Tour de France 2013: team leader special - part I

By Tim Renowden / Expert

While there is no question winning – and even finishing – the Tour de France is a team effort, inevitably only one man in a team of nine will be covered in glory at the finish line.

Today we look at the team leaders of seven of the 22 teams lining up for the 2013 Tour de France, including our very own Tour hopeful Cadel Evans and Slovakian superstar Peter Sagan:

AG2R-La Mondiale
Leader: Jean-Christophe Péraud.
Goal: Top 10 on general classification.
Roar prediction: Leaving Carlos Betancur at home is a mistake.

The AG2R squad is all French. Not a single foreigner. More French than Gerard Depardieu dipping a croissant in a bucket of champagne while wearing Chanel No.5 and singing Edith Piaf as he rides a Peugeot.

Sorry.

The brown shorts will be led by the 36 year-old former mountain biker Frenchman Jean-Christophe Péraud, whose best place finish at the Tour was ninth, in 2011.

So far, this sounds less than promising, but France’s Péraud has had an excellent season, with a third place overall at Paris-Nice, fifth at the Criterium International, and sixth at the Tour of Romandie.

A top 10 finish in the GC should be a realistic goal for this distinctly Gallic team, with the support of Frenchman Maxime Bouet, France’s Romain Bardet, and Samuel Dumoulin of France.

French riders Christophe Riblon, Blel Kadri, Hubert Dupont, Sébastien Minard and Christophe Riblon, all of France, will be riding in support of Péraud.

Colombian sensation Carlos Betancur and Italian climber Rinaldo Nocentini were left out of the AG2R squad on grounds of form, obviously.

Argos-Shimano
Leader: John Degenkolb and Marcel Kittel.
Goal: Sprint stages.
Roar prediction: Two of the biggest threats outside of Cavendish/Greipel.

Argos-Shimano has taken the unusual step of naming two sprinters as leaders. Normally you’d expect a debilitating clash of egos as they fought each other for the same leadout wheel, but Degenkolb and Kittel seem to actually get on with each other.

Officially, Kittel is the man for the flat sprints, and Degenkolb gets first dibs on the hilly sprints. In reality, they’ll both be going for every sprint on offer.

Hopefully they can stay out of each other’s way.

Astana
Leader: Jakob Fuglsang.
Goal: Top 10 on GC.
Roar prediction: A strong team won’t be enough to get Fuglsang onto the podium.

Astana has the best stage racer in the world at the moment, Giro champion Vincenzo Nibali, but he’s not riding the Tour. Instead, the teal army will be led by the relatively unknown Jakob Fuglsang of Denmark.

Fuglsang rode to a strong fourth place overall at the Dauphine and, if a crash last week at the team training camp in Tenerife hasn’t done too much damage, he should be considered an outside podium chance, given his climbing ability and strength against the clock.

The Kazakh team has a chequered history with this race, having been booted off the Tour for doping (2007), and being the scene of a memorable feud between Alberto Contador and a returning Lance Armstrong, as Contador went on to win (2009).

in 2013, Astana is one of the few teams with the depth to control a Grand Tour, and they will be one of the keys to upsetting Sky’s rhythm.

Unfortunately with such a history of doping and alleged bribery, they’re still a difficult team to love.

Blanco/Belkin
Leader: Bauke Mollema.
Goal: Top 10 on GC.
Roar prediction: Perhaps a top 10, but stage wins are a better option for the Dutch rouleurs.

A new sponsor and a new leader for the team formerly-known-as-Blanco.

Bauke Mollema is the newly-sponsored team’s leader, getting the nod over perennial next-big-thing Robert Gesink, who will ride in support.

Blanco Directeur Sportif Nico Verhoeven had this to say about the team’s aims for Mollema:

“We are looking to score a good classification with him. We are aiming for the top ten but in fact we’re simply trying for the maximum achievable.

“We could say that we’d like Bauke to finish fourth, but if he then finishes fourth when second was within grasp, I’d say we’d be less satisfied.

“But if it turns out that he is seventh and that is the best result we could have expected, then we’d be happy with that.”

So, that’s pretty clear, then.

Blanco brings plenty of other cards to the table, with Sep Vanmarcke and Lars Boom providing some serious punch, and Laurens ten Dam also dangerous in a breakaway.

BMC
Leader: Cadel Evans.
Goal: Overall victory.
Roar prediction: Evans has one more big Tour in him.

BMC has faced the age-old Hollywood dilemma in selecting its leader. Do you pick a proven veteran who many suspect is past his best, or a young star bursting with potential but without the hard-won experience of his elder rival?

BMC management has decided that Cadel Evans is, after his strong ride at the Giro, definitely not too old for this shit.

Evans’ third place at the Giro shows he is in much better form than in 2012, even if he was not quite at his best on the steeper climbs and in the individual time trial, where he dropped big chunks of time to Nibali.

