of hardened mountain men is an accepted fact these days, because nobody in the breakaway group bothered even pretending to respond (he looked quite disappointed actually, apparently wanting a battle).

Downhill, Roche and his comrades were still ahead of the pack but not really getting anywhere, the gap between them and the escapees now increased to over two and a half minutes as Perez Moreno increased his own gap, getting it up to 45" as he reached the summit for 10 points. Chavanel had to make do with second this time, but since second place on a Cat 1 is worth 8 points it was actually a more valuable result than all his earlier climbs combined. Thomas Voeckler was the first of the peloton to complete the ascent, by which time Perez Moreno was still attacking and had plummeted down a large part of the long descent apparently without using his brakes.

Sylvain Chavenel
Back in the peloton, BMC and LeopardTrek were jockeying for pole position in order to get Evans and Schlecks to the foot of the final climb safely and ready for action which also had the advantage of keeping them all well out of the way when a Vacansoleil rider fell on a tight right-hander into a narrow road, blocking the path for everyone behind him including a Contador-containing group of Saxobankers. Fortunately, nobody was injured and everyone involved was up and on their way before a really big pile-up could form. At about the same time, Nicholas Roche dropped out of the pursuing group with a mechanical problem and Boasson Hagen gain time on Chavanel, rapidly catching him and taking over leadership duties just as Frank Schleck did the same for the peloton.
"Great day today, eddy the man was on a mission today. Congrats mate." (Ben Swift, @swiftybswift, Twitter)
From this points onwards, it was Edvald Boasson Hagen's day. With 10km to go he'd managed to break away and had an advantage of almost five minutes over the peloton. Jonathon Hivert of Saur-Sojasun gave chase but couldn't get within 10" of him, losing even that when his ambition outstripped his ability and he over-egged a bend coming within centimetres of a potentially career-ending crash down the tree-studded slope to the side of the narrow road. In the peloton, Contador attacked and - a huge relief for his army of fans - Schleck Minor was immediately on his case, leading a small group consisting of Evans, Geraint Thomas and a small posse of other climbers that soon caught the Spaniard. Contador attacked again and again, demonstrating to all those who had written him off earlier in the race that they'd made a big mistake, but at no time was he able to evade Evans or give the Schlecks the shake, with the brothers overtaking and taking it in turns to lead him for a while.

Once over the summit, both Hivert and Hoogerland managed to veer off the road and onto someone's patio - luckily for them, the metal gate was open and they avoided hitting the fence on the other side. Cruel fans will be disappointed there wasn't a goldfish pond, though.

Edvald Boasson Hagen took a stunning stage victory in
Stage 17.
The Sky youngster was now without challengers but continued powering down the hill, leaving eventual victory looking like a definite as he entered into the final 4km - but in cycling, nothing's every 100% certain, especially when a relatively inexperienced cyclist is attacking a 6% descent on a road only a little wider than a large car. It was, just moments later when he crossed the line after four hours and 18 minutes dead after one of the most thrilling and impressive run-ins to finish line for some time.



Stage 17 Results:
1. HAGEN Edvald Boasson 4h 18' 00"  
2. MOLLEMA Bauke + 00' 40"
3. CASAR Sandy + 00' 50"
4. EL FARES Julien + 00' 50"
5. CHAVANEL Sylvain + 00' 50"
6. FOFONOV Dmitriy + 01' 10"
7. PATERSKI Maciej + 01' 10"
8. MURAVYEV Dmitriy + 01' 10"
9. HIVERT Jonathan + 01' 15"
10. BOZIC Borut + 02' 20"


Overall General Classification Results following Stage 17:

1. VOECKLER Thomas 73h 23' 49"  
2. EVANS Cadel + 01' 18"
3. SCHLECK Frank + 01' 22"
4. SCHLECK Andy + 02' 36"
5. SANCHEZ Samuel + 02' 59"
6. CONTADOR Alberto + 03' 15"
7. CUNEGO Damiano + 03' 34"
8. BASSO Ivan + 03' 49"
9. DANIELSON Tom + 06' 04"
10. URAN Rigoberto + 07' 36"

Points: Mark Cavendish; Climber: Jelle Vanendert; Youth: Rigoberto Uran; Team: Garmin-Cervelo; Combativity: Ruben Perez Moreno.

