Friday, April 26, 2024

Le Tour de France 2017 – Stage 7: Troyes – Nuits-Saint-Georges, 213.5km. Kittel takes his third

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLe Tour de France 2017 - Stage 7: Troyes - Nuits-Saint-Georges, 213.5km....

Kittel takes his third

Six millimetres in Troyes; that’s less than quarter of an inch – the difference between reading headlines ‘Eddy avenges Cav’ rather than ‘Kittel takes his third’…

But it’s been Kittel’s week; and when a sprinter’s head is right – as Kittel’s obviously is – even Lady Luck is carried along with them.

The big German has more than justified whatever Patrick Lefevre is paying him at QuickStep; three stage wins in the Tour is something most sponsors would give their eye teeth for.

Dimension Data’s joint number two star – with Stevie Cummings – quiet Norwegian, Edvald Boasson Hagen was impressive on Stage Six, despite being ‘dropped off’ early he fought all the way to the line and looked very strong.

Stage Seven saw him lose by that six mil. margin we already mentioned – like we said the difference between headlines and a secondary story.

Troyes
Kittel takes his third – but only just! Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

The man who impressed me on Stage Six and Seven was Eddy BH’s team mate, South African champion Reinardt Janse van Rensburg, right in the mix and very strong on the lead out; they got it wrong on Stage Six but it couldn’t have been closer on Stage Seven – well, maybe five mil ?

Boasson Hagen; we all remember those magazine headlines; ‘The New Merckx,’ and whilst he’s going well right now and he has had his moments with stage wins in le Tour, Giro, Dauphine and Tirreno, plus his multiple National Championships there are no Grand Tour podiums or Monuments on the balance sheet – albeit there is a Gent-Wevelgem and a Hamburg Classic.

Perhaps he’s too quiet, not assertive enough; fine up to a certain level but when it’s 260+ kilometres and for real he fails to make the mix.

I did hear that his body has a problem with absorbing nutrition when the race goes over 200 kilometres so maybe it’s as simple as that?

Troyes
The peloton toils under the July sun. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

But ‘respect’ for yesterday; Matthews, Kristoff, Degenkolb, Groenewegen, Bouhanni and Greipel all in his wake.

Good to see Dan McLay in the top 10 for the second day running and being brutally frank about his performance; ‘I didn’t believe in myself enough,’ it’s hard to see him winning a stage in this company but…

And of course “Sprinters’ Stages” strike fear into the strongest commentator’s heart – not Carlton’s of course; it gives him more opportunity to explain to us what a wild, wacky, knowledgeable guy he is.

I’ve defected to ITV 4 and David Millar, ‘art school boy’ or not, the man knows what he’s talking about.

And ‘yes’ we did get L’Équipe with ‘Demare by a KO’ as the headline, with ‘Cavicide’ given two pages.

Italian Flyer ‘Ale Jet’ Petacchi (six Tour stage wins) saying that there was ‘no intent’ by Sagan and he doesn’t think it was a good decision to send him home but Belgium’s Tom Steels (nine Tour Stage wins) reckons that Sagan was ‘very dangerous with his arm movement’ should be excluded.

A view shared by France’s Fred Moncassin (two Tour stage wins) stating; ‘L’exclusion est meritee.’

But these statements were most certainly made before the frame by frame analysis of the finish sprint film.

The weight of opinion expressed to us still suggests that most folks think Cav’s going for the gap between Sagan and the barriers sowed the seeds of his own destruction.

L’Équipe reports that Cav was travelling at 54.5 kph when he hit the deck – ouch!

Ace photographer John Pierce had this to say on social media;

‘What kind of ass blames the World Champion for his Kamikaze mistakes? 

“He caused a crash at the Olympics, he crashed with Haussler (in Switzerland), he crashed at stage one in Yorkshire… yet he escapes any disciplinary action…

“Cavendish should have been DQ’d for dangerous riding, so many times – and you know the commissaires would not take action unless a team complained. 

“Perhaps that was Team Bora’s only error – they didn’t place a complaint about Kamikaze Kavendish.”

Don’t hold back, John.

