PARIS (AP) With only one time trial and 25 ascents in the Vosges, Alps and Pyrenees mountains, the route of the 2014 Tour de France unveiled in Paris on Wednesday should lend itself to riders who are particularly strong in climbs. Here's a look at five riders who should bring the race alive next July:
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CHRIS FROOME
Unquestionably the man to beat in 2014, because he was so dominant and unflappable in winning the 2013 Tour. Be it in mountains or time trials, the Kenya-born Briton has no apparent weakness. Blew away rivals in 2013 with repeated and sustained uphill accelerations. Remarkably cool under pressure. Adroitly handled intense media scrutiny as pre-race favorite and when leading the Tour; dealt mostly patiently with pointed, at times accusatory, questions about doping; insisted he rides clean. Team Sky released detailed data on Froome's doping tests and performances in mountain ascents to combat suspicion generated both by the apparent ease of his victory and cycling's long and painful history of betrayal by drug cheats including Lance Armstrong. In his prime years as a cyclist (he turns 29 in 2014), backed by one of cycling's strongest and best-funded teams, and wiser and feared on the back of his 2013 show of strength, Froome has makings of a multiple Tour champion.
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