Friday, April 26, 2024

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 3; Granville – Angers. Cavendish by an inch!

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLe Tour de France 2016 - Stage 3; Granville - Angers. Cavendish...

Mont-Saint-MichelAfter a gruesomely boring stage where one man – albeit latterly assisted by Tommy V – held off the pack for 200 K it was another day of joy for Dimension Data’s Mark Cavendish; just too quick for Greipel, Coquard and Sagan on a slightly uphill finish into Angers.

Kittel looked to be well placed at the red kite but got it wrong on the final right hander to finish well out of it.

Greipel reckoned maybe he was one cog too high in the finish on 54 x 11 – Cavendish’s choice of gear was just fine though.

There’s little left to say about Cav; the man is special – if only he didn’t have the bairn on the podium with him…

Cavendish
Cavendish gets his lunge spot-on. Photo©ASO/B.Bade

Fortuneo-Vetal Concept’s bearded Armindo Fonseca hails from Rennes and felt it was his responsibility to scoot off up the road to uphold Regional honour as the race headed into Brittany.

His maximum lead of 11 minutes was reached at just 25 K into the rolling 223 K between Granville and Angers – from there on it began to slip back slowly, with the peloton not exactly burning the tar up.

Cavendish
Armindo Fonseca rode a solo stage for a while. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

Fonseca was happy with the exposure, the peloton was happy to have him out there as a marker…

As a matter of interest, the longest ever Tour breakaway was 253 K by Albert Bourlon in 1947; in recent times prologue specialist Thierry Marie’s 234 K in 1991 is the longest – the biggest winning margin for a solo break was Jose-Luis Viejo’s 22:50 in 1976.

Long straight roads rolling past hedgerows and through forests, lots of fans roadside, the peloton chatting and eating – reminds me of those pictures of Tours of my youth.

What’s happened to the full-on madness we know and love?

‘Chute victimes’ Messrs. Mørkøv, Bennett and Archbold won’t be complaining.

Thomas Voeckler bridged a five minute gap in quick order. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway
Thomas Voeckler bridged a five minute gap in quick order. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

It’s at just before 50 miles to go that something actually happens – Tommy Voeckler (Direct Energie) bridges a five minute gap solo to give Fonseca some company – this is better, I nearly nodded off just then.

The peloton have decided they best react; 3:25 is the gap with 74 K to go, Etixx and Lotto on point now with Tinkoff not far away.

Voeckler’s move is almost certainly doomed but he’s honouring the race and the organisers will be happy, the peloton is currently some 30 minutes down on the slowest schedule.

The intermediate sprint comes at 52 K to go, Fonseca and Voeckler ride through it; behind, Kittel, Sagan, Cav, Greipel sprint half heartedly through – they have bigger fish to fry.

As 25 miles to go approaches the two escapees have but 30 seconds with Lotto and Etixx doing the – belated – work.

The bunch had a relatively easy day. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway
The bunch had a relatively easy day. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

The roads roll, Tommy jerks out of the saddle, the peloton cruises, the organisers fret, the journalists have the piece written with just the winner to fill in – and think that for once all the restaurants will be open.

The peloton is playing their fish, letting the line slacken but we’re inside 20 miles and they’ll strike soon.

It’s status quo up at front of the bunch – Lotto with a little help from Etixx with Sky keeping Christopher out of trouble.

Tinkoff were also keeping Bert safe, as much as possible. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway
Tinkoff were also keeping Bert safe, as much as possible. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

Tommy V. has gurned the gap back out to minute but that’ll melt like a frozen yoghurt in the sun – Fonseca was having a nice solo run through the leafy countryside ‘till Tommy arrived to spoil it all…

We’re glad he did!

Inside 20 K now but the stage should have finished five minutes ago.

The Lotto boys are asserting themselves with 15 K to go, the break has 20 seconds and is doomed – Fonseca has actually been doomed for 200 K.

Voeckler battles on – that TV time is worth a lot of money to the sponsor, 15 seconds now for the duo as we go under the 10 K banner.

Cavendish
The race only really came to life once Voeckler had been brought back. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

It’s over for the duo; 8.2 K remains and it’ll light up now – please – Lotto Jumbo for Groenewegen, Etixx for Kittel, Dimension Data for Cav but it’s not fully ‘on’ and there’s a lot of switching and swerving – it looks dangerous.

