Connsidering Allan used a Trek bike at the Tour Down Under, so i guessed it was on the cards. But Disco hasn't always been a happy hunting ground for sprinters...Giro and Vuelta for Davis i would say?
Yeah I would say so, at this stage, with Basso allowed to race it would be at this stage:
Ivan Basso
Levi Leipheimer
Alberto Contador
Tom Danielson
George Hincapie
Yaroslav Popovych
Pavel Padrnos
Chechu Rubiera
Allan Davis/Stijn Devolder/Egoi Martinez/Vladimer Goussev/Benjamin Noval/Matthew White
Interesting who would get the last spot. Discovery don't do sprinters in the Tour, but it is a change of policy as such as they have picked up a few of them, Devolder is a strong man for the flat, and quite often in races is one of the strongest in the pack but is on the front dishing out punishment to the rest. Showed his depth in climbing by finishing 11th in last year's Vuelta (make of that what you wil)l. Martinez is one for the breakaway I guess on the transitional stages or your undulating ones, but is useful climber who won the mountain competition and a stage in last year's Vuelta. Goussev (otherwise known as the 'Goose' and yes that does sound dire) was one of their more consistent riders last year, often finishing in the top 10 of the one day races towards the end of the season, took a 4th spot in Paris-Roubaix before being disqualified, and one the prolouge and finished high up in the Tour of Germany (at this rate it is challenging the Vuelta in terms of quality and interest, as at least you get people out to watch the stages and they don't go out to the middle of nowhere) so I can think you can describe him as an all-rounder since I believe he had a good Vuelta.
Noval is one of your unsung riders in the peloton, either doing the donkey work on the front with Padrnos or setting the pace on the lower slopes of climbs and I don't think White needs much introduction. That's one strong line-up on paper and the quality of riders that could miss out, when you consider on other teams they would be starting.
The other thing I would like to point out is that I reckon Astana will end up being the current version of T-Mobile in 2005. I just think Alexandre Vinokourov, Andres Klöden, Andrey Kashechkin (3rd in last years Vuelta), and if he rides, Paolo Savoldelli (I assume he will since he bearly races after the Tour) can end up clashing with each other, especially Vino and Klödi given their past.