Vancouver Sun

Tour de France helps mark D-Day landings during Normandy legs

- ANDREW DAMPF

The landing beaches. The war cemeteries. The museums. The first towns that were liberated more than 70 years ago.

The D-Day and Second World War history that is embedded in the culture of Normandy is earning extra spotlight this weekend when the Tour de France opens with two stages in the region.

Saturday’s opening leg starts at Mont- Saint-Michel, a World Heritage Benedictin­e abbey perched on a rock off the coast, and ends at Utah Beach, one of the key landing sites for Allied troops on June 6, 1944.

The first stage also passes through Sainte- Mere- Eglise, where American paratroope­r John Steele dangled from a clock tower after his parachute got caught during the invasion, and survived. The town is now home to the Airborne Museum.

Stage 2 on Sunday finishes in Cherbourg-En-Cotentin, site of the Battle of Cherbourg.

Tejay van Garderen, the BMC rider who represents the United States’ best hope for overall victory in the Tour, was wide-eyed as he took a look around this week.

“It really puts into perspectiv­e what we’re doing here,” Van Garderen said on Friday.

“We always say that we’re soldiers going to war and then you see the real soldiers and you’re like, ‘ OK, maybe this is just bike racing.’ ”

Teams were driven into the official team presentati­on in Sainte-- Mere-Eglise on war-era jeeps and trucks on Thursday.

“I like the way organizers and the local people here have put together the appropriat­e historical reminders, that teams have been accompanie­d on the jeeps by the local people in costumes,” said Brian Cookson, the British president of the Internatio­nal Cycling Union.

A legacy of the war was freedom, underlined by the diversity of the Tour teams.

Van Garderen, who was in third place when he had to abandon last year’s Tour in tears due to illness four stages from the end, shares the BMC leadership with Australian standout Richie Porte. They are backed by riders from Germany, Italy, France, Switzerlan­d and Belgium.

“We’re such an internatio­nal team,” Van Garderen said. “It shows that the world has come a long way.”

The favourites for overall victory in the three-week race are two-time winner Chris Froome of Britain, two-time runner-up Nairo Quintana of Colombia and twotime champion Alberto Contador of Spain.

After Saturday’s stage, a group of American, British, Canadian, French and German riders will lay white roses in front of Utah Beach’s Peace Monument to commemorat­e the Allied landings.

“We will celebrate cycling as a peace symbol,” Tour director Christian Prudhomme said. “The only thing that prevented the Tour de France taking place was world war, twice.”

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Riders from France’s FDJ cycling team take part in a parade in Sainte-MereEglise, Normandy, Thursday.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Riders from France’s FDJ cycling team take part in a parade in Sainte-MereEglise, Normandy, Thursday.

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