Criterium du Dauphine: Prologue live cycling updates, blog

By Brendon Vella / Roar Guru

The first of two key warm up races before the Tour de France, the Criterium du Dauphine starts with a difficult prologue, a four kilometre ascension of the Montee de Chery. Join The Roar‘s live coverage of the Criterium du Dauphine from 9:30pm AEST.

A four kilometre prologue is always a nice way for a rider to get themselves into the race, but with the gradient of this parcours being at nearly ten per cent for the entirety, it is not your usual prologue.

The riders will start from the town of Les Gets, which is a ski resort throughout the year, and will climb the fearsome Montee de Cherry, a four kilometre test which averages out at over ten per cent, however, the final kilometre is above 15 per cent. Therefore, this will be a genuine general classification stage.

With many of the general classification contenders not having competed in a race for quite some time, we could see a few surprises in the order at the end of the day. However, these classification contenders are seasoned professionals, and have the ability to be able to time their training to perfection.

They will not be at 100 per cent form, however, they will be fairly close to it. Expect to see some fascinating racing over the next week in the lead-up to the Tour.

So who exactly are the main contenders for both today’s stage, and the general classification come race end?

We have only one former winner in the field, with 2015 and 2013 winner Chris Froome lining up with a Team Sky squad which looks leaps and bounds better than any team at this race in terms of climbing talent. Sky are bringing both Segio Henao (who has recently be cleared of any suspiscion in relation to doping) and Mikel Landa, who left the Giro in it’s early stages.

Also coming to the race for them includes former World Champion Michal Kwiatkowski and Liege Bastionge Liege winner Wout Poels. It is a super strong team, but Froome will be on his own on the opening day.

Former teammate of Froome, Richie Porte, headlines the squad brought by BMC. He was the best week long stage racer last year, but has cooled off on that tag this year, taking a more measured approach to his season. After imploding at the Giro last year, he obviously does not want that to happen again, hence why he has not raced as much this year until this point.

Though, he finished top five at the Volta a Catalunya, while also taking third at Paris Nice.

One rider though has dominated week long stage racing this year, and that is Spaniard Alberto Contador, who in the last week has revealed that he is looking for a new team, after previously stating that this year would be his last.

He certainly has disappointed this year, taking the Tour of the Basque Country general classification in early April, while adding second at the Volta a Catalunya, and second at Paris Nice.

Out of the three contenders mentioned above, Contador has had the longest time off the bike from racing, as his last race was the victory he took at Basque Country, whereas both Froome and Porte lined up for Romandie, three weeks later.

My tip for top Frenchmen today, and the race overall is Thibaut Pinot who has had a very good season so far. We have always known that the lad can climb, and after a few years where his descending was diabolical, he is slowly getting better at that as well.

They key gain for him this season is his time trialing ability, which in the past has been a let down. Even though it is a mountain prologue, hopefully he can still produce a good time against the clock, as he has done all season.

Other riders to look out for include Daniel Martin and Julian Alaphillipe (Etixx), Fabio Aru (Astana), Romain Bardet (AG2R La Mondiale), Adam Yates (Orica Orica-GreenEDGE ), Joaquin Rodriguez (Katusha), Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo), Daniel Moreno (Movistar) and Pierre Rolland (Cannondale).

Join The Roar‘s live coverage of the Criterium du Dauphine from 9:30pm AEST.

The Crowd Says:

2016-06-05T13:08:28+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Great stuff from Porte and Contador there. Cheers Brendon.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T13:02:44+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Well that wraps up The Roar's live coverage of the prologue of the Criterium du Dauphine. I will be back from 11 pm tomorrow for Stage 1, which is a day for the sprinters.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:57:10+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


RACE REVIEW In the first showdown ahead of the Tour De France, Alberto Contador continued on from his solid early season form to take the win ahead of Richie Porte and Chris Froome. With rain threatening to cause havoc on the later starters, Chris Froome and a few other general classification favorites including Adam Yates, Pierre Rolland and Joaquin Rodriguez elected to ride early, with Froome holding the lead of the stage till the final three riders. Contador would first break the mark set by Froome by 13 seconds, then Porte would slip ahead of Froome for 2nd, 7 seconds infront of the Brit, however still 5 seconds behind winner Contador. It was then two impressive performances from Etixx riders, with Dan Martin finsihing inside 12 minutes, with Julian Alaphillipe, fresh off his win at the Amgen Tour of California in 5th place. The full top 10 on both the stage and the general classification. 1 Alberto Contador 2 Richie Porte +6 3 Chris Froome +13 4 Daniel Martin +21 5 Julian Alaphilippe +24 6 Wout Poels +25 7 Romain Bardet +29 8 Adam Yates +31 9 Diego Rosa +37 10 Jesus Herrada +39

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:50:43+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


No time bonuses on today's stage, so the top 10 stay the same as the stage result.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:49:44+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


#Dauphine 1 Contador 2 Porte +6 3 Froome +13 4 D Martin +21 5 Alaphilippe +24 6 Poels +25 7 Bardet +29 8 Yates +31 9 Rosa +37 10 Herrada +39— Peloton Watch (@PelotonWatch) June 5, 2016
AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:47:31+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Poels finishes outside 12 minutes in 5th place.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:46:07+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Porte finishes in 2nd, 6 seconds behind Contador, 7 seconds infront of Froome.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:45:21+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Porte inside the final 300.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:44:55+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Goodness me, Contador has absolutely smashed Froome, quite a statement. The Spaniard finished 13 seconds in front of the Brit.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:44:05+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Vichot caught again, and dropped by Porte.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:43:40+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Great time from Dan Martin, finishing 8 seconds behind Froome, only the 2nd rider under 12 minutes.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:42:59+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Fabio Aru a long way behind Froome, outside the top 30. 55 seconds down.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:41:40+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Vuillermoz outside the top 10.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:41:13+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Porte also looking fairly good.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:39:22+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Contador dancing on the peddles. In some form already.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:37:36+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Contador catching Arthur Vichot infront.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:36:50+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Contador lives out of the saddle.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:35:44+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Mollema finshes outside the top 10, 35 seconds down.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:35:15+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Liege winner Wout Poels starts now, the last rider down the ramp today.

AUTHOR

2016-06-05T12:34:11+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Contador starts, now Richie Porte.

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