June 8 to 16, 2013
The 2013 Tour de Suisse race route |
The 77th
edition of the Tour de Suisse begins this Saturday, June 8, and runs until June
16th. It is for many riders the last stage race for pre Tour De
France tune-ups. While many TDF favorites have been using the Critérium du
Dauphiné to test their racing legs against the competition before the Tour,
several others will do their fine-tuning in Switzerland (The Tour De France
starts on Saturday June 29).
Twenty-one
teams of eight riders each will take the start for the Prologue time trial in
Quinto, instead of the town of Lugano, where it has started for the last three
years. The entire race will cover 1309 kilometers over nine stages, across the
beautiful Swiss countryside. It will feature one prologue time trial, one
half-flat, half-climbing time trial, one mountaintop finish, two stages with
big climbs close to the finish and a few stages for the sprinters and breakaway
specialists.
Of the 2012 podium, only the winner, Rui Costa is able to return |
Last year’s winner, Rui
Costa of team Movistar, will be back to try and defend his title against a
strong field of contenders. None of the others from last year’s top five
finishers are returning, but several strong GC contenders will certainly vie
for this year’s title.
Several of
the sport’s top sprinters will also be trying to prevent Team Cannondale’s
Slovakian wunderkind, Peter Sagan from dominating the sprints like he did lat
year. In 2012 Sagan won the opening time trial and then went on to win three
more stages and the points jersey.
Here is a
list of who I believe are this year’s favorites for the General Classification:
Rui Costa (Movistar)
Simon Spilak (Katusha)
Dan Martin (Garmin)
Tejay Van Garderen (BMC)
Bauke Mollema (Blanco)
Rafal Majka (Saxo-Tinkoff)
Thibaut Pinot (FDJ)
Diego Ulissi (Lampre)
Other
climbers and all-rounders in with a GC chance or a stage win:
Ryder Hesjedal, Peter
Stetina, Rohan Dennis (Garmin), Janez Brajkovic (Astana), Ivan Basso
(Cannondale), Jean-Christophe Peraud (Ag2R), Johann Tschopp (IAM), Tomasz
Marczynski (Vacansoleil), Cameron Meyer and Michael Albasini (OGE), Peter Velits
(OPQ), Andreas Klöden, Fabian Cancellara and Maxim Monfort (Radioshack), just
to name a few, of course.
Peter Sagan is the man to
beat in the sprints
|
The sprinters’ field is deep
and will also be very competitive. Besides Peter Sagan there will be Alexander
Kristoff (Katusha), Philippe Gilbert (BMC), Arnaud Demare (FDJ), John Degenkolb
(Argos Shimano), Matt Goss (OGE), Roberto Ferrari (Lampre), Tyler Farrar
(Garmin), Mark Renshaw (Blanco), Bernard Eisel and Ben Swift (Sky), JJ Rojas
(Movistar), Daniele Bennati (Saxo), Heinrich Haussler (IAM), and Tom Boonen
(OPQ), who posted some good results at the Tour of Belgium a couple weeks ago.
Boonen is recently back from a six-week racing hiatus after crashing out of the
Tour of Flanders, and will be looking to make up for lost time. Cancellara has
also just recently returned to racing after a similar absence since winning the
Tour of Flanders, Paris Roubaix and the E3 Harelbeke earlier this spring.
