Cyling’s Tour de France starts in Britain, could end with a Briton
LEEDS, England — — So your national team is out of the World Cup in Brazil, Wimbledon doesn’t seem the same without Serena Williams or Rafael Nadal, and your baseball team is slumping.
This weekend, fans of many stripes could join die-hard cycling buffs and tune in to the start of the 101st Tour de France for that much-needed sports fix.
Cycling’s big event gets going Saturday through bucolic countryside in northern England, where officials have paid for the right to host it, hoping to draw tourists, capture media attention and feed the recent cycling craze among Britons.
It could first require getting over a nagging belief that, after Lance Armstrong’s doping exposure, the sport may still be dogged by drug cheats. Cycling chiefs and experts generally agree that the era of widespread doping is over, but few would claim to know that today’s pack is fully clean. Drugs testers will conduct hundreds of blood and urine checks during the race.
Bookmakers’ odds foresee a victory either by defending champion Chris Froome, a 29-year-old Kenyan-born Briton who leads Team Sky, or two-time champ Alberto Contador — a 31-year-old Spaniard with Tinkoff-Saxo Bank — to take home the yellow jersey when the race finishes on Paris’ Champs-Elysees on July 26.
Few of the 198 riders on the 22 teams stand a realistic chance of winning, based on recent performances, skill sets and team priorities. Most are “domestiques†who race above all to help their team leaders win. Vincenzo Nibali of Italy and Spaniards Alejandro Valverde and Joaquin Rodriguez stand an outside chance.
Conceding home-road advantage, Contador said Friday that “local hero†Froome remains the favorite. The Briton, who succeeded Sky teammate and compatriot Bradley Wiggins as Tour winner, said: “I don’t think many Tour champions get to come back as defending champions and can start in front of their home crowd.â€
Five of the 21 stages end in summit finishes, which usually promise drama as the cream of the climbers rises to the top first. In all, riders will cover 3,664 kilometers (2,277 miles) of roads in England, France, Belgium and Spain.
Aside from cobblestone treachery in Stage 5, the mountains are mostly what matter this year. For the first time in 61 years, this Tour has only one long time trial — a race against the clock where racers set off one-by-one down a starter’s ramp. It comes in Stage 20. Contador and Froome are among the best in both climbing and time trials.
This year marks the second time that the Tour de France is starting in Britain, after a successful time in London in 2007. Local officials use municipal funds to pay for the right to host the race in their cities, hoping for short-term tourism revenues plus a longer-term return from the international media spotlight.
The Tour’s route changes every year. After three stages in England, this 101st edition enters France on Tuesday. The riders will cover many of the same roads their forerunners covered since the race was first run in 1903. Among novelties this year: the first-ever Chinese rider in the race, Cheng Ji, and 11 climbs in the eastern Vosges mountains — though long, steep ascents await in the Alps and Pyrenees too.
Saturday’s 190.5-kilometer (118-mile) rolling Stage 1 from Leeds to Harrogate is likely to favor sprinters. The Tour’s green jersey goes to the best overall sprinter, one of many subplots that also include pure climbers seeking the polka-dot jersey to be the best man in the mountains.
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