2009 Tour de France - Euskaltel/Euskadi Pronóstico
The orange warriors of the Basque team bring its best balanced and strongest
team to the tour. The team is aiming for a good showing and stage wins... but
where and when in the 21 days of racing will they find the opportunity and
magic?
It’s easy to make light of the chances of Basque team Euskaltel-Euskadi in
the Tour de France. One leading US publication estimated 10,000:1 as the ratio
of the number of Basque flags on the mountains to the number of stage wins by
the team. Mainly, this easy joke pays tribute to the importance the team has in
contemporary Basque society.
It might also turn out to be unintentionally prescient as the squad does have
a legitimate shot at picking up a stage win or two. Those chances partially lie
in lucky breaks going the way of the orange squad; but they also lie in the hard
work that DS Igor González de Galdeano has invested these past two years.
Before dismissing the team completely, it’s worth bearing in mind that prior
to the Olympics last year one member of the team’s staff told me that Samuel
Sanchez had, maybe, a “one per cent chance of Gold.” And look who won.
So where, and under what conditions, might the team pick up those stage wins?
First, the structure of this year’s Tour teams means that much is likely to
be unpredictable. Astana is sending 4 legitimate GC contenders to the event. It
will surely take a remarkable feat of discipline to figure out the appropriate
tactics for that team on any given day.
The defending champion is now riding for a team that struggled throughout the
Giro to protect its top rider, and at least some of Carlos Sastre’s best chances
lie in long, lethal solo attacks on the climbs. Such attacks should shatter the
field. They will also bring a response from Saxo Bank on behalf of one or other
Schleck brother. Rabobank will be sending Giro champion Denis Menchov up the
climbs. Cadel Evans seems to once again be trying to win le Tour with a solo
effort.
Put all that together, take away race radios for two stages, throw in the
flat stages made for Mark Cavendish, add the fact that Mont Ventoux is on the
penultimate day (and somebody is going to have try to save something for that
even while fending off attacks throughout the stages leading up to it) and it
should be fiendishly difficult for any team to know just how to approach many of
the race days. Several teams will be looking to take advantage of any resulting
confusion in race tactics, Euskaltel-Euskadi among them.
Euskaltel-Euskadi’s GC contender is Mikel Astarloza.
This will be his seventh tour. He finished 9th two years ago and sixteenth last
year. His form at the 2009 Dauphiné Libéré was promising, and he was more
comfortable with long solo climbs than he has been in the past. As other riders
look to keep an eye on each other, Astarloza might just be able to pull away on
one of the critical climbs and steal a march on his rivals. If his GC position
during the transition stages isn’t too great a threat to race leaders, he also
has the experience and the talent to join a long escape and help it stay away.
The team has three other potential stage winners in
Amets Txurruka, who made a splash on his 2007 tour debut, picking up
the most combative rider award, joining a long break on stage 12 that stayed
away until the final kilometer, and wearing the white jersey for best young
rider, albeit that he was “borrowing” it. Txurruka has not lost the ability to
stay away on long breaks, and his increasing experience should help him on the
road, especially those two stages that are going to be radio-free.
Additionally, the timing of the mountain stages and the need of several
teams and a bunch of riders to gauge their efforts suggest that on several
stages if the right group of riders get into a breakaway, they will be able to
stay away from a peloton unlikely to be that interested in a chase. Look for
Txurruka to contest at least one of those stages.
Koldo Fernández is Euskaltel-Euskadi’s
first legitimate sprinter. Odds have to be on Mark Cavendish to win any sprint
stage where he is with the lead group in the final kilometer, but there are two
or three other sprinters with teams capable of countering at least some of
Columbia-High Road’s lead-out efforts. On days when it is their intention,
Euskaltel-Euskadi is fielding a team that can deliver Fernández to the final
kilometer in good shape. Look for him to mix it up after this and to seek an
unexpected opening, perhaps capitalizing on other teams’ final run-in countering
of Cavendish’s moves.
The team has made it clear that Igor Antón
is going to be looking for a stage win. Last year, his campaign was marred by
injury, but anyone who saw his stage sixteen win in the 2006 Vuelta a España
between Almería and the Calar Alto observatory knows he can climb. If Astarloza
can rely on the rest of his team for support, the Euskaltel-Euskadi will be able
to send Antón on his own forays. This might happen as early as the Pyrenees and
definitely in the Alps. Who knows what Mont Ventoux will bring?
There is always at least one stage in the Tour when the day’s winner is a
surprise to everyone, and if you were to look for Euskaltel-Euskadi’s potential
“surprise,” neither former Lance Armstrong lieutenant
Egoi Martinez nor Alan Pérez
seems implausible.
In short, this is most likely the best balanced, strongest team
Euskaltel-Euskadi has yet brought to the Tour.
Predictions: Mikel Astarloza, 7th in GC. Koldo Fernández, at least one second
place stage finish. Most likely stage win, stage 11. Igor Antón, most likely
stage win, stage 9 or 17. Amets Txurruka, most likely stage win, stage 13.
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