Tour de France route to end in the Pyrenees

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PARIS (AP)—Defending champion Alberto Contador and Lance Armstrong will play out the next chapter of their Tour de France rivalry against the majestic backdrop of the Pyrenees.

Tour organizers unveiled the 2010 course on Wednesday, with Armstrong and Contador attending the ceremony in Paris. The race will start with a 5-mile prologue on July 3 in Rotterdam, Netherlands and a final stage on the Champs-Elysees wraps ups a 2,234-mile ride.

The pair worked together as Astana teammates during this year’s race, and the Spaniard won the Tour for a second time while Armstrong finished third.

The route of most prestigious three-week cycling race will recreate the first crossing of the Pyrenees 100 years ago with four stages in the daunting mountains that form the border between France and Spain.

Contador and Armstrong shook hands at the Palais des Congres during the ceremony but didn’t exchange a word.

“They’re already writing the script,” Armstrong said of the rivalry with Contador. “It’s good for cycling. I think he and I could do without it, but I think its good for the event and good for our sport. For sure the build up to the tour, from April to May to June and to the start, it’ll be really intense.”

The 38-year-old Armstrong left the Kazakh-funded Astana team to launch his own squad after last year’s race. The RadioShack team has yet to be granted a ProTour license.

Astana manager Johan Bruyneel, the man behind Armstrong’s seven Tour de France victories, confirmed he will join RadioShack this season. He said he was confident the UCI will deliver its license soon.

Armstrong didn’t give his opinion about the route for the July race

“I was never one to say I like this Tour, I dislike this tour,” Armstrong said. “It’s the Tour. The best man always wins and you always do the Alps and the Pyrenees and you always have some demanding time trials.”

In 1910, Tour riders climbed the four legendary Pyrenean passes— Peyresourde, Aspin, Tourmalet and Aubisque—a feat their modern heirs will repeat next July. The Tourmalet, one of the toughest climbs in cycling, will be scaled twice.

“With the celebration of the first crossing of the Pyrenees, it’s logical that the Pyrenees will be harder than the Alps on this Tour,” race director Christian Prudhomme said.

The course will include a total of 23 mountain passes in the Alps, Pyrenees, Jura and Massif Central, three more than this year.

In between, riders will go through Belgium and tackle six mountain stages including three hilltop finishes and four medium mountain stages. The only individual time trial will be the penultimate stage in the Bordeaux vineyards after organizers decided to scratch the team time trial from the program.

“We wanted to make sure that anything could happen anywhere,” said Prudhomme, who was disappointed by this year’s scenario, when all the favorites neutralized themselves for the biggest part of the race.

Tourmalet is a nearly 7,000-foot peak that has been climbed more times (73) than any other in Tour history. But only once has it hosted a stage finish—in 1974, when French rider Jean-Pierre Danguillaume beat a field that included Eddy Merckx to the top. That year was also the last time Tourmalet was climbed twice in one Tour.

Contador says he’s looking forward to the demanding route.

“The route is better than last year’s because there are more mountains,” Contador said. “And finishing with the Tourmalet is great for me.”

The last time the Tour sent the riders over all four of the Pyrenees’ most punishing ascents in that order was the 17th stage in 1969.

That epic race involved Merckx taking off on an 87-mile solo breakaway, finishing first at Mourenx after crossing the peaks of Peyresourde, Aspin, Tourmalet and Aubisque on his way to the first of his five yellow jerseys.

In 1910 when the race first ventured into the Pyrenees, the 10th stage was a 203-mile journey over the four peaks. French rider Octave Lapize won that stage and went on to win the race.

Lapize’s judgment of the course’s designers has become part of Tour legend: “You are assassins, yes, assassins.”

Nicknamed “The Circle of Death,” the combination of the four big mountain passes was also crossed in the 1926 Tour. Like in 1910 and 1969, the winner of that stage, Lucien Buysse, went on to win the Tour.

The first stages of next year’s race will pay tribute to two of the most prestigious classics—Liege-Bastogne-Liege and Paris-Roubaix—with riders going through seven cobblestone sectors over a total 8.2 miles in the third stage between Wanze, Belgium, and Arenberg Porte du Hainaut, France, on July 6.

It will be the first time since 2004 that riders will have to handle cobblestones, a difficult task that dashed Spanish rider Iban Mayo’s hopes of unsettling Armstrong that year.

“We don’t put cobblestones for riders to fall, but to make a selection,” Prudhomme said. “There will be 11 kilometers of cobblestones in the last 30 kilometers. There will be some damage.”

Bruyneel said this stage won’t be a threat in Armstrong’s quest to win an eighth Tour.

“He feels good on this kind of stage,” the Belgian said. “For him it’s not a problem at all.”

Following a new feud between the International cycling union and the French anti-doping agency, Prudhomme restated that the fight against doping was his priority.

“This is an absolute necessity,” Prudhomme said. “And authorities in charge of this fight need to work together in good terms.”

This month, the French anti-doping agency released a report concluding that teams including Astana had received advance notice of doping tests during the Tour, and that some blood and urine samples were not handled correctly by UCI inspectors. The UCI responded by saying it scrupulously respected the obligations imposed by the World Anti-Doping Code.

On Tuesday, French prosecutors opened a preliminary investigation to examine syringes found during this year’s race in a container given by organizers to all the teams to collect medical waste. Several newspapers reported that Astana was targeted by French authorities but Armstrong and Contador are not worried.

“I don’t have any answers because I don’t know anything about the case,” Armstrong told Eurosport. “I’m confident that our team has been racing clean. We just have to deal with it and get on with it.”

Contador didn’t appear to be worried either.

“In France, the fight against doping is total,” the Spaniard said. “Astana was the most scrutinized team during the Tour. I’ve heard that they were looking into our waste, but I’m absolutely relaxed.”

