Cavendish: I will finish the Tour de France
World Champion reje💎cts talk of early Tour exit for Olym👍pic preparation




168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Mark Cavendish has vowed that he will finish this year's 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France, contrary to speculation that he might abandon the race to foc꧒us 🍌on the Olympics.
Wiggins sug💧gests Tour de France and Olympics are too much for Cavendish
Editorial: How can Sky accommodate Wiggins and Caven🌃dish at the Tour de France?
Video: Wiggins comments on his brotherly relationship w♛ith Cavendish
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Cavꦿendish's Milan-San Remo hopes fade on Le Manie
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Brailsford: Wiggins and Cavendish must 🌜prioritise
Speaking to journalists at an event hosted by Team Sky partner Jaguar in London, Cavendish ruled oওut withdra🅰wing from the Tour before the race finish on July 22, just six days before the Olympic road race.
"I still want to win both [the Tour green jersey and the Olympic road race]. I'll finish the Tour de France. Unless I get eliminated, I'll fi♛nish it. I'm not pulling out of the Tour de France for the Olympic Games. No. But I want to do well in both," he affirmed.
Earlier in🍬 the day, Team Sky principal Dave Brailsford had sounded upbeat about the challenge of reconciling Cavendish's and Bradley Wiggins' goals at the Tour. Just over a month ago, Brailsford talked about how both men would have to "prioritize" their Tour and Olympic ambitions. "I think just to say that you're going to give each one equal significance and try to win everything is probably the recipe for failure," Brailsford said in March. Some took this as a hint that Team Sky were already planning to withdraw Cavendish from the Tour before the race reaches Paris. Today's comments may dispel that idea.
"The six days between the two are hard," Cavendish did concede. "You've got to take every single hour and make it count. But it's not like I'm coming in for a different sport at the Olympics. Probably all of the favourites for the Olympics will be riding the Tour anyway, so i🍬t's not like I'm in a different position. [It takes a lot of energy to win the green jersey], but that's why I need a good team in the Tour and a good team in the Olympic🌼s. It's not me winning the green jersey at the Tour and winning the Olympics. It's Team Sky at the Tour and Britain winning at the Olympics. "
On the equally thorny iss🅺ue of sharing legroom with Wiggins at the Tour, Cavendish was bullish. "Julius Caesar used to flank his armies on both sides," he grinned.
But for all his many strengths, Brailsford is not Caesar, and Team Sky are not theꦛ Roman imperial army. Tour history is littered with cautionary tales of teams which have tried and failed to wage war on two fronts. This, though, doesn't seem likely to shake Cavendish's faith in his fellow troops.
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"Believe me, I was doing the bunch sprints, and someone from BMC was always next to me last year," he said. "They were working for Cadel Evans for yellow, but they were there next to our train every day. So if t♚hey were doing that and not even getting wins, that's all the more reason why we should do it and possibly get wins, too.
"BMC did as much work on the front as HTC last year," he went on. "We haven't got two guys to ride on the front all day with no help, but there'll be more teams this year with a reason to ride. There are more guys thi🐓s year with wins and confidence behind them. Marcel Kittel's getting good, and his team w🌊ill be going with the sole goal of winning sprints, so they'll ride for that. And obviously Lotto have confidence in Greipel. So, yeah, there'll be more teams riding."
A lot, of course, depends on Cavendish himself,ဣ and he claims to be pleased with his season so far. The Manxman has won four races in 2012, including the Belgian semi-Classic Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne. "I think I've had the most successful start to a season for a world champion since Tom Boonen in 2006," he argued.
The rainbow jersey, however, brings burdens as well as privileges, and Cavendish admitted that, "This season has been the first time in my career when I've consistently been marked, when I've consistently felt that it's not been about someone else winning – it's about me not being there." Not that this explained his failure at Milan-San Remo in March. "I'll never be able to explain it," he said of that hiccup. "I thought, no, I was in the best form of my life. It's easy for an uneducated person to say, 'Ah, Cav can't climb.' I'm not the first guy to get ꧒dropped usually; there are other guys who get dropped before me, but the TV camera is usually on me. But I was the last guy over Le Manie in San 🌺Remo. That means there's a problem. It's inexplicable."
Cavendish's next headache will be leaving his two-week-old baby Delilah Grace to race alongside Wiggins at the Tour of Romandy next week. Asked whether his daughter was already disturbing his sleep patterns, Cavendish laughed. "The baby wakes up maybe once a night. Bear in mind that Bernie Eisel is my usual room-mate. If you can sleep through his snoring, you can sleep through anything. He cries just as much as the baby, too. No, more. He cries more than the baby, he eats more, and he sh*ts more."