Explaining the cycling iceberg: Froome waits for Wiggins and gets mad. 1/25
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Bradley Wiggins (Sky) was the man to beat in the 2012 Tour.
The Briton started his career as a track rider. He had success on the velodrome. He won multiple world & olympic titles in the Individual pursuit, Team pursuit & Madison. 2/25
In 2005 Wiggins started taking road more serious. Before he had mainly raced the classics, but he started focusing on GT GCs. Backed by a strong TT, he finished 4th (later 3rd) in the 2009 Tour de France. In 2011 he ended 3rd (later 2nd) in the Vuelta. 3/25
In 2012 Wiggins was dominant all season. He won Paris-Nice, Tour de Romandie & the Criterium du Dauphine.
His main rivals for the tour were 2011 winner Cadel Evans (BMC), Jurgen Van den Broeck (Lotto) & Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas). 4/25
A final outsider was Wiggins' teammate Chris Froome. Froome's career followed a remarkable trajectory. Until summer 2011 he had no results. He was at risk of losing his ride at Sky & only got added to the Vuelta startlist as last minute replacement for Lars Petter Nordhaugh. 5/25
Froome was flying uphill in the Vuelta. When Wiggins exploded in the final week, he took over team leadership. He came 13s short of winning, but winner Cobo got scrapped for doping. It was later revealed Froome had previously suffered from schistosomiasis. 6/25
Froome was again a domestique for Wiggins in the 2012 tour, but Froome had reservations about his leader. He didnt publicly state them, but he later said he had a hard time trusting Wiggins after his bonk in the Vuelta. Froome had worked for Wiggins whilst in the GC lead. 7/25
Wiggins started the Tour well. He finished 2nd in the short prologue through the streets of Liege. Froome also did well, ending 11th. The next day Froome however had a puncture and lost 1.25. Froome also crashed in the 3rd stage, but lost no time. 8/25
The first Moutain stage was stage 7 to the Planche Des Belles Filles. The Sky train went to work. Slowly but surely the leading group got reduced. When Froome took over from Richie Porte there were just 5 riders left: Froome, Wiggins, Evans, Nibali & Rein Taaramae (Cofidis). 9/25
The stage was decided in a sprint between those 5 riders. Evans launched with 400m to go. Froome dropped back to 3rd, but had something left despite his work. He flew by Evans & Wiggins to take the stage win. Evans placed 2nd, Wiggins third. 10/25
Wiggins moved into the yellow jersey and added to his lead after the rest day. He set the fastest time in the Stage 9 TT of 40k. He gained 1.40 on Evans & 2.10 on Nibali. Froome ended 2nd in the TT & moved into 3rd in GC. 11/25
The mountainous 10th stage had little action. Van den Broeck attacked & gained 30s, jumping to 8th in GC. Nibali attacked downhill with Peter Sagan as satellite rider, but to no effect.
Stage 11 was the Queen Stage. It featured the Madeleine, Croix du Fer & Les Sybelles. 12/25
Being over 2min down, Evans made a move on the Croix du Fer with 60k to go. He bridged up to his teammate Tejay van Garderen, who attacked 2km earlier. Evans made a bad impression. He struggled to follow Van Garderen, before they were brought back by the sky train. 13/25
Evans cracked on the final climb. He lost 1.30 & dropped to 4th in GC.
Up Les Sybelles, others put pressure on Wiggo. Nibali attacked as did Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) & Van den Broeck. Wiggins didn't bat an eye, sticking to the wheel of Froome who brought him back to the others. 14/25
Froome attacked as soon as the Nibali group was caught. Froome attacked his own team leader, but got team orders to wait since Nibali was dropping Wiggins as well. Froome obeyed and waited for Wiggins to come back. He paced the final 3km & there were no attacks. 15/2
Froome made a statement by sprinting away in the final meters. He was now 2nd in GC, 2.05 behind.
Sky played down the incident, but it caused a media frenzy. Internally, it also caused struggles.
It was later revealed Wiggins texted General Manager Dave Brailsford: 16/25
'I think it would be better for everyone if I went home'.
Wiggins felt Froome had stabbed him in the back. The agreement was that Foome would only attack in the final 500m, so the position of Wiggins wasn't in danger. 17/25
The peloton went into the Pyrenees in stage 14. Spectators had sabotaged the course with carpet tacks. Wiggins neutralized the peloton in an act of sportsmanship. 2 days later Nibali attacked a couple of times, but Froome brought back Wiggins every time. Evans lost 5min. 18/25
Stage 17 to Peyragudes was the final mountain stage. Nibali tried putting pressure on Wiggins in the downhill of Port de Bales, but failed. Sky was simply too strong. On the final climb Froome & Wiggins rode away from the rest. With 3k to go Alejandro Valverde (Movistar)... 19/25
was 45s up the road. Froome wanted to go all out for the stage win. He set a high pace, which a distracted Wiggins couldnt follow.
