Thursday, April 18, 2024

Le Tour de France – Day 6: Stage 18, Bourg D’Oisans to Saint-Etienne

-

HomeDiariesLe Tour de France - Day 6: Stage 18, Bourg D'Oisans to...

Guten dag! We honoured Carlos yesterday, so we best pay tribute to Big Marcus today. It’s been a great Tour for Columbia – and it’s not over yet. We had to be flexible today, the plot was to do a bike feature – the top GC riders plus points and mountains leaders – but the start at Bourg-D’Oisans was so tight for space, with team buses in the village streets that there was no room for the team trucks. These went directly to the hotels at the finish in St. Etienne, so it wasn’t the best day to bike skek.

Thinking on my feet, I decided to do an opinion piece on “has Sastre done enough to win?”  for words of wisdom from among others, Patrick Lefevre, Roger Legeay and Claudio Corti.

I also did a wee interview with my journalistic idol, Philippe Brunel;

“the winner must CONQUER the Tour.”

Bourg D'Oisans
Philippe Brunel, more philosopher than journo. Photo©Martin Williamson

Cycling journalism as philosophy, I love it!

Bourg D'Oisans
Tom Boonen’s boss, Patrick Lefevre. Photo©Martin Williamson

I could have left it at that, but with so many of our interviewees talking about another CSC ‘blitz’ we decide to go to the last big climb of the race, the 2nd cat, 14 K Croix de Montvieux.

Bourg D'Oisans
Claudio Corti, one of the ‘old school’. Photo©Martin Williamson

Just maybe there would be an ‘explosion’, or if not, then we’d go ‘local colour.’

Bourg D'Oisans
Chris Froome talks to VeloVeritas. Top bloke, he gave us his time when pushed to get to the depart. Photo©Martin Williamson

When a break of two hustled past, we knew it wasn’t going to be a ‘mega’ day and settled for that ‘local colour’ – probably a lovely brown, the skin colour of two charming local ladies who we were chatting too, Laetitia and Noemie.

Bourg D'Oisans
Our lovely new friends in Pelussin. Photo©Martin Williamson

It was a great hour or so, Tour watching at its best – it was good to be almost, ‘just a fan’ again.

The big drama was Cunego, he crashed early, gashing his chin and would finish the day 20-12 down, not bad for having ridden a near 100 mile time trial with four of his squadra.

He was being pushed up the climb, when we saw him. Just while I mention stats, the bunch did 55.7 kilometres in the first hour – wow!

Bourg D'Oisans
Cunego gets a push. Photo©Martin Williamson

We nipped right in behind the breakdown truck – you daren’t let a gap open or you’re on open roads with hundreds of cars and camper vans setting out for home.

Despite Cunego’s injury, the five Lampre guys were riding at 40 to 50 kph on the flat, and touching 80 on the descents.

I didn’t see much of it – I was sitting tapping the keys on Martin’s BlackBerry.

It’s 8.40 pm in the press room at St. Etienne – which is actually located in the St. Etienne football stadium – the pieces are away, the pics are away and Martin is getting our VeloVeritas pictures up to date – sorry about the lack of them, but it has been hectic: 2.00 am we got to bed this morning.

I’m on a Tour motorbike tomorrow – wish me luck!

Ed Hood and Martin Williamson
Ed Hood and Martin Williamson
Ed and Martin, our top team! They try to do the local Time Trials, the Grand Tours and the Classics together to get the great stories written, the quality photos taken, the driving done and the wifi wrestled with.

Related Articles

Tour of Britain 2006 – Stage 1, Glasgow to Castle Douglas

The Tour of Britain 2006 kicked-off in Glasgow on Tuesday morning with a 101.1 mile haul from Glasgow to Castle Douglas. Last year Evan Oliphant (Recycling) grabbed an excellent second place on a stage behind Russian champion Sergei Ivanov (T-Mobile). This year he'll be talking to VeloVeritas every day after the stage, we caught-up with him before the stage whilst he was stocking-up on victuals for the stage and receiving a light massage.

Rotterdam Six Day 2011 – Day One, Stam and Van Bon Take Early Lead

Rotterdam Six Day 2011 and it wouldn't be a Six without off-the-track dramas - you'll all be familiar by now with the 'Iljo Saga.' Who ever you think is at fault, there's no doubt that the sport's governing body is now doing itself no favours with the way it's handling this situation. They tell the Rotterdam organiser that Keisse shouldn't start, but when Frank Boelé says; 'and you'll pick up the tab for the 50,000 Euros/day fine if Keisse's judgement sticks because I'm denying him the right to ride?'

Bremen Six Day 2012 – Day Five

We had Frank Sinatra for the sprint series last night during the Bremen Six Day 2012, never a bad thing. Bed was just before midnight and I didn't get up until 09:00 - just braw.

Gent Six Days 2011 – Night Six

On the one hand, the 18:00 finish is cool; but on the other, the lunch time kick off means that the last day is pretty hectic for the support staff. The result was never really in doubt and I thought that the last chase was poor. But I said all of that yesterday - and what I'm not taking account of is the huge gaps in the Six Day programme.

At Random

Cones Stop Play!

There was sunshine on Bishopton, a car park full of riders and shiny bikes - not sure about the guy on the fixed Dolan, though - lots of marshals, pieces to feed the five thousand, the requisite scout hall strip; and - the council cutting the verges down on Westferry. Cones Stop Play...

Stuart Balfour – Young Scot Victorious in the GP Plouay

Up there on the list of ‘cult’ races is the GP Plouay, now known as the Bretagne Classic Ouest France; not a race that’s high in the cycling public’s consciousness outside of Brittany but always hard fought on a tough parcours by a quality field since 1931. This year the winner was Belgian hard man Oliver Naesen (AG2R) who shrugged off the rain and took the laurels.

Copenhagen Six Day 2010 – Day Six

Wednesday morning in the camper van, long straights of grey motorway tarmac through a flat, snow blanketed landscape, minus three, no sunshine, just more grey above us; in all the times I've worked at the Copenhagen Six Day 2010 Six, I don't think I've ever seen the sun.

Dan Fleeman – New British Hill Climb Champion

Cervelo's Dan Fleeman left it late to take his first win of the year; but it took him just 3 minutes 18 seconds to convert late season road form to victory in the most specialist and punishing of races-the British Hill Climb Championship, on the 1100 metre Pea Royd Lane climb near Sheffield, England on Sunday.