BMC and Evans just not good enough

By Felix Lowe / Expert

It’s pretty safe to say that Cadel Evans is not going to win the Tour de France this year. This is hardly an opinion – it’s as close to a fact as something hypothetical can get.

Barring an unlikely misfortune taking out both the two top riders in the GC – Sky pair Brad Wiggins and Chris Froome – Evans will not ride into Paris wearing yellow like last year. He won’t even come close.

In fact, it would even take some kind of miraculous mishap for the Australian to better third-place Vincenzo Nibali, who so far has looked comfortably superior than the defending champion.

Although we still have two gruelling back-to-back Pyrenean stages coming up after the rest day, Evans is now relying on others crumbling more than himself excelling – and that is a dangerous game.

It’s like entering the final game of a football season knowing that not only do you have to win your remaining match convincingly, your main rivals also have to lose their corresponding fixture (and they’re playing a team everyone expects them to beat).

In this situation, all you can do is play your own game, keep your own side of the bargain, and hope that everything else falls into place. Things are essentially out of Cadel’s hands.

We saw glimpses of the attacking spirit of Evans in the Alps, most notably with his attempt to pull away of his rivals on the Col du Glandon in stage 11.

He managed to open up a small gap as he rejoined team-mate Tejay van Garderen out ahead – but as soon as it became glaringly obvious that Cuddles was struggling to keep up with the pace of the young American, I knew his attack would not only be reeled in but that Evans would lose time at the finish.

And so it was. Distanced on the final ascent to La Toussuire, Evans lost his second place to Froome and dropped off the podium into fourth place. “I hate coming fourth,” Evans harrumphed on the second rest day in Pau. But anything better seems unlikely now.

On paper, Wednesday’s stage to Bagneres de Luchon could shake things up. Almost 200km long, it features four of the most iconic climbs in the Pyrenees – the Col d’Aubisque, Col du Soulor, Col du Tourmalet and Col de Peyresourde.

But going too early would be to commit the same mistake Evans made on the Col du Glandon – while leaving it to the last climb would be risky given the 16km run down to the finish where things could come back together.

Thursday’s short but beastly 144km stage to Peyragudes with its summit finish may be a better option – yet if Sky still have numbers going into the final climb, then their leading duo will be hard to crack.

The clear obstacle for both Evans and the other second-tier GC riders is the fact that Sky are just so formidable.

With Christian Knees and Edvald Boasson Hagen driving the pace coming into the hills and Australian pair Mick Rogers and Richie Porte riding robotically on the front as the roads head up, Sky have the upper hand coming into each major mountain – and that is even before the yellow jersey and his ‘understudy’ Froome come into play.

As Evans’s succinctly put it – Sky are “making it difficult to do stuff”.

“Sky have just shown their strength and they’ve all really come out firing,” he said. “Their seven riders on the front have been incredible. There performance in the time trial from their two leaders was also incredible.

“Their riders are all on the best form of their lives. They ride a continuous tempo especially on the climbs.”

The likes of Nibali, Evans and fifth-place Jurgen van den Broeck have to try and disrupt Sky’s rhythm. But this is easier said than done: both the Liquigas and Lotto teams of Nibali and van den Broeck are part set up to help their sprinters Peter Sagan and Andre Greipel, while Evans’s own BMC team are – with the exception of van Garderen – largely invisible in the mountains.

If you do manage to disrupt Sky’s game, then the next thing one of the GC pretenders will have to do is drive a wedge between Wiggins and Froome. But while it would be nigh-on impossible to expect both men to crack – were one to fade, then it would only strengthen further the other’s GC ambitions.

BMC team manager John Lelangue nevertheless remained upbeat on the rest day, putting a positive spin on his team’s performance by stressing their full quota and their offensive tactics. “We have Cadel close to the podium for the moment but we still have the two Pyrenean king stages of the Tour,” he added optimistically.

These are just empty words. The truth is that last year Cadel Evans did not win the Tour de France because of the showing of his team – he did so because he was the best individual rider in a race in which no one team stood out for its strength in depth.

This year BMC have bought pretty much the same team as last year – but it just isn’t good enough in a year where i) Evans is nowhere near the same level individually, and where ii) there’s a team like Sky in the mix.

