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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #10 on: June 29, 2012, 06:41:00 PM »

Tomorrow the Tour de France starts with a prologue - a 6.4 km individual time trial.

Look for time trial specialists like Fabian Cancellara, David Millar, Dave Zabriski to take the first Yellow Jersey.  Bradley Wiggins is another to watch as well. 

6.4 km is not far and only a few seconds will separate most of the contenders.
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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #11 on: June 30, 2012, 04:04:09 PM »

2012 Tour de France Prologue results
Prologue – Liege to Liege ITT 6.4 km
Cancellara wins Tour prologue, Wiggins second
Stage results
•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 7:13
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
•   8. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   13. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   15. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   16. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   18. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   19. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   22. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at :20
•   30. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at :21
•   35. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at :22
•   41. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at :23
•   42. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at :23
•   45. Tony MARTIN, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :23
•   69. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at :26
•   81. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :28
•   88. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   100. Vladimir KARPETS, Movistar, at :31
•   101. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at :32
•   110. Tom VEELERS, Argos-Shimano, at :34
•   113. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at :34
•   119. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   138. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   198. Roy CURVERS, Argos-Shimano, at 1:06

GC Standings:

Same…


Next Stage: July 1: STAGE 1 - Liège  Seraing 198 km


Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan: 20 points
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky: 17 points
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step: 15 points

 Polka Dot: None

White:           
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 7:23
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Patrick GRETSCH, Argos-Shimano, at :2

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 22:13
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Roy CURVERS, Argos-Shimano
Withdrawals:

All Riders in the race.

Prologue  Review:
Cancellara wins Tour prologue, Wiggins second
•   By VeloNews.com
•   Published Jun. 30, 2012
•   Updated 5 hours ago
Fabian Cancellara won the prologue at the Tour de France Saturday. Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) became the first rider to win five times in the Tour opener when he bested Bradley Wiggins (Sky) in Liège, Belgium.
Frenchman Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-Quick Step) finished third, with American Tejay van Garderen (BMC Racing) fourth.
"Today was like a velodrome because there were so were many crowds," said Cancellara. "I am very proud of this. This is a big victory for me. People were wondering about me after I had my crash (at the Tour of Flanders), if I could come back."

Cancellara came back and more, starting second-to-last and doing just as he did on much the same course in 2004, beating all previous times and holding off the defending Tour champ. Then it was Lance Armstrong. Today, it was Cadel Evans (BMC Racing).

After a lackluster first half of the season for RadioShack, highlighted by Chris Horner's second overall at Tirreno-Adriatico and Jakob Fuglsang's Tour of Luxembourg win, Cancellara said the win relieved some of the weight resting on his shoulders.

“I have memories today of winning eight years ago and that was very special," said Cancellara. "When you are 23 and win, then eight years later do it again, it’s a very special thing for me, my family and especially for the team. This is a great opening for our Tour. A lot of pressure went away with this win. But we all want success and success is never easy. The whole team did a big effort.”

Evans finished 17 seconds behind Cancellara and 10 seconds off the pace set by Wiggins, his top rival for the three-week tour.

"It's not good, but not bad. Of course I'd rather lose less seconds, you never want to lose time," said Evans. "One GC rider ahead of me, but I was half expecting that... that's what Wiggins' background is, these short hard efforts.

"The real racing starts tomorrow."

 Wearing the French tricolor as national TT champion, birthday boy Sylvain Chavanel was a revelation in the opener. More known as a gutsy attacker in the hilly intermediate stages, Chavanel started 113th and bested Edvald Boasson Hagen (Sky). Boasson Hagen, Cancellara, Wiggins — these are names expected to show on the front page of a prologue results sheet.

"I did a great race," said Chavanel. "I wanted to make a good performance. From the beginning of the season I'm doing good in the time trials. I knew that the specialists could have beat me, but I'm super happy in any case. I have no regrets. I really did my best to honor my brand new French champion jersey. It's a third place in a prologue of the Tour against the best time trialists of the world."