Froome dropped Wiggins twice, making hand gestures towards him. Valverde won the stage, 18s ahead of Froome & Wiggins. 20/2
After the stage the partners of Wiggins & Froome bickered on this platform.
Wiggins added to his winnign margin by winning the
final TT. He won the tour by 3.20 on Froome. Nibali was 3rd at 6min. A month later Wiggins became Olympic TT champion. 21/25
Wiggins won the tour thanks to Froome, who felt undervalued. The relationship between the 2 was really bad. Wiggins refused to pay Froome his share of the prize money. In spring 2013 the 2 finally cleared the air. Froome blamed the British tabloids for making things worse. 22/25
In 2013 Wiggins went to the Giro as leader, but crashed in multiple wet descents. He withdrew from the race. He didn't start the Tour due to an injury.
In the years that followed Wiggins struggled with his status of Tour de France champion. 23/25
The added pressure meant Wiggo shifted focus away from GTs. He became TT world champion in 2014 & raced spring classics. He set the hour record in 2015 & retired by winning his 5th Olympic gold in 2016, this time on the track. 24/25
For Froome things had just gotten started. The Brit, born in Nairobi Kenya, won the 2013 Tour de France in dominant fashion. In the span of 5 years he would win the Tour de France 4x. He also won the Giro & Vuelta. 25/25
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Explaining the cycling iceberg: Hinault vs LeMond pt1. Tour de France 1985. 1/25
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In 1984 the Bernard Hinault era was deemed over. The Badger had dominated cycling in the years before. By 1982 he had won 4 tours and a dozen of classics. Since 1980 he struggled with a lingering knee injury, which got worse over time. In 1983 he skipped the Tour due to it. 2/25
Despite the absence of Hinault, Renault still won the Tour de France with the 22 year old Laurent Fignon. Hinaults position as leader of Renault was under pressure. Not only because of Fignon, but also because of the talented 22 year old American Greg LeMond. 3/25
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Pogacar's upset on Planche des Belles Filles. 1/34
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The 2020 Tour de France took place in turbulent times. The Grand Depart was postponed to late August due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The course remained largely unchanged, but the favorites changed completely after the competition break. 2/34
Team INEOS won 6 out of the last 7 tours, but left Geraint Thomas (2018 winner) & Chris Froome (4x winner) home after subpar performances in the Tour de l'Ain & Dauphine. They did bring the defending champion, Egan Bernal, who abandoned the Dauphine with back issues. 3/34
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Rasmussens horrible TT in the 2005 Tour. The worst TT Ever???? 1/18
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Michael Rasmussen started his career as a Mountainbike rider. The Dane became World Champion in 1999, but switched focus to road racing a year later. In 2002 he signed with Rabobank, where he steadily improved. In 2003 He finished 7th Vuelta, winning the 7th stage. 2/18
Rasmussen went to the 2005 Tour de France with a free role. The 31 year old would hunt stage wins in the mountains as well as provide assistance for Rabobank leader Denis Menchov when necessary. 3/18
Explaining the cycling iceberg: Contador ate a steak. 1/14
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Todays iceberg story is the succession to yesterdays iceberg story about the 2010 Tour de France. Yesterday i went over the battle for the 2010 tour, today the aftermath. 2/14
The 2010 Tour de France was already heated, but became even more controversial in September. The UCI announced they had found traces of clenbuterol in 2 of Contadors urine samples. Clenbuterol is on the doping list because it reduces fat and boosts muscle creation. 3/14
The 2010 Tour de France was set, at least for American media, to be a battle between Alberto Contador (Astana) & Lance Armstrong (Radioshack). The 2 had a heated rivalry in 2009 when they were teammates, but were now on opposing teams. 2/24
Realistically Contador was the favorite. The Spaniard had won the last 4 grand tours he raced & looked to be in fine form during the 2010 season. Outside the US, Armstrong was not seen as a serious challenger. His days were considered over, his comeback mostly failed. 3/24
Explaining the cycling iceberg: The best Tour of the Armstrong era. Luz Ardiden 2003. 1/28
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Lance Armstrong (US Postal) was the outright favorite to win the 2003 Tour de France. A 5th consequtive win would make him the joint record holder with Merckx, Hinault, Indurain & Anquetil. Media & competitors looked for any signs of weakness, but they could find few things. 2/28
French paper Aujoudhui wrote: 'If Armstrong is no longer infallible... The most convincing signs of weakness they could find were that Armstrong crashed in June, that the course might not be perfect & that he is trying to save his marriage. All smacks of clutching at straws' 3/28