For Schleck, its now or never as Tourmalet looms in last Pyrenees stage at Tour de France
By Jamey Keaten, APThursday, July 22, 2010
Schleck ready for ‘queen stage’ at Tour de France
PAU, France — For Andy Schleck, it’s make or break time at the Tour de France.
The 25-year-old Luxembourg rider says he knows he’ll be on the spot in Thursday’s “queen stage” of the race, needing to overcome his eight-second deficit to defending champion Alberto Contador during the final day in the Pyrenees.
The 17th stage features three tough climbs along a 108.1-mile ride from Pau to an uphill finish on the Tourmalet pass — one of the most wrenching ascents in pro cycling.
Schleck knows three other stages loom before Sunday’s finish in Paris. But for a climber of his pedigree, and with the Spaniard one the world’s top riders in time-trials — one of which awaits Saturday — he has to make a move now if he wants to take home the yellow jersey.
“There’s only one way and that is the climb of the Tourmalet,” Schleck said at a Saxo Bank team news conference on Wednesday’s rest day.
This year’s Tour marks the centennial of the race’s first run in the Pyrenees, so race organizers gave it a particularly tricky challenge: two runs over the Tourmalet — over both sides.
“It’s definitely the highlight of this Tour,” said Schleck. “I always said the guy who has yellow tomorrow will have the yellow in Paris … Tomorrow is definitely the queen stage.”
Riders will also scale two category-1 climbs — the Col du Soulor and the Col de Marie-Blanque — the final two miles of which are at a leg-straining gradient of more than 11 percent.
The ride starts at an altitude of 541 feet in Pau; by the finish, the racers will have scaled three successive peaks of about 3,280 feet, 4,920 feet and finally 6,890 feet.
With Schleck telegraphing his intentions to attack, Contador will know what’s coming. The ultimate question on the day is whether the Spaniard will have the gusto and the legs to keep up.
One wild card will be the weather: driving rain showered the region of southwestern France overnight, and the forecast was for cool temperatures — which tend to dampen the appetite and ability to lead attacks.
Schleck says he’ll need a lead of at least one minute over Contador coming out of the Pyrenees if he hopes to stop the Spaniard during the 32.3-mile time trial on Saturday.
Contador wasn’t making assumptions about winning his third Tour just yet. He said Thursday’s stage would be “very, very hard.”
“We can have very big gaps in that stage, probably more than in the time trial.”
For days, the race has been a two-man show, with pre-race hopefuls including Denis Menchov of Russia, Ivan Basso of Italy, and — most of all — seven-time champion Lance Armstrong, all seemingly too far back to threaten Schleck and Contador.
Spain’s Samuel Sanchez is 2 minutes behind compatriot Contador, and Menchov is another 13 seconds back — gaps that could be overcome on such a big mountain stage.
Armstrong, who’s ruled himself out of the running — the Texan is in 25th place overall, 33:46 behind Contador — could still mount a surprise: He’s been gunning for a stage win in his final Tour.
“It’s not yet finished,” said Johan Bruyneel, manager of Armstrong’s RadioShack team. “We’re going to try again.”
Frenchman Anthony Charteau hopes to wrap up the title of King of the Mountains — the polka-dot jersey. His closest chaser for that honor is 39-year-old countryman Christophe Moreau.
As for the yellow, despite bearing the strains of three tough days in the Pyrenees already, Schleck predicted he’ll have a good ride on Thursday, and says he still has some energy left.
What gives me a lot of confidence is that I just feel I haven’t given everything yet,” he said. “I still haven’t spoken my last word on this Tour.”
Associated Press Writer Naomi Koppel contributed to this report.
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