
Briançon
159.5 km
Tuesday 17 July
Juan Mauricio Soler had given a hint of what he was capable of when the Tour de France first arrived at the Alps. In his debut in the race, the Colombian has been aggressive on the climbs but the favorites of the general classification had always been able to reel in his attacks. This time, not even an inspired Alejandro Valverde, Michael Rasmussen or Cadel Evans could spoil the Barloworld rider’s party. He attacked 10km before the summit of the Col du Galibier, reached a lead of over three minutes and arrived in the highest city in Europe with an advantage of 38 seconds over Valverde and the other title hopes.
The 159.5km eighth stage of the 2007 Tour de France – from Val d’Isere to Briancon – began at 12.36pm. There were 171 riders in the race. The itinerary after the first rest day included three climbs including the 94th edition’s highest pass, the ‘hors categorie’ 2,770m high Col d’Iseran (with the summit at 15km), then the cat-1 Col du Telegraph (at 99km) followed by the HC Col du Galibier (at 122km). The first rider at this summit wins 5,000 Euros for the ‘Souvenir Henri Desgrange’. The two intermediate sprints were in Le Villaron (at 33.5km) and Bramans (60km).
Popovych Makes His Move
At the 3km mark, Arrieta (A2R) rode ahead of the peloton. It was the first attack but no one cared. At 4.5km, Popovych (DSC) set off in pursuit and caught him at 6km. ‘Popo’ then rode ahead. With 5km to climb, the Discovery Channel rider led the peloton by 1’40”. Cardenas and Soler (BAR) were also aggressive early. Popovych led Lefevre and Soler by 30” at the top. Gusev (DSC) attacked the peloton in the last kilometer of the Iseran and he continued his escape on the descent when he was joined by Astarloza (EUS), Clements (BTL), Vaugrenard (FDJ) and Gutierrez (GCE). Popovych claimed first-place the intermediate sprint and was caught by the five chasers at the 38km mark. Rabobank led the peloton 1’25” behind. The Rabobank team then moved to the front of the bunch to take control. At the 45km mark, their group was 2’05” behind. The average speed for the first hour was 38.6km/h.
Burghardt (TMO) slammed into a dog at the 48km mark but remounted his bike and rejoined the peloton. It was the only accident in the early part of the stage. The points at the second sprint were won by Astarloza who was the best-placed on GC of the escapees. The peloton was 3’00” behind at the 60km mark.
Col du Telegraph
With 9km to climb to the Col du Telegraphe, Gusev accelerated and prompted an attack from Astarloza. Six kilometers from the second summit, Astarloza led Gusev, Popovych and Gutierrez by 25”, Clement by 35”, Vaugrenard by 50” and the peloton by 2’55”. Millar led the peloton for the first 8km of the Telegraphe then peeled off and Camano (SDV) took over. Clement caught Gusev’s group halfway up the climb.
Gusev, Popovych, Clements and Gutierrez caught Astarloza between the Telegraphe and Galibier. At the base of the third climb, the five riders were 3’05” ahead of the peloton. Vinokourov (AST) consulted the race doctor on the Telegraphe climb.
Col du Galibier
On the early slopes of the third climb Clement caught up with the four stage leaders. They were 1’10” ahead of Soler (BAR) and 2’20” ahead of the peloton. Mercado (AGR) attacked with 16km to climb. Soler caught the leading quintet 8km from the top and raced into the lead. Only Popovych could match the Colombian’s pace. With 6km to climb Soler raced into the lead. Valverde sparked up the action in the yellow jersey’s group with 10km to go and this blew the bunch to pieces. Evans was the first to respond, then came: Rasmussen, Sastre, Kloden, Kirchen, Mayo, Cobo, Leipheimer and Contador. Moreau was dropped but wrestled back to this group at the summit. Vinokourov lost contact and, at the top the situation was: Soler in the lead, Popovych then Contador at 2’05”, Evans at 2’20”, Astarloza at 3’00”, Valverde and the rest of his elite group at 3’15”.
Soler Gives Barloworld A Victory
On the descent there was the expected regrouping: first Evans waited for the yellow jersey group which split into two on the false flat leading to Briancon with five in the lead (Rasmussen, Valverde, Gutierrez, Astarloza and Kirchen) then seven (Evans, Arroyo, Sastre, Moreau, Leipheimer, Cobo, Mayo and Kloden). With 6km to go, Rasmussen’s group caught up with Contador and Popovych. And 2km later there were 14 together again. Try as they did to catch Soler, they missed the cut as the Colombian powered alone up the final rise and claimed his maiden stage victory and the first win for Barloworld in the Tour de France. Valverde and Evans led most of the way up the final rise and finished 38" behind Soler.
Rasmussen was sixth in the stage (at 42") but inceased his overall lead; he now has a 2’35" advantage over Valverde and will wear the yellow jersey in stage 10.
