The Tour de Suisse’s beauty hides the fact the race is suffering from an identity crisis
The Tour de Suisse, with its backdrop of lush green, meadows, spectacular mountains and pristine roads, may be cycling’s most beautiful and telegenic race, writes Richard Moore. But like so many recent editions, the 2017 edition was not a reliable form indicator for the Tour de France. Suisse could be seen as the cycling equivalent of Paris Hilton. Or, indeed, Filippo Pozzato. They look fabulous but what are they actually for? Beyond looking fabulous, what is their purpose?
The race predates the Vuelta by two years, and some still refer to it as the fourth Grand Tour, but that is a claim that seems difficult to justify these days. It does look amazing, and for a bike race, looking amazing matters a lot. Plus, it’s very well organised. Many riders love it.
And yet, gradually over the years the top GC riders have been turning their backs on it. Only one rider in the top 10 this year, Bahrain-Merida’s Jon Izagirre, will lead his team at the Tour. The winner, Simon pilak, has only ridden in one Grand Tour in six years, let alone been a contender.
What’s the problem? One is that the nine-day race falls between two stools: not quite important enough to attract a cast of A-listers who want to win it and too close to the Tour to attract those same riders trying to hone their form.
This story is from the August 2017 edition of Procycling.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 2017 edition of Procycling.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Summit Ambition
With nine summit finishes and a testing third week, is the Vuelta the year's toughest grand tour, once again?
ZDENĔK ŠTYBAR
The Quick-Step Floors' Classics specialist on cars, climbs and Belgian fans
Mathieu Burgaudeau
The French teenager at Vendée U has already caught the eye of Direct Énergie
Jasper Philipsen
The 19-year-old Belgian won six races in his first year at U23 level, including a stage of the Baby Giro Six wins. That sounds impressive.
Richie Porte
The 2017 Pre-Tour favourite recalls the journey back to racing after his stage 9 horror crash
Greg Van Avermaet - On Top Of The World
The 2017 season saw Greg Van Avermaet finally clinch a debut monument, amid a run of major spring wins that helped propel him to the top of the WorldTour ranking. Procycling met the Belgian Classics king at his home to find out what's next.
Down Under UPS Its Game
What to expect from the Australian WorldTour season opener
Ryan Mullen
Trek's new Irish TT specialist on why the café run should be a bike-talk free zone
Dani Rowe
The Olympic gold medallist on how the track has influenced her road racing
Danny Van Poppel
Lot toNL's Dutch sprinter on his best and worst grand tours and crashing on the cobbles