Can Wiggins win the Tour?
Matthew Keenan argues Bradley Wiggins is on track to winning the Tour de France if Team Sky places its bets on yellow.

The road to Paris lies in front of Bradley Wiggins (Getty)
- 27 Comments | Join the discussion
"Yes," is the short answer to the headline.
But there are three
major challenges, that Bradley Wiggins and/or Team Sky can control, that
need to be overcome to turn that "yes" into a Tour de France winning
reality – team balance, maintaining form and handling the pressure.
Team balance
Determining the division of resources at Sky will be a delicate process
– Mark Cavendish for a bag full of stage wins and the green jersey or
Wiggins and his tilt at yellow?
In a recent article on Cycling Central
by Sophie Smith, Erik Zabel is quoted as saying he would send Cavendish
with at least six riders and Wiggins with (Vuelta a Espana runner-up)
Christopher Froome for the yellow.
Zabel bases this on Cavendish
being a safer bet, which he is. But racing for yellow at the Tour de
France is the biggest prize in cycling and must be the priority.
It’s hard to disagree with someone of Zabel’s stature but on this occasion, I do.
Cavendish is capable of winning on his own. The disqualification of
Mark Renshaw in 2010 didn’t seem to slow him down. I would have Edvald
Bossan Hagen do the job for Cavendish and let the Manx Missile take
care of the rest.
Wiggins will be 32 come Tour time and may never get another opportunity like 2012.
The course couldn’t be better suited to his strengths. There will be
101.1km of individual time trialing. That’s more than double last year.
And just three mountain-top finishes. It’s the perfect storm for
Wiggins.
The fact that Sky is keeping the nucleus of a Tour
general classification team around Wiggins all season, with Cavendish
only scheduled to join him July, indicates the team balance is falling
in his favour.
Maintaining form
Managing the
already stunning form of Wiggins will be a challenge. This is a better
problem to have than chasing your tail searching for form.
But
it’s a challenge nonetheless and one recognized by Lance Armstrong, who
Wiggins revealed after his Paris-Nice win, sent a message to the Brit
saying not to burn too many matches before July.
Born out of the
successful British track cycling program, Team Sky has enough science
behind it to rival the CSIRO. But cycling is more than just lab testing
and scientific training. There’s an art to it. Team Sky has the art part
covered with Shane Sutton.
Sutton has been a critical figure in Wiggins’s career, almost of surrogate father proportions.
With the balance of resources available at Sky there's every reason to
believe Wiggins won’t just maintain his form but he will improve on it, to
arrive on the start line in Liege in the form of his career.
And don't forget, Cadel Evans won Tirreno-Adriatico at this time last year.
Handling the pressure
Wiggins has a proven track record of handling pressure.
Of the pressure in the final time trial at Paris-Nice he said it was, "nothing compared to the pressure of being in an Olympic final on the
velodrome."
Four years of preparation for a four-minute race,
under the scrutiny of a few billion television viewers. Yeah, that’s
genuine sporting pressure.
Plus winning Paris-Nice and last
year’s Criterium du Dauphine, with extended defences of the yellow
jersey, is a good apprenticeship for defending yellow at the Tour. But
it’s still not the Tour.
The pressure at the Tour is
relentless. And it’s only under the July spotlight that we’ll really
know the answer to this question.
My Sky nine for the Tour
Bradley
Wiggins, Mark Cavendish, Christopher Froome, Edvald Boassan Hagen,
Christian Knees, Danny Pate, Richie Porte, Kanstantsin Siutsou and
Rigoberto Uran.
If he continues on his current trajectory, Wiggins will be one of the biggest rivals to Cadel Evans come Tour time.
Twitter: @mwkeenan
Comments (27)
24 Jul 2012 5:49 AEST
From: Eltham
25 Mar 2012 17:13 AEST
From: Hawthorn East
Looks like Brailsford agree's, he is reported telling them to focus on one or the other, and with the respective courses, you would think Cav will come into the Tour underdone. I don't think Wiggo will win at the Tour, but it will be his focus
19 Mar 2012 12:32 AEST
From: Greensborough
17 Mar 2012 18:05 AEST
From: wollongong
He is stomping now ,if he is in july ,he is definitely in the mix .
17 Mar 2012 14:48 AEST
From: Melbourne
Finally a comment from Stan that is actually reasonable and makes some sense. The odds that this will happen again any time soon are perhaps equivalent to the chances of Wiggins, or any other british rider, actually winning the Tour.
17 Mar 2012 14:30 AEST
From:
How can Cav be a distraction? Simple. He won't be a domestique for Wiggins, so that's one less person to help him in the mountains. Perhaps not technically a "distraction", but Cav's not going to be of any help to Wiggins. Having said that, Sky should still take Cav to the Tour. PS: I hope my spelling meets your unusually high standards.
17 Mar 2012 14:26 AEST
From:
Bradley Wiggins is 50% convict, as opposed to the average Englishman, who is 100% convict.
16 Mar 2012 9:55 AEST
From: Oxford, England
Yes, that makes HUGE sense: leave Cav at home, after they've spent enormous sums to get him there. He is the fastest sprinter in the world, so they should let him watch the Tour on TV. Only a turnip would believe that. Wiggins ( not Wiggens ) is not as good a rider as Cavendish, in any case. How can Cav be a "distraction" ??? He is a superstar, no ?!?!?!?
16 Mar 2012 9:46 AEST
From: Oxford, England
Don't be afraid, Capn Cook. I am only offering an opinion of Bradley "Wiggins" Wiggles. If you learn to read, you will see that my name is 'Stan', not 'Sean'. Capiche ??? I am not trying to crack anybody up. It's just good to know that Wiggles is 50% convict. His padre was from the Colony. Bradley Wiggles loves the Australian flag - Britain at night !!!!!
15 Mar 2012 22:14 AEST
From: Elthamn
Mate you need to get a life ! What sort of statement is "they just feel like the enemy". So what are the Aussie riders in team Sky - Traitors ?! Maybe you would like them tarred and feathered ?! If you want a Poms v Aussie forum go and look up Cricinfo I am sure they will enjoy your parochial garbage. By the way yes I am British and also Australian and guess what I actually do not see Greenedge as the enemy but another major boost for cycling and a great team along with Sky!
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