Tag: Picks

  • Tour de France 2016: Stage 14 Preview

    Tour de France 2016: Stage 14 Preview

    PROFIL (13)

    Stage 14: Montélimar › Villars-les-Dombes Parc des Oiseaux – 208.5km

    On the heels of two decisive days for the General Classification comes a stage set for the sprinters. There are several small climbs in the profile, but only three of them are categorized, and they’re Cat. 4s at that. Plus, the final 50km are flat. It will take a bungling by the sprinter’s teams to let this stage get away.

    I don’t have too many new things to say about the sprinting matchup, which, for me, always comes down to a three-way contest. Mark Cavendish has proven the most successful so far in this race. Marcel Kittel has the speed to beat anyone, and André Greipel throughout his career has shown a tendency to have one or two very impressive stages in his legs per grand tour.

    I’ll go with Cav slightly ahead of Kittel here after two tough stages. He’s probably a bit stronger in a messy sprint. I’m not sure that the peloton will be particularly orderly given the last two days of racing and that probably favors Cav. It also disfavors Greipel, for that matter.

    Beyond the big three it’s the usual suspects as fringe contenders: Peter Sagan, Bryan Coquard, Alexander Kristoff, Sam Bennett, and Dylan Groenewegen are riders to watch.

    VeloHuman Stage 14 Favorites

    1. Mark Cavendish | 2. Marcel Kittel | 3. André Greipel

  • Tour de France 2016: Stage 13 Preview

    Tour de France 2016: Stage 13 Preview

    PROFIL (12)

    Stage 13: Bourg-Saint-Andéol › La Caverne du Pont-d’Arc – 37.5km (ITT)

    After a bizarre Mont Ventoux thriller, I’m expecting something a bit more straightforward Friday in this Tour’s first of two time trial stages.

    The 37.5km route is not overly difficult. The two main challenges come at the start and at the end of the day. The road angles upward from the get-go in the range of 5% for 7km. Then things are quite flat before a high-speed, not-that-technical downhill at around 24km. After that, it’s another flat stretch and then a final ascent to the line that starts off steep for a brief moment before easing up.

    I see this as a stage for the big engines, and there are plenty in attendance—though for the first time in a long time, there is no clear-cut favorite for a traditional time trial at the Tour.

    For me there are as many as six riders who could potentially win the chrono. I’ll start with my (very) prohibitive favorite, Tony Martin. He hasn’t been the dominant TT specialist of old recently, but he also hasn’t had many opportunities to time trial over 20km this season, except in the German nationals, which he won. On this big stage I do expect him to shine. The course suits him well.

    Tom Dumoulin is the other rider I put atop my group of six potential winners. Like Martin, he excels in long time trials, and he doesn’t mind a few hills thrown in. He’s obviously on terrific form (his Stage 9 win proved that) so another victory would be no surprise.

    Rohan Dennis and Fabian Cancellara should be in the mix as well. It’s been a bit of a quiet Tour for both riders thus far, but they both have the talent to win.

    Chris Froome and Richie Porte have not had quiet Tours. Both could be tired from climbing Ventoux at full speed Thursday, but I still think the stage win is a possibility. Froome is being tipped by many for the stage—I personally think Porte is even better in the TT these days, as it’s been a very long time since Froome did much against the clock in a big race, but it’s impossible to know just how Porte is feeling after the crash in Stage 12. He didn’t look great at the finish. If he’s not too hindered by lingering injuries, Porte could win the TT.

    Outsiders for the stage win include Vasil Kiryienka, Ion Izagirre, Tejay van Garderen, and Thibaut Pinot.

    VeloHuman Stage 13 Favorites

    1. Tony Martin | 2. Tom Dumoulin | 3. Chris Froome

  • Tour de France 2016: Stage 12 Preview

    Tour de France 2016: Stage 12 Preview

    PROFIL (10)

    Stage 12: Montpellier › Mont Ventoux – 178km

    Thursday’s stage was supposed to be the day the GC contenders really clashed for the first time in this Tour, but windy weather in France has forced the organizers to shorten the stage—what was originally set to be a finish atop Mont Ventoux is now a finish 6km earlier at the Chalet Reynard. Given Ventoux’s odd geographic situation, far from any other serious climbs and therefore the only really hard ascent on the profile, that reduces the impact the stage will probably have.

    Stage 12 will be still be a big challenge, however, as the now 14km finishing climb is still plenty steep. Plus, I think the racers will be starting to feel a need to pressure Chris Froome, who seems to pick up time every day. And by “the racers,” I mostly mean Nairo Quintana. There’s a chance this stage comes down to long-range attacker, but I think the Froome vs. Quintana showdown will be the main even Thursday.

