The column: A silver lining to Tom Dumoulin’s DNF?

The column: A silver lining to Tom Dumoulin’s DNF?

As disappointed as he was to abandon the Giro d’Italia, could it yet force Tom Dumoulin to make his first full-bore assault on the Tour de France?


So much for a low-key opening week, huh? The received wisdom had said we would make it to the first rest day with minimal time separating the favourites. Not only is the gap between the maglia rosa and the rest bigger than its been at this point in proceedings in almost 25 years, but we’re already one big name down.


From a parcours perspective, as we talked about last week, it made sense for Tom Dumoulin to put at least most of this season’s eggs in the Giro basket. Even with Roglič showing all the signs of being a champion-in-waiting, Dumoulin – a rider with a Grand Tour victory already to his name – still had a better chance than one who had yet to claim his first.


But even before the opening stage it was clear that something was not quite right. And not in an “he’s going in undercooked because it’s a long way to Courmayeur” kinda way. Head or legs, it was impossible to tell, but when Dumoulin said he wasn’t where he thought he should be, we were predisposed to believe him. Still, few expected his time-trial to be beaten by Nibali and Yates, let alone matched by super climber, Superman López.

Tom Dumoulin

Can you see where we’re going with this?


Tom Dumoulin clearly prefers the Giro d’Italia to the Tour. Plenty in the peloton do. That he even took the start on Wednesday despite his GC ambitions having evaporated in an instant shows how committed he is to the Corsa Rosa. But it’s not the biggest race in cycling.


We know Dumoulin was likely to be going to the Tour de France anyway but, like last year, it would have been as an optional extra. An afterthought. That might have helped in a way, by relieving him some of the pressure that only comes with the Tour, but it also left many of us wondering what might have been had he given it everything he’d got.


Although he’s led his team there in the past, he has still never started a season with the Tour de France GC as his number one goal: In 2016 he was targeting the Olympic time-trial; 2017 was about the Giro and the Worlds; last year he hedged his bets.

Tom Dumoulin

That still won’t be the case in two months time but, after recovering, reflecting and regrouping, presuming there’s nothing seriously wrong with his knee, Dumoulin stands to arrive in Brussels in the best shape he’s ever been to make a concerted crack at the Tour.


Read: Rouleur reviews the Tour de France 2018


It rather throws Sunweb’s strategy into flux. Poor old Michael Matthews and Wilco Kelderman will have fewer personal opportunities than they would have been hoping for. But a fully fit Tom Dumoulin is perhaps the only rider capable of competing with Chris Froome (who isn’t on his own team) as he begins his quest for a fifth Tour de France. We’re not calling Dumoulin’s Giro DNF a blessing in disguise, but who won’t want to watch that?

 

The post The column: A silver lining to Tom Dumoulin’s DNF? appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

READ MORE

Illustration of Isaac del Toro in a UAE Team Emirates-XRG cap, set against the green, white and red of the Mexican flag

"People are thinking about their kids being the next Mexican top rider": Del Toro and the New Wave

Mexican cycling's decades in the doldrums look set to end, with 22-year-old superstar Isaac del Toro leading the charge and a reinvigorated federation aiming to...

Read more
Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

African cycling has already given the sport Biniam Girmay and Kim Le Court. Jeremy Ford picks the Next Ten – ten riders aged 23 or...

Read more
Illustration of Lance Armstrong in cycling kit holding yellow jerseys, standing in a dark archway — by Enric Adell

Lance Armstrong's Hollywood return: inside the Austin Butler biopic

A forthcoming Austin Butler biopic puts Lance Armstrong centre stage once again. The man the Tour de France would rather forget refuses to go quietly....

Read more
Amy and Kyle Hudson sit together on a sofa with their dog, looking at a laptop.

'A few years ago I didn't want to be here, now I'm riding around the world': Amy and Kyle Hudson's record-breaking ride

Amy Hudson got a bike four years ago to lift her depression. And it changed her life. Now she and husband Kyle are attempting to...

Read more
Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Social media posts from pro riders are part and parcel of the job these days — but not all of them get it right. What...

Read more
Hannah Barnes waving in the British champion's jersey on the Tour de Yorkshire podium, alongside a Canyon-SRAM teammate

'There's a lot more to agency work than contracts' — Hannah Barnes and a fresh approach to rider management

The former professional cyclist now works for major football and cycling talent agency, SEG, and is using her experience to ensure that euros never take...

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE