Defending champion Vincenzo Nibali, 2013 winner Chris Froome,
double champion Alberto Contador and the indefatigable Nairo
Quintana are expected to fight it out for the yellow jersey on a
Tour tailor-made for pure climbers.
Spaniard Contador is planning to take the toughest road to Paris as
he will also compete in the Giro d'Italia, looking to become the
first rider since the late Marco Pantani in 1998 to achieve that
particular double.
"He knows how to get ready for them and if anyone can back up the
Giro/Tour then I would say he's the guy to do it," Briton Froome
told Cycling Weekly.
"It's not only difficult, it's risky," Contador, one of only six men
with wins in all three grands tours, said.
Like Froome, Nibali will avoid a heavy race schedule ahead of the
Tour in order to stay as fresh as possible.
The Italian, who was dominant on all terrains in last year's race,
will face increased scrutiny as his Astana team are on the radar of
the International Cycling Union (UCI) following a string of doping
cases last season.
Having abandoned hope of securing a second Tour title after his 2012
triumph, Wiggins, who reverts to track cycling midway through the
season with an eye on the 2016 Olympics, is taking aim at the
Paris-Roubaix in April -- tackling the cobblestones prior to the
wooden boards of the velodrome.
Victory in the Queen of the Classics, added to his road and track
Olympic gold medals and his Tour de France crown, would make the
Briton one of most versatile riders of all time, especially if he
goes on to break the hour record.
FRENCH RENAISSANCE
The revamped hour record is currently held by Austrian Mathias
Brandle but it is not expected to withstand the challenges of
Australians Rohan Dennis and Jack Bobridge, before world time trial
champion Wiggins has his tilt.
The Team Sky rider will then leave the road for good to focus on his
2016 Olympic challenge, leaving it to Froome to help the British
outfit show more than last year, when Dave Brailsford's squad
disappointed on the Tour.
[to top of second column] |
The world's greatest cycling race will also reveal whether the
French renaissance led by Jean-Christophe Peraud and Thibaut Pinot,
who finished second and third respectively in 2014, is the 'real
deal' and not just a flash in the pan.
Their performances indicate a revival is gathering pace and there
could be more to come with Warren Barguil showing at last year's
Vuelta that he too would be a force to be reckoned with in the
French ranks.
This season will also be the occasion for Slovakian prodigy Peter
Sagan, who joined Contador's Tinkoff-Saxo team, to show he has what
it takes to win one of the 'Monument' classics.
German Marcel Kittel, the best sprinter in 2014, will have to hold
off the fresh challenge of Norway's Alexander Kristoff, while Briton
Mark Cavendish will be looking to fight his way back to the front
having massively underperformed last season.
Other sprinters to watch in 2015 include Germans Andre Greipel and
John Degenkolb as well as France's Arnaud Demare and Nacer Bouhanni,
who are not on the same team anymore after the latter left FDJ for
Cofidis.
With one year to go before the 2016 Olympics, the track cycling
world championships being held in France next month will be of
greater importance to those seeking to hone preparations ahead of
the Rio Games.
(Editing by John O'Brien)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|