GC implications
Wiggins' ride, during which he closed six seconds on previous leader Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-Quick Step) in the final 3km, was the first shot over the bow in what should be an intense GC battle fought over the race's 101km of time trials and three mountaintop finishes.

"Fair play to Fabian, he's the best in the world at what he does and I think he proved that again today," said Wiggins.

The biggest loser on Saturday was Juanjo Cobo, the 2011 Vuelta a España champ, who entered the day with a shot at Movistar's leadership, but finished in 7:57, 37 seconds behind Wiggins and nine seconds off of teammate Alejandro Valverde.

Denis Menchov (Katusha) rode quietly to a 7:26, inserting himself into the overall conversation, while Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) and Giro d'Italia champ Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Sharp) tucked in at 7:31.

Americans Levi Leipheimer (Omega Pharma) and Chris Horner (RadioShack) finished in 7:41 and 7:47, respectively.

Van Garderen pulled on the white jersey as the race's best young rider. The Boulder, Colorado, resident was second to Cancellara in the prologue at the 2011 in the Tour de Suisse. He enters this Tour in support of Evans.

"It was crazy, just the adrenalin rush being in the Tour. This is the start of three weeks. It's an incredible feeling. I got chills," he said. "I cannot wait to get up there and get it. I haven't had this white jersey in a while. Normally I have a good prologue, so I wanted to give it a go. To be honest, the team has a great spirit. We are serious, but we joke around at the team dinner. Cadel said, 'Guys, do not stress. We had a lot of fun winning the Tour last year and let's have fun again this year.'"

Sagan and Martin run into trouble
Two men who hoped to contend for the stage win, world champion Tony Martin (Omega Pharma) and Slovak strongman Peter Sagan (Liquigas) ran into trouble on the course.

Sagan did not get the start he expected and lost more time when his foot came out of his pedal as he negotiated a left hand bend. He eventually finished 52nd at :24 behind.
Martin, who succeeded Cancellara as world time trial champion in 2011, was firing on all cylinders until he suffered a puncture, which probably cost him the yellow jersey. He was on-time to contend with Cancellara before the mishap. Martin ended up finishing 44th at just :23 behind the Swiss winner.

"I was on a good time, but after my puncture I had to change bike. Without that I would have had an even better time," he said. "I'm disappointed, of course. I've been planning for this for a long time."

For Cancellara, the win was a return to where his record-breaking Tour career began.

Gilbert (BMC Racing), who finished ninth on Saturday and grew up just outside of Liège, said he would "try everything for the win tomorrow."

With a seven-second barrier and now time bonuses on offer, Cancellara's jersey is likely not on the line, but a sharp attack from Chavanel could see the Frenchman in yellow two days before the race moves to his home country.


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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #12 on: July 01, 2012, 02:32:32 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 1 results
July 1: STAGE 1 - Liège  Seraing 198 km
Sagan wins stage 1 of the 2012 Tour de France; Cancellara leads
Stage results
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, in 4:58:19
•   2. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   3. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at 0
•   4. Philippe GILBERT, BMC Racing, at 0
•   5. Bauke MOLLEMA, Rabobank, at 0
•   6. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 0
•   9. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   12. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   16. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at 0
•   20. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at 0
•   21. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 0
•   32. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   34. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   35. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   36. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   42. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 0
•   44. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 0
•   54. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :17
•   56. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :21
•   77. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at :45
•   95. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 1:25
•   128. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 2:07
•   132. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:07
•   142. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 2:07
•   143. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:01
•   155. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 3:01
•   172. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 3:41
•   181. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 3:41
•   198. Guillaume LEVARLET, Saur-Sojasun, at 8:52

