Tour de France/Olympics double
It's a dilemma for many athletes. Tennis players have to decide whether interrupting their summer hard court season to play in Beijing is worth being tired out for the final Grand Slam of the summer, the U.S. Open. Top American male Andy Roddick is skipping the Olympics.
Cyclists are struggling with that decision during these three weeks of the Tour de France.
While the Tour is the biggest race of the year, especially for the all-important sponsors, some riders like Team Columbia's George Hincapie are keeping an eye not only on stage wins but on their physical condition.
Hincapie, 35, has qualified for his fifth Olympics. He will ride the road race in Beijing Aug. 10. He's never won an Olympic medal and said to do so would be the perfect cap to a career coming to a close.
"It's tough," Hincapie said after today's Stage 11 from Lannemezan to Foix.
"The Tour is one of the most important events for the team, for us as well because we are a new team and to put one aside for the other is not something to take lightly. I'm trying to get through the tour not killing myself. It's hard. Just riding it is even tough. I'm just trying not to hurt myself while still trying to win a stage or two these next couple of weeks because on a personal level it would be quite amazing for me to get an Olympic medal."
Hincapie's Team Columbia teammate Mark Cavendish, the British sprinter who has won two stages already, is having a similar dilemma. He has high aims for the Olympic time trial medal, he is not a good mountain climber and the grueling Alps stages are still ahead. Cavendish has speculated whether it would be worth it to finish the Tour or drop out and head home to do Olympic training.
"Guys have to think that way," Hincapie said. "It's always a tough year."
-- Diane Pucin
Photo: George Hincapie before this year's Tour began. Credit: Pascal Pavani / AFP / Getty Images










Mark Cavendish "is having a similar dilemma", is he? Really?
He has already made it abundantly clear that finishing the Tour de France means far more to him than winning an Olympic medal in an event where he is already the current world champion - for the second time - and that dropping out of the Tour, in order to save himself for the Olympics, would be unfair to himself, the team who helped him to two stage wins, his sponsors and the Tour organisers. There is no dilemma, other than that being invented by sports writers who don't even begin to understand the sport they are commenting on.
Posted by: Mark | July 16, 2008 at 10:48 PM
it will good to see some clean cycling
Posted by: Kudzu Fire | July 17, 2008 at 04:12 AM