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Who will truly have the smile on 27 July?
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Lance Armstrong grins on the "rest" day...
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Jan Ullrich laughs on the "rest" day...
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| Chris
Carmichael
from http://www.letour.com/2003/us/ |
Rest Day 2:
Gearing Up For The Final Push To Paris
The Tour de France is an exhausting event for everyone involved. It's
obvious the riders could use a break after racing for two weeks, but
this short rest is also important for the journalists, the support
crews, and the thousands of people who make this three-week traveling
circus run smoothly. The brief lull in the action is just the relief
everyone needs to make the final push to Paris.
Just as on the first rest day, the riders will go out for a two-plus
hour ride today to keep their legs fresh and maintain the routines their
bodies have become accustomed to. This is even more important during the
second rest day, as there is one more mountain stage in the Pyrenees
awaiting everyone tomorrow. Stage 16 shouldn't be very decisive in the
overall standings, though, because the peloton should regroup in the 80
kilometers remaining after the Tour de France's last major climb.
Following the outstanding performances from Lance Armstrong and Jan
Ullrich over the past few days in the mountains, the two men will be
watching each other closely over the coming days. The 2003 Tour de
France is the closest race we've seen in many years, and the two
principle protagonists are continuing to gain strength.
There is an odd phenomenon in three-week stage races. While it is
natural for riders to fatigue and get slower as the race wears on, some
riders actually adapt to the stress and get better as the race enters
its third week. There are two ways to finish a three-week stage race:
either you finish with great form, or you finish as a shadow of the man
who started the race.
To finish more strongly than you started, you have to come into the Tour
in great shape so you don't have to dig deep into your reserves during
the first ten days of racing. This scenario is most often applies to the
contenders for the overall victory. They are the strongest men in the
race, and the nature of the first week of the race is usually such that
they don't have to work very hard. But since the constant speed and
intensity of the Tour is hard to replicate in training, the first week
of road stages stress their physiological systems and lead to
adaptations. Lance Armstrong has been pointing out to journalists that
Jan Ullrich has a history of racing the second half of the Tour better
than he raced the first half. He adapts to the stress of racing and gets
stronger from it, and so does Armstrong.
Barring anymore bizarre incidents, the time gap between Armstrong and
Ullrich is likely to remain more or less unchanged from now until
Saturday's final individual time trial. Yet, even though the Team
Bianchi and US Postal leaders will be an inseparable pair on the roads
through the French countryside, there will be plenty of action to keep
fans on the edges of their seats. Richard Virenque may have sown up the
King of the Mountains competition, and Denis Menchov is leading the
young riders competition by over 42 minutes, but the points competition
is still being hotly disputed.
Fdjeux.com's Baden Cooke is currently in the green jersey as the leader
of the points competition, but the defending points champion is not far
behind. It is doubtful either of the two men will be in contention for
the two intermediate sprints in Stage 16, as they come right after the
descent from the Tour's final major climb, but between the start of
Stage 17 and the finish on the Champs Elysees, there are seven
intermediate sprints and three road stage finishes where they can battle
for points.
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