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2004 Tour de France
2004 Tour de France Chris Carmichael
2004 Bike Review

Check out the smoothest rigs this side of L'Alpe d'Huez in the Road Bike Review section of this year's Outside Buyer's Guide.  [more

Cycling Training

Are you fit enough to blow through three weeks of hundred-mile race stages? Funny, neither are we. But with a whole lot of practice and some help from Chris Carmichael and the Outside Training Center, perhaps we too could tackle le Tour.  [more

A d v e r t i s e m e n t

 Chris Carmichael's
Tour Journals
Stage 20 July 25, 2004
Stage 19 July 24, 2004
Stage 18 July 23, 2004
Stage 17 July 22, 2004
Stage 16 July 21, 2004
Stage 15 July 20, 2004
Rest Day 2 July 19, 2004
Stage 14 July 18, 2004
Stage 13 July 17, 2004
Stage 12 July 16, 2004
Stage 11 July 15, 2004
Stage 10 July 14, 2004
Stage 9 July 13, 2004
Stage 8 July 12, 2004
Stage 8 July 11, 2004
Stage 7 July 10, 2004
Stage 6 July 09, 2004
Stage 5 July 08, 2004
Stage 4 July 07, 2004
Stage 3 July 06, 2004
Stage 2 July 05, 2004
Stage 1 July 04, 2004
Prologue July 03, 2004
Tour Preview July 02, 2004
Stage 18 June 23, 2004
Stage 17 June 22, 2004
Stage 10 June 18, 2004
About Chris Carmichael
 Tour de France Photos
2004 Tour Photo Gallery #7,
July 26

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #6,
July 22

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #5,
July 19

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #4,
July 14

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #3,
July 11

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #2,
July 9

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2004 Tour Photo Gallery #1, July 62004 Tour Photo Gallery #1,
July 6

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Lance Armstrong Foundation

Buy a yellow wristband emblazoned with Lance's motto, "Live Strong", and join Outside and NIKE in an effort to raise $6 million toward the Lance Armstrong Foundation's fight against cancer.  [more


2004 TOUR DE FRANCE
Chris Carmichael

Stage 5: July 08, 2004
The Benefits of Giving It Away
By Chris Carmichael


With more than two weeks remaining in the 2004 Tour de France, and knowing how difficult the final week will be, the US Postal Service was more than willing to let a five-man breakaway escape today and take the stage as well as the yellow jersey.

While it might seem crazy to give up the overall lead Lance and the team worked so hard to win yesterday, you have to realize that winning the Tour de France is all about energy management. The team put in a hard effort yesterday to win the team time trial, not because they really wanted the yellow jersey, but because they wanted to increase the time gaps between Lance and his rivals. Starting Stage 5 with the yellow jersey was an honor, but it also obligated the team to ride on the front and set the pace for the peloton.

The Tour de France is largely governed by honor and tradition, and the team holding the yellow jersey is expected to lead the field out of respect for the jersey and significance it holds. You don't necessarily have to defend the jersey at all costs, but refusing to work at all would be a serious sign of disrespect to the jersey, the race, and the other riders.

It wasn't in the best interest of Lance Armstrong's overall chances to win the Tour de France to fiercely defend the yellow jersey today. Putting your team out front in the wind for 120 kilometers burns a lot of the team's collective energy, and Lance needs his teammates to be as fresh as possible heading into the mountains next week. The majority of the teams in the Tour don't have any riders who can challenge the main contenders for the overall victory, and they would gladly ride on the front all day to defend the yellow jersey for as long as they could. Holding the yellow jersey is great for a team's sponsor, and in some cases, validates a weaker team's invitation to be in the race at all.

The Brioches La Boulangère team doesn't need to prove its worthiness to be in the Tour de France, but they did start the race without the rider they hoped would challenge Lance Armstrong for the yellow jersey, Joseba Beloki. The Spaniard who crashed so spectacularly in last year's race and broke several bones moved to the Brioches La Boulangère team last winter, but left it abruptly a few months ago, after the team was selected for participation in the Tour de France. Without Beloki, they don't have a contender for the overall victory, but young Thomas Voeckler gave the team something to celebrate by earning the yellow jersey today after a very long breakaway effort.

Brioches La Boulangère will certainly take up the work to defend the jersey and control the peloton. They are a French team, in a French race, with the current French National Champion in the yellow jersey. This is great news for the Postal Service because it means they can take a back seat for a few days and recuperate. Four USPS riders hit the ground today, Benjamin Noval crashed hard in Stage 3, and they've had a long week of work keeping Lance out of trouble. They've done a great job, and they haven't had to dig deep into their energy reserves yet, despite the amount of work they've done. With the pressure off of them for a few days, the whole team should be really fresh and ready for the next big challenge: the Pyrenees.







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