Evans seems confident he will recover properly from his Giro exertions, and seems happy with the team around him:

“I am happy to have my three ‘guardian angels’ – (Manuel) Quinziato, (Marcus) Burghardt and (Michael) Schär – around me, plus Brent (Bookwalter), Amaël (Moinard) and Steve (Morabito) from our successful 2011 team.

“And with Tejay (van Garderen) coming into the mix, we are a lot stronger in the mountains than in past years.”

Tejay Van Garderen is named as a support rider for at least one more year, but if Evans has a bad day in the Alps, expect his understudy to pounce.

The young American is fresh and confident from his first stage race victory in the Tour of California, and has been talking the talk about being ready for Grand Tour success.

Philippe Gilbert is the other top rider for BMC, and will be trying to pinch stage wins, after another slow start to the year.

Cannondale
Leader: Peter Sagan.
Goal: Green jersey and multiple stage wins.
Roar prediction: Sagan to arm-wrestle Cavendish for green jersey dominance.

Peter Sagan is the designated Cannondale leader, and the team will focus on stage wins and the green jersey.

As the team’s website says, Sagan’s aim is “to try to win again the points classification and be one of the stars of the race” – it’s hard to see Sagan doing anything but starring, although he’ll have stiff competition for the green jersey from Mark Cavendish.

It’s a little while since Cannondale (or its previous iterations) arrived at Le Tour without a GC hope, but with Ivan Basso recovering from a bout of saddle sores that forced him to stand out of the Giro, and the departure of Vincenzo Nibali since last year, the team is relying on Sagan to produce some fireworks.

Italian rising star Moreno Moser is Cannondale’s second leader, in his first Grand Tour. Moser won Strade Bianche earlier this year, and seemed set for a breakout classics campaign, but his form has been underwhelming since. Moser has been given a licence to hunt stage wins, which for him means getting in breakaways.

Cofidis
Leader: Jérôme Coppel, Dani Navarro, Rein Taaramae.
Goal: TV coverage.
Roar prediction: a team divided is a team that won’t win anything.

The French team with the sharpest kit in pro cycling has named three leaders for the Tour: Jérôme Coppel, Dani Navarro, and Rein Taaramae.

You may think it’s strange to name one-third of your team as leaders. I think it’s pretty clear the team doesn’t really know who’s going to be in the best shape after a week.

Navarro’s best result this year is fifth overall at the Dauphine, where he looked really strong, and to me he is the most likely captain when the race hits its stride.

Taaramae finished 11th at the 2011 Tour, but hasn’t had a great 2013 apart from the Estonian national championships, which isn’t exactly top-tier competition. He is a good climber, but whether he can stay with the elite group in the big mountains is another question.

Coppel also hasn’t set the world on fire this year, but at least he’s French, and a French team needs a French leader (see AG2R).

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-26T14:24:46+00:00

Chris

Guest


Agree Tim and I hope your optimistic view is the better and right one (but right or wrong I will always watch as many races as I can! It is not any different to other sports in that regard in anycase). I agree with your comment on corroborating evidence but also wonder, if on at least some of those, a lesson of knowing/monitoring the numbers/times/outputs is now just learnt (i.e. go up to but don't cross a particular line). I guess we will see over time. On this TDF, I have a strong feeling (and hope) there will be a few surprises and I am looking forward to the race, as well as reading your articles as we go.

2013-06-25T23:41:05+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


Talking about doping all the headlines in France are about Jalabert's EPO taking in the 1998 tour which was revealed a couple of days ago. He has officially withdrawn from his consultant job with France television in order to prepare his defence. Same old really.

AUTHOR

2013-06-25T21:51:47+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Hmm. There's a lot to be written about this. I agree that more boring racing on its own is not proof of less doping, but when you combine it with corroborating evidence like slower times on climbs, lower W/kg results (and other physiological indicators), it starts to look more promising. Maybe I'm just too optimistic. Sky utterly controlled the race last year, but I think much of the suspicion on Sky comes because "how can they have so many riders at such a high level?" and history has taught us to be skeptical. That's fair enough.

2013-06-25T14:08:49+00:00

Chris

Guest


I am unconvinced that the more boring racing (as we saw last year) is the product of less doping - in fact I am very convinced that the very boring and consistent riding by an entire team points to doping. Cycling, even grand tours, should be like other sports. There should be impressive and unexpected victories, stand out performances (on the back of some consistent record that logically leads to that achievement) and the freakish go all out (and probably than later fail) performances. And there should be those consistent defendants to a title. The margins should generally be minor so the racing should always be exciting (not boring) at the elite level. When we see complete domination, except in those rare one in a century athletes (and I mean one person not an entire team), we should be suspicious. So is cycling clean? No I don't think so, if it were the margins would be much less. Don't get me wrong, I love this sport and I will spend many nights (as I have done in the past) watching it until I have bags under my eyes - I also spent a good part of my life as a track and road cyclist. However it would be niave to suggest organised and sophisticated doping (not able to be detected) is no longer present. I just hope that the cyclists who I love and admire are not on the gear. My advice, always look at the cycling history, e.g. if a time trailist suddenly becomes a colombian mountain goat, then be concerned. The proof of non-doping, in the absence of an effective doping testing program, is always in a steady and consistent improvement record.

