Saturday, April 27, 2024

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 1; Mont-Saint-Michel – Utah Beach. It’s About Cav

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLe Tour de France 2016 - Stage 1; Mont-Saint-Michel - Utah Beach....

Mont-Saint-MichelThe Friday evening prior to the Grand Depart at Mont-Saint-Michel, we’re in the Amritsar Indian restaurant in Kirkcaldy – Callum, Dave and I agree that Cav has won his last Tour de France stage, Kittel and Greipel will be the men, and that the 32 stage wins record of Merckx is safe – as is Hinault’s second spot on 28 stage wins.

‘Mark will have to be happy with his 26 bouquets.’

Not for the first or last time, the little chap from the middle of the Irish Sea made us eat our words; “Cav can never win Milan-Sanremo…”

Lotto and Etixx have the big strong boys in their trains for Greipel and Kittel – Cav has a couple of Golden Oldies in Eisel and Renshaw plus Boasson-Hagen but despite what the Dimension Data press release said they were far from organised in the finale.

Both Boasson-Hagen and Renshaw were trying to find Cav in the melee; he was on his own – this was no HTC perfect delivery, this was Cav ‘doing a Robbie McEwen’ using pure instinct to position himself perfectly all the way up the finish straight then turning on the boosters to leave three of the fastest men on the planet flat footed.

Mont-Saint-Michel
Mark Cavendish in yellow for the first time in his career. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

Kittel and Greipel dominated the Giro sprints and Sagan ? – we know about him; a little further back were Coquard and Kristoff another two of the fastest men around.

And we must slide in an honourable mention for Dan McLay; top ten in his first Tour stage – nice job.

But 10 out of 10 to Cav then, no real train, the very best in the world all there and he beats the lot of them – respect!

Mont Saint Michel
Le Mont Saint Michel was a spectacular départ. Photo©David Daguier

The thing with Cav is that he’s set the bar so high that if he’s not winning five or six Grand Tour stages in a year we think he’s had a bad year and it’s all over.

I reached for ‘Velo 2016’, the sad bike fanatic’s bible to look back at his palmarès; it was 2005 when it all kicked off with three UCI road wins for team Sparkasse, not to mention a world madison champs with Big Bob Hayles.

The following year he again rode for Sparkasse but stagiaired with T-Mobile, netting four wins.

Staying with the ultimately doomed and damned German squad into 2007 he took 11 victories including the one that really snapped our eyes open – beating Boonen to win the Scheldeprijs and setting a record for the number of wins achieved by a neo-pro.

His ‘Golden Time’ with Team High Road/Columbia/HTC began in 2008; as Dave said at the time; ‘he’s winning for fun.’

Mont-Saint-Michel
The Tour has visited Mont-Saint-Michel just a couple of times before. Photo©ASO/B.McBeard

There were 21 victories that season including two Giro and four Tour stages – he’d arrived.

And he chucked in a world madison title with Brad, just for luck.

In 2009 it got even better with 28 wins including three Giro and six Tour stages and of course, the magical Primavera – remarkable.

In 2010 the win count was back to ‘just’ 13 but there were five Tour stages and three Vuelta stages.

The following season he’d bounced back up to 16 wins including two Giro and another five Tour stage wins and that fabulous rainbow jersey.

For season 2012 with HTC unable to find a sponsor he headed for Sky, included in his 18 wins were Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne, three Giro stage and three Tour stages.

It wasn’t a happy marriage though, so for 2013 he was with legendary Belgian team, QuickStep – five Giro stages, two Tour stages, the British Championship and a total of 19 wins made for a good year.

But 2014 – whilst there were wins in the Algarve, Turkey, California and Suisse – was marred by his disastrous crash on Stage One of the Tour de France when he went down hard in the Harrogate finale.

There were 11 wins, a staggering season for many; but for Cav, average – and no Grand Tour wins.

Last season, whilst he ‘only’ took one Grand Tour stage – Stage Seven of le Tour – saw 14 wins but a burning desire to win an Olympic medal on the track in Rio saw him leave Patrick Lefevre’s squad.

The Belgian Master Manager not sharing Cav’s Olympic dream – his sponsors want wins in Tour stages and Classics, not ‘sideshow’ track races.

Mont-Saint-Michel
The escape of the day featured Lee Howard and Alex Howes. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

VeloVeritas predicted he’d join MTN Qhubeka (now Dimension Data) for 2016 – and whilst we were scoffed at, we were proved correct.

His year prior to the Tour has been ‘OK’ by his standards, a stage and GC in Qatar, stages in Croatia and California not to mention another world madison title with Bradley – and all whilst pursuing a track training programme designed to make him competitive in the omnium in Rio.

