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Tour de France

Tour de France to take off in Nice as France stands 'resilient' amid Covid-19

The 2020 Tour de France starts in Nice on Saturday under the shadow of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is uncertain if the three-week race will end with its usual finale on the Champs Elysees in Paris.

The Tour de France will start in Nice. Here the Tour de France departure logo at the Boulevard des Anglais in Nice.
The Tour de France will start in Nice. Here the Tour de France departure logo at the Boulevard des Anglais in Nice. AFP
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In a globally popular event broadcast in 190 countries, 22 teams will race across 3,484km, cycling past breathtaking scenery in the French countryside.

The organisers of the Grand Boucle, as it is known, also hope to provide a new blueprint for sports in the time of Covid-19.

Defending champion Colombian Egan Bernal is again a good bet for the overall leader's fabled yellow jersey, along with Slovenian strongman Primoz Roglic . French cyclist Thibaut Pinot is also a strong contender for the legendary race that crosses all five of France's mountain ranges.

Chairs in the colours of the Tour de France jersies at the Promenade des Anglais in the French Riviera city of Nice where the race starts on Saturday
Chairs in the colours of the Tour de France jersies at the Promenade des Anglais in the French Riviera city of Nice where the race starts on Saturday AFP

Masterplan

Bernal's Ineos team boss, Dave Brailsford, told reporters by video conference Friday that he had stuck with his 21-day masterplan for an eighth victory in nine years as he felt the Tour would indeed make it all the way to the Champs Elysees' cobblestones.

"It's important for sport and important for society, but we don't know, nobody knows [if the Tour will make it to Paris], but the organisers particularly deserve a lot of credit and they really have done everything possible to make it work."

Route of the 2020 edition of the Tour de France.
Route of the 2020 edition of the Tour de France. © Wikimedia Commons

The French authorities feel the cultural impact of the race is important enough to risk even in the uncertain times of the coronavirus pandemic.

"The Tour de France should provide a sign that we can continue to live, that our society is resilient," said French health minister Olivier Veran a day after the Prime Minister put 19 regions into a coronavirus red zone.

Team Mitchelton at the presentation of the teams, two days before the start of the tour in Nice, 27 August 2020.
Team Mitchelton at the presentation of the teams, two days before the start of the tour in Nice, 27 August 2020. AFP

When the race sets off Saturday from the Promenade des Anglais in chic seaside Nice, only a few dozen people will be present.

Fewer fans

In the low Alps outside Nice on Sunday the 176 riders will likely see fewer fans on the roadside after vehicles were banned, meaning the packed ranks of camper vans are off the menu this year.

The action could explode Sunday with Julian Alaphilippe, a Frenchman who led the race for 14 heady days in 2019, promising to again try and make an early grab for the yellow jersey.

Female touch: French rider Julian Alaphilippe is helped by a hostess to put on the overall leader's yellow jersey early in last year's Tour de France
Female touch: French rider Julian Alaphilippe is helped by a hostess to put on the overall leader's yellow jersey early in last year's Tour de France AFP/File

The real action is likely to be the war of attrition between the two strongest teams Ineos and Jumbo.

Both squads will be concerned that limited warm up time could make the race less predictable and wary of outliers capable of summoning a massive climb performance.

"I'll have to be patient," says Pinot, who rides for French team Groupama-FDJ and is still trying to become the first Frenchman to win the Tour since Bernard Hinault in 1985.

"I'm tougher and stronger than last year," promised Pinot, who pulled out with injury deep into the 2019 Tour.

There are also several diminutive Colombian climbers ready to pounce.

“Never look back”

Dutch outfit Jumbo boast not only former ski-jumper Roglic, but also Dutch former Giro winner Tom Dumoulin, in a line up that was too strong for Ineos in warm up races.

Tom Dumoulin of Jumbo-Visma waiting for the virtual Amstel Gold race to start
Tom Dumoulin of Jumbo-Visma waiting for the virtual Amstel Gold race to start ANP/AFP

Shaken by Jumbo's form, Brailsford dropped two former Tour winners, Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas.

"You can never look back," Brailsford said on Friday.

"I'm very excited about this young team with an experienced support cast. Egan deserves the leadership. He's a brilliant rider, a huge talent."

Whoever emerges from the sunflowers and the chateaux wearing the yellow jersey atop the popular culminating climb of La Planche des Belles Filles, will have won one of the most hotly anticipated Tours in its 107 year history.

(With AFP)

 

 

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