Asked to comment that case, Prudhomme said he knew nothing about it.

“We learned it from the press,” he said.

While there were no positive tests at this year’s Tour, authorities did seize drugs that the French anti-doping agency said raised questions. The drugs included treatments for diabetes, high blood pressure and convulsions suffered by manic-depressives.

Associated Press writer Greg Keller in Paris contributed to this report.

Updated Oct 14, 10:24 am EDT
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2040 Comments

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  1. <i>bbozo30</i>
    15. Posted by bbozo30 Sat Jul 4 2:04pm EDT

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    Hey Steelers suck.....thanks for the update on Tennis and cancer.....by the way, the Lance you're rooting for publicly stated that God had nothing to do with him beating cancer......that was right before he left his wife that stayed at his side when he had cancer......save the hero speech for some other people that don't know better. Bet you're wearing one of his wrist bans too aren't ya......might want to cut that off now
  2. steelers suck
    14. Posted by steelers suck Sat Jul 4 1:45pm EDT

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    Stop hating. Armstrong is a great rider. Regardless with drugs or with out. You all need to realize this guy almost died he had cancer people. One more thing Armstrong is gay makes me laugh he has 3 kids and i think another on his way. So stop hating and calling this great rider gay. He is kicks *** . Oh tennis is bike riding are in different leagues who wants to watch tennis? No one absolutely no one. Its boring and they score awkward.
  3. Crepax
    13. Posted by Crepax Sat Jul 4 1:27pm EDT

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    Hey Ted & Jodie, upon first seeing the Williams "sisters", I wondered why are these NFL line backers playing women's tennis. The appearance of being more masculine than most of the male players has always troubled me.
    Greg
  4. Ted & Jodie
    12. Posted by Ted & Jodie Sat Jul 4 1:11pm EDT

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    I wonder if the test in tennis , I see Venus got beat by her younger brother !!!
  5. Jordan
    11. Posted by Jordan Sat Jul 4 12:12pm EDT

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    Chris H, You might want to get a new prescription for your meds. I'm not so sure the ones you have are working buddy.
  6. Chris H
    10. Posted by Chris H Sat Jul 4 11:55am EDT

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    I say let `em all dope,then they`ll all be the same as if they were all clean,no one will have an edge,big deal,enjoy the race, enjoy the scenery,the history,then get on your bike and go ride,those of you who are so self-rightous, super clean, ultra its got to be a certain way,you won`t ride unless the weather was perfect,god forbid if it rained while you were out,yup,cancel the ride because your a wuss,ohh its tooo cold,ohhh its too hooot,ohhh you cheated,grow up,get a spine,quit crying,here let me throw you off this cliff.... you people would shut down the tour because its not to your way of thinking,there are cheaters in EVERY SPORT,get over it, enjoy the ride,make me come over there and slap you like the little girl that you are,cry baby little wuss,what do you ride in lacra or a diaper,this is why they shouldn`t let GAY PEOPLE ride bikes,we know why your out there,and why you ride in the back of the pack,YOU FREAK,......
  7. <i>thomaspluker</i>
    9. Posted by thomaspluker Sat Jul 4 11:41am EDT

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    we are in america. lance is innocent until he is proven guilty. if he is found guilty beyond a doubt, fry his ass!
  8. GAREN
    8. Posted by GAREN Sat Jul 4 11:22am EDT

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    I agree with poster 6
    I disagree with lifetime bans - It doesn't apply in other sports, so why cycling? - In the grand scheme of things it's a little too severe, . . don't you think?
    .
    In the current climate, even a short ban - it marks you as a cheat and outcast, to some degree ! - Lets not go overboard on this!
  9. Cherie L
    7. Posted by Cherie L Fri Jul 3 10:07pm EDT

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    I think every athlete should be tested. And if you are positive, you're out! no tolerance!! Lance, I will be watching! Good luck !! I agree with positing #4! ( anonymousscooter) test positive twice, out for life!
  10. Jeff
    6. Posted by Jeff Tue Jun 30 3:19pm EDT

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    I am all for the testing of cyclists and the policing of our sport. What I am tired of seeing is that the only time cycling makes headlines is when somebody is caught doping or Lance sneezes. There is so much more to cycling than doping and Lance.
  11. DaveLamite
    5. Posted by DaveLamite Tue Jun 30 2:26pm EDT

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    The NFL's testing policies, what a joke! Hines Ward admitted to pooling his blood on TV at the super bowl..... This exact procedure would get you banned for several years in cycling! I love both sports but cycling is much stricter on what they allow. Even caffeine is only allowed in trace amounts!
  12. Jonathan
    4. Posted by Jonathan Tue Jun 30 12:31pm EDT

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    I say if they get caught it should be a lifetime ban,,,test the sample twice, 2 different agencies and if both are positive, out for life,, if the two testing agencies find different results, then the guy has a target put on him for suspicion. LIFETIME BAN! PERIOD
  13. greg y
    3. Posted by greg y Tue Jun 30 8:36am EDT

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    Well I don't know about a witch hunt, but we test the hell out of cyclists, and now baseball and other sports are coming around to stringent testing. Thank God that the NFL polices themselves, and there are hardly any instances of drugs, doping, steroids. Too bad these other sports can't be as pure as 350 lb. neanderthal men that can run a 4.5 40 yd. dash drug free.......
  14. Tasia
    2. Posted by Tasia Mon Jun 29 9:53pm EDT

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    lets make it fair and easy, TEST THEM ALL.....
    This may just be to logical for thr french and uci
    to use the same word as mcquaid
    " idiots"
  15. Jeff
    1. Posted by Jeff Mon Jun 29 4:39pm EDT

    Report Abuse

    And the witch hunt begins ...
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