The Death of the Grand Tour

LeMond and Fignon do battle in the high mountains.

Suspense. It defines the thrill of watching a bike race. Johan Van Summeren, his deflated rear tire clanging over the last secteurs of cobblestones in Paris-Roubaix with Fabian Cancellara breathing down his back; Laurent Fignon snatching seconds from Greg LeMond on each mountaintop finish, as LeMond snatches those same seconds back in the time trials. From the spectators standpoint at least, suspense categorically defines good bike racing.

Bike racing is a monumentally difficult sport, with even the one-day races representing a magnificent display of endurance. Many one-day races are 200 or more kilometers over difficult terrain and in awful weather, where riders need to be fit, strong, and alert at all times during a competition that lasts upwards of six hours. Grand Tours distinguish themselves by aggregating the challenges from the one-day races into a three-week event; their sheer length cause riders to not only battle each other but themselves as fatigue creeps in, brought on by racing twenty days along windy coastal roads, over high mountains – in baking heat or torrential rain. Simply finishing a Grand Tour labels a rider as a “Giant of the Road”, the designation given to those few who were good enough and hard enough to endure this ultimate test of determination and stamina. Those who manage to win one will be defined by the accomplishment for the remainder of their career and, quite possibly, their lives. The V, brought to life and personified in each one of them.

Historically, one of the distinguishing factors of Grand Tour contenders has been their superiority over their rivals in one discipline or another, while typically being bested in another discipline. The Grimpeur who soars over the mountains shows weakness when they go contre la montre. The Rouleur who gains an advantage in the time trials struggles to limit their losses over the high passes. The route, the terrain, their weaknesses, and their ability to respond to the tactics of each stage characterizes the three-week struggle for domination. There is no other event on Earth like it.

The grimpeur versus the rouleur has been the Grand Tour’s great struggle, for what Merckx giveth in the Mountains, Merckx taketh away in the Time Trial. The emaciated body that the climber uses to float up the steepest gradients is little more than a waifish weather vane in the time trails where sheer strength and power are the keys to success. Conversely, the additional body mass required to generate time trial-winning power becomes an anchor when pointed uphill, allowing gravity and physics to do their cruel work.

Where in the past we’ve seen riders who could ride amongst the best in both the mountains as well as the time trials, these riders were never the dominant figure in either of both disciplines. Anquetil was strong in the time trials but struggled in the mountains – the same goes for Indurain. Hinault, LeMond, and Ullrich were strong in the time trails and, while good climbers, were always bested by others on the high passes. Fignon and Pantani could take time away from their rivals on the vicious slopes of the high mountains, but struggled to maintain their advantage in the time trials. It all came together to form a ferocious battle of riders pitting their strengths against their rivals’ weaknesses, and their rivals coming back to do the same another day when conditions were more in their favor.

Yet, in the last decade, we’ve seen an alarming shift in the qualities of some top Grand Tour contenders. With Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador, we have seen a new class of rider who is the best climber in the world while also the best time trialist; while an awesome display of skill, it puts paid to the excitement of watching a Grand Tour unfold. Each of Armstrong’s wins came at the hands of devastating mountaintop wins coupled with domination in the Time Trials. Similarly, Contador’s 2009 record-setting VAM (Vertical Ascension in Meters) on the climb of Verbiér came alongside his defeat of World-Champion time trialist, Fabian Cancellara, his frail climber’s body managing to best the most powerful rider in the peloton.

Whatever lies at the root of this transformation, it seems these riders have found a way to abolish their weakness in these opposed disciplines, and can execute their race plans with surgical, three-week precision. With that precision comes the death of the Grand Tour; for it is the weakness of our heros that lends us the opportunity to revel in the thrill of their victories. Without that weakness, we have gained an impressive show of dominance, and lost the spectacle of suspense.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

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  • Fuck yeah! That's what I'm talking about!

    Now, to repost some of my earlier questions here: I am DYING to talk about the tdf: So hard to pick only five contenders for this year. Will Basso be healed and ready? Will Cuddles hold up or fold as per the last few years? Will Wiggo really show up or was 2009 a fluke? Can JVDB be as awesome as last year? What about Gesink--is he real contender? Also, no prologue. What's up with that?

    As for dominating both climbing and time trialing, I hate to raise the ugly monster but I smell a nice steak cooking somewhere in Spain and in Texas on that one.

  • I'm really curious about that myself Buck... I wonder how the final TT is gonna play out if we have a vegan field this year, lol.

    What do you make of Horner's proclaimation that he can hang with anyone but Beefador?

    @Frank What happens if (and it's admittedly unlikely) Berto gets pulled midway through and he's in your picks? DNF/Crash rule or rest day sub?

  • @Leroy
    If any rider DNF'd for whatever reason, you have 24(ish) hours to make the swap. I actually doubt they'll pull him mid-way. But the piti principle applies anyway.

    My VMH and I have vowed to not let the investigation sully the tour, though. Whether he Shoukd or shouldn't be there is beside the point...the authorities are letting him race, so bring it on; I just want to see some '89-like awe-inspiring, pins-and-needle style racing! Vive le tour!!

  • Couldn't agree more. I really wish they'd settled it one way or the other beforehand but it is what it is. I can't believe they'd pull him either but, it is the UCI afterall...

    The suspense has already started!! Andy's dropping chains on Di2 and showing suspect form pre tour... is he sandbaging?!

  • @Leroy
    I'm not buying Horner as a legit top ten but who knows. My last two VSP selections have been pure shit!

    I also wonder if Sammy Sanchez cannot crac the top 5. It's going to be an aWESOME year, esp the stage that finishes on top of the Col du Galibier!!! I do wish that there was another longish ITT, aorund 50k, to help add some more excitement to the race, though.

  • I'm just gonna throw this out there, but I won't be surprised if Contador exits from the tour at some point due to "stomach issues" or illness. Saves face all around. I'll put him in my top 5 picks, but I'll be ready to make a substitution.

  • @wiscot
    Not so sure myself. He'll stick it out unless he's surely not going to win, then maybe he pulls out. If he wins I predict he'll not be banned. No way the powers that be are going to have two GT wins nullified in the same year. Pity, that.

    If he loses or dnf's, then all bets are off. A ban becomes much more likely.

    Delenda Est Alberto (bringing my sig back for the TdF)

  • Nobody think that Contadoor might run out of team mates? - not sure who he has apart from Navarro and Sorrenson for the climbs and Richie Porte maybe - Leotard Schleck do look pretty damn punchy, and will presumably to try and ride Saxo Wank off the road, so might be tight enough come the mountains.....that said, hard to see anyone shaking him off

    JVDB looks the danger man to me - will also be interesting to see how OLO use Phil Giblets, who seems so fucking hard this year, you'd wonder if he gets the MJ on his back in week one, if he won't just decide he doesn't want to give it back

    Wiggo.....?

    Is Chavanel back in? I thought they'd lobbed him according to cyclingnews??? Non? Hope he is picked, for some off the front entertainment

    Can't wait... come on le Petit Grimpeur!!

  • @Buck Rogers
    I do wish that there was another longish ITT, aorund 50k, to help add some more excitement to the race, though.

    agreed - might have to forgo my loyalty to Wiggo on that one sadly

    not going to paick any sprinters for the GC this time either..... Doh!!

  • Anybody find it extremely odd that JVS is off Garmin's tour squad and is replaced by a relatively anonymous rider? What are the circumstances behind this last minute sub, and why the hell wasn't it Dan Martin?

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