The Dauphiné marks the arrival of “Tour de France season,” drawing an always impressive startlist of top Tour talent hoping for a final tuneup before La Grande Boucle. The big names and mountainous parcours should make this year’s edition of the race a worthwhile attraction.
The Route
The 2015 Dauphiné route offers a healthy dose of difficult climbs. The only stage without a categorized climb is the TTT, and even that has some challenges.
The race kicks off with a bumpy stage 1 likely to favor a punchier rider, with eight categorized climbs, small though they may be, on the day. Stage 2 does have a Cat. 1 challenge on the menu, but a long flat finale could favor the sprinters. The Stage 3 TTT will likely have serious GC implications. 24.5 kilometers is long enough to open the sort of gaps that will have an impact in a one-week race, especially given a long, slightly uphill stretch in the second half of the stage.
Stage 4 will be a day for the sprinters or more versatile fast-finishers before the GC riders come to the fore again on Stage 5, which closes out with a one-two punch of categorized climbs. Stage 6 is another day that may have a GC impact, closing out with a Category 3 climb.
Stage 7 will probably be the most decisive stage of the 2015 Critérium du Dauphiné. After 30 flat kilometers, it’s up and down the rest of the way, with a total of five Cat. 1s along the route, including the summit finish.

None of the climbs are all that brutal by themselves but altogether they will provide plenty of launching pads for the uphill specialists. Stage 8 closes out the race with another Category 1 summit finish at Modane Valfréujs.
The General Classification Contenders
Two of cycling’s so-called “Big Four” will garner the most attention coming into the race: Chris Froome and Vincenzo Nibali. Froome has won the race before, the year he won the Tour de France, and he may be hoping to replicate his performance from 2013, where he came into the Tour riding high on the back of strong performances in the one-weekers. He’s had a decent, though not great, year so far, and this is an opportunity to get on track with a big success for his Tour bid this year. At his best, Froome is almost unstoppable, and he should be motivated to be close to his best here. The team trial suits Sky well. Nicolas Roche and Wout Poels are among Froome’s many strong teammates in attendance who will be valuable supporters or even potential alternatives should the need arise.
Vincenzo Nibali’s path to Tour de France victory was a bit different from Froome’s—the Italian all-rounder did not look nearly as strong in the run-up to the 2014 Tour, but peaked at the right time in July. If he’s looking to replicate that approach, he might not be quite at 100% here. If he’s gunning for victory though, he should love the climber-friendly profile, and Astana’s TTT squad looks strong too. This is a great parcours for Nibali, without any individual time trial to potentially set him back against his more chrono-adept rivals—motivation may be the key factor in determining how well he performs.
Last year’s winner Andrew Talansky was one of the most surprising winners of a WorldTour race all year, grabbing the Critérium du Dauphiné yellow jersey with a brilliant breakaway move on the final stage. The lack of a time trial in this year’s edition does not suit Talansky, the USA’s new national time trial champion, but with all of these climbs, the opportunities are there for plenty of action should he be hoping to get aggressive again this year. Teammate Daniel Martin is another option—individual time trials often tank his chances in stage races, and the absence of one here will make this an attractive event for him.
Alejandro Valverde will love the Dauphiné parcours. He’s been cycling’s most successful rider so far this season, landing on podiums almost at will, and he should be motivated to prove himself ready for the Tour with Nairo Quintana elsewhere. Movistar brings a strong team that includes Beñat Intxausti, who was great in the Giro.
Tejay van Garderen has looked great at times this season, and mediocre at other times. With the Tour on the horizon, though, he should be in strong form in this race, and with the strength of BMC’s world champion TTT squad, he should be set up for success. Van Garderen has focused on improving as a pure climber recently and that will come in handy here.
Despite a disappointing Ardennes campaign, Joaquim Rodríguez has shown flashes of brilliance in 2015. If he rides here like he did in País Vasco, he’ll be difficult to beat, especially with these sorts of climbs—the uphill challenges in the Dauphiné are many, but none of them are of the brutal, interminable sort that could put Rodríguez into trouble against the likes of Froome. Katusha Teammate Giampaolo Caruso should be a great second. Lampre’s Rui Costa is riding in the Dauphiné instead of the Tour de Suisse this year, eschewing a chance to win a fourth Suisse title in a row. He is hoping to make his mark on the Tour de France this season, which means that the form should be there. The profile, with its constant ups and downs but without any Ventoux-esque climbs, should suit him very well too.
Wilco Kelderman rode well here last year and should be primed for success with the Tour around the corner. Julian Alaphilippe will be eager to show that his success on the climbs in California was no fluke. Trek’s Bauke Mollema rode very well in Tirreno-Adriatico, and should be in the mix with the favorites in this race if he can show that sort of form here. AG2R’s two-pronged attack of Romain Bardet and Jean-Christophe Peraud won’t be easy to counter, assuming the French squad can hang tough in the TTT. Mathias Frank, Pierre Rolland, and Daniel Navarro, and Simon Yates are others with an outside chance at success in the General Classification.
The Stagehunters
The list of sprinters in this mountains race is rather thin, but not without talents. Nacer Bouhanni, Sacha Modolo, and Luka Mezgec look like the fastest finishers here, with Tyler Farrar, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Samuel Dumoulin, Kris Boeckmans, and Kevin Reza are others who could be in the mix in the bunch kicks.
Versatile quick men like Simon Gerrans, Ramunas Navardauskas, and Tony Gallopin will hope to challenge the more explosive GC types on the intermediate days, like Stage 1. And of course, watch out for any strong climbers who fall out of contention early with poor TTT performances to get involved in the breakaway conversation later on in the race.
VeloHuman Top 10 Overall Favorites
GC Winner: Chris Froome
Podium: Alejandro Valverde, Vincenzo Nibali
Other Top Contenders: Tejay van Garderen, Joaquim Rodríguez, Andrew Talansky, Rui Costa, Romain Bardet, Bauke Mollema, Wilco Kelderman
Be sure to follow @VeloHuman on Twitter for more analysis and commentary during the race!
-Dane Cash
Photo by Georges Ménager (CC).











