fourteenandoh;1496357; said:
can you explain the team aspect they keep aluding to? lance says it isn't ideal, but when it comes to make a decision either he or the other guy on his team won't like it. what are they talking about? doesn't it come to a point eventually where they can go head to head?
The rest of the guys on the team normally ride to protect the position of the team leader, if he has the yellow jersey or is on a good position to earn it during the tour. That involves setting the pace, and being in front of the team leader for the vast majority of the race, since it takes significantly less energy and effort to follow than it does to lead.
Lower level team members also have other helping duties. Guys called 'domestiques' drop back to the team car to pick uip water and food (energy bars, etc) and then use up some energy catching back up in order to distribute. They'll also drop back and help guys catch back up to the peloton (pack) after a flat tire or a fall. Those are normal team things, though, and aren't what really comes down to team strategy in crunch time.
The tour is normally won and lost on the time differences that are gained in the steep climbs and in the individual time trials. On the climbs, like in today's stage, the team strategy is based on which cyclist has the best chance to win the yellow jersey. Different things come into play. Today, Astana set the pace of the race most of the way - they wanted a fairly quick pace in order to split up the peloton. They wanted to thin out the size of the pack containing the top yellow jersey contenders, so that late in the race contenders from other teams would have very few teammates to help them. They also wanted to crack Cancellara (who had the yellow starting today), since he's a great road racer but not a top climber, in order to claim the yellow jersey. There was no doubt that Lance wanted to grab it today if he could - he mentioned it before the race.
Once the final climb was getting down to the nitty-gritty (after Cancellara cracked and the main group got down to less than 20 guys), for a while Astana was happy to just counter any individual attacks from serious contenders for the GC (General Classification, in which the yellow jersey is won). Guys on other teams that are a GC threat include Cadel Evans, Andy and Frank Schleck, Carlos Sastre, and Christian Vande Velde, but those guys were all between 1 and 3 minutes behind the lead. They need to make up that time in the mountains, because the peloton will always chase down a serious GC contender on any relatively flat stage.
So for most of the climb, the Astana guys were setting a steady pace, and just waiting to counter any attacks from the group of guys I mentioned (plus a handful of others). Astana guys other than Contador, Armstrong, and Leipheimer 'drove the train' as far as they could, and then dropped back. Late in the climb (the last 3K of a 10.6K climb) the serious attacks started. Cadel Evans tried to get away, but Contador and Armstrong stayed with him, and he couldn't break ahead to gain any time. With about 2K left, the group of main GC contenders was down to about 15 guys, and Contador attacked. He was trying to get the yellow jersey, but also trying to gain 19+ seconds on Lance in order to be the leader among the Astana guys.
Team tactics come into play when there's an attack like that. The rest of the group wants to catch up to Contador, and if they ride as a group and take turns leading it improves their chances. The teammates of the guy that made the break can actually mess that up by not taking a turn in the lead, or by doing tactical things like changing the pace.
So at that point Lance had to decide if he would help the group catch Contador (and also help keep himself as the Astana GC leader), or not help the group and allow Contador to maximize his time gain and improve his chances of winning the yellow jersey.
I didn't see Lance comment about the chase tactics after the race, but it seemed like Lance didn't try to help in the chase and was thus a 'team player'. The possibility also exists that he didn't have the energy to do that and was just hanging onto the pack.
Sometimes teams will also have a plan of attack, with different riders taking turns making an attack at different times, in order to make it tougher on the other contenders. Before the race, Johan Bruyneel (Astana Team Mgr) siad that no such plan existed today. (They won't always be honest in those situations, but today I believe he was). He was going to let the team ride together far into the climb, and then let who was stronger get sorted out at the very top. And Contador was clearly a little stronger, at least for today.
But 2 seconds is almost nothing in the tour. However, the only real stages where Lance can gain time is the remaining mountain stages and the individual time trials.
July 11 - Mtn
July 12 - Mtn
July 19 - Mtn
July 21 - Mtn
July 22 - Mtn
July 23 - Indiv time trail
July 25 - Mtn
July 26 - Into Paris, the GC lead almost never changes on the last day