Anthony Tan
A leaner year for Oz, but don’t despair
From a happy and healthy group of nine who began last year’s Tour in Brest, Australians at cycling’s main event could be facing their leanest line-up in two years.

Saxo Bank's Stuart O'Grady (Getty)
- 5 Comments | Join the discussion
From a happy and healthy group of nine who began last year’s Tour in
Brest, Australians at cycling’s main event could be facing their
leanest line-up in two years.
So
far, just six Aussies have been confirmed to take to the start line in
Monaco on July 4: Cadel Evans, Matthew Lloyd, Michael Rogers, Mark
Renshaw, Stuart O’Grady and Brett Lancaster.
Not since the 2007
Tour de France has Australia fielded such a small contingent, when
Evans, Rogers, O’Grady, Lancaster, Robbie McEwen and Simon Gerrans
represented the land Down Under at the 94th edition of La Grande Boucle.
There, McEwen
showed incredible fortitude to come back from a crash late into the
opening road stage to Canterbury, England, where he brilliantly bested
all and sundry; Rogers found himself in the maillot jaune virtuelle before
crashing out with O’Grady
on Stage 8; and perhaps most significantly, Evans came of age and
within 23 seconds of being the first ever Australian to win the Tourde
France (as well as taking two second places and one third), beaten only
by Spanish wunderkind Alberto Contador – the man who will once again be
his – and everyone else’s – greatest nemesis in 2009.
Hopefully – and after all that’s gone on with the stunning preclusion
last Thursday of Simon Gerrans in the Cervelo line-up, I do mean hopefully –
Quick Step will have the smarts to take this year’s Tour Down Under
champ Allan Davis with them, particularly after ASO’s ‘not welcome
invitation’ they extended to Tom Boonen
for his apparent predisposition to the white stuff (although that
matter’s likely to be settled in court this coming Tuesday);
andSkil-Shimano finds it in their souls to include Victorian Mitchell
Docker as part of their final nine.
If – and once again, I say ‘if’ with the anticipation of a
five-year-old on Christmas Eve who anxiously waits for Santa to come
down the chimney – Davis and Docker are included, we find ourselves one
short of our Aussie contingent of yesteryear and two off our previous
best mark of 10 at the 2005 Tourde France, though more than the five we sent in 2006. But 2009 could have easily been a record.
We don’t need to say more about ‘Gerro’ except that it’s a travesty he
won’t be there to support defending champion Carlos Sastre, or
selflessly spend days on end chasing down dangerous breaks for Sastre
or Norwegian sprinter and 2005 green jersey victor, Thor Hushovd.
However, there’s a raft of other Aussies who have been left on the
bench; left to wonder what might have been this July as they watch from
the box, like most of you will do onSBS into the wee hours each morning.
A Trojan workhorse from last year’s Tour, Adam Hansen of Columbia-High Road is missing.
Garmin-Slipstream
had the opportunity to take any one of three Aussies from Trent Lowe,
Chris Sutton or Cameron Meyer. To be fair, team owner/manager
JonathanVaughters has chosen a strong nine and gave strong supporting
reasons behind his final choice that aims to put Christian Vande Velde
on the podium, though Sutton could have easily been subbed for Kiwi
Julian Dean, and Cam Meyer for American Danny Pate. I understand
T-Lowe’s been sick of late and wasn’t in good shape, so let’s hope we
see the diminutive climber in good health and good form come theVuelta
a España.
Rabobank, searching for the Paris podium’s top step with Giro d’Italia
champ Denis Menchov, has kept Matthew Hayman and Graeme Brown at bay.
Like Garmin, it’s a solid line-up and naturally, climber-heavy. If
there’s one rider that could have been replaced, big-boy Matty Hayman
in my mind would have done as good a job as rouleur Joost Posthuma –
though it’s understandable the Dutchie got the nod.
No argument over Saxo Bank’s choice not to include Matt Goss. Sastre may no longer be part of Bjarne Riis’
team but the wily Dane still holds the same lofty objective as last
year, and that is to win the race with the prodigious AndySchleck . Out
of the 20 teams to take part it’s arguably the most experienced, and
when the pressure’s on, experience counts for everything.
Française des Jeux’s Wesley Sulzberger will also need to wait at least
