The column: Assessing Jakob Fuglsang’s Tour chances

The column: Assessing Jakob Fuglsang’s Tour chances

How are they doing it and how long can they keep it up? Evaluating the Tour de France prospects of Jakob Fuglsang and his Astana team


What to make of Jakob Fuglsang’s victory in the Critérium du Dauphiné? What, indeed, to make of the astonishing season Astana are having, in general? They’ve accrued 28 victories this year already. Thirteen of those have come at WorldTour level, while four have been either a Grand Tour stage or Monument.


That equals the most the Kazakh-backed team have ever managed for a full season since they were formed in 2006. In 2008, they won five Vuelta stages. (Granted the WorldTour was a bit smaller back then.) We’re not the only ones wondering how they’ve done it, though the more pressing question is whether they can keep it up until the end of July.


Because being – or having – the best rider at the Tour, or one of them, can only take you so far. That the team formerly known as Sky have won the race with three different riders is no coincidence. Plenty of contenders, including a couple we might name from last year, could make a strong case that they would have finished higher up the order if only their squad had been stronger, or more disciplined.


Assuming his team’s provisional line-up ends up being the one they go with, Jakob Fuglsang will not be able to say that.


Astana will arrive in Brussels with Fuglsang himself one of the team’s only two riders who have never won a stage of a three week race (and he did win Liège-Bastogne-Liège a few months ago). If his team-mates can keep a lid on their individual ambitions – and manage not to mess things up tactically – it’s easy to imagine him as the only leader with a full phalanx of protection left to escort him through the meaty end of the Tour’s toughest stages.

Jakob Fuglsang

To present the other side, having the strongest team is all well and good, but it doesn’t count for much if that team doesn’t also contain the strongest rider. That’s a harder question to answer about Fuglsang. He was the standout rider of the spring (bar Mathieu van der Poel); not once off the podium and on the top step at the last Ardennes classic that mattered.


Then there’s the Dauphiné’s record of predicting winners which has to mark him out as a favourite, if not the. Of the others, none have shown us anything to justify that status. Even if you don’t think Ineos’ riders are cursed, neither Bernal nor Thomas have had the perfect preparation. After that, who do we have? Quintana? Yates? Porte? Pinot? Really?


Fuglsang is also 34. Not that we should rule someone out by age alone, but it would be quite the Indian summer for a rider who has only finished in the top ten of a Grand Tour on one previous occasion. He might have managed better two years ago had he not been forced to abandon due to injuries suffered in a crash. But then he might not.


Read: The Tour de France 2019 route – who does it favour?


Of the Dauphiné, this year’s victory arguably tells us less than usual, the course bearing little resemblance to the Alpine portion of the Tour de France. Lastly there’s the matter of form. It would be an extraordinary feat to have stayed at that level, or somewhere close to it, from February through to the end of July.


None of which is to say, with any certainty, that he won’t win the Tour de France. Someone has to.

 
 

The post The column: Assessing Jakob Fuglsang’s Tour chances 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