Long straight roads but central reservations to make it dangerous; Direct Energie to the fore for Coquard at 3.6 K to go – that’s too early.

Kittel is well there, he has three Etixx there for him.

Cancellara for Theuns, Boasson-Hagen for Cav, 1800 metres to go and a crash has split the peloton.

Etixx on point, across the bridge, flame rouge, Renshaw is good for Cavendish; Greipel comes, but Cav is good, straight, true, strong.

Greipel thinks he has it but he was wrestling with the gear, Cavendish is not sure if he has it…

Sagan looks to be fourth, Coquard third but who’s won?

Cavendish
Coquard and Sagan sprint for third place. Photo©ASO/B.Bade

Edward Theuns (Trek) is fifth, again – a coming man for sure.

It’s Cav!

Cavendish wins.

That’s win number 28 to draw level with Hinault – albeit 20 of The Badger’s wins were time trials; the best sprinter was Darrigade, way back on 22 wins.

Six to go to match Eddy’s 34? – it’s possible…

[vsw id=”Mn-HeyBPs2c” source=”youtube” width=”615″ height=”430″ autoplay=”no”]

Cavendish
Mark Cavendish and Andre Darrigade. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway
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

La Vuelta a España 2012 – Stage 10: Ponteareas – Sanxenxo 190.0 km

From Ponteareas to Sanxenxo and it's Degenkolb! He thrust four fingers into the air and that was that. Bouhanni was closer than he has been before, Bennati and The Shack didn’t do much wrong, but the Argos man has the head and the legs.

Tour de Trossachs 2013 – it’s Gold for Goldsworthy

Silas Goldsworthy (Sandy Wallace Cycles) added his name to the list of Scottish cycling greats – Steel, Bilsland, Millar, Obree and MacIntyre - who have won the Classic chrono, with a 1:07:29 ride on a ‘four seasons in one day,’ Sunday over the glorious countryside around Aberfoyle and Callander to take the win at the Tour de Trossachs 2013.

Le Tour de France 2013 – Stage 18: Gap > Alpe-d’Huez, 168km. Riblon Saves AG2R’s Tour

I could never be a ski bum, 60 Euros per night for the room here at the top of Alpe-d’Huez - but you have to pay extra for sheets - and towels - there's no toilet paper - then you have to clean the place at the end of it. A bit like borstal really, with off-hand, condescending staff.

Le Tour de France 2013 – Stage 1: Porto-Vecchio > Bastia, 212km. Kittel survives the Chaos

It was Kittel today. My son asked me today what the chances of Cav taking the win and the yellow jersey were; "95%" said I, confidently. But it’s that other 5% which makes it a bike race. The bulk of the stage was a ‘paint drying’ job with the early break – which went in remarkably fuss free fashion - of Jerome Cousin (Europcar), Juan José Lobato (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Lars Boom (Belkin), Juan Antonio Flecha (Vacansoleil-DCM) and Cyril Lemoine (Sojasun) sitting up in the huff because they couldn’t get the gap; then the peloton doing the same to give the escapees some space and incentive to get back on the case.

At Random

Dan Gardner – The GB Rider Racing at the World Championships for the US Team Astellas

GB riders in the Men’s Elite TTT? Alex Dowsett for Movistar with a nice ride for bronze, Team Sky had Luke Rowe and Ian Stannard – when do those boys get a rest? And that’s our whack, right? Wrong. Check out rider number 243, licence holder GBR 19960306, Dan Gardner, Great Britain, Astellas Cycling Team, USA.

“No Ordinary Joe” by Brian Jones

One of the nice things about this gig is that people sometimes send you cool cycling books to review, in this case, ‘No Ordinary Joe’ sub-titled ‘Cycling Legends 1960’s, 1970’s, 1980’s, a unique collection of stories, USA & Canada.’

Living in the Heart of Flanders!

The things that can happen in the space of a week when you're living in the heart of Flanders. As mentioned in the last blog post I happened to meet Kurt Asle Arvesen on a ride and had a nice spin and chat with him. A couple of days later I was in the Asfra bike shop when fellow Norwegian and Team Sky rider Edvald Boasson Hagen walked in on his way out training.

“A Boy From the Elephant” by Ron Keeble

Ron Keeble's childhood stories would make a good movie – it would need to be in black and white though, to get the mood right, and perhaps a French director? Full of mischief and close shaves with authority, two things that would follow him throughout his life. It’s safe to say that this is not your average cycling book.