Stage 9 - Morzine-Avoriaz > > > Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne - 204.5 km
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
High Mountains - A sporting perspective
A final descent that can hurt
After the first rest day, which the riders will have to get out of their system, this is the main Alpine stage, with the Col de la Colombière pass via Le Reposoir, the Col des Aravis pass, Les Saisies and the Col de la Madeleine pass. If Contador has lost five minutes on the cobbles, it is not unimaginable that he will be clawing them back a little every day on this sort of terrain. However, there is no summit finish, because there would have been too many on this Tour. We preferred to diversify the route more to avoid riders waiting for the summit finishes to open up the gaps. The favourites might not want to attack to avoid finding themselves alone on the flat, which means a big battle is an unlikely scenario. That said, those who are not good downhill riders could lose Le Tour in the finish to this stage.
(letour.com)
July 12 post:
It has been an eventful first eight stages and there is much more too come. After the rest day, we'll have the big alpine stage of this year's Tour going from the stage 8 finish at the Morzine-Avoriaz ski resort to the Rhône-Alpes valley town, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne some 205 km to the south.
Naturally, with any big alpine stage you can expect equally spectacular scenery to go along with exciting race action. Remember the breathtaking helicopter shots of Linus Gerdemann soloing Col de la Colombière, the last climb before the descent into Le-Grand-Bornand on stage 7 in 2007? For this stage, Col de la Colombière will be featured in the first half at km 46. After the cat 1 Col de la Colombière, we'll have three more serious climbs climaxing with the massive Col de la Madeleine (26 km of 6.2%) before the long descent to the finish in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne which is hosting a stage finish for the first time. Col de la Madeleine is one of the more famous climbs in Tour history, first being used in 1969 and most recently in 2005 (I believe) for a total of 25 times.
A long descending finish is often more entertaining than a mountaintop finish because you get the battle going up before watching the GC contenders flirt with danger on a harrowing drop to the finish. For this stage, after the Col de la Madeleine descent, there is 13 km of mostly flat cycling to the finish where the weaker descenders will have a chance to catch back on.
Samuel Sanchez almost took the first mountain stage before the rest day so we know he's on good form and since he's one of the best descenders in the business, he would seem the logicial choice to win this stage if a break of non-GC contenders doesn't succeed. Rain and cooler temperatures are expected when the racing resumes on Tuesday which could make this stage even more treacherous. Steve
The finish in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, a valley town in the Rhone-Alpes.
(steephill.tv)
Stage 9 - Morzine-Avoriaz > > > Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne - 204.5 km
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
MORZINE-AVORIAZ
17 times a stage town in Morzine
6 times a stage site in the resort of Avoriaz
Population: 3,000
Town in Haute-Savoie (74)
Morzine-Avoriaz and the Tour have enjoyed a solid alliance since 1975, as this will be the Tours twenty fourth visit, and a rest day to boot. Climbers have always triumphed here and the only one to have triumphed twice is Richard Virenque. Two winners in Morzine are no longer with us: Thierry Claveyrolat, who achieved one of his finest victories here in 1991, and Marco Pantani, who triumphed here in 1997. In 1988, thanks to his win in Morzine, Fabio Parra became the first Colombian rider to finish on the Tour podium.
Morzine, a preserved mountain environment
Morzine is located half-way between Lake Leman and Mont-Blanc. This authentic Savoy village, situated at an altitude of 1,000 m, has maintained its charm thanks to traditional architecture made of wooden chalets, with roofs often made of local slate. At the heart of the Portes du Soleil (the gates to the sun) and their 650 km of ski slopes, Morzine is ideal for all winter sports, such as family skiing holidays, snow-shoe hikes, as well as hang-gliding, but is also a warm and friendly place for recharging your batteries. Although white in winter, Morzine is bursting with colour in the summer. You can climb its slopes on foot or bike, plunge into its streams for gorge scrambling, rafting or other white water sports, or swing through the trees at the aerial adventure park. To get to know the heritage of Morzine better, weekly visits allow visitors to discover the old quarters, slate-making workshops, cheese-makers (of tome, abondance and reblochon) and themed trails reveal the riches of the natural environment on the banks of the Dranse as well as the to-and-fro of migratory birds.
SAINT-JEAN-DE-MAURIENNE
Once a stage town
Population: 9,400
Sub-prefecture of Savoie (73)
Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne has notably seen the birth of expert slalom racers, like Jean-Noël Augert and Jean-Baptiste Grange, but the close proximity of the Croix-de-Fer, Télégraphe, Lautaret, Madeleine, Glandon, Iseran, Mont-Cenis and Galibier mountain passes have always made it a natural cycling ground. The start of a stage in 2006, the Savoyard city will this year have the honour of hosting a stage finish.
At the heart of the biggest cycling area available to climbers, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne has a veritable passion for cycling. Galibier, Télégraphe, Madeleine, Glandon, Croix-de-Fer, Iseran it is at the crossroads of all these mythical passes and famous climbs, for the utmost delight of sports cyclists, touring cyclists, mountain bikers or simply spectators. Furthermore, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne boasts the rich heritage of a Town of Art and History: the cathedral and gothic cloisters, a crypt that was a cradle to Romanesque art, the suit museum, the Mont-Corbier museum (a liqueur made out of plants gathered from the surrounding mountains) and, of course, the Opinel museum, devoted to the now world famous knife invented more than a century ago a stones throw away from the town. Lastly, in a year that marks the 150th anniversary of the annexation of Savoy by France, in 2010 Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne will be organising many events in addition to the traditional Saint-Jean Bread Festival that takes place on the 5th of August.