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Missile, Pistolero, Purito and Shark

Mark Cavendish, known as the “Manx Missile,” is the active leader in stage wins at the Tour de France with 25 victories. And when the 101st Tour de France will open with a sprint stage, Cavendish will have an opportunity to wear the leader’s yellow jersey for the first time in his storied Tour history.

PARIS – Svelte climbers, explosive sprinters, powerful time trialists: The Tour de France is not just about the handful of all-rounders who will vie for the coveted yellow jersey when the race will begin Saturday in Leeds, England.

Team Sky’s Chris Froome is favored to repeat as champion, but he’ll be tested by the 2,277-mile (3,364-kilometer) route, which was laid out with the aim of encouraging riders to take chances, with more short-but-treacherous mountain stages like those in the relatively little-used Vosges region.

Should Froome dominate the race as he did in 2013, however, there will be other storylines to keep fans interested:

Will Mark Cavendish fight off the new generation of French and German sprinters aiming to claim the crown of Tour Sprint King?

Who among the young American riders will emerge as the next great hope of USA cycling?

What’s happened to Luxembourg’s once-formidable Schleck brothers?

And does aging veteran Jens Voigt still have one more thrilling breakaway victory left in him?

Here are 10 cyclists to watch:

Mark Cavendish

The 29-year-old “Manx Missile” again will be a contender for the sprinter’s green jersey in his second year riding for the Belgian squad Omega Pharma Quick-Step. Cavendish, who has the most Tour stage wins (25) of any active rider, also has a chance to wear the yellow jersey for the first time in his career after route planners decided to start the race with a sprint stage that just so happens to finish in his mother’s hometown of Harrogate. A bout of bronchitis prevented the 2013 British road champion from defending his title in June, but Cavendish hopes to be back to full strength for the Tour.

Alberto Contador

At 31, the Spaniard known as “El Pistolero” is the most decorated stage racer of his generation, with five grand tours in his palmares, including two Tours de France. The Tinkoff-Saxo rider will be out to reclaim his position at the top of the sport after he was stripped of the 2010 Tour title for a doping violation and lost a podium spot in the 2013 Tour on the penultimate stage. His form has been good this season, with stage wins and overall victories in two important weeklong races – Tirreno-Adriatico in March and Tour of Basque Country in April, as well as a close second-place finish in June’s Criterium du Dauphine. As a headline in French newspaper L’Equipe declared in March, “The King is Back.”

Chris Froome

The defending champion has every chance of repeating and giving Team Sky its third Tour victory in as many years. The 29-year-old Kenyan-born Brit grabbed the yellow jersey with a victory at Ax 3 Domaines in the Pyrenees in Stage 8 and held it for the rest of the race. His closest rival, Colombian sensation Nairo Quintana, finished more than four minutes behind him and is skipping this year’s Tour to focus on the Spanish Vuelta in September. Froome also won’t have to worry about managing his sometimes-fraught relationship with teammate Bradley Wiggins, the 2012 champ who was left off of Sky’s squad.

Marcel Kittel

The 26-year-old German dethroned Cavendish last year as the fastest man on the Champs-Élysées, ending the Brit’s four-year winning streak in the final stage finish. The Giant-Shimano rider has won stages in all three Grand Tours, including two at this year’s Giro d’Italia, to add to his haul of four stages at last year’s Tour – double Cavendish’s take.

Vincenco Nibali

The 29-year-old Italian climber, known as “The Shark,” won last year’s Giro d’Italia and was runner-up at the Spanish Vuelta. The Astana rider’s coach told the Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport that Nibali has spent recent weeks in the Italian Dolomites preparing his attack, with the aim of hitting peak form just before the Tour. His recent victory at the Italian championships suggests he’s ready.

Joaquim Rodriguez

The Spaniard known as “Purito” (Little Cigar) remains a threat for the Tour podium at age 35. The Team Katusha rider grabbed a third-place finish in last year’s Tour thanks to a standout performance in the penultimate stage in the Alps, where only Quintana was able to outclimb him to the finish at Semnoz. This season, his best result has been a victory in the Volta a Catalunya in his hometown of Barcelona in March, when he beat Contador and Froome.

Peter Sagan

The charismatic Slovak is the favorite to win the sprinter’s green jersey for a third year in a row. The 24-year-old Cannondale rider only won one stage last year but was a constant threat, with four second-place and two third-place stage finishes. Known for his humorous finish-line salutes, as well as his bike-handling skills, which rivals call the best in the peloton, Sagan consistently is one of the most exciting riders to watch.

Andrew Talansky

The 25-year-old Garmin-Sharp rider was the top-performing American last year, finishing 10th. He also turned more than a few heads after winning June’s Criterium du Dauphine, using wily tactics to defeat Contador, Froome and Nibali on the race’s final summit finish in the Alps for the biggest victory of his career.

Alejandro Valverde

The 34-year-old Spaniard will lead Team Movistar in Quintana’s absence. Valverde returned to cycling in 2012 after a two-year doping ban and has racked up some impressive performances since then, including a podium finish behind Froome and Sky teammate Richie Porte in last year’s difficult Stage 8 summit finish at Ax 3 Domaines, then a fourth-place finish on Mont Semnoz. Valverde also can take hope from the hilly time trial in the penultimate stage: He conceded only 30 seconds to Froome in a similar stage last year.

Tejay van Garderen

The 2012 white jersey winner had a disappointing Tour last year, but his BMC Racing team believes in him enough to tap him as team leader over former yellow jersey winner Cadel Evans. The 25-year-old will be supported by a squad that’s largely been revamped since 2013, with five new riders, including fellow American Peter Stetina.

Jul 4, 2014
Froome already under fire in France


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