Bradley Wiggins (AFP/File, Joel Saget)
PAU, France — For Bradley Wiggins, legendary climbs like the
Tourmalet or the Aubisque don't have names: they are simply stretches of
uphill road standing between him and an historic Tour de France victory
Sunday.
Wiggins, the stand-out stage racer for the past year,
will take a 2min 05sec lead over Sky teammate Chris Froome into the last
two climbing stages of the race when it resumes on Wednesday.
With
Italian Vincenzo Nibali in third at 2:23 and defending champion Cadel
Evans of Australia even further off the pace, a British one-two on the
Champs Elysees now looks likely.
First, however, comes two tough days in the Pyrenees.
On
stage 16 the peloton tackles the Col d'Aubisque, the Col du Tourmalet,
the Col d'Aspin and the Col de Peyresourde on the way to a downhill
finish in Bagneres-de-Luchon.
Stage 17 begins in
Bagneres-de-Luchon and takes in four climbs including the 11.7 km hike
over the Port de Bales, before finishing with a 15.4 km ascension to
Peyragudes.
For Wiggins, who grew up idolising Spaniard Miguel
Indurain -- the first rider to win the race five times consecutively --
all notions of romance have to be shelved as he concentrates on the job
at hand.
"It doesn't matter what the climb is called. It's just a
name at the end of the day," he said on the race's second rest day
Tuesday.
"At this stage of the Tour, whatever they put in front of
you... ultimately it boils down to the same thing -- if you haven't got
it physically you're going to get dropped on a day like yesterday."
While
some in the race will be hoping for Wiggins to come under attack from
Evans, Nibali and a few others, he is not about to change Team Sky's
winning formula so far for Wednesday's epic.
"I don't think it's any more difficult than any other stage we've done to this stage," said Wiggins.
"We could sit here all day talking about scenarios... but we just see how it plays out on the road ultimately.
"Ultimately,
it's about going out there tomorrow and averaging 400 watts (of power)
for whatever climb, climb after climb, and rehydrating, and re-fuelling
on the bike and that's what ultimately wins you bike races."
Sky's
impressive pace-setting in the mountains has effectively left Evans and
Nibali struggling to sustain the rare attacks they have thrown at the
Briton.
Not surprisingly, Wiggins says he has nothing to fear.
"I
don't really fear anything. It's just a case of going out and doing the
performance. What is there to fear? At the end of the day it's just a
bike race," he said.
"We'll go out there, do what we've done every day this year and whatever happens, happens."
Having
dropped to fourth overall at 3:19, Evans -- an historic champion last
year after twice finishing runner-up -- appears to have conceded defeat.
"They
ride a continuous tempo that's leaving the climbers pretty empty when
they get to the final. It's making it difficult to do stuff," he said.
As he prepares to start his ninth day in yellow on Wednesday, Wiggins had a word of encouragement for his rival.
"He's not given up once. He fights until the end of the line. And that's something to be admired," added the Englishman.
"A
lesser man would have thrown in the towel, climbed off because he
wasn't going to win. He's remained dignified and ever day he's gone out
there as though he's still leading this race."
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