Las Vegas Review-Journal

Route favors Froome in 100th Tour

British cyclist primed to win after being 2012 runner-up

- By JAMEY KEATEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — Chris Froome has a chance to prove over the next three weeks what some suspected in 2012 — that he could have won last year’s Tour de France if he hadn’t had to give way for his teammate, Bradley Wiggins.

Now Wiggins is out injured, and that makes the Kenyan-born Briton the favorite to triumph on a particular­ly mountainou­s route this year, one that should suit his climbing skills.

The 100th edition of the Tour begins Saturday in Corsica — France’s “Island of Beauty” in the Mediterran­ean — the first time cycling’s greatest race has set wheel to road in the land of Napoleon’s birthplace.

Another key plotline: the shadow of Lance Armstrong. This is the first Tour since he was stripped of his record seven victories for doping, which he finally admitted after years of denials following a detailed report from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. While Armstrong will have no involvemen­t in this race, fans and media will have a close eye on performanc­eenhancing drug use in the peloton.

That 198-rider peloton, or pack, is to cover 3,479 kilometers (2,162 miles) over three weeks — 21 stages and two rest days — before an unusual nighttime finish July 21 on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.

The race spends three days on Corsica’s winding, hilly roads, then begins a counterclo­ckwise run through mainland France along the Mediterran­ean, into the Pyrenees mountains, then up to Brittany and the fabled Mont-Saint-Michel island citadel before a slashing jaunt southeastw­ard toward the Alps before entering the capital.

Long before they knew Wiggins would be out, race organizers gave relatively short shrift to the time trial — a raceagains­t the clock in which last year’s champ excels.

There’s no opening-day time trial. The team time trial returns to the Tour in Stage 4. Two individual time trials in Stage 11 (33 km, 20.5 miles) and Stage 17 (32 km; 19.8 miles) will count, but the latter comes before three days in the Alps, which might have more impact on the race outcome.

Froome, the 28-year-old Team Sky leader, has ridden in two other Tours. His dazzling start to the season — winning four of the five races he started — and his second-place finish behind his British compatriot last year has put him on the top rung of Tour favorites.

Last year, Froome was a dutiful, if not always respectful, sidekick to Wiggins. Froome injected drama into the race — and fanned talk of rivalry — after he repeatedly outperform­ed Wiggins in the mountains. At one point, he even gestured at his Team Sky leader to catch up.

At the time, Wiggins acknowledg­ed Froome had “talent,” but also didn’t know what it was like to feel the pressure of being the favorite.

Now is Froome’s chance, and so far he has seemed to manage the pressure: He won the Tour of Oman, the Criterium Internatio­nal, the Tour of Romandie and the Criterium du Dauphine this year. His only loss this season? Second place in the Tirreno-Adriatico.

Two-time Tour winner Alberto Contador is seen as Froome’s most likely challenger. The Spaniard’s career hit a speed bump in 2010 when he tested positive for the banned fat-burning, muscle-building drug clenbutero­l at the Tour — landing him a ban that forced him to sit out last year’s race. He hasn’t yet revived the fear and admiration that his sharp uphill accelerati­ons once inspired.

American Tejay Van Garderen, a support rider for BMC leader Cadel Evans of Australia last year, is among the rising stars to watch. The 24-year-old took home the white jersey awarded to the Tour’s best young rider last year. The question now is whether 2011 Tour champion Evans, 36, will be in contention enough for Van Garderen to stay in a support role. If not, he could be cut loose.

The route is among the most mountainou­s in recent years. Stage 15 on July 14 — France’s national Bastille Day holiday — features an uphill finish on the barren Mont Ventoux in Provence. The year’s “Queen Stage” comes four days later in Stage 18, with not one but two runs up the famed Alpe-d’Huez.

Froome said Tour planners were “bordering on sadistic” with the selection of the Alpe d’Huez stage.

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