Team Sky this year are incomparable to what they were like last year. Only three riders from this year’s dominant force featured in 2011 – one of whom, Wiggins, crashed out. Rogers and Porte hadn’t found their calling. Froome, a relative unknown, was also absent; his breakthrough in the Vuelta still months away.

In one year, Sky have completely changed the game. They have raised the bar so high most teams in the Tour look like Pro Continental outfits in comparison.

BMC have been totally outclassed – in virtually every department.

They are a team which greedily spent big on riders like Thor Hushovd and Philippe Gilbert (both without a win this season) instead of signing some high calibre climbers ahead of a Tour that was only ever going to be won in the mountains, what with Wiggins such a dominant time triallist.

They are a team which (in this case, understandably) chose sentiment over sense – picking George Hincapie for a record 18th Tour instead of a rider who could aid Evans in the hills.

They are a team reduced to having a masseur struggle to change their leader’s back wheel after he had to wait more than a minute for a second team-mate to arrive at the top of a mountain (afterthe first, van Garderen, refused to offer his wheel).

They are a team whose grip on events was perfectly encapsulated by manager Jim Ochowicz falling over in a roadside ditch twice while Evans flatted a third time en route to Foix.

In short, in a Tour that looks to be won because of the brilliance of one team, BMC are just not good enough for a leader who is not the same individual rider he was 12 months ago and whose demise in the GC is entirely logical.

Collectively, Sky are better than BMC; individually, Sky have two better riders than Evans, who may not even be the strongest Australian of the two squads. It’s hard to see how the defending champion can turn things round now.

The Crowd Says:

2012-07-19T01:38:26+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


I think Wiggins may be the main man in a new Brittish team in a couple of years, they will ride the excitment and try to get another team. THe sport is booming in England and a Brittish Wiggins v Brittish Froome in sepoarate brittish teams would be a great thing.

2012-07-18T14:49:59+00:00

someone

Guest


As of now, Cadel is gone. Not even a chance of podium, forget it.

AUTHOR

2012-07-18T11:10:55+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Ha, I wonder what Chris Froome would say about that?! But you're right. I can see Wiggins stepping down over the next few years, Porte perhaps being the man for the Giro or Vuelta, and Froome having a pop as leader on the Tour. Then after his contract is up, Porte will join GreenEdge. Makes sense.

AUTHOR

2012-07-18T11:09:06+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Yep. Ruled him out. As I write, we're one climb down. Three more to go. Sky still in control. Just can't see it happening. Remember - he needs to take back more than one or two minutes - he really needs to be in yellow before the ITT if he wants to stand a chance. It's not going to happen!

AUTHOR

2012-07-18T11:07:24+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Retirement at the end of 2013 wouldn't surprise me. Next year he may even ride as a lieutenant for a younger rider like van Garderen, or perhaps a new signing. There is talk of BMC buying out Chris Froome's contract at Sky...

AUTHOR

2012-07-18T11:03:48+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Why? Primarily for the reasons given above - not a strong enough team in the face of a powerful Sky machine, and not good enough individual form. Why is his form not so good? Well, he's a year older and he did struggle with a sinus infection at the beginning of the season at a time when Sky were fine-tuning their Tour preparations with a win in Paris-Nice for Wiggins. Also, I don't think we can overlook the fact that perhaps last year's win for Evans was the cherry on the top of his career. Before that, he had had two dismal Tours. In 2011 it all came together at the right time - including Contador's patchy form. It was the crowning moment of his career - and perhaps the motivation just isn't there for him anymore. Wiggins mentioned this in an interview - not with malice, just plain honesty. For years and years Evans finished second or third. Now he's won once, perhaps that's enough for him. Either way, he certainly doesn't have the same hunger this season. He is, as you mention, also a father now so that is another distraction. Crucially, though, Evans didn't come up against a powerful team with two strong leaders last year. Team Sky have been extraordinarily strong this year - and that has been a huge factor. Last year's Tour did not include Froome not did it include Wiggins, really. And it certainly didn't include a team with such all-round strength.

