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Toad
10-27-2005, 09:22 PM
2006 Tour route unveiled
By Agence France Presse
This report filed October 27, 2005

The speculation is over. Some of it was right, much of it was wrong. Either way, the organizers of the Tour de France on Thursday unveiled the route of the 2006 race, officially kicking off the post-Armstrong era at France's national tour.

It will be the first Tour since 1999 not to feature seven-time winner Lance Armstrong, who is now retired, but the American was nonetheless a hot topic despite the presence of several of his potential successors.

Ivan Basso, of the CSC team, was present and was largely favorable to a race route which will feature the two traditional individual time trials, at the end of the first week and on the penultimate day.

Organizers however have removed the team time trial event - so coveted by Armstrong and his Discovery Channel teammates - from this Tour, which will begin in Strasbourg in Alsace and move counter-clockwise around the country before finishing in Paris.

Early stages will be held in the north east of France, with forays into the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany.

Ivan Basso and Jan Ullrich - Who will this Tour favor?

As the race heads south toward Bordeaux in the south west of the country, only two stages will be held in the Pyrénées, with the second of those two stages finishing in Spain for the first time since 1996.

The likes of Basso of Italy, who finished runner-up to Armstrong last year, Spain's Alejandro Valverde and other yellow jersey contenders such as Kazakhstan's Alexandre Vinokourov or Jan Ullrich of Germany will find the bulk of the challenge lies in the Alps, where three days of difficult climbing await.

The summit finish at Alpe d'Huez, which last featured as an individual time trial in 2004 after which Armstrong finally held off German rival Ullrich in what was an epic race, returns as part of the 187km long 15th stage from Gap.

The Tour will hit the Galibier next year

The following day is a 182km epic over two legendary Cols (passes) - the Col du Galibier, the Col de la Croix-Fer, then the Col du Mollard before finishing on the La Toussuire summit.

The final of three days in the Alps is the 199km 17th stage, in which four Cols and one medium-sized climb will be negotiated before the peloton races down towards Morzine - where the now-retired Richard Virenque won after an epic stage in 2003.

The final test for any of the main contenders will come on the 19th stage, a 56km individual time trial from Le Creusot to Montceau-les-Mines.

The final 20th stage is from Antony to the south of Paris to the traditional finish on the Champs Élysées.

Toad
04-28-2006, 05:19 PM
Sport continues to grow without the Lance factor:


VeloNews sees expanded interest for 2006 Official Tour de France Guide
This report filed April 28, 2006

PARIS, France -- It sounds unlikely, but even after the retirement of Lance Armstong, interest in the Official Guide to the Tour de France produced by VeloNews is considerably ahead of what it was at the same time last year. With two weeks left until space close, the 2006 Official Tour Guide has already sold more advertising pages, the newsstand draw has approximately doubled, bike shop interest is at a record high, and the issue looks likely to set an all-time record for paid circulation for the ABC-audited magazine.

While VeloNews's long-time status as the official publication of the world's biggest bicycle race and the Official Tour Guide's increased distribution are certainly positive factors, interest in the Tour de France stateside is at an all-time record for a variety of other factors:

Americans Floyd Landis, Levi Leipheimer and George Hincapie are all legitimate yellow-jersey candidates.
Media coverage, including OLN's well-received live television effort, looks set to expand upon already record levels. The Tour de France reports that 213 U.S. media representitives have requested credentials so far for the July race -- well ahead of last year's pace.
There is a booming interest in road cycling in general, with participation and dollar sales of road bikes setting records so far this spring. According to the Bicycle Product Suppliers Association, the road market grew by 29% in 2005, and is up 285% over five years. The trend continues this year, as evidenced by numerous manufacturers being out-of-stock on high-end road bikes, record event participation, and the reported 1 million+ spectators who lined the course of the Amgen Tour of California in February.
The 2006 Official Guide to the Tour de France is a high-quality, perfect-bound magazine of 180 pages. Published in June prior to the Tour starting in Strasbourg on July 1, the Guide is packed with features, photos and stats on the world's largest annual sporting event. This year's Guide offers a number of enhancements, including exclusive interviews with pre-race favorites Ivan Basso, Floyd Landis, Alexander Vinokourov, Levi Leipheimer and George Hincapie; a review of the nine years that Jan Ulrich has been in the hunt for yellow; Tom Boonen's increased ambitions beyond just the sprinter's green jersey; a first-hand look inside the French anti-doping lab that handles samples taken at the Tour; and an insider's analysis by 37-time veteran Tour journalist John Wilcockson, of the Tour's key climbs, where the race will be won and lost.

