AFP/Utrecht


Reigning champion Vincenzo Nibali admitted yesterday that he has been unhappy with his season so far, but insisted he is still on course to retain the Tour de France title.
On the eve of the Grand Depart in Utrecht with today’s 13.8km timetrial, Nibali pulled no punches about the tough start he’s had to the current campaign, in which he had not yet won a race until last weekend’s Italian championships.
“It was a difficult spring because I didn’t have any wins and wasn’t able to find the right conditions to win,” said the 30-year-old Sicilian.
“Even from winning the Tour last year, it wasn’t easy to get going again in the new season. But with my coach Paolo Slongo we managed to find the ideal preparation and training before the Tour, just like last year, and now we’ll see at the Tour.”
Nibali also moved to backtrack on his barb aimed at Tour rival Nairo Quintana, in which he questioned where the Colombian climber had been preparing for the Tour—something that was seen by many as a thinly veiled suggestion that the Movistar leader was training back in his homeland to avoid being tested for doping.
“My intention wasn’t to discredit an important country like Colombia in questioning where Quintana was,” explained Nibali.
“It was about knowing where everyone else is and seeing how many media were following our training when in Teide, San Pellegrino or at the Dauphine.
“It was just a simple ‘we don’t know where Quintana is because we haven’t seen him since (the Tour de) Romandie’.
“It wasn’t a controversy, just a way of saying we haven’t seen him since Romandie. I’m sorry if the question was taken the wrong way. For me he’s one of the favourites, if not the absolute favourite.”
Quintana had reacted angrily when asked about Nibali’s question, fuming to Het Nieuwsblad newspaper: “We are talking about Colombia as if it were a country lost in the jungle, far from anything or anyone. You can rest assured that I have undergone and passed tests there.”
Speaking about his own team Astana’s doping problems, Nibali insisted he and his teammates had always remained calm throughout the year, despite the possibility of the Kazakh outfit’s World Tour licence being revoked.
“We had problems at the beginning of the year when the media spoke a lot and there were many rumours, but nothing ever happened. Our licence was in question but it was never revoked,” said Nibali.
“We paid with this whole problem for two riders who were doped, but we can’t respond to errors we haven’t made. We kept working serenely and with commitment, and we arrive at the Tour de France with the right motivation and the desire to do well, peddle hard and enjoy it.”
Kazkah brothers Maxim and Valentin Iglinsky both tested positive for EPO last year while three riders from the team’s feeder Continental Tour outfit also failed dope tests.
The International Cycling Union (UCI) recommended that Astana’s licence be revoked but that was rejected by its own licence commission, although Astana were put under greater scrutiny.
Meanwhile, veteran Fabian Cancellara will have his work cut out if he is to begin his 10th Tour de France in yellow.
The 102nd edition of the Grand Boucle starts with a short race against the clock around Utrecht in the Netherlands.
The ‘fantastic four’ overall favourites of champion Nibali, Giro d’Italia laureate Alberto Contador and the two men they succeeded, Chris Froome (2013 Tour winner) and Nairo Quintana (Giro victor in 2014) are unlikely to challenge for the victory in today's timetrial, although they will be looking to make time gains or limit losses against each other.
Of the quartet, Froome is widely regarded as the strongest timetriallist and Quintana the weakest, so the race will be on to see how much time Briton can put into the Colombian.
But at the front of the race, Cancellara, 34, will be aiming to win an opening Tour stage or prologue for the sixth time, and  don the famous yellow jersey for perhaps the last time.
The Swiss known as Spartacus admitted this could be his last Tour. “I thought about this could be my last participation and last possibility to arrive in Paris, yes this is in my mind,” he said Thursday.  
Cancellara is probably not the favourite, though, despite his incredible timetrial record, winning Olympic gold in 2008 and four world titles.
German Tony Martin has surpassed Cancellara in recent years as the king of the timetrials, winning three straight world titles from 2011-2013 before he was beaten by current Olympic champion Bradley Wiggins last year.


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