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 5:05:32
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
•   6. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   7. Philippe GILBERT, BMC Racing, at :13
•   8. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   10. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   11. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   15. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at :22
•   23. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :24
•   34. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   36. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at :33
•   39. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   45. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   54. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   62. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :57
•   75. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 1:21
•   84. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 1:41
•   102. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   106. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 2:30
•   107. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 2:30
•   144. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 3:19
•   145. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:20
•   156. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 3:53
•   166. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 4:07
•   167. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 4:07
•   198. Guillaume LEVARLET, Saur-Sojasun, at 9:43


Next Stage: July 2: Stage 2 Vise - Tournai 207.5km


Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan: 55 points
•   2. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 49 points
•   3. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky: 42 points

 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 3 points
•   2. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 1 point
•   3. Pablo URTASUN PEREZ, Euskaltel-Euskadi: 1 point

White:           
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 5:05:42
•   2.. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3.  Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 15”17:101
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Guillaume LEVARLET, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:

All Riders in the race.

Stage 1  Review:
Sagan wins stage 1 of the 2012 Tour de France; Cancellara leads
•   By VeloNews.com
•   Published Jul. 1, 2012
•   Updated 1 hour ago

Peter Sagan won stage 1 of the Tour de France Sunday in Seraing, Belgium. Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale) went away on the finish climb with overall leader Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) and stomped away on the finish straight for his first Tour win.

Edvald Boasson Hagen (Sky) was third.

All three finished on same time with the chase group and Cancellara maintained his seven-second lead in GC over Bradley Wiggins (Sky).

"I would like to thank all of my teammates for this victory this afternoon... Vincenzo Nibali looked after me in the run-in to the finish and put me in a good place," said Sagan. "The finish today was extremely difficult."

Cancellara said attacking on the final climb was the best way to defend his maillot jaune and repay his teammates for a full day of work on the front of the peloton.

"I said in the end to myself, probably attacking is the best defense," said Cancellara. "When I saw (Sylvain) Chavanel was attacking with Albasini, I just went up steady. When the cobblestones came, that's my thing, and I attacked."

As he did at Milan-San Remo in March, Cancellara lost out to a rider that couldn't come around him until the final moment of the stage.

Six up the road
After a protest stopped the peloton momentarily in the neutral zone, the racing got underway immediately.

The top prize the escapees were hunting was clear early on as Mørkøv and Urtasun split the single point on offer at each of the stage's first two Cat. 4 climbs, the Côte de Cokaifragne and Côte de Francorchamps. Mørkøv, Urtasun and Bouet looked the strongest of the six escapees all day. The Dane took top honors, however, at the next two climbs, the Côte de Lierneux and the Côte de Barvaux in fierce sprints against the Basque Euskaltel rider.

Meanwhile, back in the bunch, RadioShack patrolled the front all day.

“We had to do it, because with this finish, nobody wanted to take responsibility of this the race," RadioShack director Alain Gallopin told VeloNews. "With the yellow jersey, we have to do it.”

The break built a maximum advantage just shy of five minutes, but with the stage halfway gone, RadioShack's Jens Voigt and Yaroslav Popovych turned up the chase for Cancellara. They dropped the gap to 1:08 with 32km remaining and after a lull — and two crashes around 25km to go — Lotto-Belisol, BMC Racing and Orica-GreenEdge took to the front.

Caught in the first crash were one of Sky's top domestiques, Michael Rogers, and Vladimir Karpets (Movistar), among a few others. The second crash involved roughly 12 riders, with Thomas Voeckler (Europcar) among those caught out. A long, straight run through an open field and left-to-right crosswinds heading into Seraing appeared as though it would keep the crash-delayed riders, now echeloned from the left gutter across the road, from rejoining the peloton, but the chasers jumped on-board on the outskirts of the finish town.

Lotto was full-gas at the front with sprinter André Greipel leading three teammates over the top of the breakaway with 8km to go. The German led the catch after Bouet tried a last-ditch effort to earn the most aggressive rider's prize, and the bunch was set for a run-in at the Côte de Seraing finish climb.

