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Jun 19, 2023 25 tweets 15 min read Read on X
Explaining the Cycling Iceberg: How Thomas Voeckler nearly won the 2011 Tour de France. 1/23

#cyclingiceberg ImageImage
The 2011 Tour de France started with 1 big favorite: Alberto Contador (Saxo). The Spaniard had won the 2 previous tours, and the 2011 Giro. Contador was however involved in a doping case. In the 2010 Tour he tested positive for Clenbuterol, and was suspended for a year. 2/23 ImageImage
Contador was however free to start the Tour, since he appealed the sanction. His 2010 win still stood in the books.
Most opposition for Contador was expected to come from Cadel Evans (BMC), Andy Schleck (Leopard) & Franck Schleck (Leopard). 3/23 Image
Contador had a terrible start to the Tour. He crashed in the first stage and lost 1.20 to Evans, who ended second behind Philippe Gilbert (Lotto). He lost more time in the TTT & thought to have won stage 4 on the Mur de Bretagne. He celebrated, but Evans won the stage. 4/23 Image
Thor Hushovd (Garmin) took the yellow jersey in the TTT and held it until the 9th stage in the Massif Central. There was a breakaway of 5 riders, but Flecha & Hoogerland got crashed out by a car. More on that in this thread: 5/23 Image
Luis Leon Sanchez (Rabobank) won the stage ahead of Thomas Voeckler (Europecar). The peloton ended 4min behind which meant that Voeckler was the new maillot jaune, with a lead of 2.30 of the GC riders who were happy they didn’t have to control the peloton. 6/23 ImageImageImage
Voeckler was seen as a real baroudeur for medium mountain stages/ In 2004 he had already worn the yellow jersey for 10 days, but lost over 40min in the mountains. In 2009 & 2010 he won a stage from the breakaway. They didn't expect Voeckler to defend his jersey with panache. 7/23 ImageImageImage
Stage 12 finished on Luz Ardiden. Samuel Sanchez (Euskaltel) won the stage, whilst the GC riders were very active. They attacked multiple times but Voeckler, helped by a very strong Pierre Rolland, managed to hang on. He stayed with the Schleck’s for a long time. 8/23 ImageImage
In the final km's F Schleck got away and gained 40s. Evans/A Schleck gained 20s on Voeckler in the final km. Contador made a bad impression.
The 13th stage finished downhill in Lourdes. Hushovd won the stage & there were no timegaps between the GC riders. 9/23 ImageImage
The 14th stage finished on Plateau De Beille. The GC favorites rolled attacks with 10k to go, but Voeckler followed. It became an attack-stop-attack-stop climb. Vandendert (Lotto) made use of this an won the stage. Voeckler survived all attacks and kept the yellow jersey. 10/23 ImageImageImage
Voeckler made the French dream about a first Tour de France win since Hinault won in 1985. He went into the third week with a lead of 1.50 on F Schleck, 2.05 on Evans, 2.15 on A Schleck & 4.00 on Contador. There were 2 hilly stages, 2 mountain stages & a TT left. 11/23 ImageImage
Contador still tried to win the tour. In the 16th stage to Gap he attacked on a 3rd category climb and dropped everyone bar Evans & S Sanchez. They gained 20s on Voeckler, but over a minute on Andy Schleck who was scared in the wet downhill towards Gap. 12/23 Image
Contador attacked again the following day. This time he was unable to drop his rivals uphill, so he tried a downhill attack with S Sanchez. Voeckler made a mistake under this pressure, and road onto a carpark where he needed to turn around. He lost 30s due to this error. 13/23
The 18th stage featured the Agnel & Izoard before finishing on the Galibier. Andy Schleck, 2.23 down in GC, launched an all or nothing attack on the Izoard. By the top of the climb he had a lead of 2min. Maxime Monfort functioned as a satellite rider in the downhill. 14/23 ImageImageImage
A Schleck started the Galibier with a lead of 4min on the favorites, who were quickly out of domestiques. Evans took his responsibility and paced. He slowly but steadily started eating the lead of Andy. But with 2k to Andy still had 3min, things were looking good for him. 15/23 Image
Whilst Voeckler was hanging on for dear life, Contador was dropped. Andy won the stage, but lost a minute of his lead in the final KM. His brother Franck ended second, seconds ahead of Evans & Voeckler who saved his yellow jersey by 15s. France was ecstatic! 16/23 ImageImageImageImage
The dreams of an entire nation were crushed the following day. The 19th stage finished up Alpe d’Huez, but had the Galibier it before.
With 96k to go Contador launched an attack with 3 satellite riders. Evans & A Schleck responded, but Voeckler was in crisis. 17/23 ImageImage
He eventually bridged the gap, but was under tremendous pressure the entire climb. Contador kept attacking and eventually dropped Voeckler. Evans had a mechanical at the same moment, leaving Contador & A Schleck up the road. Voeckler topped the Telegraphe 30s behind. 18/23 Image
Evans got things organised on the Galibier, but Voeckler dropped back too late. Contador kept expanding the gap, putting Andy in a great position to win the Tour. Evans had to do something and attacked. Voeckler was left behind, but still had some teammates to help him. 19/23 Image
Evans closed the gap to 30, Voeckler was a minute behind him. In the downhill everything came back together again. Interestingly enough, Rolland attacked in the valley with Hesjedal and started the final climbs with 50s on the GC group. 20/23
The GC group was blown into pieces at the bottom of the Alpe. A Schleck & Evans both attacked, putting and end to Voeckler's dreams. Contador then attacked, caught Rolland and left him behind. Contador exploded in the final km’s and was caught by S Sanchez & Rolland. 21/23 Image
A late attack by Rolland saw him win the stage & white jersey, but behind there was still a yellow jersey up for grabs. Despite multiple attacks, Evans, A Schleck & F Schleck finished together. Voeckler lost 2.30 to them. Andy Schlek took the yellow jersey. 22/23 ImageImageImage
A 40K TT determined who would win the Tour. Evans was a much better TT’er than the Schlecks, and didn’t disappoint. He ended second in the TT more than 2min ahead of the Schleck’s. Evans won the tour, ahead of Andy & Franck Schleck. Voeckler ended 4th in GC. 23/23 Image
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More from @NoahvPutten

