Tour de France, '07: Stage 18 Preview: Paris Is On The Horizon — Good!
http://www.byjamesraia.com/articles/67/1/Tour-de-France-03907-Stage-18-Preview-Paris-Is-On-The-Horizon-a-Good/Page1.html
By James Raia
Published on 07/26/2007
There are three riding days to Paris and the end of the 2007 Tour de France. And it's a safe assumption, the peloton can't wait.
Via
injury, illness and disgrace, only 141 of the starting field of 189 in
London on July 7 remain. That's about 75 percent of the original field,
and weary and frustrated those still left will face stage 18 of the
20-stage race Friday.
The field will ride 211 kilometers (131
miles) from Cahors to Angouleme on another rolling, scenic route
through the Dordogne region on a northwest trek toward Paris.
There are three riding days to Paris and the end of the 2007 Tour de France. And it's a safe assumption, the peloton can't wait.
Via
injury, illness and disgrace, only 141 of the starting field of 189 in
London on July 7 remain. That's about 75 percent of the original field,
and weary and frustrated those still left will face stage 18 of the
20-stage race Friday.
The field will ride 211 kilometers (131
miles) from Cahors to Angouleme on another rolling, scenic route
through the Dordogne region on a northwest trek toward Paris.
Like
Thursday's stage, the 18th stage has several categorized climbs, all in
the first third of the course. And also like the 17th stage, none of
the ascents are seriously challenging. The final 140 kilometers (87
miles) to the finish in the center of Angouleme, the market town and
the capital of the Charente region, are flat.
Here are the details of climbs in the 18th stage:
Km 15: Côte de Salvezou: 1.3 km climb, 6.5 percent average grade, category 4.
Km 24: Côte de Lavercantière: 1.2 km climb, 5.9 percent average grade, category 4.
Km 39.5: Côte de Saint-Martial-de-Nabirat: 1.5 km climb, 4.3 percent average grade, category 4.
Km 70.5: Côte de Saint-Cyprien: 2.8 km climb, 4.9 percent grade, category 4.
Angouleme
has only once hosted a Tour de France stage finish. In 1975, Francesco
Moser of Italy, riding his first Tour, surprised the field with an
uphill attack in the final half-mile and barely held off Belgian
sprinters Rik Van Linden and Walter Godefroot.
With the overall
top-three places already likely determined, Saturday's final individual
time trial will just determine the order in which the accolades will be
bestowed after the race final Sunday.
As such, overall title
contenders will hopefully just cruise along safely in the main field
while one-day specialists go for it in the 18th stage, If there's not a
sustained breakaway, the race's remaining sprinters will again try to
find their way to the front for another high-speed assault in the final
few hundred meters.
With the official dismissal of Michael
Rasmussen (Rabobank) of Denmark as the race leader prior to the 17th
stage, here's the top-10 overall standing entering the 18th stage:
1. Alberto Contador (Spain) Discovery Channel, 76 hours, 18 minutes, 25 seconds.
2. Cadel Evans (Australia) Predictor-Lotto, 1 minute, 53 seconds behind.
3. Levi Leipheimer (USA/Santa Rosa, Calif.), Discovery Channel, 2:49 behind.
4. Carlos Sastre (Spain) Team CSC, 6:02 behind.
5. Haimar Zubeldia (Spain ) Euskaltel-Euskadi, 6:29 behind.
6. Alejandro Valverde (Spain) Caisse d'Epargne, 10:18 behind.
7. Kim Kirchen (Luxembourg) T-Mobile, 11:36 behind.
8. Yaroslav Popovych (Ukraine) Discovery Channel, 12:50 behind.
9. Mauricio Soler (Colombia) Barloworld, 13:31 behind.
10. Mikel Astarloza (Spain) Euskaltel-Euskadi, 13:42 behind.