Friday, April 26, 2024

Le Tour de France 2017 – Stage 21: Montgeron – Paris Champs-Élysées, 103km. Dylan Groenewegen strikes early

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLe Tour de France 2017 - Stage 21: Montgeron - Paris Champs-Élysées,...

Dylan Groenewegen

Former Dutch Champion, Dylan Groenewegen (LottoNL) struck out early on Stage 21 and held on for his seventh win of the season after stage wins in Dubai, Yorkshire, two in Norway and two in the Ster ZLM Tour.

He’s had two sixth places, a fifth, a third and a second in this Tour but with that big hurdle called Kittel out of the way, this one belonged to him.

Andre Greipel’s (Lotto & Germany) terminal velocity was much higher but the 24 year-old from Amsterdam had the better timing and positioning over the sea of cobbles that is the Place de la Concorde.

A former winner of the u23 Ronde Van Vlaanderen he’s no pure drag strip artist and has also won races like the Brussels Cycling Classic and Ronde um Koln – he’s quick.

Dylan Groenewegen
Dylan Groenewegen. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

If you’re a sprinter in Le Tour then this is the stage to win – his reputation will be well burnished by this success.

We offer out congratulations to Dylan, Christopher Froome, his brutally effective team, Romain Bardet in particular and everyone who finished this monumental race.

Those late transition stages may look boring on TV but stand road side and observe the state some of these young men have ridden themselves into and it’s difficult not to have respect for every last one of them.

And to go with those noble words, here are our:

VeloVeritas Tour de France 2017 Awards

Dylan Groenewegen
Romain Bardet. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

“Man of the Race” Award

Romain Bardet (AG2R & France) rode himself beyond the pale; we hope to see him win this race one day.

Dylan Groenewegen
AG2R. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASP

“Team(s) of the Race” Award

We couldn’t split AG2R and Sunweb, the former for their aggression and spirit; the latter for their unflinching riding in support of Michael Matthews in green and Warren Barguil in polka dots.

And a big honourable mention to Wanty for being in all those breaks during the first two weeks, respecting the race and honouring the jersey.

Dylan Groenewegen
Warren Barguil. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Lazarus “Born Again” Award

Warren Barguil (Sunweb & France) VeloVeritas cycling sage and mentor, Viktor and I are due the man an apology; two beautiful stage wins and so close to another as well as King of the Mountains – respect.

(Although marks were deducted for that abomination he rode on the last stage).

Dylan Groenewegen
Marcel Kittel. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Sprinter Award

Despite the fact that we think it was a mental rather than a physical reason Marcel Kittel (QuickStep & Germany) ‘chucked it’ five stages are five stages!

An honourable mention to Michael Matthews.

Dylan Groenewegen
Nacer Bouhanni. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Non-Sprinter Award

We share equally between Nacer Bouhanni (Cofidis & France), Andre Greipel (Lotto & Germany) and Alex Kristoff (Katusha & Norway).

We’re just glad we’re not their pet dogs and getting that kick in the ribs when the formerly fast men get home.

Dylan Groenewegen
Team Astana. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

Non-Team Award

Astana, and by a considerable margin; Aru deserved much better than this.

What’s that?

How about Bahrain, BMC, Cofidis, Movistar and UAE? Were they there?

Dylan Groenewegen
Nairo Quintana. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

“Broken Dream” Award

Nairo Quintana (Movistar & Colombia) – Giro and Tour – what were you thinking, amigo?

Dylan Groenewegen
Louis Meintjes. Photo©Sirotti

HG Wells “Invisible Man” Award

Louis Meintjes (UAE & RSA) in the final chrono there was not one image of the man on French TV – impressive.

Dylan Groenewegen
Alejandro Valverde. Photo©Sarah Meyssonnier/ASO

“Absent Friends” Award

Alessandro Valverde (Movistar & Spain) and Peter Sagan (Bora & Slovakia) we missed you, gentlemen.

Dylan Groenewegen
Alberto Contador. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

“Don’t Do an Elvis and Come Back” Special Mention

Alberto Contador (Trek & Spain) let us remember you how you were in that last week, Bert.

Ciao, ciao.

Dylan Groenewegen
Rigoberto Uran. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

“Most Bang for his Bucks” Award

Jonathan Vaughters, head honcho of Cannondale, thanks to Rigoberto Uran (Colombia) with a stage win and a podium on a shoestring.