Jun 9
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Free Landa. 1/30

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In 2015, Mikel Landa broke through on the world stage of cycling. In his fifth year as pro, he landed his first World Tour victory in the Tour of the Basque Country. Knocked out of GC contention, he attacked from the breakaway on the final climb to win the fifth stage. 2/30 Image
Just like in 2014, Landa was sent to the Giro d'Italia as mountain support for Astana leader Fabio Aru. The Kazakh team made their first big move in the hilly fourth stage, catching several GC outsiders off guard. Due to his work for Aru, Landa lost a minute in that stage. 3/30 Image
Read 32 tweets
May 27
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Coppi breaks his word to win the 1953 Giro. 1/23

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The 1953 Giro attracted a formidable start list. At the historical peak of Italian cycling, the Giro was briefly able to compete with the Tour as most prestigious Grand Tour. This was partially because Tour organizer L'Auto was seen as too close with the Nazis during the war 2/23 Image
The Italian media was pleased to see then three best Italian riders of the time, Gino Bartali (Bartali), Fausto Coppi (Bianchi), and Fiorenzo Magni (Ganna) at the start. They thought there was a good chance of an all Italian podium. 3/23 Image
Read 24 tweets
May 12
Explaining the cycling iceberg: The Jiffy-bag scandal. 1/26

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I got notified by a very thoughtful follower that I had accidentally skipped over two iceberg stories. So it turns out i have 4 iceberg stories left rather than 2 :)
Today the Jiffy-Bag scandal, later this week the 1953 Giro. 2/26 Image
Bradley Wiggins was the best British cyclist of the late 2000's and early 2010's. Wiggo started his career as a track cyclist. At just 20 years of age, he was part of the Bronze medal Team Pursuit team at the 2000 Sydney Summer Olympics. 3/26 Image
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Read 27 tweets
May 2
Explaining the Cycling Iceberg: Lance Armstrong's doping confession. 1/3

#cyclingiceberg Image
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The final 3 iceberg stories.... Today, the most infamous interview in cycling history
During his career, Lance Armstrong faced persistent doping allegations. His performances, in an era following several EPO scandals such as the Festina affair, drew skepticism. 2/38 Image
For the entirety of his career, Armstrong denied using doping. His go-to defense line was that he had never tested positive, despite being the most tested athlete in the peloton.
In the first part of Armstrong's career, the allegations were nothing more than rumors. 3/38 Image
Read 40 tweets
Apr 22
Explaining the cycling iceberg: W52-Porto. 1/15

#cyclingiceberg Image
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We are down to the final 4 Iceberg stories! A highly anticipated one today, as we will cover W52.

Founded in 2004 as Casactiva–Quinta das Arcas–UCS, W52-Porto operated as one of the bigger Portuguese amateur teams during the first nine years of the team’s history. 2/15 Image
Upon becoming a UCI Continental team in 2013, the 2.1 Volta a Portugal became the biggest goal of the year for the team. Established in 1927, the Tour of Portugal is one of the oldest cycling races on the calendar. The race was run as a three-week stage race... 3/15 Image
Read 16 tweets
Apr 15
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Le Tour, C'est Le Tour. 1/22

#cyclingiceberg Image
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Today a relatively short iceberg story. The stories i planned for this when i drafted the iceberg (over 2 years ago!) have been absorbed in standalone stories over time. Today I will still cover some French chauvinism in the tour! 2/22 Image
I remember quite well that several Tour de France routes in the mid-2010s sparked intense debate on this platform. The organizers were frequently accused of designing an "anti-Froome" course, to benefit French riders like Romain Bardet and Thibaut Pinot. 3/22 Image
Read 23 tweets

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