The ‘Deloite’ on the team jersey is there because of Cav; with the Manxman’s wages paid by the accountancy giant the African team is more than happy to indulge his Olympic obsession.

And yesterday he repaid the sponsor and the team’s faith with a huge result for them – the stage and the maillot jaune.

Short of winning the race overall the first stage is the one to win – the world’s media are all there and itching for those images of the first maillot jaune getting pulled on.

He’s now won the points jersey and worn the leader’s jersey in all three Grand Tours.

He’s won a Monument, the Worlds on road and track, The Scheldeprijs, Kuurne, 45 stages in Grand Tours (27 Tour; 15 Giro and 3 Vuelta) and stages in just about every other stage race there is.

His wife was a page three model, he has two lovely children, a beautiful house in Tuscany, a McLaren in the garage… maybe that Olympic obsession isn’t so hard to understand.

He won’t be the man who has everything ‘til he has one of those big shiny discs with the Olympic rings on it.

On paper, Boudat, Viviani, Norman Hansen, Gaviria, Kluge and maybe O’Shea should all beat him in Rio – but then on paper Greipel and Kittel should have left him standing yesterday at Utah Beach…

[vsw id=”KK5IUtKWeio” source=”youtube” width=”615″ height=”430″ autoplay=”no”]

Mont-Saint-Michel
The Tour de France is off and running. Photo©ASO/B.McBeard
Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Scottish Road Race Championships 2011, Evan Takes His Fifth!

On a day of sunshine, wind and squals over 12 laps of a rolling circuit around Balfron, Evan Oliphant (Endura Racing) defended his Scottish road race championship in fine style; riding away from the day long break with two laps to go and opening a big gap over Gary Hand (Endura/Pedal Power) and Ross Creber (Cycle Premier/Metaltek) who also slipped the bunch to sprint it out for silver and bronze respectively.

Le Tour de France 2017 – Rest Day 1: Dordogne. Moules, frites, turbos, and interviews

The deal is that they have four static bikes on rollers hooked up to a magnetic ‘cycle track’ – Scalextrix style - with little ‘Lego figures’ on tiny bikes on the track. The harder you pedal, the faster your little figure goes. Scottish honour was upheld by VeloVeritas with Martin posting fastest heat against Berteld Van de Velde, "the Moules Guy" at time of leaving...

Scottish Olympic Time Trial Championship 2007

Showing he's lost none of the form which would have kept David Millar (Saunier Duval) in Slipstream Argyle pattern - rather than the red and blue hoops of British champion -- in time trials next year (had the Fort William man's front tyre not exploded), Jason MacIntyre (Edge RT) put more than four minutes into second placed Arthur Doyle (Ivy CC) in Sunday's Scottish Olympic Time Trial Championship 2007 over 27 technical miles at Irvine.

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 8; Baeza – Albacete, 207.4 km. Nacer Bouhanni Battles

On Stage Eight to Albacete, once the break got caught with around 20 miles to go it looked like standard sprinter stage fare – Giant, Lampre, F de J and GreenEDGE would control it for their sprinters, with Nacer Bouhanni prominent.

At Random

The Wait and Hope: Eneco Prologue

The Wait and Hope. Yesterday was the start of the Eneco Tour, a race through the Netherlands, Belgium and (I think) Luxembourg. It’s a week-long race on the Pro Tour circuit, meaning it is one of the handful of races through the year from which teams can accumulate Pro Tour points and enhance their ranking.

Gabriel Cullaigh – “2018 is all about winning bike races”

It was the end of 2016 when we last spoke to Gabriel Cullaigh, he’d just signed up with top Dutch development squad, SEG Racing. We’d expected great things after a 2016 season which saw him on the podium of the u23 Gent-Wevelgem and fifth in the u23 European Road Race Championship but his season petered out mid-summer due to health problems. But he’s back, with Team Wiggins and just days after he spoke to Velo Veritas he won Stage One and took the yellow jersey in the Volta ao Alentejo in Portugal.

Giro d’Italia 2012 – Stage 2: Herning 206km. Cav is King!

Giro d'Italia 2012 - Stage 2 and Cav is King. If these were Medieval times I'd have to throw myself on his mercy. Prostrate myself at the foot of the steps to the Sky bus, next Monday in Frosinone. Trust that in the joy of his re-confirmation as king of Denmark he'd be merciful.

Hello, and Welcome to my Peter Smith Blog!

It's a pleasure to be given the opportunity to write the Peter Smith Blog for the guys at VeloVeritas, and hopefully this might give a little insight as to what it's like for the lesser-known riders, trying to establish a career in such a cut-throat sport.