Behind the Lotto train, George Hincapie brought BMC Racing teammate Cadel Evans up the left side of the strung-out bunch, with Sagan in-tow. Hincapie dropped them off a few wheels from the front just in time for a series of left- and right-hand corners leading to the ramp.

Chavanel, then Cancellara, then Sagan
Orica took control onto the base of the 2.4km, partially cobbled climb with Stuart O'Grady, Michael Albsasini, Matt Goss and Simon Gerrans there. But Sylvain Chavanel, just seven seconds behind Cancellara after a surprise third-place ride in Saturday's prologue, launched around the left side of the Aussie train as the road steepened 2km from the line.

Albasini and Cancellara jumped out in pursuit of Chavanel and the Swiss laid down a brutal acceleration that only Sagan could follow.

"I tried to attack in the steepest part of the climb," said Chavanel. "I knew that it was more or less impossible to wait for the end for the sprint. Guys like Boasson Hagen and Sagan are better than me in a finish like that. So I tried to attack a bit early. When Cancellara jumped on my wheel and attacked, I thought maybe someone else could take the wheel of Cancellara. So I stopped a little bit, but when I started again the race was away."

Resplendent in yellow, Cancellara led the young Slovak champion onto the lower-angle upper reaches of the climb and, much like at Milan-San Remo in March, it was the RadioShack man pulling a Liquigas rider toward the finish. Then it was Nibali. Today it was Sagan, the winner of nine stages between May's Amgen Tour of California and June's Tour de Suisse.

"I waited to see if I could attack and I wanted to hold on because I knew it was a long finish," said Sagan. "I couldn't ride with Cancellara. I know he's very strong."

Evans tried to match the pace on the climb, but could not.

“It was very intense,” said Evans. “It was a short, sharp finish to a relatively calm day.

“I tried (to follow the attacks), but they are specialists on these kinds of finishes. I had to think of my GC as well.”

As Cancellara looked back constantly at Sagan, Boasson Hagen shot up from the chase in his yellow helmet signifying Sky's lead in the teams classification. He closed an eight-plus-second gap on the cobbled upper reaches of the climb. The trio came onto the finishing straight together, the yellow jersey on the front, the yellow helmet on the back.

Boasson Hagen stood to gain a second on Tejay van Garderen (BMC Racing) and steal the best young rider's white jersey. Sagan was in it for the finish and the green points jersey. But Cancellara, in yellow, was out for more time to pad his overall lead and the pace-making fell on his shoulders.

Cancellara stood and opened the sprint on the right barriers, the chase group, which included Wiggins, Evans and van Garderen, bearing down on the leaders. Sagan opened it up inside 100 meters, shot out to the left, and won easily.

"I'm very happy, especially after yesterday's incident at the prologue," said Sagan, who unclipped a pedal in the opener and lost any chance at repeating his Tour de Suisse prologue win late last month.
The Slovak will wear the green points jersey on Monday, on loan from Cancellara, who will again be in yellow. Some good advice before the stage on Sunday had Sagan on alert for the Swiss on the finish climb.

"Before the race today I spoke with my team coach and manager, and they said I had to look out for only one rider: Cancellara.
"He had a great prologue, and that showed he's got good condition. Also, this stage suited him."

Sagan got one over on Cancellara today. And when the race jury awarded the same time to the chase group, it meant Cancellara's effort was essentially for naught — other that the honor of attacking in yellow.

"This play of poker is maybe where I lost in the end, but I think I won a lot of confidence and that's really important," he said.

"I thought attacking would be the best defense and 500 meters from the line I wasn't going to slow down. If I go for something, I go all the way. I'm not going to give up, that's not me.
"Maybe Sagan, eight years from now, will do the same thing."

Local hero Philippe Gilbert (BMC), winner of all three Ardennes classics in 2011, topped the chase group sprint for fourth, with Rabobank's Bauke Mollema fifth.

Overall contenders Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), Robert Gesink (Rabobank) and Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Sharp) finished sixth, seventh and ninth, respectively. Sky's GC backup, Chris Froome lost more than a minute and plummeted down the standings.

“Froomey was unlucky to puncture just at the wrong moment as we hit the waterfront along the river," said Sky director Sean Yates. "It was lined out going 70K an hour. Richie (Porte) waited along with Christian (Knees). By the time they came back to the convoy, riders were getting shelled. It was not possible to get back on. Riders were all over the place."

Valverde was caught in the second late crash with teammate Rui Costa — making it four Movistar riders to go down in the final 10km — but chased back on in time to blaze up the finish climb.

“After three years without riding the Tour, I barely remembered how dangerous this race is during the first week, with much more tension than any other," said Valverde. "We rode at the front for almost all day, but we suffered a couple of crashes in the finale and we had to put a feet a feet on the ground at the second one. We did a huge effort to come back in and we made it just before the climb."

Also losing time on the stage were Americans Levi Leipheimer (Omega Pharma), who dropped 17 seconds after being caught in traffic behind the peloton on the finish climb.

"The final was dangerous and we were riding very fast," said Leipheimer. "Mayby at 3km to go, just before the climb, we were a little bit too far from the head of the bunch. The I passed a lot of riders on the climb, but it was impossible to catch the first part of the group. In any case, the legs are good and my priority in this first part of the Tour is to stay safe and out of trouble."

Tomorrow's stage
The 99th Tour de France continues Monday with the 207.5km second stage, from Vise to Tournai. It should be a day for the pure sprinters, as Sagan will face off with the likes of world champion Mark Cavendish (Sky), André Greipel (Omega Pharma-Lotto), Marcel Kittel (Argos-Shimano), Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Sharp) and more.

The Tour will honor the late Wouter Weylandt, whose last win before his death in the 2011 Giro d'Italia took place in Tournai during the 2010 Circuit Franco-Belge.



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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #13 on: July 02, 2012, 04:51:02 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 2 results
July 2: Stage 2 Vise - Tournai 207.5km
Cavendish exposes his one-stage bluff in Tournai
Stage results
•   1. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, in 4:56:59
•   2. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol, at 0
•   3. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   4. Tom VEELERS, Argos-Shimano, at 0
•   5. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 0
•   6. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   10. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   41. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 0
•   45. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   49. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   54. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   56. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 0
•   66. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 0
•   68. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at 0
•   78. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at 0
•   83. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   87. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   96. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   132. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   135. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   136. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   138. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   148. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at :20
•   160. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at :20
•   170. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at :20
•   179. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at :51
•   198. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 9:55

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 10:02:31
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
•   6. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   7. Philippe GILBERT, BMC Racing, at :13
•   8. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   10. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   11. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   15. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at :22
•   33. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   36. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   42. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   50. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   58. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at :53
•   60. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :57
•   98. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   101. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 2:30
•   102. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 2:30
•   138. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:20
•   151. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 4:10
•   164. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 4:27
•   165. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 4:27
•   198. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 13:37


Next Stage: July 3 Orchies - Boulogne-sur-Mer 197km

Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 78 points
•   2. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky: 63 points
•   3. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan: 55 points

 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 4 points
•   2. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 1 point
•   3. Pablo URTASUN PEREZ, Euskaltel-Euskadi: 1 point

White:           
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 10:02:41
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 30:08:07
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:

All Riders in the race.