They top the teams cost/benefit analyses.

Uran also gets the ‘How to do it With no Team’ Prize.

Dylan Groenewegen
Chris Froome. Photo©Pierre Froger/ASO

“Storm in a Teacup” Award

Breaking a spoke is NOT a crisis or a big deal; I used to break them every week in time trials.

Luis Ocana crashing out; Bernard Thevenet dropping Eddy Merckx in the mountains; Lemond beating Fignon to win Le Tour by eight seconds in the final time trial were all ‘big deals’ – changing a rear wheel is not.

In conclusion, not a bad Tour but not a great one either.

Still, soon be the Vuelta…

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, Stage 9: Morzine-Avoriaz – Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne; Time to Stop Dreaming

Before we talk about today’s stage from Morzine-Avoriaz, let’s spare a moment to remember the man who died on this day, July 13th 1967 on Mount Ventoux, Provence — world champion, winner of Paris - Nice, Milan — Sanremo, the Tour of Flanders and the Tour of Lombardy. Tom Simpson is sadly missed but a legend, never to be forgotten.

Le Tour de France 2009 – Stage 16: Martigny > Bourg-Saint-Maurice, 159km

Sitting here in Bourg-Saint-Maurice, perhaps I'm going to revise my opinion that l'Equipe's Tour coverage isn't as good as the Gazzetta's Giro coverage. The Gazzetta looks better, but the L'Equipe goes so deep.

Il Giro d’Italia 2014 – Stage 4; Giovinazzo – Bari, 121 km. Rain (almost) Stops Play, Nacer Bouhanni wins

A few years ago in that much missed part of Scottish cycling history which was the Girvan Three Day - old timers like me still want to say; ‘Grants of Girvan,’ the race originally sponsored by that purveyor of the water of life – a stage was curtailed because of snow. The journos did the rounds of riders such as Nacer Bouhanni, management and officials who all said broadly the same thing, that given the conditions it was a wise decision.

Le Tour de France 2009 – Stage 5: Le Cap d’Agde > Perpignan, 196.5km

Today's fifth stage from Le Cap d'Agde saw the first successful breakaway of this year's Tour. Thomas Voeckler held off the chasing peloton by seven seconds to win out of a five-man escape in the flat but windy 196.5km course from Cap d'Agde to Perpignan. Russian rider Mikhail Ignatiev also held on from the break to claim second with British sprint phenom Mark Cavendish leading the pack snapping at their heels for third.

At Random

Gary Wiggins – “Nobody messed with The Doc”

The tall, rawboned rider ambled across to the barrier; Gary Wiggins was broad and square across the shoulders, big-thighed and walked with a loose-limbed gait. His long legs made easy work of straddling the steel fence which separated the riders' enclosure from the paying public at the Gent six, back in the early 80's.

Gordon Arms Hilly Time Trial 2014 Goes to Oliphant

Raleigh professional Evan Oliphant handled the age old dilemma of the pro racing against amateurs – if they don’t win they’re criticised, but if they do then it’s ‘expected’ – by taking the best option and winning the Gala CC’s Gordon Arms Hilly Time Trial over 20.5 cold and cloudy Borders miles in 50:06; some ways short of Mark Atkinson’s (Velo Ecosse) 1999 course record of 48:47 but enough to give him the result by 41 seconds over Carl Donaldson (GS Metro).

The 2008 Scottish Cross Country Mountain Bike Series

Rob Wardell emailed to tell us about the first round of the Scottish Cross Country Mountain Bike Series which is due to take place in less than 3 weeks' time, at Laggan Woftrax. Online entries are now being taken at EntryCentral. Riders who enter online at EntryCentral will also receive a :£5.00 discount over postal entries and entries on the day.

Adam Duggleby – the new 12 Hour National Competition Record Holder

Here at VeloVeritas we still get excited about competition records so it’s only proper then that we should ‘have a word’ with 33 year-old Adam Duggleby (Vive le Velo), who recently in the Farnborough & Camberley CC National 12 Hour Championship in Hampshire recorded 322 miles (the official distance not yet available), adding around four miles to Andy Wilkinson’s (Port Sunlight Wheelers) 2012 record of 317.97.