Tour de France: Stage 17 Preview

Following yesterday's damp and (for the Schleck bros.) disastrous taster, today sees the Tour enter the High Alps proper with a variety of climbs up to Category 2 and 1869m before crossing the border into Italy for the real test of Stage 17, Sestrieres. Though "only" a Category 1 - largely, one suspects, due to its popularity as a skiing resort and thus having roads permitting the rich to drive their Bentleys, Beemers and Benzes up there - the mountain pass tops out at 2035m, meaning that cyclists and others partaking in harsh physical activities need to contend with the effects of altitude in addition to the sheer stress of climbing to such a height which is close to the point (approx. 2100m) at which oxyhaemoglobin is rapidly reduced to potentially dangerous levels.

The stage begins in Gap, acting as a stage town for the 20th time (the last time having been yesterday) and ends 179km away in Pinerolo - the Tour is just one of many links between the towns because they've been twinned for forty years. The first 30km or so are fairly flat with the departure from Gap a simple matter along the N94; a major road heading past Pont Sarrazin where yesterday the riders began the final section into Gap after the crazy descent of Col de Manse, which heads first east and then south-east past La Bâtie-Neuve. La Bâtie-Neuve insists that since it has more than 2000 inhabitants it's a city, but they're not fooling us with that - the village is small and they must be counting everyone in the immediate area (in order to claim more from the EU, perhaps?) Either way, it's an attractive enough place with a good mix of the ancient (assorted medieval buildings and remnants of medieval fortifications) and well-designed modern - which not creates a harmonious whole but also makes it a pleasant place to live. Early breakaways look set to be the order of the day and are likely to be more successful than yesterday when it took a long time and many kilometres before a group managed to get away.

As it hits the 14km point the peloton reaches Chorges, a town of around 2500 people. Local legend has it that the inhabitants are descended from a group of Ancient Greeks who had set up home in Italy before being driven into France by violent Celtic invasions: like all the best legends, there is no evidence to prove this one way or the other and the locals will hopefully not subject themselves to DNA profiling in an effort to find out. Chorges' church, dedicated to Saint Victor. The original church incorporated sections of architecture from the time when Chorges was an important Roman city, but it was largely destroyed in a fire in the late 16th Century and then burned again just over a hundred years later by Savoyard soldiers.

Usually submerged, the Viaduc de Chateloube reappears
when water levels in the lake fall.
Soon, the parcours reaches the enormous Lac de Serre-Ponçon, the second largest artificial lake in Europe by volume, and winds around the northern shores, using bridges across the picturesque inlets between hills and outcrops. The lake is the site of an underwater bridge, too - the Viaduc de Chanteloube which was built in the early 20th Century, designed to carry a railway that was never finished across the valley to Chorges. When a damn was built and valley flooded, the viaduct vanished underwater but reappears periodically when water levels are low. The dam was the first to be surveyed without the lake behind it being drained in 1963, when a submarine was used.

This section of the stage brings one of the most remarkable points of the Tour when the riders cross the lake on the Pont de Savine Le Lac, a bridge about a kilometre in length and offering spectacular views across the lake and to the mountains, from the northern shores to the town of Savines-le-Lac which is located 26.5km from Gap. The town is home to around 1200 people and has a remarkable modern church dating from the 1960s but looking like it was designed by Le Corbusier.

