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Geraint Thomas gives his backing to 2011 Tour of Britain route and final-day time trial

Too early to say if Welshman will ride race, focus currently up to the Critérium du Dauphiné

Team Sky’s Geraint Thomas has given his thumbs-up to the route of September’s Tour of Britain, which with its final-day time trial in London could make him one of the favourites to clinch the overall title should he still be in contention at that stage, assuming he takes part in the race.

No plans have yet been finalised for the Welshman’s racing programme beyond June’s Critérium du Dauphiné 2011, but the Tour of Britain is a race he’s enjoyed taking part in since his days with Barloworld.

With a stage finish in Caerphilly, this year’s route also takes the race to just five kilometres from the Cardiff suburb of Whitchurch where Geraint grew up, and should he feature in the Team Sky squad for the race, he is bound to receive some great home support on that stage.

Talking about the introduction of the 10km time trial on the final Sunday ahead of a road race on the Whitehall to Tower Bridge circuit last seen in 2009, Geraint said: “I think it’s a really good thing. It’s great for the team, we’ve got some good time triallers if they’re there or thereabouts on the GC, and it’s good for the public too, they get a full day’s racing.”

As for Stage 4 of the race, which runs from Welshpool to Caerphilly, that’s a route that Geraint knows very well, and in particular the final 50km on roads he’s ridden many a time in training.

“It’s really exciting to see the route,” says Geraint. “The race is becoming stronger, and whereas once it might have been viewed as an end of season race, that’s no longer the case – everyone wants to race it.”

That was a view echoed by his Team Sky colleague Greg Henderson, winner of the Prostate Cancer Charity Points Jersey last year, who says that the Tour of Britain is one of two races now considered to be vital as preparation for the World Championships in Denmark, the other being the Vuelta.

Similar feedback from leading teams following last year has led to the longest stage of this year’s race, Stage 7 from Bury St Edmunds to Sandringham, being set at 200km specifically to provide a warm-up for Copenhagen, and Geraint says that the leading outfits are happy with the race in general.

Although we’ll have to wait a few months to find out whether Geraint is in the Team Sky line-up for the race, he has no doubt that he’d like to ride his home tour if possible, saying “the Tour of Britain’s something I’d love to do.”

Ahead of that, his immediate racing programme comprises the Tour de Romandie in Switzerland which starts next Wednesday, the Bayern Rundfahrt in Bavaria in late May, then the Critérium du Dauphiné in early June.

Geraint put in a strong performance in the latter race last year, finishing fourth in the Prologue won by Alberto Contador then third on Stage 1 after his team mates worked hard to get him into a great position for the bunch sprint, which he freely admits isn’t his forte.

Those performances led to him spending several days in the green points jersey during the race. Contador would be the eventual winner of that jersey, with Geraint coming fifth in the points competition. The overall title was won by RadioShack’s Janez Brajkovič, with Contador in second place.

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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Simon_MacMichael | 13 years ago
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The "gives his backing" in the headline was our precis of what Geraint said, maybe "gives his thumbs-up" might have been better.

But the British champion who rides for Britain's top team giving his view on the Tour of Britain is a fair news story in our opinion, especially given the time trial element - 5th place over 9km in last year's Tour de France prologue suggests he'd be in with a shout if he races.

True, it's not clear whether or not he will take part, but that's not unusual - while some riders will target specific races at the start of the year and have their calendar pretty much mapped out, for others there is more scope for flexibility.

We imagine that in the case of Geraint or indeed any of Team Sky's ten British riders, their programme for September may very well depend on how many riders Great Britain qualifies for the World Championships in Denmark.

Should the country qualify nine riders (from an initial squad of 14) as it did in 2009, then the bulk of the squad that will support Mark Cavendish's rainbow jersey bid is likely to be provided by Team Sky.

We suspect that any decision on who will ride the Vuelta and who will do the Tour of Britain will be delayed until that World Championship qualification situation is clearer.

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Michael5 | 13 years ago
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Its as well he has; its alleged the organisers were thinking of cancelling if Geraint wasn't 100% with it. Even though he's not riding himself....

How many more of these non-stories do you have up your sleeves?

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Karbon Kev | 13 years ago
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He gives his backing to the route? Oh how gracious of him ..  39

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