another year, although like Goss, one can understand his absence given
the 23-year-old’s in his neo-pro season. Still, over the 20 or so Tours
I’ve seen, there have been plenty of FDJ
inclusions (mostly French) who haven’t done diddly squat, other than
limp around France like a three-legged dog for three weeks and ask for
their mother.
Perhaps the most notable absentee will be
McEwen, yet it is injury rather than poor form or team politics that
has kept the tenacious Rockin’ Robbie away. It will kill him not to be
there, even though he isn’t saying so.
As of June 24, he’s 37 years young. Though beware: the minute you think
he’s done and about to hang the race wheels in the shed, the fluent
Flemish speakingQueenslander has an uncanny knack of going large and
taking a big win, so don’t discount his chances at the Vuelta, an
Autumn Classic like Paris-Tours, or next year’s Tour.
No matter how many Aussies take to the start line on July 4, cycling fans Down Under should not despair.
Because in 2002 – a year when just four Australians got the call-up to
the Tour de France – McEwen took two stage wins and his first of three
maillots verts; Brad McGee won a fantastic stage in Avranches; Baden
Cooke finished second to McEwen on the Champs Élysées and showed
glimpses of what he would the following year, emulating McEwen’s green
jersey feat; and Stuey O’Grady finished third in the points
classification.
So… Aussie, Aussie, Aussie – allez, allez, allez!.....And there’s always Heinrich Haussler.
Comments (5)
Aussie Assault
To All When will be graced with an Australian Team, even if only for a year on the entire program? Imagine the following, in no particular order, and sorry to those that i have omitted to choose our 9 from: Stuart O'Grady, Michael Rogers, Adam Hansen, Cadel Evans, Matthew Lloyd, Allan davis, Mark Renshaw, Brett Lancaster, Simon Gerrans, Robbie McEwen and two of our import favorites Jens Voigt and soon to be back Heinrich Haussler. What a great competitive team, clearly they would all work with and for each other and grow an extra leg as only aussies can to help each other for the benefit of the team. Now some of these guys are heading towards the end of their career as opposed to the start but by god it would be worth the Packers or Murdochs helping us see this team on the world stage just once.
06 Jul 2009 10:10 AEST
From: Cammeray
Allez Le Aussies
Good Article Dog Lindro
03 Jul 2009 14:29 AEST
From: Flemington
Haussler
The rumour is that true blue Aussie Heinrich will get an Australian racing licence next year. Josephine, are you able to confirm this? We would all love to see him at the Worlds in Geelong next year racing for Australia.
03 Jul 2009 12:34 AEST
From: Central Coast
Robbie
This bloke has had terrible luck these last few years. I'm devastated he's not in it.
01 Jul 2009 22:16 AEST
From: Canberra
Aussies at the tour
You're forgetting Heinrich Haussler! He is a true blue Aussie! Heinrich is riding for Cervelo. This is his third tour de france!
Join the discussion
PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.
Most Popular
About this Blog
Cycling journalist Anthony Tan joins SBS's Tour de France coverage where he'll bring us his unique news and views of the great race from behind the scenes.
Anthony Tan Anthony Tan
Other Blogs
TV
- Living Black
- Italian Food Safari
- Thalassa
- Luke Nguyen's Vietnam
- Behind the Scenes: The 2009 Deadly Awards
- My Family Feast
- Costa's Production Blog
- Eurovision 2011
- Swift and Shift Couriers
- Global Village
- My Bogan Diary
- The Road to the White House
Food
Films
Documentary
- Britt Arthur
- Catharine Lumby
- John Birmingham
- Rory Medcalf
- Mark Jones
- Emily Booth
- Bob Wurth
- Andy Martin
World News Australia
Sport
- The Circus
- The Interchange
- The Hangover
- Lip Service
- Deep in the Dust: On the Dakar trail
- Dakar Dreams
- The Finktank
- Open Season
About SBS
Business
Internet and Technology
Cycling Central
- Joe Ward
- Tom Palmer
- Bridie O'Donnell
- Sarah van Boheemen
- Stuart Randall
- Rochelle Gilmore
- Matthew Price's Broom Wagon
- Anthony Tan's Velo Files
- Matthew Keenan
- Kate Bates
- Al Hinds
- Philip Gomes
- Scott Sunderland
- Mike Tomalaris
Sat 25 May 2013 | 

Email to friend
Print
Enlarge text







top
Blog Home 

12 Jul 2009 21:54 AEST
Jeano
From: Kilmore, VIC