    I’m going to give Froome the slight edge. He’s beaten Quintana here before, and I’ve seen little so far this race to suggest he can’t do it again, though it certainly wouldn’t be a big surprise if Quintana were to nab the day.

    I do expect attacks from the likes of Richie Porte and Romain Bardet to garner the attention of their rivals, which could make it hard to get away, but they’ll have a shot. Fabio Aru and Joaquím Rodríguez might get a bit of breathing room, making them dangerous. Personally, I’ll be watching to Dan Martin and Adam Yates to see if they can really hack it on a climb like this. Yellow is a real possibility for either of them if Froome is too focused on Quintana to chase.

    There’s also a decent chance of a breakaway winner in Stage 12. Rafal Majka would be my top favorite there, with Thibaut Pinot, Rui Costa, Vincenzo Nibali, Steve Cummings, and Thomas De Gendt as other options.

    VeloHuman Stage 12 Favorites

    1. Chris Froome | 2. Nairo Quintana | 3. Rafal Majka

  • Tour de France 2016: Stage 11 Preview

    Tour de France 2016: Stage 11 Preview

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    Stage 11: Carcassonne › Montpellier – 162.5km

    Fortunately, the Tour’s 11th stage is relatively short, because the profile doesn’t have much to offer in the way of interesting features. Unless the peloton really screws this one up, Wednesday should be a sprinter’s day.

    I expect a bunch kick for the pure specialists, which means I’m going to have trouble making my prognostications all that compelling: as usual, it should be all about Mark Cavendish, Marcel Kittel, and André Greipel. I’m going to stubbornly pick Marcel Kittel for this stage despite Cav’s success in the Tour so far.

    I think the probably traditional mass sprint here favors Kittel, if only slightly—especially since Cav’s top leadout man Mark Renshaw is out of the Tour. And while I see Cavendish as a very close contender just as worth of favorite status, don’t count Greipel simply because he hasn’t won yet. He can run a bit hot and cold, and if he’s hot in Stage 11, he could very well win.

    Beyond that big three it’s more of the same in terms of possible outsiders. Peter Sagan, Bryan Coquard, and Alexander Kristoff headline a list that also includes Dylan Groenewegen, Edward Theuns, John Degenkolb, Michael Matthews, and perhaps Sam Bennett, if he’s feeling up for it.

    VeloHuman Stage 11 Favorites

    1. Marcel Kittel | 2. Mark Cavendish | 3. André Greipel

  • Tour de France 2016: Stage 10 Preview

    Tour de France 2016: Stage 10 Preview

    PROFIL (9)

    Stage 10: Escaldes-Engordany › Revel – 197km

    Tuesday’s stage is a tough one to forecast thanks to a small climb late in the day, though the rest of the stage will probably be relatively mundane. The Port d’Envalira is one heck of a climb but it comes so early in the action it’s not going to have much of an impact on the racing other than probably setting up the early break.

    Then it’s a long descent and about 130km of mostly flat roads before the Côte de Saint-Ferréol, 1.8km at 6.6%, crested 7km from the finish. The road only really flattens out for the final 3km.

    This stage could go any number of ways. It’s possible the break takes it, in case the sprinters’ teams aren’t all that interested in keeping the escapees under control with a testy finish on offer. It’s possible the bunch gets to the finish together, though slightly reduced from the late climb. It’s possible someone attacks out of the peloton on the climb. And it’s possible that the stage ends in a sprint. That’s a lot of options.

    I like Peter Sagan to win the stage because he could triumph in any one of those four scenarios. He’s looked great even in the pure bunch sprints so far in the race, not to mention his skills as a solo artist and puncheur. He can be in the mix no matter what happens in Stage 10.

    I think there’s a decent probability of a bunch sprint, too, so Mark Cavendish, Marcel Kittel, and André Greipel could all be in play. Alexander Kristoff, Michael Matthews, and in particular, Bryan Coquard are especially dangerous given the profile.

    I see Tony Gallopin as a nice option to attack for the win. He’ll love the finale. Greg Van Avermaet, Julian Alaphilippe, Edvald Boasson Hagen, Fabian Cancellara, and Steve Cummings could get involved with a long-range strike as well.

    VeloHuman Stage 10 Favorites

    1. Peter Sagan | 2. Bryan Coquard | 3. Tony Gallopin

  • The Recon Ride Podcast: Tour de France 2016, Part II

    The Recon Ride Podcast: Tour de France 2016, Part II

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    Episode 48: Tour de France 2016 Show, Part II

    The Recon Ride reviews the Tour’s first nine stages and looks ahead at what’s to come over the next week.

    [powerpress]


    The Tour de France is in full swing. Dane Cash and Cosmo Catalano discuss the state of affairs in the Tour so far and dig into the next few days of racing, which include some big mountains and a crucial time trial.

    Photo by Chaumurky (CC).