Saturday, April 20, 2024

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 19; Albertville – Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc. Bardet Saves the Tour for France

-

HomeDiariesLe Tour de France 2016 - Stage 19; Albertville - Saint-Gervais Mont...

Mont-Saint-MichelWe chose the wrong mountain – but little did we know there’d be a big rain storm on the last climb to give the race the jolt it’s been requiring for three weeks.

A great day for Bardet and AG2R.

A good day for Quintana, Mentjies and Martin.

A bad day for Mollema, Yates, Dumoulin, Rolland and Navarro – the latter three all crash victims.

And Froome and Porte have had better days. . .

We holed up at the top of the HC Montee de Bisanne but it hadn’t really kicked off there, it all went mad on the decent off ‘our’ mountain‎ when the rains came down and the crashes gave the GC a right good shake up.

Bardet
Romain Bardet. Photo©ASO/P.Ballet
Bardet
Chris Froome shows the battle scars. Photo©ASO/A.Broadway

Froome came down and is it just me or did he not look his usual self on the final climb?

We’ll find out today.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

The soigneurs were in position when we got to the top of the Col, texting the team cars for an update.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

The Tinkoff team car bullied it’s way into a parking space but when the hot under the collar spectators discovered it was Ivan Basso causing the fuss all was molto bene!

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Majka was first up of the breakaway, in pursuit of even more points in the King of the Mountains contest – ‎ after the time trial stage he had almost double De Gendt’s points total; it’ll be even more of a gap now after he took full points on the Bisanne.

We’ve just bought l’Equipe and pre Stage 20 he’s on 209 to De Gendt’s 105 points and is the race’ number one ‘baroudeur’ with 637 kilometres spent ‘up the road.’

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

The light was going fast as the peloton rolled past – there were some serious faces in there.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Van Avermaet had been in the break but was off the back of the peloton when he passed us.

He’d get back on the descent and later in the day do good work for Porte.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Tommy Voeckler was pulling faces, as ever but no longer has the legs to support the facial contortions.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

We’re thinking Simon Geschke is spending too much time in the barber’s shop – or maybe we’re just jealous.

Either way – he was dropped!

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

It was another ‘beardy’ next, Cofidis lead out man, Geoffrey Soupe in the company of Adam Hansen.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Our big chum from the time trial, Navardauskas clearly wasn’t enjoying the stage and was making sure he’d be warm on the decent.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Sagan was ‘caping up’ too but in his usual way didn’t look up nor down despite having just climbed an HC mountain.

Going into Stage 20 he has 425 to Kittel’s 228 points – so, barring accident, Tinkoff take home two jerseys.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Martin and I once followed French Champion Arthur Vichot [the ITT in Embrun in 2013] – and can tell you that his bike handling is as sharp as his appearance.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Sep Vanmarcke is a man of the cross winds and cobbles – not the cols.

It shows.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Meanwhile, Steve Cummings was in his usual tail gunner position – this stage is just a wee bit too much even for his considerable talent.

Bardet
Photo©Ed Hood

Stone last – but he did make the time cut @ 35:39 – was Dan McLay, dragging that big frame of his over the worst the Alpes can offer.

He’s not last on GC, that’s Sam Bennett @ 4:46:58; Dan is fifth last @ 4:42:24 – If he can get through today and get a good lead out on the Champs Elysees…

‎We’re on the parcours of Stage 20, on the run in to the Col des Aravis but en route the Joux Plane the final climb of the 2016 Tour de France.

In around five hours it’ll be all over…

But mean times, it’s time for a kir…

A demain.

Bardet
Romain Bardet has great potential for the GC in the future. Photo©ASO/ASO/A.Broadway
Pierre Rolland came down hard. Photo©ASO/P.Ballet
Pierre Rolland came down hard. Photo©ASO/P.Ballet
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

Le Tour de France 2009, Stage 4: Montpellier > Montpellier, 39km TTT

The team time trial here in Montpellier, it’s beautiful; speed, strength, skill, trust, unity, honour — everything that makes pro bike racing special.

Le Tour de France 2012 – Stage 20: Rambouillet – Paris Champs-Élysées, 130 km.

Monday July 23rd, 21.55 in a Ryanair Boeing, somewhere over Northern England. They sell papers on the plane, these days - at inflated prices of course. The whole outside 'wrap' of The Times is a Bradley Wiggins picture, yellow clad and taking the turn at the top of the Champs Elysees, l'Arc de Triomphe providing the background. And the 'The Thunderer' isn't too proud to pinch L'Équipe's headline from two days ago; 'Promenade des Anglais.'

Giro d’Italia 2009 – Day 4: Stage 17, Chieti – Blockhaus

I woke with a start, in the middle of the night, damn! I thought, things I should have mentioned, in the diary - Blockhaus; today's mega climb, we caught sight of it yesterday morning as we hurtled down the Autostrada.

Giro d’Italia – Day 10: Stage 21, Cesano Maderno – Milano (Individual Time Trial)

Today's Gazzetta in Cesano Maderno has Emanuele Sella's little face smiling out at us with a headline that makes a play on his name: "S(T)ELLA" = star. Life is so much easier when Germans don't win stages! Inside, a headline says; "Bruseghin da podio. Di Luca si arrende." I ask our hotelier what 'arrende' means; he slumps his shoulders, drops his arms to his side, puts his head to one side and let's his tongue hang out - yes, we can understand the translation.

At Random

Yuriy Metlushenko – Winning Races Across the Globe for a Decade and a Half

If you’re a regular VeloVeritas reader then you’ll know we try to buck the superlatives trend – ‘iconic’ and ‘awesome’ are words you won’t see on our pages too often. But we have to use a superlative when we talk about today’s interview subject, the Ukraine’s Yuriy Metlushenko – ‘Legendary.’ He’s been winning bike races across the globe for a decade and a half and shows no sign of slowing down.

Just a typical Wednesday afternoon in Kermis Belgium

172 starters on a Wednesday afternoon... only in Kermis Belgium. This was a hard race from the off, again typical of Belgium. With only one amateur race taking place on this day it meant this race was full-on. A couple of crashes in the peloton on the same corner on consecutive laps didn't help matters...

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 19; Salvaterra de Miño – Cangas de Morrazo, 176.5 km. Adam Hansen Takes the Win!

VeloVeritas cycling sage, Vik hates those narrow bars Adam Hansen uses - they're to make him more aero and save those precious watts - but they certainly didn't do him any harm, today in Cangas de Morrazo. Not just a win; he's saved Lotto's Vuelta - it goes from 'Ligthart and Hansen enlivening the breakaways' to 'stage winning' and that's about a million miles. By good fortune we had a chat with the man just before this Vuelta kicked off...

John Atkins – Britain’s greatest ever cyclo-cross rider; 13 times a British Champion

John Atkins is Britain’s greatest ever cyclo-cross rider; 13 times a British champion and still the nation’s best ever finisher in the Worlds – and at a time when ‘cross gods, the de Vlaeminck brothers were at their zenith. He lives quietly in retirement in Wales, doesn’t ‘do the internet’ and isn’t a man for the ‘stats.’ He was surprised we wanted to speak to him but gave freely of his time and anecdotes. Here’s what John had to say to VeloVeritas just after young van der Poel had won the Worlds in Tabor.