2012-07-18T10:31:28+00:00

Sam

Guest


Spot on analysis, Felix. BMC brought along a similar, classics heavy support squad for Cadel - because, hey, it worked last year, didnt it. Sky determined the Tour would be won in the mountains - week 1 was just to be got through as safely as possible. As we know, they suffered in losing Kosta Suitsou early on - which makes what they're doing with 8 men vs BMC's 9, even more impressive. Andy Rihs has more money than sense, and will wave the checkbook around to buy in the names, rather than what the team actually need - and they need more climbers. Cadel is not quite the rider he was last year - I wouldnt be surprised if he retires in the next year or so - and he doesnt have the team around him to really help him when and where he needs it. As for Ritchie Porte - GT leader for Sky in next 2 years without doubt.

2012-07-18T09:45:50+00:00

Trojan

Guest


You've ruled out Cuddles before the Queen stage? Right. Wiggans weakness will be the next 2 nights. Let's just wait and see before we rule out Nibali and Evans.

2012-07-18T09:26:14+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


I thought Teejay had actually gone past him when Cadel yelled to him, it would be easy to not hear someone with the crowd noise and wind in your ears. Teejay is not stupid, he would have to realise that he needs to perform to keep his contract and to be the next BMC number 1 after Evans. I think a lot of number one and two riders would be scared of Froome having his contract bought out and taking their spot

2012-07-18T07:15:06+00:00

sittingbison

Guest


Bush I think it was a little disingenuous of Felix to insinuate van Garderen "refused" to give Cadel his wheel. He is leading the prestigious "Young Rider" white jersey category by a small margin, and another team mate Cummins was relatively close (although he ended having a rear flat as well).

2012-07-18T06:39:12+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


Many ppl think the same as you do Brian but i guess it's hard to organise a race (outside the WC) where cyclists ride as a nation rather than a team. Cycling as always be a 'sponsors sport' so i dont think they would agree to lose their stars for a very high profile race, especially a 2-3 week Tour. Agree re-Schleck. Alos have to admit that a tour without Contador is not the same. But we know the reasons behind.

2012-07-18T04:04:16+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


If your "team mate" isn't stopping to give you his tyre, how can they honestly expect to win against a team who appears so focused on getting their leader over the line?

2012-07-18T03:49:55+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Still looking forward to these next two mountain stages though!

2012-07-18T03:11:48+00:00

tonysalerno

Roar Guru


It is getting away from Cadel Evans very quickly... in fact its gone. Sky racing have had a fantastic tour de France thus far and it is just a matter of which rider will don the yellow jersey. Wiggins over Froome most likely.

2012-07-18T01:51:18+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


To get into the Super XV finals, the QLD Reds had to score four or more tries, gaining a bonus point, as well as win their last regular season game, and have one of four teams above them lose to relatively weaker, lower table teams. It happened, with the other Australian team, the ACT Brumbies cracking and losing fairly convincingly. It could happen. Brabury could happen. Isn't looking likely though. Shame.

2012-07-18T01:35:18+00:00

Justin Curran

Roar Rookie


It certainly seems to be game, set and match to Sky. Maybe age is catching up with Evans. He is one of the oldest of the top GC contenders in the race, and he can't be expected to stay at the same level forever. I suppose we were all hoping that maybe he could maintain it for at least this year and maybe next. He has already floated the idea of retirement after the 2013 season.

2012-07-18T00:54:23+00:00

Brian

Guest


What would be good would be a tour between nations once every 4 years like a World Cup. It could rotate hosts and would really generate interest in a place like Australia. On the tour itself yes Sky are too superior. What this tour really needed was an in form A Schleck with his brother for support to test Sky in the mountains.

2012-07-18T00:12:30+00:00

The Kiwi

Guest


I agree with the overall message you're giving - that neither Evans nor BMC are good enough this year. Evans in particular seems weaker than he was last year. But, you're pretty much stating the obvious. What would have made this article really interesting is some analysis on "why" Evans is weaker (distraction of being the last winner, distraction of being a father, virus, age etc)?

2012-07-18T00:05:59+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


I would kill to see a sprint with lines marking out lanes for the last 500m of a flat race, with only one sprinter from each team allowed, without drafting it would make an interesting sight. Cant wait for the track racing at London to come around

2012-07-17T22:38:23+00:00

Al-Bo

Guest


That's true and Porte's talked of as being the better rider of the two. Every year, the day after the Tour, they should have an "every man for himself" race with no team loyalty.

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