2016 Tour De France: Stage 18 Preview

By Brendon Vella / Roar Guru

Stage 18 of the Tour sees the riders battle it out once again in the ‘race of truth’. After a difficult but fairly unselective day yesterday, the general classification contenders will not be able to follow the wheels of their fellow contenders, something which the majority have done all Tour long.

The 17-kilometre individual time trial starts along flat roads for the first four kilometres, after setting out from the town of Sallanches. However, from this point until the final few kilometres, the riders will be climbing, and the general classification men will come to the front. This is not a stage for the likes of time trial specialists like Tony Martin and Fabian Cancellera.

From the four-kilometre point the road rises to its steepest and most difficult of the stage, with the riders contending with around 2.5 kilometres at over ten per cent, with some sections above 15 per cent. However the next kilometre allows some respite, as it is only a false flat of around 1.5 per cent before the riders start the long gradual climb up to the stage’s highest point in altitude.

From the eight-kilometres point on the stage, to the 15-kilometres point, the road goes up fairly gradually, averaging around five per cent over the seven kilometres period, with sections above eight per cent.

The final two kilometres of the stage will see the riders descend down into the town of Megeve for the finish of the stage.

With the nature of the climbs on today’s course, I would be surprised to see any of the riders using time trial bikes, however, a few of the riders may use the clip on bars on their normal road bike, to get into a more aero position for the flatter sections of the course.

Chris Froome will be once again tough to beat, however, Tom Dumoulin may be the only time trial specialist that could contend on a stage like this, having already won two stages of the race – one to the top of the Arcalis on Stage 10, and then on the only other time trial of the race on Stage 13.

After a difficult stage yesterday, most of the general classification men will be hoping to not concede too much time to their rivals.

Riders to watch out for today: Nairo Quintana and Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), Fabio Aru, Roman Kreuziger (Tinkoff), Romain Bardet (AG2R La Mondiale), Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo), Richie Porte and Tejay van Garderen (BMC), Serge, Joaquin Rodriguez (Katusha), Daniel Martin (Etixx-Quickstep) and Adam Yates (Orica BikeExchange).

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2016-07-21T09:29:28+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Coming good at the right end of the race, however, according to his history in grand tours, will have a very bad day at some point. Lets hope the next four days go off without a hitch for him.

AUTHOR

2016-07-21T09:28:31+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Quintana has been very good in time trials this year, finishing inside the top 10 at both the Tour of the Basque Country and the Tour of Romandie over parcours which also feature a climb. Difference is though today is really all about climbing, instead of a little climb before a mostly flat finish like the two results l mentioned above. Having said that, he looks far from the rider we have seen in the past so far this Tour.

2016-07-21T06:59:41+00:00

Rob Gremio

Roar Pro


I'm expecting Porte to do very well in this ITT, and possibly climb into a podium spot. Exciting times ahead!

2016-07-21T01:44:55+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


I think you're right. But some people recover in the 3rd week to their 'true form'. I have my doubts about Quintana doing that too. It will be interesting to watch.

2016-07-21T01:11:06+00:00

spruce moose

Guest


Not an aberration. Quintana also faded on Mont Ventoux. He was very lucky the camera incident occurred. Saved his bacon.

2016-07-21T01:08:25+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


Good analysis. This will be a decisive stage in the race for 3rd place. Will be interesting to see whether Quintana and Mollema's fading last night were an aberration, or they will fall further tonight.

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