Why bother watching: The 2008 Tour de France

You don’t have to be an actual cyclist, like Cindy Riley Dunleavy and John Scutieri, to enjoy watching the Tour de France.

Most people don’t need any coaxing or coaching to watch, say, Major League baseball or Wimbledon. Sports like baseball and tennis are well covered by the national media, with stories that provide more information than anyone could ever need about what to watch, who to watch, and what everyone is going to be wearing.

But summer in general, and this summer in particular (with the Olympics in China and the many trials leading up to the opening parade on Aug. 8) is a time when all those cable channels are loaded with obscure and potentially addictive sports.

One of the most compelling, and most difficult to comprehend, is the Tour de France, which launches on July 5 and will be aired on Versus pretty much 24/7 until the final lap around Paris on July 27.

Even for dedicated cyclists, the annual Tour, which is probably the most prestigious bicycle race in the world, is about as easy to understand as thermodynamics, cricket or the novels of Thomas Pynchon.

But anyone who watches it for a day or two is likely to find themselves, like Cindy Riley Dunleavy, sneaking out of her office to go to a neighboring store with a television set, to watch some of the cycling action. Dunleavy is the manager of Riley’s Furniture in Millerton, where she works with John Scutieri, who is also the town’s mayor. Together they are members of a group of cyclists who meet every Friday outside the store, on Route 44, and take a 20-25 mile ride together at a brisk pace. (Anyone with  a bike and a helmet is invited and encouraged to join them.)

On a recent afternoon, they tried to explain the allure of the tour, and shared some basic knowledge to help novices understand what’s going on.

When did you start watching the Tour de France?

Cindy: Probably in the early Lance Armstrong years, eight or nine years ago. Actually, no, I really started watching 20 years ago, when Greg LeMond was racing but I watched it more regularly when there was all the hype around Lance. He was such an inspiration.

John: I started watching the tour three years ago. I was taking an indoor ‘spin’ bicycling class at the NorthEast Athletic Club here in Millerton, and everyone would be talking about the Tour in class. And then Cindy would come into work and she would get so excited about it, she’d be all fired up.

Is it harder to watch now that there isn’t one clear person to root for?

John: Lance is like Tiger Woods in golf or Michael Jordan in baseball. But the thing with the tour is that it’s a real team sport. The first time you watch it, it’s just... a bike race, and you’re watching to see who wins. Then you start to realize that the guys who are finishing in the top five or so, they’re wearing jerseys that are a particular color and you realize that they’re all on one team. Then you start to understand that there are hundreds of riders out there on the different teams and each of them has a unique function. The strategy is very complex.

Do you root for a particular team?

John: You always kind of pull for the United States team but actually they’re not really national teams. Even the Lance Armstrong teams had bikers from many different countries.

The teams all have corporate sponsors, and they’re just made up of the best bikers they can pull together.  About the only “national†team is Euskatel-Euskadi, which only has riders from the Basque region of Spain. With no strictly U.S. team, and with Lance gone, are there any other riders you’re looking for?

Cindy: I’m not sure who are the riders to watch this year but I have enjoyed watching Floyd Landis, and I enjoyed watching Jan Ulrich in his never-ending attempt to beat Lance.

John: For me, what’s interesting is not so much the individual racers or even the score or who wins. I’m fascinated by their strength and endurance, and what it takes to maintain the stamina they need to put on the miles they do every day. This is two weeks of mountain climbing on a bike. And these aren’t hills. These are Alps!

The tour covers so many different kinds of terrain.

Cindy: It’s worth watching just for the scenery. It’s like a guided tour of France, and not just the famous sites but the back roads. And the people who live along the route are so passionate! You see farmers making giant sculptures of bicycles out of hay.

John: And the terrain is part of what makes it such an interesting sport to watch; that’s where the personalities come in. Some of the riders are hill climbers, others are sprinters.

Cindy: And each team really has only one guy they’re working to get to the finish.

John: It’s so scientific, it’s fun to watch and try to figure it out. You see the peloton, this massive group of bikers all traveling at high speed, with their wheels only about six inches apart, and they’re throwing their water bottles around. And the guys in the center aren’t even pedaling, they’re just getting sucked along.

With all that intense strategy, it must be hard to understand. Which announcer best explains the tour, in your opinion?

Cindy: My favorite announcer is Phil Leggitt [on Versus, the cable channel that does round-the-clock tour coverage]. I like his enthusiasm and his knowledge. He gives you so much background on the riders and the trainers, their backgrounds.

John: Phil’s my favorite, too. He captures my attention when he talks.

Do you watch the tour coverage continuously?

Cindy: A few years ago, my niece and I had a ritual where every night we sat down with a bowl of popcorn to watch the tour. And Lance. But last year I didn’t watch it as regularly.

John: I watch the highlights, and I watch the “legs†that I like, which are the mountain stages. To watch the whole thing... that’s a whole lot of television.

Cindy: My favorite are the time trials. You get to know the individual riders a little better. And they wear those weird helmets.

If you’re going to watch the tour...

Tour guides Cindy Riley Dunleavy and John Scutieri suggest that if you want to watch the tour you should understand these three phrases.

For more on the intricacies of the tour (and more lingo) visit Wikipedia.com (Tour de France 2008) and Versus.com.

Peloton

Also sometimes called the field, the pack and the bunch, this is the main group of cyclists and can include hundreds of bikers packed tightly together. The airstream is so powerful in a peloton that the lead riders are literally pulling the riders along behind them. Riders take turns being in the lead, so their teammates can save their strength.

The Maillot Jaune and other jerseys

Each day, colored maillots or jerseys are awarded in four categories. The green jersey goes to the rider with the most points at the end of the stage, and is usually awarded to a rider who is known as a fast sprinter (as opposed to being a rider who is a strong mountain climber).

The white jersey goes to the best young rider or the rider under 25 with the fastest time.

The polka dot jersey goes to “The king of the mountain.â€

And of course the Maillot Jaune (seen so often on Lance Armstrong’s back) is worn by the race leader.

The stages

The tour has 19 days of racing, known as stages. Different stages cover different types of terrain, and require different skills from the lead riders.

There are sprinter stages, mountain stages (this year’s tour will include one of the most challenging and famous of all the tour peaks, the Alp d’Huez), the time trials and the rolling stages, which are hilly but not mountainous — which means it’s anyone’s guess as to whether the sprinters will dominate here, or the climbers.

Each year the tour follows a different route (although the last day is always in Paris). This year’s tour starts on the exquisite Brittany coast.
John: The best days to watch are the rest days, when the riders take a day off. On those days the announcers do a recap of the previous days’ highlights.

Do you think you’ll ever completely understand what’s happening in a Tour de France?

Cindy: Every year I learn a little more lingo, and more about the tour. It’s not like football. I don’t think I’ll ever understand football because it’s not a sport I care about. But cycling is a sport I enjoy doing. While I’m watching the tour, I can’t help thinking, “I’d like to try climbing that mountain myself someday.â€

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