This course is a real raw bike racer's course. Eddy Merckx would have loved this course. "Flat" stages 3, 8, and 14 will create as many time differences as the Alpe or PdB. Crosswinds in the first week will be a significant threat. Day to day and even within stages courses change 90 degrees, by design. The best teams and experience will play a huge role even before the TTT (which is W to E btw). The overall drain on the riders will be incredible. "Lesser men" who are willing to attack early and target "flat stages" could find a way to be in contention. "Favorites" will need to take risks on descents, make mid stage attacks, win 1K uphill sprints, and create chaos while managing energy. There will be no parades in this Tour. Teams will get burned up. Guys will be isolated, all over the road. Luck, bike racing instincts and grit (3 weeks of it) will prevail.
1. Nibali (Showed his bike racer aggression last year. Saw briefly again in the Dauphine. Strongest team. Experience. Willing and able to take risks.)
2. Valverde (Explosive uphill rider for short distances - 3 of them early. Can fade late in 3 week races, but no ITT. A great bike racer, perfect course for him.)
3. Quintana (Willing to take risks but can be out descended - will be very important like Route du Sud. A steady head. Will stay in game to end. That will be more important than just his climbing ability.)
4. Talansky (My "lesser man." Suicide break in US champs. He's a bike racer and can be overlooked. Had bad luck last year, but was up front. He gets it. Can see him doing crazy off the front attacks and gaining time and in the hunt, and having no clue what he's accomplishing, like the 14 Dauphine. He's just racing. Think a guy with the nickname Pit Bull suits the course this year.)
5. Contador (I think early he will be in charge. The best of them, but the grind will be too much. This will be Giro^3. Every week brutal. Too much. Let Oleg go to the Vuelta, alone. Go back to Lugano and rest, well earned.)
Others:
Froome - Not a raw bike racer, not his course, style mismatch, team is overrated/weak. Just don't think he will get to the point where he can wind it up and fly away. Carnage all over the road is not his game. Last year was a good indicator. 2015 will be harder.
French (Pinot, Peraud, Bardet, Alaphilippe?): These guys are great, but they will ride conservatively being in France. If any one of them risks it all several times, any one of them could win it all (but they won't). Look for bat$hit crazy attacks with panache the first week or just top 10/20s here.
TJ: A follower and every day someone bike racing will cut more and more time out of him. He's good, but not explosive, not his course, no ITT. By late July you'll say, hmmm, TJ 7th, that's about right.
Hesjedal: I'd put him in the top 5 if it weren't for the Giro. I think it will be too much, but we may see him early in the leader board like AC.
Purito: If it were 2012, I'd have him in there, but it's not. Great bike racer, but age and miles may be too much. Would not be surprised tho.
Uran: Just don't know if he recovers from illness in Giro and is ready to surprise. Think it would bee a big surprise
Pozzovivo: Like Chiappucci reincarnate, wouldn't it be great to see him get 7 minutes in an early break and fight it out to the end, but with out the 3 ITTs? The kind of thing to look for. Maybe it would even force Greg Lemond to say Chiappucci's name correctly when recalling the tale for broadcast.
2nds-Majka, Porte, Landa, Martin...Team duties will still keep these guys back, great racers, but not their stage.
Bauke Mollema: I just like the name Bauke.
The green jersey will also be very interesting this year. Only 8-9 sprint stages possible and 5 in the first week, and those stages have a lot of points for winners. Whoever carries it to Pau may keep it. Could also stay close to the end in Paris since not that many opportunities. No Sagan parade here either which will be great too.