Stage 2  Review:
Cavendish exposes his one-stage bluff in Tournai
•   By Matthew Beaudin
•   Published 1 hour ago

TOURNAI, Belgium (VN) — Oh come on. It couldn’t really have been possible that Mark Cavendish could show up at the Tour de France and not be a favorite, could it?
That is exactly how the world champion played it before the Tour started on Saturday. He didn’t have a leadout train. He was too light to be as quick as normal. It was a solid bluff… until the finish line in Tournai, the Tour’s first bunch finish.
After his roommate and close friend Bernhard Eisel dropped him off with 500 meters to go, Cavendish (Sky) freelanced the final 500 meters, finally grabbing André Greipel’s (Lotto-Belisol) wheel and jumping the big German for the win at the line. It was an absolutely clinical example of how to win a sprint without a leadout; he skipped from wheel to wheel and came around Greipel with under 25 meters to the line to win by half-a-wheel. It was as if he was climbing a ladder.
“Mark showed today why he is the world champion, why, when you put him in that two or three kilometers, he’s the master. How he got on Greipel’s wheel, I don’t know. Who knows? But he did. That’s what makes him the champion that he is,” said Team Sky manager Dave Brailsford.
“He just makes more right decisions than wrong decisions and more often than not finds himself in the right position to sprint. And when he is in that position, he doesn’t really lose.”
Cavendish did it without the vaunted leadout train that he’s had in years past. Without the extra weight he usually carries for more power. Without, if it’s possible, heavy expectation. The team that lines up in the morning for Sky isn’t here to help Cav’ in the sprints; it’s here to put Bradley Wiggins into yellow, plain and simple.
The win, Cavendish said, meant no more and no less because it came largely alone.
“A win at the Tour de France is the win at the Tour de France,” Cavendish said. “They don’t come easy. This is the most important race of the year for me. It’s what my season is normally based around, you know? It just gives me an extra drive, an extra determination.”
It’s evident Cavendish is pulling on the strength of his world champion stripes. He mentions the jersey in interviews, and said he looks down at the bands on his sleeves in training and races.
“Every race since I’ve won this jersey, I’ve wanted to wear this jersey and show why I wanted to wear it. I have massive respect for this jersey. I have massive respect for every rider who’s ever worn it,” he said Monday. “I really wanted to do it an honor this year… That doesn’t mean winning a stage at the Tour de France. It means wherever I go.”
Just before this year’s Tour started, Cavendish sat down with reporters and broke down his chances in the sprints. He said he’d lost weight for the Olympics, and that it would be hard to win without a dedicated train. It was almost as if he didn’t expect to win at all. He was subdued. It was all very Un-Cav’.
“I’m realistic. When I know I’ve done everything I know I’m better than everyone else. Fear of failure is a big thing,” Cavendish said before the Grand Départ. “So, if I fail, I know I’ve done something wrong. So, right now I’m realistic. I know I have limited support… when I’ve lost in the past, it’s because I’ve failed.”
Since he showed up for the 2012 Tour, it’s been about all about Wiggins, Cavendish’s madison partner on the track at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
“I’m in the world champion’s jersey, riding for a British team. We’ve got the favorite in the Tour de France, a British rider and good friend of mine. It’s an honor to be here,” he said.
Ah, yes. An honor. But the Tour is Cavendish’s stomping grounds. The “Manx Missile” has won 21 Tour de France stages since 2008, including Monday’s. The win draws him within one win of the all-time Tour record for sprinters.
“For sure it’s nice to come in with less pressure, with less expectation to win multiple stages,” he said. “I think now if I don’t win five stages it’s seen as a failure to some people… On the other hand, we come in with the favorite for the yellow jersey, and that brings a heightened sense of responsibility, a heightened sense of pressure, a heightened sense of tension.”
There has also been speculation that Cavendish would leave the Tour early in order to recover and focus on the Olympic road race in London. To that, he said he planned to ride to Paris.
“It’s (the Champs Élysées) the most beautiful boulevard in the world. It’s my favorite place to sprint. I’ve won there the last three run-ins,” he said.
Eisel, a rival-turned-mentor to Cavendish since they began working together at High Road in 2007, said the stage 2 win comes as relief.
“It’s like we expected it. I was pretty sure we weren’t going to have the leadout train like in the past years, but he showed he’s able to win this sprint without a train, just floating around and moving up in the last moment,” Eisel said. “I’m happy for him. Really happy for Mark that he won this stage. Now, I think it’s easier for him.”
With a cheeky dance through his rivals in the final half-kilometer Monday, Cavendish certainly made it look easy.

