Number 6

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Lance Armstrong has moved on from the Five time winners club and set up his own, new club. Only trouble is, that he’ll have to wait a while for a bit of company. This tour, more than any others, he has been ruthless and his attention to detail exquisite. Taking seconds on early stages and stamping down his superiority on the big stages, then riding his rivals out of the frame on each time trail. Maybe this is it, maybe there won’t be a number seven, but then who’d have said that it would have been possible for a man to win six tours. Awesome.

Goodwood Ride

Enjoyed my ride at Goodwood today with Martin, we started out around 11 o’clock and completed around 12 laps of the 2.4mile circuit. The weather came good and the sun shone for the first time in ages. (I’ve been suffering too many rides in the rain lately). This was another ride for the British Heart Foundation, and if anyone has any money left over or neglected to sponsor me for the London to Brighton, then please email me If I can raise £50 then I get a free t-shirt, come on people – clothe me…

Here are the stats – we did take it easy most of the time, I put in a killer lap towards the end.

Time: 2hrs
Average Speed: 15mph
Distance 30miles
Maximum Speed 25mph

Wear YELLOW

During my visit to the tour I handed over a shiny Euro and received a little yellow bracelet. This is sold on behalf of Lance Armstrong’s Wear Yellow Live Strong campaign which benefits cancer sufferers all around the world. Its amazing how many of these yellow bands you can spot it you’re watching the tour. The Lance Armstrong Foundation has a very interesting site, which gives information, including support for people and thier families who are living with cancer.

 

Armstrong gains over rivals

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After the first of serious climb of the tour, Stage 12: 197.5 km Castelsarrasin to La Mongie, US postal are back in charge. Although Basso won the stage, Armstrong’s second place has pushed him within touching distance of the race yellow jersey Thomas Voeckler, who incidentally has shown himself more than worthy of wearing yellow.

Photos above taken with my new camera, a Nikon Coolpix 3200.

Had a fantastic weekend watching stages 7 and 8. Spent a great afternoon in St Brieuc on the barriers, with a grand parade of cycling through the ages, followed by the publicity caravan, throwing out caps, badges and coffee sachets… then a couple of hours later, as the atmosphere started to hot up, the team cars and commissaires vehicles, followed by the riders themselves, gunning at great speed up the final kilometre from la flame rouge. The stage was won by Pozzato from Fassa Bortolo, a young rider announcing himself on his first tour.

The next day, after a peaceful morning and a quick look at the map, we went to L’Enseigne Verte, which is a fourth category climb a few kilometres east of Briec. The turnout was amazing, much more than we had anticipated, with camping cars lining the route up to the summit. Although St-Brieuc had been great, the atmosphere at the roadside was much more intense. As the team cars sped through on thier way the finish, the helicopters hovered overhead and the sound from the crowd was getting louder and louder. Suddenly I whipped my hand from the road as the riders brushed past, quickly followed a few seconds later by the peloton. My heart was racing as they vanished out of sight.

Armstrong in Yellow

After the hustle and bustle of the opening days, including a great time trial victory for the young swiss rider Fabian Cancellara , who broke down in tears when Armstrong crossed over a second behind; a couple of sprints more notable for the absence on the podium of Alessandro Petacchi; and after the drama of Iban Mayo falling on the cobblestones amid the dust and mayhem usually enjoyed by the Paris-Roubaix…after all of that, we have Lance Armstrong in yellow and some of his rivals a long way off the classification. Really, I forgot this wasn’t just any bike race.

The Tour de France Blog is back for another year, with all the news from the race.

BBC Sport providing some beautiful photos – especially of stage 3 on the cobbles.

Graham Watson has been covering the tour since 1977 and takes some amazing photos.

Le Tour de France 2004

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Its here at last, after months of waiting, the big guys are on their way to Paris over 3,388 kilometre, along some of France’s most beautiful scenery, up mountains and along the flat. This promises to be a great race. Lance Armstrong is gunning for a record 6th Tour win.

Over the next three weeks I’ll try to put as much up as i can, any links I find, some photos, some times, and comments. Please send me your stuff. Comments box is open for business.

We are going over for two stages this weekend in Quimper and I’ll take some photos. Here we go…

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