The teams:
Ag2r La Mondiale (France)
Argos-Shimano (Netherlands)
Astana (Kazakhstan)
Blanco (Netherlands)
BMC (USA)
Cannondale (Italy)
Euskaltel-Euskadi (Spain)
FDJ (France)
Garmin-Sharp (USA)
IAM Cycling (Switzerland)
Katusha (Russia)
Lampre-Merida (Italy)
Lotto Belisol (Belgium)
Movistar (Spain)
Omega Pharma-QuickStep (Belgium)
Orica-GreenEdge (Australia)
RadioShack-Leopard (Luxembourg)
Saxo-Tinkoff (Denmark)
Sky (Great Britain)
Sojasun (France)
Vacansoleil-DCM (Netherlands)
Argos-Shimano (Netherlands)
Astana (Kazakhstan)
Blanco (Netherlands)
BMC (USA)
Cannondale (Italy)
Euskaltel-Euskadi (Spain)
FDJ (France)
Garmin-Sharp (USA)
IAM Cycling (Switzerland)
Katusha (Russia)
Lampre-Merida (Italy)
Lotto Belisol (Belgium)
Movistar (Spain)
Omega Pharma-QuickStep (Belgium)
Orica-GreenEdge (Australia)
RadioShack-Leopard (Luxembourg)
Saxo-Tinkoff (Denmark)
Sky (Great Britain)
Sojasun (France)
Vacansoleil-DCM (Netherlands)
Coverage:
beIN
sports TV will be broadcasting the race in the U.S. if you are fortunate enough
to be able to fork over even more money to your cable provider, as it only
comes as a separate tier package for an additional price. I don’t think they will
be broadcasting live though (please let me know if I'm wrong). I just hope they
won’t air the stages as late as NBC Sports did with the Criterium du Dauphiné,
where some stage broadcasts ended after the next stage had already begun! That’s
pretty useless to most folks. beIN TV’s recent first-time broadcast of the Giro
d’Italia looked great in HD, but showed some kinks they are still working out.
Eurosport,
SBS, and SKY sports are some of the other international broadcasters of the
event. You can always check steephill.tv for more viewing and streaming
options.
Here is a look at the stages and
profiles for the 2013 Tour de Suisse:
Stage 1,
Saturday June 8, Quinto to Quinto, 8.1km ITT
Stage 2,
Sunday June 9, Quinto to Crans-Montana, 161km MTF (mountaintop finish)
Stage 3,
Monday June 10, Montreux to Meiringen, 203km
Stage 4,
Tuesday June 11, Innertkirchen to Buochs, 161km
Stage 5,
Wednesday June 12, Buochs to Leuggern, 176km
Stage 6,
Thursday June 13, Leuggern to Meilen, 186km
Stage 7*,
Friday June 14, Meilen to La Punt, 206km, *Queen Stage
Stage 8,
Saturday June 15, Zernez to Bad Ragaz, 181km
Stage 9,
Sunday June 16, Bad Ragaz to Flumserberg, 26.8km ITT
STAGE 1 – 8.1km ITT
Prologue ITT Profile; only small time splits are expected |
STAGE 2 - 161km MTF
Stage 2 is the only true MTF of the race, and crosses the race's high point early on |
STAGE 3 - 203km, medium mountains
Stage 3's late climb should thin the field of contenders; good descenders should prevail |
STAGE 4 – 174km, rolling
Stage 4 profile; the sprinters should be able to control this one |
STAGE 5 – 176KM, rolling
Stage 5 profile looks like a Classics stage, with little opportunities for breakaways |
STAGE 6 – 186km, rolling
Stage 6 profile shows ample opportunity for a successful breakaway |
STAGE 7 – 206km, high mountains
The queen stage profile; over 200k and the penultimate chance to gain precious time |
STAGE 8 – 181km, rolling
The bump at the end of stage 8 could host a late attack, but sprinters will be hungry |
STAGE 9 – 26.8km ITT
The final stage TT could end up being the decisive stage |
My picks
for the overall win:
The entire
course suits riders like Rui Costa, Bauke Mollema, Dan Martin, Simon Spilak,
Tejay Van Garderen and Thibaut Pinot. I will go with the American, Tejay Van Garderen, coming off his
recent win at the Tour of California. Tejay will likely be Cadel Evans'
lieutenant in the TDF mountains, so this could be a good opportunity to log
more of his own impressive results.
I will try
to post stage-by-stage analyses and reports, but I have a lot going on right
now, so I will do my best.
Coming
soon I will post a thorough preview of the 2013 Tour de France.
Enjoy the
racing!
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