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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 15: July 20, 2004
The Man Comes Around
By Chris Carmichael


I hate to tell you, "I told you so," but it came as little surprise that Jan Ullrich found his legs during the rest day and had the power and motivation to attack Lance Armstrong during Stage 15.

Besides Armstrong, Ullrich is the only other man in the 2004 Tour de France who has ever won the race. He has always been an incredible talent, and when he is on form he can produce an astonishing amount of power. History has shown he tends to get stronger in the final week of the Tour de France, a fact that appears to be true once again this year.

Ullrich's attack was a credible one, but it did not worry Armstrong or the U.S. Postal Service team. Coming some 60 kilometers from the finish, the team knew it had the power to reel him back in before the finish. Armstrong actually benefited from having Ullrich up the road because it reduced Ivan Basso's opportunities to attack.

While Armstrong was nearly seven minutes ahead of Ullrich in the overall classification, the German posed more of a threat to Basso's position in second place. Having only a five-minute lead over Ullrich, the CSC leader couldn't afford to let a resurgent Ullrich gain time. It was in his best interest to cooperate with the chase and reel Ullrich back into the group.

Jan Ullrich's tactical decisions today effectively neutralized Ivan Basso, and that played into Armstrong's advantage. With two individual time trials in the next five stages, and considering the predominantly ceremonial nature of the final stage into Paris, Basso is quickly running out of room to gain time on Armstrong. The two men are likely to finish very close to one another in the uphill time trial tomorrow, and I believe Armstrong is more likely to gain time on Basso rather than lose it. That really only leaves Basso Stages 17 and 18 to attack Armstrong, and Stage 18 is not likely to offer many such opportunities.

Ivan Basso needs to use whatever remaining opportunities he can find to gain time on Armstrong before the final individual time trial on Stage 19. While he has done a lot of work to improve his ability in time trials, the men around him in the general classification are stronger against the clock. If he can't reduce the time gap to Armstrong before the final time trial, he is unlikely to challenge for the yellow jersey. At the same time, he may be in danger of losing second place to Andréas Klöden, or even Ullrich, if either man gains time on him over the next two days.

It's important to remember that the Tour de France is not "everyone against Armstrong." Ullrich, Kloden, and Francisco Mancebo are within striking distance of the yellow jersey, and even though it's on Armstrong's back, Basso is standing in their way as well. Stacking the mountain stages at the end of the Tour may provide for an exciting finale, but it also means riders may run out of road before they find the opportunity that could put them in yellow.







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