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Tour de Georgia
2005
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"We have two options in life,
both medically and emotionally, give up or fight like hell."
- Lance Armstrong
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July 17 (Stage 11) July 18 (Stage 12) July 19 (Stage 13) July 20 (Stage 14) July 21 (Stage 15) July 22 (Rest Day) July 23 (Stage 16) July 24 (Stage 17) July 25 (Stage 18) July 26 (Stage 19) July 27 (Stage 20) July 28 (The Trip Home) Friday July 18 - Stage 12 - Gaillac to Cap'Decouverte
We were late getting up and missed breakfast. We would just find something to
eat in town. I was loading up the car and noticed a Bianci Time Trial bike
leaning up next to the front door. As we were checking out, Jan Ullrich walked
down the stairs and out to get on his bike. He was obviously preriding the
course that morning. Jan always looks big on tv and Phil and Paul often refer to
him as the big German on the Outdoor Life Network broadcast, but in person, he’s
a rail, just wider than Lance. Anyway, our first brush with the big boys of the
Tour. There were a couple of Bianci team cars out front and some Fassa Bortolo,
but no US Postal. We stopped at a bakery for breakfast, then continued down the
road to the start. About the time we noticed the barricades starting, we
realized we were walking
Frankie said, "Great come on!" We walked pass the Gendarmes, under the barricades and right up to the Postal bus and picked our spot for the day. I introduced myself to Dan Osipow of Tailwind Sports and said hello to Jeff Garvey. We watched Ekimov and Pavel warming up, then Jerry took pictures of me with Johan Bruyneel, Victor Pena, George Hincapie and Floyd Landis!
We
were having a great time until the Tour Security came by and wanted to see our
credentials. We got the boot! We walked toward the exit then peeled off and sat
down. The security guard followed us and escorted us out. Oh well, it was lunch
time anyway. We were really bummed, but hungry. We got a cold pizza and a Coca
Light, otherwise known as a Diet Coke. We had wondered how we were going to get
any food, but the security fixed that problem. After we ate, we walked around to
the other side of the barricaded area and waited until the Gendarmes weren’t
looking, then jumped the barricades. We eased back over to the Postal bus and
ran into our friend Sammarye, who is writing a daily report for Lance’s website.
We met her two years ago at the Tour. She has a Lance Fan website and is a
Peloton Project member also. We were able to reclaim our spots at the roped off
Postal area bus where the team was warming up.
The drive was two full pages on our map, but it only took a little over two hours. It was great because we had fairly large roads the whole way. Angie was reading the map and I was following the road
signs. We were both following the road to Foix, which was on the way to Ax-Les-Thermes.
Angie got frustrated at me because she couldn’t find the road we were on. She
thought I had made a wrong turn. We finally noticed the GPS in our car wasn’t
registering the road number either. It showed us driving on the map where there
was no road! We figured out we had turned on a new road that took us straight to
our destination. We drove up to the end of tomorrow’s stage at Ax –3-Domaines.
We are planning on riding our tandem tomorrow to Ax-3-Domaines. It is really
steep in places, but we picked out a couple of possible spots for us to setup.
We came back to our hotel (one we stayed at last year) and had a quick panache
(beer and lemonade)before checking in. The room had a toilet and a shower, well
sort of a shower/tub thing. It was really more like a giant washtub. |