Troyes
The sprint ‘heads’. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Bora’s bid to get Sagan back in the race has failed – obviously! – but some wag on Facebook has suggested that if the Slovak rode the stages he missed, overnight then he’d have covered the full race distance once he ‘caught up’ and would have satisfied UCI rules.

This reminds me of the time Dave and I were working on the Tour, in digs down near Milau and got to chatting to English chaps over breakfast.

They were keen as mustard but hadn’t quite got the hang of how it all worked.

The day prior a rider had been penalised 10 minutes – I can’t remember who now – and one of our new chums asked if this meant he’d start 10 minutes behind the field that day?

Dave patiently explained that they’d just add 10 minutes to his overall time – but perhaps the man was on to something?

Sagan, solo pursuing the peloton across France with a 10 minute deficit to make up?

Troyes
KM0 marks the end of the neutralised zone. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Today is a sore one.

Into the Jura mountains; just three climbs with no HC ascents – a cat. 3; a cat. 2 and a cat. 1 doesn’t look too severe on paper but this is a tough stage – and whilst it may not be a mountain top finish the final kilometres are Tough with a capital ‘T.’

This is the proverbial day on which the Tour can be lost.

And Sunday is even less bountiful:

A cat. 2 climb straight out the blocks; then a cat. 3; an HC; another HC; a cat. 4; and yet another HC all in 181 kilometres with the finish coming 26 K off the final summit of Mont du Chat after a mad descent and a heavy roads to the line.

The GC will firm up over the weekend and the serious Kings of the Mountains will lay the foundations for all those red dots.

A demain.

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

Ian Stannard takes the British National Road Race Championships 2012

With the bells of beautiful Ampleforth Abbey peeling in celebration, Sky made it a hat trick of British National Road Race Championships titles; strong man Ian Stannard following on from Geraint Thomas in 2010 and Bradley Wiggins in 2011.

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 2014 – Stage 17; Saint-Gaudens – Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d’Adet, 125 km. Rafal Majka Confirms

Another great stage yesterday - Peraud takes a giant step, Rafal Majka confirms, Nibali consolidates, Konig stumbles... After breakfast we had a wander round Lourdes; it's one weird place - but I said that yesterday. We decided against the finish col to Saint-Lary Pla d'Adet - dead end climbs are nitemares to get off after the stage and we figured that the action might just start on the Col de Val Louron-Azet. We got up there in plenty time, claimed our spot and waited 'til it was time to grab our caravan swag.

Roadside at the Tour of Britain 2022; Stage One

It’s not every day you get the chance to see some of the sport’s greatest names just up the road from your home, competing in the Tour of Britain 2022. Fortunately, by the time we got to Union Street it was just drizzling, not cold but grey and understandably not conducive to riders wanting to stand and chat...

At Random

John Lee Augustyn – Getting Good Guidance from the Right People

John Lee Augustyn is probably best known outside of the African continent for his head-first lunge down the scree slopes of the Col de la Bonette-Restefond descent to Jausiers in the Tour de France a couple of years ago, and this after leading the race over it's summit in glorious solitude - only Frederico Bahamontes and Robert Millar share that particular accolade. Last season was difficult for John Lee, but now though, things look like they're going to change for the 23 year old, and we recently chatted to him to find out more...

Scottish Road Race Championships 2018

Mark Robertson (Army CU) who successfully defended his 2017 title, confirming that he’s ‘not just a sprinter’ and giving lie to suggestions that his win last season was a ‘fluke.’ VeloVeritas hasn’t been to the Scottish Road Race Championship for a year or two but when we heard it was in Cromarty, one of favourite places on the globe there could be no excuse for absence.

Gent Six Day 2009 – Nights Five and Six

There was no partying at Iljo's dad's bar, De Karper - which is just along the road from the Gent track - for us tonight; we had a ferry to catch. I didn't have time to put together a Day Five piece, today. We were up at 09:00 for the 13:00 start; usually I spend the early afternoon writing, but today I couldn't, although I did manage to get the Day Five pictures away as the under 23 lads prepared for action.

Scottish Cycling Super 6 Series – Event 1, Gifford

The new Scottish Cycling Super 6 series kicked off in grand style today at Gifford in beautiful East Lothian, with Gary Hand taking a well-executed and deserved solo win in the 'A' Race, in a superbly organised Edinburgh Road Club event.