Jean-Marie Leblanc interview
By Hedwig Kröner in Gap The outgoing director of the Tour de France, Jean-Marie Leblanc, is rather...
Finally, the race is daring!
By Hedwig Kröner in Gap
The outgoing director of the Tour de France, Jean-Marie Leblanc, is rather happy with the way the last edition of 'his' race is unfolding. Speaking to the former professional cyclist and journalist at the start of stage 14 in Montélimar, Cyclingnews discovered a very relaxed race director, who at 61 years of age is also looking forward to his retirement.
Jean-Marie Leblanc may be retiring after this Tour, but he still has the energy to answer critics. He shot back at some observers who had expressed their surprise at the outcome of Saturday's stage (where new yellow jersey Oscar Pereiro was allowed to gain more than 30 minutes on the stage). "A lot of people, myself included, thought that seven consecutive years of Lance Armstrong's domination at the Tour - apart from his class as a rider - started to get a little long," Leblanc explained. "Then, he retired, and everybody was happy, saying that we were finally going to have an undecided Tour, without real favourites. More so, there have been even less candidates for victory since Strasbourg because Basso and Ullrich aren't there. So you can't be happy about this, and at the same time, when things are really starting to get exciting, say that they [Phonak] didn't make the right choices."
Indeed, this year's Tour de France has already had multiple leaders and is much more open than in recent years. "We have just seen the maillot jaune change shoulders seven times!" continued Leblanc. "At the start of the Tour, I said that the race depended on the imagination and the strategies of the directeurs sportifs. You have to dare, you have to take risks and take initiatives - and today, exactly this is happening, so I'm overjoyed!"
For Leblanc, who has been in the position of race director since 1989, Phonak's move to leave the overall lead to Caisse d'Epargne's Oscar Pereiro, was not only understandable but also very intelligent. "Of course, there will be only one winner in Paris," he continued. "We will see if Floyd Landis made the right choice. Personally, I think they did the right thing. They don't have a very strong squad - it's good, and united - but they would have penalized themselves in those two stages today and yesterday. The stage to Montélimar was very long, 230 kms and very hot, too. Today, the parcours was hard towards the finish in Gap. So I understand their choice perfectly; it's a good decision."
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