After a few tentative attacks, Mauricio Soler struck a decisive blow on the Col du Galibier. He attacked several times in stage eight but it was his move on the final mountain that enabled him to leave the peloton in his wake. He claimed his maiden Tour stage victory in Briancon and proved that he is a rider who deserves a lot of respect.
“It’s an incredible day. I’m living out a dream. I worked very hard to arrive at the finish on my own and I received the superb prize for that effort. I wanted to achieve something for myself in my Tour debut and at 24 years of age, I’ve been able to stamp my name on a stage. Nobody believed I could win here, not even me.
“It’s true that today I was strong, I proved that by attacking on the Iseran climb, then the Col du Telegraphe and again on the Galibier where I was finally able to break free.
“I thought that the finish of the stage was all downhill so I panicked a little when I saw the climb in the final kilometers.I arrived at the foot of the final ascent and was in a state of shock. I felt like I had nothing left in my legs but I managed to make it to the finish. Now, the challenge is to stay with the best riders because my ambition is to wear the yellow jersey, even if I’m realistic enough to know that will be very difficult.”
The Discovery Channel squad played a strong tactical card on the road to Briancon. Yaroslav Popovych earned the title of the Most Aggressive rider thanks to his attack in the first five kilometers. He stayed ahead of the peloton for most of the day and, right at the summit of the final climb, was caught by his colleague Alberto Contador. The Spaniard was able to break free of the yellow jersey’s group with a phenomenal attack on the Col du Galibier but the long descent didn’t work in his favor. He finished fifth in the stage but is in complete control of the youth classification, with a lead of over three minutes on Linus Gerdemann... white is nice but he’s really after the yellow jersey.
“It was a very tough stage and I’m pleased with what I’ve been able to achieve but I really thought, for a while, that it would have been possible to stay ahead of Rasmussen and Valverde so it’s a little bit frustrating that we were caught in the run-in to Briancon but it’s hard for two men to stay ahead of a group of 15.
“I knew it would be hard to stay away for 40km but we made it to the final climb. [Yaroslav] Popovych did an exceptional job but we just couldn’t make it. Let’s hope that we do better another day. But the most important thing is to be strong and put on a good show.
“The circumstances haven’t been great. We attacked with a long way to go and it was always going to be a monster job to stay ahead. But we made the best of the situation. Today it didn’t come off but another day I’m confident that it will.”
He began the day with an overall lead of 43 seconds and although he admits being attacked "left, right and center", Michael Rasmussen now has a buffer of two minutes 35 seconds over the rider in second place. Alejandro Valverde is a more credentialed rider than Linus Gerdemann (who slipped from second to 17th) but the Danish Rabobank rider still believes he has what it takes to win the Tour de France in 2007.
“My team did a really good job controlling the pace until halfway up the Galibier. After that I got a little isolated when the attacks really started going but I have to expect that. Essentially only the top contenders are left and you can’t expect to have it all your own way and with a full team. I got attacked left, right and center… it felt like a million times but I just tried to follow them and eventually Evans got away. I chose to follow Valverde because he had a team-mate up the road and we could join forces and work together to reel in the riders who were ahead.
“I attacked a few times as well. The team wants to protect the overall lead. Now it’s all about the yellow, obviously the polka-dot jersey is secondary. I’m in the lead by almost three minutes now. The next big test will be the time trial on Saturday and I believe I’ll manage to protect the jersey for the next four days.
“The time trial is not a concern even if it’s not my specialty. I haven’t worked on it specifically but we have done some testing with the Rabobank team – visiting the wind tunnel and adjusted my position to try and refine some aspects of that discipline – and hopefully the result will reflect that I’m a little stronger against the clock than I was two years ago.”
The results for the ninth stage of the 2007 Tour de France is:
1. Juan Mauricio Soler (COL) BAR 159.5km in 4h14’24" (37.617km/h)
2. Alejandro Valverde (ESP) GCE - at 38"
3. Cadel Evans (AUS) PRL - at 38"
4. Alberto Contador (ESP) DSC - at 40"
5. Iban Mayo (ESP) SDV - at 42"
6. Michael Rasmussen (DEN) RAB - at 42"
7. Levi Leipheimer (USA) DSC - at 42"
8. Kim Kirchen (LUX) TMO - at 46"
9. Andreas Kloden (GER) AST - at 47"
10. Carlos Sastre (ESP) CSC - at 47"
Soler won the stage by 38". Rasmussen will keep his yellow jersey.
Evans led the chase for most of the final climb but Valverde pipped him on the line to take the 12" time bonus and second place.
Soler has given the wildcard team a victory in the Tour de France. Seven years since Santiago Botero’s landmark win in Briancon, Colombia is about to get another stage win.
Rasmussen is leading the pursuit of Soler. Evans is on his wheel and the pace is too much for Moreau who has failed to stay in touch with the yellow jersey’s group.