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Stage 4: Timed to perfection (Tour de France: USPS total domination)
VeloNews ^ | 7-9-03 | John Wilcockson

Posted on 07/09/2003 4:06:49 PM PDT by TomB

Preparation, motivation, execution.

Those were the three qualities that set apart the U.S. Postal-Berry Floor team at Wednesday's team time trial. By beating the ONCE-Eroski team of Joseba Beloki by 30 seconds, and the Bianchi squad of Jan Ullrich by 43 seconds, Postal put Victor Hugo Peña in the yellow jersey and Lance Armstrong in the driving seat of this centennial Tour only two stages away from the Alps.

The preparation for the stage was something begun by the team's Belgian directeurs sportifs Johan Bruyneel and Dirk Demol, who first came to look at the Joinville-St. Dizier course two months ago. Also in May, the Postal riders who attended the team's training camp in the Alps, did some initial team time trial practice on their time trial bikes.

Then came the work over the 24 hours preceding the stage.

"Yesterday," said Bruyneel, "we looked at the course a second time. We took down all the details - turn to the right, turn to the left, and things like that. Then we did it [with the team] this morning, first in the car to get the details in the head, then the last part on the bikes, because the last 20 kilometers is the most important. Afterwards, we talked about it and decided a strategy."

An hour or so before the Postal's 3:45 p.m. start, the nine riders were warming up on wind trainers in the cool of a tree-shaded park in Joinville. A good warm-up was essential, even though it was an 80-degree day, because there was a 3km climb right from the start.

Postal's George Hincapie said that the plan was to start conservatively. "We knew its was hard start," he said, "and almost a 70-kilometer time trial, so the ending is where you can make up the most time. And the beginning is where you can lose the race."

The second part of the winning formula was motivation. And Postal had plenty of that. As Hincapie said: "We've lost [the team time trial] the last [three] years and we didn't want to go down to dinner tonight and say we could have done this, could have done that. We didn't have any excuses."

It was also important that the team start last in the team time trial, and to achieve that Postal needed to be leading the team GC after stage 3. That was mainly done by having its best riders against the clock - Armstrong, Ekimov, Peña and Hincapie - ride full out in the Paris prologue. It was a successful strategy, with all four finishing in the top 15.

Then came the final part of the plan: execution. Bruyneel explained, "We reserved out strongest guys to take the longest turns in the last 20 kilometers, when we could make the difference. Five riders - Lance, George, Victor, Floyd [Landis] and [Viatcheslav] Ekimov - were the real motors of the team who took very long pulls."

That theory was only partially carried out, because riding a team time trial is very exacting and, on a day when strong side and head winds battered the riders, extremely exhausting. That was confirmed by team leader Armstrong.

"Some days when you win, you get to the finish line and say, ‘Shit, that was easy.' Today was not one of those days," said Armstrong. "It was a full effort for everybody. In the end, we were intending to take long pulls. But we were taking these 10-second pulls - we were empty."

Winning the team time trial was more important this year as it is the only significant time trial before the mountains. But getting the yellow jersey for its popular Colombian rider Peña is just a bonus.

Hincapie explained, "We don't act any different [because the yellow jersey is in the team]. Lance is the leader and I'm sure we're not gonna kill ourselves to keep the yellow jersey for Victor, but we want to make sure that Lance stays in a good position.

"Everybody expects us to control the race, so we're gonna have to play a big part in that also. But there a couple more sprint stages, so I'm sure the sprinters want to win some stages before the Alps."

Indeed, Thursday's 196.5km stage 5 from Troyes to Nevers has sprinters' stage written all over it. No doubt, some of the 50 riders who are now five or so minutes behind on GC will try to get away in long-distance breaks. But as happened on stages 1, 2 and 3, the teams of sprinters Alessandro Petacchi, Erik Zabel, Robbie McEwen and Baden Cooke should again bring the race back together before the end.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: lancearmstrong; letour
Just to point out how dominating this ride was for USPS, they now own the top EIGHT places in the overall Tour standings:


1 008 PENA Victor Hugo COL USP in 13h 44' 44"

2 001 ARMSTRONG Lance USA USP at 00' 01"

3 004 EKIMOV Vjatceslav RUS USP at 00' 05"

4 005 HINCAPIE George USA USP at 00' 05"

5 009 RUBIERA José Luis ESP USP at 00' 23"

6 002 HERAS Roberto ESP USP at 00' 27"

7 007 PADRNOS Pavel CZE USP at 00' 27"

8 006 LANDIS Floyd USA USP at 00' 28"

9 011 BELOKI Joseba ESP ONE at 00' 33"

10 015 JAKSCHE Jorg GER ONE at 00' 38"

1 posted on 07/09/2003 4:06:49 PM PDT by TomB
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To: jern; auboy; ewing; MEG33; RetiredArmy; af_vet_rr; Weimdog
Anybody have a Tour ping list?
2 posted on 07/09/2003 4:09:36 PM PDT by TomB
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To: All
We Replaced Patrick Leahy's Brains With Folger's Crystals. Let's See If Anyone Notices!