AUTHOR

2013-06-25T11:57:57+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


G'day Cam. Yes, the racing is definitely more conservative now, and the times on major climbs are typically slower. Is that less exciting? Maybe, but I'm cool with that.

2013-06-25T08:35:02+00:00

Cam Baker

Roar Rookie


Tim - Do you think that the reduction in doping over the last few years has / will lead to what we might consider to be more boring racing? Where people win the tour by not having a bad day as opposed to breaking off the front and gaining time. It seems to me like there just isn't the same chance of a single rider dominating a stage as in the past. No one seems to break away from the bunch until there is only 1 or 2 km to go where as my (perhaps romantic) memories of past races was of now proven dopers looking over their shoulder with 10km of climbing to go and just taking off.

2013-06-25T06:57:50+00:00

Kate Smart

Expert


As you know Tim, I do enjoy discussing men's fashion, especially when related to cycling. I know you're already aware that I think Movistar is the nicest kit, but I have been meaning to point out since the Giro, that maybe your love of red is a little wayward? I think the fire engine, red of Katusha is a far superior shade of the colour than the washed out Cofidis version. The Cofidis kits looks like they've been through the wash a few too many times. The red of Katusha has the depth of a Testa Rosa. It has the boldness of a Lady of the Night. It is a red for action!

AUTHOR

2013-06-25T06:50:35+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Surely Androni Giocattoli is worse than Vini Fantini (although both are horrible). Agree Lotto is very good. I also like Sky, Movistar and Radioshack.

2013-06-25T06:36:42+00:00

Bones506

Roar Guru


Picking the best team kit is like Australian politics - you work off getting the worst out first and in the end have a winner. Fantini is the worst by far - not helped by having a bunch of bloated dopers on the team. For me - Lotto. Relatively simple kit and the splash of yellow is nice.

2013-06-25T06:10:39+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


Tx Tim. Didnt know Aldo! As a kid I remember Francesco Moser's hour record attempts in Mexico, those were big things for us then! Dunno if its just me but i have the impression the hour record is now something of the past and i have not heard of any other attempts in years! Surely a Martin or Cancellara could have a go (or they might have had?)

2013-06-25T04:06:05+00:00

Dive Pass

Guest


Nice write up! The AG2R section had me chuckling. I'd be surprised if Evans is on the podium this year, notwithstanding his being tough as nails. (Mind you, I had him written off in 2011, so what do I know?) Really hoping Kittel or Greipel can give Cavendish a nudge in the sprints.

AUTHOR

2013-06-25T01:10:18+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Hi Nick, Moreno Moser is the nephew of Francesco Moser and Aldo Moser who was also a champion rider. With a name like that comes a lot of expectation, but so far he seems like a real talent. I don't think Sagan can be top-20 this year, he's too heavy and there are too many long climbs. I think he can definitely get over some medium lumpy stages and win sprints that Cavendish, Goss and Greipel can't reach, and that will keep him in the green jersey hunt, but I don't think he can ride a strong GC this year.

2013-06-25T00:45:57+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


Quite agree that French teams are mostly there to 'show the jersey' rather than win the Tour. Tbh I think Betancur had the potential to outshine Peraud and it's something the managers might have taken into consideration when not selecting him. The French want a home grown hero on the TdF podiums. Pity because he is such a great cyclist to watch and he sure would have shown the Ag2r jersey too. As an aside does anyone know if the young Moser is related to Francesco? And for you Tim, do you think Sagan could aim for a top 20 finish? The bloke seems to have no limits and as we have seen TT specialists doing ok on the mountains, why not an all rounder/puncher like him. Podium girls be prepared!

AUTHOR

2013-06-25T00:30:14+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Just in case anyone is wondering where the rest of the teams are, they will be following in separate pieces. All the teams at once was too long for a single article.

AUTHOR

2013-06-24T23:42:26+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Now Felix, taste is a subjective judgment, and the Cofidis "stylised axe-wound with yellow helmet" jersey does divide opinions. I like it, it's easy to spot. Perhaps my tongue was also in my cheek. Perhaps a column on the best kit in pro cycling? Nominees?

2013-06-24T23:15:07+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Cofidis - the sharpest kit in pro cycling... Have you been at the bottle again, Tim?

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