Cycling-Star-studded Ineos-Grenadiers hold key to intriguing Tour de
France
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[June 24, 2021]
By Julien Pretot
BREST, France (Reuters) - Tadej Pogacar
and Primoz Roglic are the clear favourites for this year's Tour de
France, but an aggressive and star-studded Ineos-Grenadiers team may
hold the key to the race, which sets out from the port city of Brest
on Saturday.
Pogacar blew Roglic away in the final time trial to win the race
last year, and the 22-year-old has also triumphed in the
Tirreno-Adriatico and Tour of Slovenia stage races in the lead-up to
the Tour with dominant rides in the mountains.
Roglic, meanwhile, beat his young compatriot at the Tour of the
Basque country in their only head-to-head duel in a stage race this
season, more than two months ago.
Roglic has not raced since late April, looking to spare himself
ahead of the Tour as the top contenders avoid each other, making the
outcome of the three-week event starting from Brittany, the homeland
of French cycling, harder to guess.
Geraint Thomas has been rediscovering his 2018 Tour-winning form
this year, and he will share the leadership of Ineos-Grenadiers with
2020 Giro d'Italia champion Tao Geoghegan Hart and Richard Carapaz,
who won the Giro in 2019.
Australian Richie Porte, who came third on the Tour last year, is
also in the squad, which will no doubt be looking to blow up the
race.
While Pogacar has shown more individual brilliance than Thomas,
Carapaz or Geoghegan Hart, he is likely to suffer if the British
outfit try to attack him with several riders.
"We won't win this tour by sitting on the wheels. We have the team
to make it a racers' race, take the initiative, seize every
opportunity and make our opposition focus for every kilometre of
every stage," team manager Dave Brailsford said.
"We have changed our race philosophy this season to being more open
and aggressive. Our performances have built all season and a joy of
racing has infused the whole team."
With his climbing abilities, Ecuador's Carapaz could emerge as the
team leader as the Tour progresses. But as long as Thomas, Geoghegan
Hart and Porte are in the mix, their rivals will need to keep an eye
on all of them.
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UAE Team Emirates rider Tadej Pogacar of
Slovenia, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, in action in
the peloton. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
"Carapaz seems to be the best-placed
although they won't designate him right away (as team leader)," a
sports director, who declined to be named but has led several title
contenders on the Tour, told Reuters.
"They also have the advantage of making fewer strategic mistakes."
Before the race reaches the Alps, world champion Julian Alaphilippe
of France and Dutchman Mathieu van der Poel look set to battle it
out for the first yellow jersey in the opening stage from Brest to
Landerneau, which ends with a short climb that suits both riders.
Should Van der Poel win, he would find himself wearing the yellow
jersey on his Tour debut, a feat his grandfather, the late Raymond
Poulidor, never achieved despite finishing on the podium eight times
and winning seven stages.
Four-time champion Chris Froome is back on the Tour after a one-year
hiatus, but he has little hope of winning the race this year as the
Briton has yet to regain his past form following a horror crash at
the Criterium du Dauphine.
He will return to a climb that made his name for all the wrong
reasons in 2016, the Mont Ventoux, which he ended up running up a
section of after a mechanical fault on a surreal day of racing.
The riders will climb Ventoux twice on the 11th stage between the
Alps and the Pyrenees, where the Queen stage of the race will take
the peloton up Luz Ardiden after scaling the awe-inspiring Col du
Tourmalet.
Another British rider, sprinter Mark Cavendish, also returns after
three years away, earning a late call-up from his Deceuninck-Quick
Step team, although he is likely to struggle to add to his
remarkable 30 stage victories.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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