Chateau de Picomtal at Crots.
The passage through the town should be a simple matter - there are central reservations but the road is wide with just one sweeping left-hand bend and no roundabouts. It then heads east along the lake's southern shore towards Crots. Despite being situated in an area with soil unsuited to agriculture, Crots became a place of some importance and has a 12th Century abbey, Abbaye Notre-Dame de Boscodon, home to monks of the Order of Chalais who appear to have existed primarily by foraging in the nearby forests and sheep raised on the hills. The abbey is notable for the symbolism incorporated into it - for example, it's aligned so that certain parts will be illuminated on certain days of the year, has proportions related to the Golden Ratio and several features relating to the number seven. Crots is also home to the very beautiful Château de Picomtal.

Soon, the route comes to a large and complicated roundabout at Grand Liou. With five exits, there are wide triangular sections in the middle of the roads leading from it which may prove slippery and problematic for any rider who takes bad line and needs to cross them. The N94 then skirts around Embrun where the ancient part of town sits atop a high rocky outcrop - site of the Tour Brun d'Embrun, a medieval tower, and a 13th Century cathedral - before continuing north-east and up a small uncategorised climb towards Chateauroux-les-Alpes after 42.5km.

Mont-Dauphin, the Arsenal.
The parcours then reaches some high cliffs rising to about 300m from road level and negotiates them by clinging to the lower part just above the river below - the mountains beyond the cliffs and on the other side of the river are much higher still, reaching more than 2600m above sea level. Rounding a bend, the road enters a small plateau along the valley floor and soon comes to Saint-Clément-sur-Durance, 49.5km from the start, before crossing the river and making its way along the side of more cliffs situated above a wide gorge. It passes a number of villages and the remarkable 17th Century fortress of Mont-Dauphin standing on an enormous flat-topped rock jutting out from the valley floor.

The route then turns north, soon coming to Saint-Crépin - home in the 19th Century to over a thousand people, now reduced to less than half as inhabitants have had to relocate elsewhere in search of work. An unusual roundabout just past the village has a central passageway, allowing the peloton to speed straight through without negotiating and bends. After 63km from the start they reach La Roche-de-Rame, once an important stop-over point for pilgrims en route to Jerusalem. In that charming way that the French have, the valley contains a huge industrial complex devoted to the production of strontium, calcium and heavy metals extracted from the mountains and which has left many scars on the natural beauty of the area. Just as the village is left behind, markings on fields directly to the left (east) of the road reveal that at some point there were large buildings or heavy activities involving movement of earth here. A little further on is L'Argentière-la-Bessée and, just as they leave the town, the peloton begins the ascent of Cat 3 Côte de Sainte-Marguerite, 2.8km at 7.4% to 1216m. The summit is reached via two switchbacks, where the gradient can be much steeper than the average. The summit of the mountain stands at around 2800m, 1600m higher than the little village Saint-Marguerite which gives the climb its name.

The descent is long and fast, allowing little time to look at Queyrières - where we join the D36C - and its larger neighbour Saint-Martin-de-Queyrières where a complicated junction will see riders working their round tight bends and a roundabout to get onto the D36 which carried us along the banks of the river, under the N94 upon which most of the previous 75km have been complete, through a tunnel and out the other side into a straight, forested section. We then travel past Le Villaret towards Villar-Saint-Pancrace where a very small number of inhabitants still speak a dialect unique to the area - when they die, the dialect will die with them. Villar-Saint-Pancrace is also the location of the intermediate sprint which today features a climb of about 50m in the middle, making it more difficult than usual for the sprint specialists.

A very short way on is the beautiful town of Briançon, the ancient origins of which can be in no doubt since it was mentioned by Pliny, Ptolemy and others. The town was destroyed by a fire that raged for five days in the late 17th Century, the locals unable to combat the flames as it was winter and the local watercourses were all frozen. However, its strategic importance remained and so it grew up again, gaining a garrison and a number of 18th Century forts nearby. Entering the town looks technical with various roundabouts, the route swapping between the D36, D136, D2 and back to the N94 which takes it out of town and onwards towards La Chaussée, the stage's second Cat 3 climb which reaches 1333m via a short 1.4km climb at 8.3% - an unusual one in that it's urbanised all the way up and down. On the other side is the feeding station, a welcome sight to cyclists who have now covered 87.5km and climbed several hills.

