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To: nutmeg

Alright.

I have been looking forward to this stage since I saw the stage profiles before the tour started.

TV coverage in Europe starts in 20 minutes. Now, they are showing a recap of yesterday.

The race is already on though, and Robbie McEwen just won the first sprint.

Cheers.


3 posted on 07/13/2006 2:42:03 AM PDT by Eurotwit (WI)
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To: Eurotwit

From Velonews:-

12:24 PM Good day and welcome ...
to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the 11th stage of the 93rd edition of the Tour de France. Today's stage - with a profile that resembles a rip saw - takes the peloton over the mighty mountain passes of Tourmalet, Aspin, Peyresourde and Portillon merits the greatest attention from the race favorites — even though this one then continues into Spain for another 40km to finish on the long, but gently graded climb to the Pla-de-Beret summit.

12:32 PM Racing began early today
With 168 riders leaving Tarbes at 11:12 this morning. After several initial attacks, the day's break formed and we have four riders - Iker Camano (Euskaltel) [51st on GC, at 10:09], Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner) [91st, at 17:02], Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank) [123rd, at 30:07] and David de la Fuente (Saunier Duval) [157, at 42:25] - comfortably ahead of the peloton as they begin to work their way up the lower slopes of the hors categorie Col du Tourmalet... well "comfortable" is a relative term, since not much is comfortable on the Tourmalet, is it? This is an 18.3km climb that averages 7.7 percent. The four leaders - now at the 56km mark - are 7:20 ahead of the peloton, which contains all of the big players, including the new yellow jersey Cyril Dessel (AG2R) and Juan Miguel Mercado, who says he wants the jersey as early as today.

12:35 PM Landis predicts a decisive stage
Speaking with VeloNews's John Wilcockson, “This will be the most difficult stage ahead of the Alps,” said Floyd Landis, who’s now in fifth overall, 4:45 behind new race leader Cyril Dessel (AG2R) after Wednesday’s “no hope” breakaway succeeded. “The Col du Tourmalet has a category HC and then there are four category ones. The final climb is not so steep but very long. I think only a small group will be fighting for the win.”

This assessment by Phonak’s big hope to win this Tour is probably right on the money. Stage 11 is 206.5km long, which equates to a about six and a half hours of racing, and the total amount of climbing is a daunting 17,473 feet.

12:39 PM At 60km
...and 15km from the summit of the Tourmalet, the four escapees remain together some 8:11 ahead of the peloton.

12:43 PM The Tourmalet
The Tourmalet was one of the first major mountain climbs to be included in the Tour, in 1910, when it was climbed from the opposite direction. Climbing it west-to-east, as is being done Thursday, is longer and more spectacular. It’s a taxing 18.3km long, averaging 7.7 percent with long sections at 10 percent — first on the early slopes up a steep valley and through the village of Barèges, and then across an open mountainside in a series of bold curves.

12:45 PM Contest Reminder
Any idea who is going to win this one? You get a shot at a prize if you're right. Go ahead and hit the Daily Contest button atop our page.

12:48 PM At 62km
and 13km from the top of the Tourmalet, the four leaders are 7:40 ahead of the peloton, which remains relatively intact, including all four jersey leaders.


4 posted on 07/13/2006 3:52:58 AM PDT by managusta (corruptissima republica plurimae leges)
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To: Eurotwit; managusta
Yeah, they took off an hour early today, didn't they?

Day-ham! When you put it that way...

... and the total amount of climbing is a daunting 17,473 feet

6 posted on 07/13/2006 4:23:04 AM PDT by Ready4Freddy ("Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die.")
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