Movistar Team Leaders Recon Tour de France Cobbled Stage

Landa, Quintana, Valverde test their legs on the cobblestone sectors on stage nine of the 2018 'Grande Boucle', finishing in Roubaix

After completing their respective early-April racing appointments at the Vuelta al País Vasco and the Klasika Primavera in Amorebieta, Nairo Quintana, Mikel Landa and Alejandro Valverde joined some of their Movistar Team-mates on a recon of stage nine of the 2018 Tour de France, Arras to Roubaix, just under three months before leading the Blue outfit at the 'Grande Boucle'.

Landa, Quintana, Valverde test their legs on the cobblestone sectors on stage nine of the 2018 'Grande Boucle', finishing in Roubaix

Together with three riders from the Movistar Team's Paris-Roubaix roster –Imanol Erviti, Marc Soler and Jasha Sütterlin–, as well as sports directors José Luis Arrieta and Chente García Acosta, the Spanish squad's leaders covered the fifteen cobbled sections of this feared stage. At the end of the recon, Arrieta commented the following:

“What we wanted here was to get a real feeling about the terrain: how you enter and tackle every sector, which ones of them could be key - it's obvious that it will all be a different story when you're racing and into a furious peloton, but I'm sure this recon will really help us a lot. We were also lucky, since we had two days of dry weather, which allowed us covering the entire group of sectors with no setbacks. Taking advantage of all materials we already had here in northern France for Roubaix, we also tested different wheelsets, tyre pressures - it's also about having everyone going into this stage, come July, with absolute confidence about what's best for them. All three leaders had already ridden on cobblestones this spring, and even if we know that the hardness of those sections is nowhere near the Roubaix pavé, it's significant for us to have them feeling what it's like to go on a cobbled race.”

Arrieta considers this stage could become decisive: “As we always saw, you can lose the Tour de France at every stage, and days like these are even more dangerous. You'll need to be in perfect form, know what you're facing, and also some extra bit of luck, because a puncture, a mechanical, can all cost you lots of time. It's pretty likely that one of the race contenders will leave this stage with his chances ruined.”

2018 Tour de France

The 2018 Tour de France starts on the 7th July and features 21 stages for a total of 3,329 kms of racing before it reaches the Champs-Elysées in Paris on July 29th. Gravel, cobbles and a new climb all feature in next year's Grand Tour. The 105th edition of the Tour de France starts with a Grand Depart in the Vendée region of western France.

The Grand Depart will start on the island of Noirmoutier and head towards Fontenay-le-Comte on a flatish stage of 189 kms, running along the Vendée coast. The winds of the Atlantic sea could play a huge part.

Stage 9 from Arras to Roubaix pays homage to the Classic race Paris-Roubaix. The stage features 15 sectors of cobbles, with sectors of up to 2.1 kms in length, the stage will finish in the iconic Roubaix velodrome. This stage will be a key stage for the GC riders, who will have no choice but to ride at the front of race to stay in contention and out of trouble. Time gaps could open up here, even before the race hits the mountains.

Landa, Quintana, Valverde test their legs on the cobblestone sectors on stage nine of the 2018 'Grande Boucle', finishing in Roubaix