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The Tour De France, The Worlds Biggest Road Bikes Race
By Alastair Hamilton, Thu Dec 8th

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The Tour de France is the BIG one; it's the World cup and theOlympics all in one. It has it all, the high mountains, the windswept northern planes and the heat of the south. It also has theworld's media, all the top teams and riders and millions ofcycling mad fans watching. The other "Grand Tours" of Italy andSpain are as exciting, sometimes more so, but they don't havethe thing the Tour has, that unique Tour ness, that uniqueFrench ness.

 

How it started.


It all started in 1903, when the French daily paper, L'Autowanted to sell more than its competitor, Le Vélo, who at thattime was the only paper reporting on cycle racing. It wassuggested to the papers director, Henri Desgrange that theyshould organise a roadbike race all round France. The first race was 2,428kilometres split into six stages and was run off at 25.29kilometres per hour and out of the 60 starters 21 finished andthe race was lead from start to finish by Maurice Garin.

 

The Heroes.

Over the years there has been a lot of heroes in the Tour deFrance, you could say all the riders are heroes, to win the raceonce is hard, but to win it five times is phenomenal. Only fivemen have done this, and one of these has won it seven times.French rider Jacques Anquetil was the first to win the race fivetimes, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and then Spaniard MiguelIndurain all equalled him. Then the American, Lance Armstrongstarted to win in 1999 and didn't stop until he had won it arecord seven times in a row. This is all the more amazing as heis a cancer survivor and was given a 50/50 chance of life; hebeat the cancer and went on to beat all comers in the Tour deFrance.

 

Schleck ousted from Tour of Spain
Two-time Tour de France runner-up Andy Schleck is sent home from the Tour of Spain for breaking team rules.
Laws secures breakthrough victory
Britain's Sharon Laws wins the first major race of her career by sprinting to victory in stage one of the Tour de Ardeche.
Tour of Spain latest standings (external)
Manxman Mark Cavendish is among the riders at the Vuelta a Espana, the third of the year's three Grand Tours.
Blyth out to fulfil Olympic dream
Leeds' Anna Blyth wants to emulate the success of her team-mates at the 2012 Olympics
Team Sky withdraw from Spain Tour
Team Sky pull out of the Tour of Spain following the death of masseur Txema Gonzalez.
Millar replaces Thomas in GB team
David Millar replaces Geraint Thomas in Britain's three-man team for the road cycling World Championships in Melbourne.
McLaughlin smashes trial record
James McLaughlin smashes the Guernsey Velo Club's five mile time trial record by 20 seconds.
Cavendish beaten again in Spain
Mark Cavendish is beaten in a sprint finish for the second time in three days in the Tour of Spain.
Tour legend Fignon dies aged 50
Two-time Tour de France winner Laurent Fignon dies of cancer at the age of 50.
Ill Team Sky riders abandon Tour
Two Team Sky riders quit the Tour of Spain during the third stage having been left sick by a mystery illness that has swept through the team.
Cavendish loses in sprint finish
Mark Cavendish retains the leader's red jersey in the Tour of Spain, despite being edged out by Yauheni Hutarovich in a sprint finish to the second stage.
Team hands Cavendish Spain lead
Mark Cavendish takes the leader's red jersey in the Tour of Spain after his HTC-Columbia squad win the floodlit opening team time trial in Seville.
Storey included in England team
Multiple Paralympic gold medallist Sarah Storey is named in England's cycling team for the 2010 Commonwealth Games.
GB duo join Cavendish at Worlds
Geraint Thomas and Jeremy Hunt are named as support riders for Mark Cavendish's bid to win the World Championships road race in Melbourne in September.
Hoy and Pendleton set for Poland
British Olympic champions Sir Chris Hoy and Victoria Pendleton will head to Poland in November for the European Track Cycling Championships.

The course.

The race starts in a different town every year and every otheryear it starts outside France, the choice of stage towns is acombination of money and sporting considerations, the towns willpay for a start or a finish, but they need to be near a mountainor a cobbled road or be near other town who want to host theTour. The Towns pay to be the centre of interest for a day, theTour also brings in a lot of money in tourism and the Townscollect much more than they pay and the world will remember thename of the Town, for at least a day.

 

The riders.

All the best riders want to win the Tour de France, but theycant, from the 200 or so starters there is a possible five orsix riders who can win, the rest are either helping their teamleaders or sprint or mountain specialists who want to win stagesor points or mountain jerseys, this keeps the race active andinteresting from beginning to end.

 

The BIG Tour.

The Tour is the biggest, but that has its problems, some Townsare not big enough, hotels etc., the television needs morespace, the journalists need more phone lines and computers, moreand more people are following the race and the riders can beforgotten about in all the razzmatazz, but its still the biggestsporting event in the world, long may in run!

More reviews at http://www.bike-cycling-reviews.com

 

About the author:Alastair Hamilton is a successful writer who offers a trulyunique depth of experience in competitive cycling, he alsocontributes adding technical articles on road bikes to some online magazines. Please, visit bike cyclingreviews to reach further information on bike and cyclingnews

 
 
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