The publication also includes a special section on the North American riders and TV schedules. Besides pages of information on the teams, the athletes, the bicycles and the 21 stages of the 2006 Tour de France, the Guide will feature behind-the-scenes stories on the Tour and stunning pictures by the Tour's leading photographers. "This is a must-buy souvenir edition for every cycling fan," explains VeloNews advertising director Nick Ramey.

The Official Guide gives advertisers an exceptional opportunity to reach their key customers, who will study every page, every day during the Tour's month-long competition. The Guide is the indispensable armchair companion for all cycling fans in July, who according to reader surveys consistently call it a reader favorite. Simply put, VeloNews's Official Guide to the Tour de France offers advertisers the greatest concentrated single exposure in the cycling market.

Tour de France race director Jean-Marie Leblanc explains, "As America's leading bicycle racing publication, VeloNews has been the perfect partner for the Tour de France for many years. They understand the Tour. We have been extremely pleased with the Official Guide produced by VeloNews and are very excited to see the success of the 2006 edition."

Adds Ramey, "They said last year's Tour mania was simply the result of the 'Lance-effect,' but what explains the increased interest this year? It's simply un-real. Could it be that the Tour de France is finally being recognized here as the world's preeminent annual sporting event?"

Space close for the 2006 Official Guide to the Tour de France is May 10. To advertise, please contact your account executive at VeloNews immediately.

About the Tour de France
Founded in 1903, the Tour de France is the world's leading bicycle race. The Tour is owned and run by the Paris-based Amaury Sports Organisation (ASO), which in addition to the Tour de France operates the Paris-Dakar motor rally, the Enduro du Touquet motorcycle race, the Marathon de Paris plus numerous other sports competitions. The Tour de France has licensed the exclusive North American rights to the Official Guide to VeloNews since 2000.

Steveo 90
04-28-2006, 05:49 PM
i think its the only time i watch the oln network

Toad
04-28-2006, 05:55 PM
i think its the only time i watch the oln network

If you plan on moving to Montana you better get familiar with the "hunt'n and shoot'n" channel.:D

Steveo 90
04-28-2006, 05:57 PM
no doubt............lol


dont forget the how to dress in the winter channel

Toad
04-28-2006, 06:00 PM
no doubt............lol


dont forget the how to dress in the winter channel

Be sure to get some of that deer piss to put on your boots!:D

Steveo 90
04-28-2006, 06:02 PM
hey,its the spirit of the deer...........


i would like to move there,you should think about biking glac nat park


could be like the tdf

Steve
04-28-2006, 07:13 PM
could be like the tdf

tdf = Tour de Freezing your ass off? Doh

Steveo 90
04-28-2006, 08:57 PM
tdf = Tour de Freezing your ass off? Doh


:D


its all in the layers..............of ho's,i mean clothes

Toad
04-28-2006, 09:00 PM
My best sailing buddy got so into snow boarding he up and moved to Montana. The slopes are almost lonely sometimes he says, but the winters are just brutal. Deer meat is a regular thing now for him.Doh

Steveo 90
04-28-2006, 10:11 PM
i have tried venison before,not my thing so they wont have to worry about me shooting them..........


as far as the winters go they average 6 ft of snow a year,but i have a feeling they consider the higher elevations into those figures