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You Are Here:   Home  >>   Long Breakaway Benefits Salvodelli and Discovery Team
2005 Tour de France Chris Carmichael
2005 Bike Review

Check out the smoothest rigs this side of L'Alpe d'Huez in "State of the Art," our review of the new spokesmodels of spin.  [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. Plus, get your questions answered in the exclusive Fitness Q&A with Chris Carmichael.   [more

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

 Chris Carmichael's
Tour Journals
Stage 21 July 24, 2005
Stage 20 July 23, 2005
Stage 19 July 22, 2005
Stage 18 July 21, 2005
Stage 17 July 20, 2005
Stage 16 July 19, 2005
Rest Day 2 July 18, 2005
Stage 15 July 17, 2005
Stage 14 July 16, 2005
Stage 13 July 15, 2005
Stage 12 July 14, 2005
Stage 11 July 13, 2005
Stage 10 July 12, 2005
Rest Day 1 July 11, 2005
Stage 9 July 10, 2005
Stage 8 July 09, 2005
Stage 7 July 08, 2005
Stage 6 July 07, 2005
Stage 5 July 06, 2005
Stage 4 July 05, 2005
Stage 3 July 04, 2005
Stage 2 July 03, 2005
Stage 1 July 02, 2005
About Chris Carmichael
 Tour de France Photos
Lance Armstrong photoTour de France 2005
Stages 19-21

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Lance Armstrong photoTour de France 2005
Stages 16-18

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Lance Armstrong and the Discovery Channel Team photoTour de France 2005
Stages 13-15

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Cormet-de-Roseland photoTour de France 2005
Stages 10-12

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Lance Armstrong, Bobby Julich, and Denis Menchov photoTour de France 2005
Stages 7-9

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Tour de France PelotonTour de France 2005
Stages 4-6

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Lance ArmstrongTour de France 2005
Stages 1-3

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Lance Armstrong Foundation

You've seen them everywhere, from grade school kids to John Kerry's wrist. Buy a yellow wristband emblazoned with Lance's motto, "Live Strong," and join the effort to raise money for the Lance Armstrong Foundation's fight against cancer.  [more


2005 TOUR DE FRANCE
Chris Carmichael

Stage 17: July 20, 2005
Long Breakaway Benefits Salvodelli and Discovery Team
By Chris Carmichael


For the first time since Stage 3, the team classification in the Tour de France became an issue today. At the start of the day, T-Mobile was leading the competition that records the finishing times for the top three finishers for each stage. As these times accumulate over the course of the Tour de France, teams that have riders consistently finishing near the front of each stage end up leading the classification. With two riders in a breakaway group more than 20 minutes ahead of the peloton, Discovery Channel forced T-Mobile to consider whether it was worth chasing to defend their team classification lead.

T-Mobile was leading the team classification because their top three riders, Jan Ullrich, Alexandre Vinokourov, and Andreas Kloden consistently finished near the front on the hardest mountain stages. Even though Lance Armstrong, Ivan Basso, and Mickael Rasmussen finished ahead of them on most of those stages, those men rarely had any teammates who finished ahead of the top three T-Mobile riders. As a result, T-Mobile built up a lead of 19:28 over Discovery Channel.

The team classification is an important competition in the Tour de France because it illustrates the collective strength of your entire team. However, it is obviously less important than winning the yellow jersey. Lance Armstrong and the Discovery Channel team would like to win the team classification, but they won’t do anything that could potentially risk Lance’s yellow jersey.

Today’s breakaway just happened to offer the opportunity for Discovery Channel to move ahead of T-Mobile. With Paolo Salvodelli and Jose Luis Rubiera up the road, and only Oscar Sevilla representing T-Mobile in the breakaway group, the peloton had to finish less than 19 minutes behind in order for T-Mobile to hold on to their team classification lead.

During the stage, Mario Kummer, the director for T-Mobile, told the press he wasn’t going to send his team to the front to defend their lead. Even though they did spend a little time riding at the front of the peloton, it was clear they had other plans for the day. Like Discovery Channel, their primary concern is the overall position of their leading rider, Jan Ullrich. As a result, they waited until the final small climb of the day to attack. Ahead, Salvodelli had become the second Discovery Channel rider in four days to win a Tour de France stage.

The attacks that occurred within the main peloton just inside the “10km-to-go” banner were designed to catch team leaders sleeping. Two riders who weren’t paying enough attention, or who were sitting too far back in the peloton, were Floyd Landis (Phonak) and Cadel Evans (Davitamon-Lotto). Everyone else in the top ten was in the front group with Armstrong and Ullrich when the peloton split. Though they chased hard, the group behind the split never caught back up and finished 20 seconds down on the Armstrong group at the finish. That small moment of inattention cost Landis seventh place and moved Vinokourov up to seventh overall.

Similar short attacks are just the type of action you should expect to see over the next two days, as the men in the top ten look for any possible opportunity to leapfrog over each other and closer to the final podium in Paris.

Chris Carmichael is Lance Armstrong's personal coach and founder of Carmichael Training Systems, Inc. (CTS). His latest book, Chris Carmichael's Fitness Cookbook, is now available and you can register for a chance to win a ride with the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team at www.trainright.com.







2005 BUYER'S GUIDE
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