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3 posted on 07/09/2003 4:10:27 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: TomB
Men in Blue bump!
4 posted on 07/09/2003 4:10:59 PM PDT by Drango (Just 5¢ a day will end pledge drives on FreeRepublic.)
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To: TomB
I was reading Jan Ullrich's reaction/interview in the Spiegel after this team time trial and he seemed very pleased. His team is not particularly strong and he viewed their performance as something of a victory. Team Postal Service won't be able to relax too much with him lurking back there.

When do they hit the mountains- 3 days? Be seperating the wheat from the chaff then.

I note Tyler Hamilton is still hanging in there gamely as well.

Go Lance!

5 posted on 07/09/2003 4:28:16 PM PDT by Prodigal Son
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To: TomB
They are in the Alps on Saturday.

Did you see the profile for July 21 in the Pyrenees? That will be a tough day.

A Tour ping list would be great. Otherwise I will try and keep up with OLN's coverage in the internet. OLN's coverage was pretty good last year.
6 posted on 07/09/2003 4:36:58 PM PDT by PhilSC
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To: Prodigal Son
Mountains are soon, and your right, the wannabes will fall to the back.

This maybe of interest to some, not sure the significance, but last night through next week, a half hour before the evening Tour coverage, they will be showing the Running of the Bulls. If you want to see people missing a few brain cells mixing it up with bulls (and giving PETA a heart attack in the process) don't miss it.

*spoiler* Usually in the runnings, if it's bull vs man, the bull wins.

7 posted on 07/09/2003 4:37:45 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: TomB; Admin Moderator
Hi Tom. Could you please not post the results of the stages in the title please? Maybe something like "Tour de France Stage Four Results (SPOILER). Same story here. Thanks. Some of us don't get to watch it on OLN until after work.
8 posted on 07/09/2003 4:41:38 PM PDT by RoughDobermann
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To: TomB
does france even participate? or did they surrender to the competition?
9 posted on 07/09/2003 5:06:03 PM PDT by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: Drango
Blue Man Group bump!
10 posted on 07/09/2003 5:12:19 PM PDT by ChadGore (Kakkate Koi!)
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To: TomB
LanceArmstrong.com
The Boys in Blue left no doubts about who - as a whole - is the strongest team in the 2003 Tour de France. While main rivals ONCE and Bianchi certainly came out strong, it was Lance and the boys who literally shifted gears upward as the stage progressed: 7th at the 18 km check, 2nd at the 44.5 time hack, and then 1st from 59 kms to the end.

But the day still had to be played out as each team started on a wide, yellow start ramp before heading out onto the 69 km / 42.9 mi course. The weather was not much of a factor - temps were in the upper 70s / lower 80s, but the winds were light and the conditions consistent for everyone concerned.

One question that got answered nicely was could Tyler Hamilton even finish the stage, broken collarbone and all? The American CSC leader dug deep and did indeed finish with his team, logging a 10th place finish, 1'45" back to USPS. He'll now tough it out as best he can; his next real test coming Saturday as the roads go upward...

Team ONCE, regarded by most as one of, if not the best, TTT folks in the world, really missed TT specialist Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano. Their effort was definitely strong in support of Beloki, but now he faces a precious 32 second deficit to Lance. Jan Ullrich and his Bianchi teammates also looked very good today, nabbing third on the day and JU is now just 38 seconds back to Lance.

So the stage seems to be set as a winnowing process has certainly occurred - is it now a 3 man race between Lance, Ullrich, and Botero? Right now it would seem to be, but there is lots more to come - but first some celebrating in Camp USPS tonight: Victor Hugo Pena is the new GC leader - the first Colombian rider to ever get that honor - and tomorrow's his birthday to boot!


Graham Watson, professional photographer

Lance: "Everybody dug deep - George and Eki were machines.
I just kept asking Victor, Which jersey do you want to wear at the end of the stage?..."

11 posted on 07/09/2003 5:26:01 PM PDT by concentric circles (User name for sale - no longer needed)
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To: longtermmemmory
does france even participate? or did they surrender to the competition?

Q: why did they ban fireworks at the Tour de France?

A: 'Cause everytime they went off, the French riders would throw their hands in the air and surrender!

12 posted on 07/09/2003 8:01:09 PM PDT by Drango (Just 5¢ a day will end pledge drives on FreeRepublic.)
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To: TomB
Victor Pena will wear the Yellow for a second straight day as no changes at the top after the stage on Thursday. Lance remains one little second behind him and the mountains loom. I am excited about watching Lance and Herr Jan battle on the hills!
13 posted on 07/10/2003 8:59:50 AM PDT by RetiredArmy (We'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American Way! Toby Keith)
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To: TomB
USPS bump!

Go Lance!

14 posted on 07/10/2003 6:10:16 PM PDT by nutmeg
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To: RetiredArmy
They had a clip during today's coverage of Lance actually joking with a camera crew that was filming him DURING THE RACE! I've followed the Tour coverage for the past few years and I've never seen him do that before.

He look extraordinarily relaxed. That should make his rivals VERY, VERY nervous.

15 posted on 07/10/2003 6:16:48 PM PDT by TomB
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