Tour de France ready to roll amid resurging outbreak
Colombia's Egan Bernal, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey (C), races on the Champs Elysees during the Tour de France in Paris, France, July 28, 2019. (AP Photo)

Although delayed for over two months due to the coronavirus outbreak, the Tour de France is back with the might of political will and organizational savvy, while the Tokyo Olympics and Euro 2020 have fallen by the wayside



The Tour de France rolls out of the French Riviera next Saturday with peaks, plains and rigid coronavirus protocols standing between the 176 riders and the final dash along the Champs-Elysees in Paris.

A blueprint for sports in the time of coronavirus may emerge as global audiences from 190 countries will be able to feast on France's prettiest vistas on the grueling three-week endurance test.

Race chief Christian Prudhomme likes to say the Tour de France is 3,000 kilometers of smiles (3,470 kilometers for 2020), but he has appealed to the expected 10 million roadside fans to mask up this year.

After marathon negotiations with political leaders, the ASO, which organizes the race, announced in a meticulous 18-page protocol guide that two positive COVID-19 cases in any team will see them removed from the event.

All riders must undergo two PCR nasal tests in the days leading up to the start of the Tour.

Furthermore, the Tour has set up a COVID-19 testing unit of around 15 people which will be attached to the coordination center.

The Mediterranean city of Nice plays host to the buildup known as "Le Grand Depart" and the first three stages either start or finish there.

Colombia's 23-year-old defending champion Egan Bernal will defend his title as sole captain of Ineos, who ruthlessly axed both four-time winner Chris Froome and 2018 champion Geraint Thomas from their roster last week.

"The key thing is that we target the Tour win," Bernal said.

The team's owner, plastics and chemicals magnate Jim Ratcliffe, who also owns Nice's football club, has renamed the cycling team "the Ineos Grenadiers" to promote the company's new four-wheel-drive off-road vehicle.

In another first, the Israeli Start-Up Nation team will be amongst the 22 teams at the starting line on Saturday.

The Tour will also do away with having two podium girls to greet the winners each day – now it will be one woman and one man.

Grande Boucle mastermind

Ineos is led by Dave Brailsford, who masterminded seven victories from the past eight editions starting with Britain's Bradley Wiggins in 2012.

Brailsford is an expansive thinker who introduced the concepts of "marginal gains" and "mission clarity" to cycle racing.

"There are many prizes on offer at the Tour de France, our target is the yellow jersey," Brailsford says of the overall victory his team chase if – virus permitting – the 2020 edition makes it to Paris.

Brailsford has provided the all-rounder Bernal with the platform for success to the degree of stripping his starting lineup of the cycling world's two most marketable stars.

Standing in the way of Bernal and Brailsford is up-and-coming Dutch outfit Jumbo-Visma, who boast two of the peloton's most respected riders.

Jumbo will be led by former ski jumper and Vuelta a Espana champion Primoz Roglic.

The Slovenian boasts an uncontended final 500-meter acceleration but can be wracked with uncertainty when isolated.

Jumbo also line up former Giro d'Italia and world champion Tom Dumoulin, a road savvy former medical student who is possibly more likely to survive the 21 days in one piece.

The route itself resembles the thrilling 2019 itinerary, crossing all five of France's mountain ranges.

There will be five summit finishes and 29 classified mountain climbs, although the camper vans and pop up villages that straddle these summit finishes will be reduced by the health protocols this year.

With the two-month hiatus, the French plains will likely be whipped by autumn winds, especially on runs along the coast such as stage 10 between the Atlantic islands of Oleron and Re.

The suspense will be cranked up throughout, however, as the penultimate day features a potential shake-up with an individual time trial on the fan-favorite Planches des Belles Filles climb.

Without a French winner since 1985, Thibaut Pinot of the FDJ team is the best home hope, and he grew up near the Planche des Belles Filles.

"I have the legs for it," he said this week.

In a Tour de France like no other, it will be a victory in itself whether it is Bernal, Dumoulin or another who pulls on the yellow jersey in Paris on Sept. 20.