Fort du Chaberton
Travelling along a wide, flat-bottomed valley, the parcours passes around La Vechette and on to the stage's first Cat 2 climb up to 1860m, a 6.1% gradient  for 7.9km with five switchbacks to Montgenèvre, one of France's oldest skiing resorts. Being so close to the border with Italy (the town has changed ownership between the two nations at various times through history), there are many forts high up in the mountains here, dating from Napoleonic times to WW2, including the Fort du Chaberton.

Just before the town of Claviere, the race crosses the border and enters Italy. Claviere was almost entirely destroyed by fighting between the French and Italians in WW2, but has regrown and become wealthy due to the excellent skiing offered in the area. The road through the town should be without problems, but a roundabout just east could cause problems for riders who elect to take the route around the left of the centre which requires a tighter bend than the right. The route travels another 6.5km between the high peaks and includes a twisty section into Cesana Torinese where we swap to the SR23 heading south and then east up the Cat 1 climb to Sestrières, 11.1km and 6.3% to 2035m. It seems strange to see such a modern town so high up among the ancient mountains, but Sestrières truly is a new town, having begun its life as one of Mussolini's pet projects. We can't hold being created by a Fascist against it, however, and it's a very beautiful town; the gleaming white buildings forming an attractive contrast t the dark, brooding rockfaces. Straight out of the town is the long and fast descent over 44km all the way to the final categorised climb.

The parcours heads through the mountains, bypassing a few hamlets over the next section. However, this section is largely uninhabited so we suggest you forget the history for a while, sit back and try to comprehend the astounding beauty of the region, one of the most astonishing places in Europe - but keep an eye on the action, because this descent is fast and technical. We're hoping everyone gets down in one piece, but it's very likely that at least one or two riders won't be finishing the stage.

We come eventually to Perosa Argentina, 153.5km from the start and where, as the name suggests, silver was once mined. Getting into and through the town is straight-forward, but a left-hand bend on the way out could prove to be a hazard if it's wet. Near Pinasca, on the opposite side of the valley, the road becomes the SP66 then a sort way on changes back to the SR23 again. At 171km, the final climb is reached - Cat 3, 6%, 6.7km Côte de Pramartino.

Once crested, it's downhill via a descent even more hazardous than that from Sestrières. This section has no less than 95 points described in the race book as dangerous and a great many of them are along this section, the part where today's winner is likely to be decided. The descent continues all the way through San Pietro Val Lemina and on into Pinerolo, home to 36,000 people and today acting as a stage town for the very first time. Pinerolo has, at various times, belonged to France, Italy and Savoy; creating an interesting mix of cultures. The finest structure in the town is perhaps the Madonna delle Grazie, a fitting name considering the graceful architecture, but there are many imposing buildings in the town both ecclesiastical in nature and otherwise. It also hosts an annual festival of chocolate, so what's not to like about the place?

Predictions: The poor performance of the Schleck Bros. changed everything yesterday, leaving them no longer among the favourites to win the Tour. However, they're both well-known for hating bad weather so there's always a chance that they could do well today if conditions are better in the mountains. The trouble is, so will Contador. One rider sure to put in a good show today is Cadel Evans - he's fast up and down mountains and can shift a bit on flat sections too, which is why he's our top choice today. We also think Thor Hushovd will do well since revealing himself as a master descender, as will Voeckler and possibly Chavenel.

Weather: As far as rain goes, it's not looking too bad today with sun forecast throughout the route. However, winds of up to 40kmph will cause problems, not least of all as they're coming from the north-east and and north-west, so will be headwinds over some parts of the parcours and crosswinds in several others. Temperatures in the valleys should be comfortable at around 20 degrees C, but it'll drop sharply to 10 degrees at the higher points.

DEVIL WATCH: There are many, many places for His BeSandaled Majesty to lurk throughout this stage, but we really can't imagine he'd be anywhere other than on the upward slope of that huge climb into Sestrières.

More pictures later when Blogger sort their current bugs out.