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          Room for Froome

          Updated: 2013-06-30 07:35

          By Associated Press(China Daily)

            Print Mail Large Medium  Small

           Room for Froome

          Chris Froome of Team Sky poses for photographers before a meeting with journalists in Nice, southern France, on June 18. With injured Bradley Wiggins out of the Tour de France, the Kenya-born Briton is the favorite to triumph on a particularly mountainous route this year that should suit his climbing skills. Lionel Cironneau / Associated Press

          Although defending champion Bradley Wiggins is out with an injury, another confident Brit has emerged as the Tour de France favorite, Associated Press reports in Paris.

          Chris Froome is the overwhelming favorite for the Tour de France but the return of former winner Alberto Contador after a one-year hiatus could trigger a classic duel to mark the 100th edition of the great cycling race.

          It will also be the first Tour since American Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven titles after admitting he cheated his way to glory from 1999-2005, leaving a huge gap in the event's records.

          It is a period Briton Froome will be happy to put in the past for good.

          "The fact that I'm able to finish at the front in the mountains and in the general classification means that the sport has changed since 10 years ago," said Froome, who was promoted to Team Sky leader before teammate and defending champion Bradley Wiggins withdrew from the race for health reasons.

          "You learn from the past. The sport is going in the right direction and my results are proof of that."

          Froome has won four of the five stage races he has entered this season.

          "It definitely gives me confidence that I've had the right build-up to the Tour, that I've had the right preparation for the Tour," he explained.

          "It also gives my teammates a lot of confidence, that they're riding for a worthy cause, that they know I can deliver the result.

          "But having said that, once we line up on the start line in Corsica, every other race we've done early on this season folds away," said Kenya-born Froome with a note of caution.

          Froome is expected to have the upper hand in the individual time trials and will rely on a super strong Team Sky with a stunning capacity to set a high tempo in the mountains to prevent attacks - a tactic Wiggins heavily relied on in 2012.

          Contador's presence, after missing last year's Tour because of a doping suspension, will definitely be felt even if the Spaniard has made little impression so far this season.

          Contador, who won the Tour in 2007 and 2009, goes into the race with only one low-key victory under his belt - a stage of the Tour de San Luis in January.

          Since then, the 30-year-old has been comprehensively beaten by Froome and others, despite repeated attacks in the uphill stages of the Tour of Oman or the Criterium du Dauphine.

          Froome is likely to gain time in the two individual and one team time trials of this year's race, which started on Saturday, so Contador will have to make up for it in the mountains, where his rival also shines.

          The race should not be decided before the last week with the 14th stage finishing up the Mont Ventoux and the 18th sending the peloton twice round the 21 hairpins of L'Alpe d'Huez.

          However, Contador is one of only five men with titles in all three grand Tours (Spain, Italy, France) while Froome has only two podium finishes - seconds in the Vuelta in 2011 and the Tour in 2012.

          Contador will also be assisted by a solid team featuring Australian Michael Rogers, who was a key rider for Team Sky during last year's Tour, as well as Irishman Nicolas Roche and Czech Roman Kreuziger.

          Both have relinquished their personal ambitions to help the Spaniard clinch a third title.

          "There are quite a few guys whom I believe to be threats to the yellow jersey and until any of those guys lose time on the general classification they should be treated as potential yellow jersey wearers," said Froome.

          "Contador is definitely not someone to write off from the group of contenders. I did come out on top in the time trial and in the mountain stages (in the Dauphine) against Contador but he cannot be ruled out."

          Never gives up

          Contador proved in winning last year's Vuelta that he never gives up, taking the overall lead in the 17th stage after launching a devastating surprise attack.

          Should he and Froome falter, the indefatigable Cadel Evans, winner of the Tour in 2011, will be ready to step up, as well as fellow Australian Richie Porte, the Team Sky No 2.

          "Richie's results this year have been fantastic," Team Sky coach Tim Kerrison said. "He's a very, very good stage racer and a strong GC contender."

          The battle for the points classification green jersey is likely to be between Slovakia's Peter Sagan and Mark Cavendish, although the Briton would be happy with a brief spell in yellow.

          "I would like to wear the yellow jersey after the first stage in Corsica," said Cavendish, who is 11 stages shy of Eddy Merckx's all-time Tour record of 34.

          "It's the only one of the three grand tours where I haven't worn the leader's jersey, so I'd like to do that."

          The route is among the most mountainous in recent years. Stage 15 on July 14 - France's Bastille Day holiday - features an uphill finish on the barren Mont Ventoux in Provence. The year's "Queen Stage" comes four days later in Stage 18, with not one but two runs up the famed Alpe-d'Huez.

          Froome said Tour planners were "bordering on sadistic" with the selection of the Alpe d'Huez stage.

          Before then, race contenders must emerge unscathed and in contention after the Pyrenees - including an uphill finish at Ax-3-Domaines ski station in Stage 8 - and avoid crashes that often bedevil the flat stages.

          Look for nervous, jostling, and adrenaline-fueled finishes on those days, when sprinters will shine. This year's sprinter crop is among the best among recent Tours, headlined by British superstar Cavendish.

          Even as cycling tries to get past the doping legacy embodied by the Armstrong saga, the plague of drugs cheats continues.

          In May, the Italian Giro was marred by three doping cases. Danilo di Luca, who won that race in 2007, tested positive for banned blood booster EPO - long the designer drug for riders. Fellow Italian Mauro Santambrogio, who won a stage this year, also tested positive for EPO. France's Sylvain Georges tested positive for Heptaminol, a banned stimulant.

          Froome said the Armstrong revelations were "a big hit" to fans and riders, who are now "all being painted with the same brush" - even if the sport is among the groundbreakers when it comes to anti-doping controls.

          "I am confident in the testing that's in place," Froome said. "It's up to us to use this as an opportunity to show that the sport has changed and that this is a completely different cycling to that (Armstrong) era."

          (China Daily 06/30/2013 page8)

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