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #14 on: July 03, 2012, 05:18:30 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 3 results
July 3 Orchies - Boulogne-sur-Mer 197km
Many trains jostling for one track: A dominant sprint leadout has yet to appear at the 2012 Tour de France
Stage results
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, in 4:42:58
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Peter VELITS, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :1
•   4. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at :1
•   5. Michael ALBASINI, Orica-GreenEdge, at :1
•   6. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :1
•   11. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :1
•   13. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :1
•   16. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :1
•   20. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :1
•   23. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :1
•   30. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :1
•   31. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :1
•   35. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :1
•   53. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :47
•   56. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at :47
•   59. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at :47
•   61. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at :58
•   65. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 1:15
•   94. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 3:54
•   106. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 5:27
•   148. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 7:27
•   171. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 8:02
•   172. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 9:00
•   173. Robert HUNTER, Garmin-Barracuda, at 9:00
•   174. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 9:00
•   190. Simone STORTONI, Lampre-ISD, at 16:26
•   191. Pablo URTASUN PEREZ, Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 16:26
•   192. Patrick GRETSCH, Argos-Shimano, at 16:29
•   193. Roy CURVERS, Argos-Shimano, at 16:29
•   194. Albert TIMMER, Argos-Shimano, at 16:29
•   195. Marcel KITTEL, Argos-Shimano, at 16:29
•   196. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 16:29

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 14:45:30
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
•   6. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   7. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   9. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   10. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   15. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :23
•   25. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   26. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   30. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   37. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   43. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :57
•   57. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   58. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 2:29
•   86. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 5:24
•   91. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 6:23
•   110. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 8:19
•   117. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 8:46
•   130. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 9:56
•   159. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 12:11
•   165. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 12:52
•   172. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 13:26
•   196. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 30:05


Next Stage: July 4 Abbeville — Rouen 214.5km

Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 78 points
•   2. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky: 63 points
•   3. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan: 55 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 9 points
•   2. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
•   3. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points

White:           
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 14:45:40
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 44:17:04
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:


Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 3  Review:
•   Many trains jostling for one track: A dominant sprint leadout has yet to appear at the 2012 Tour de France
•   By Andrew Hood
•   Published 46 mins ago

BOULOGNE-SUR-MER, France (VN) – One of the more interesting story lines in the first half of the Tour de France will be the battle for supremacy among the sprint trains.
With Team Sky riding for the yellow jersey, world champion Mark Cavendish is “freelancing” this year’s Tour, leaving a vacuum inside the peloton in the bunch sprints.
Monday’s barnstorming stage into Tournai, with Cavendish pulling off the win despite Lotto-Belisol’s otherwise perfect lead-out for André Greipel, was just a appetizer of what the Tour can expect between now and next weekend’s climbing stages in the Vosges.
“There is no train hierarchy at the moment,” Team Sky sport director Sean Yates told VeloNews. “Only one train can actually succeed. In HighRoad days, Cav’ had it good. They built that train and they made it very intimidating for everyone else. Now there is a fight to see who can fill that void.”
Lotto-Belisol, Orica-GreenEdge and Argos-Shimano are among the main contenders to fill the space left by the dissolution of Cavendish’s former train at HighRoad at the end of last season.
Argos-Shimano is only racing its first Tour and will not be trying to completely dominate the sprints. Behind them are scores of sprinters who will be also looking to hitch rides in the finales, among them Oscar Freire (Katusha), green-jersey contender Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale), Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Sharp), Mark Renshaw (Rabobank), Alessandro Petacchi (Lampre-ISD), J.J. Rojas (Movistar) and J.J. Haedo (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank).
Lotto and GreenEdge are fighting an arms race. Both teams bring squads loaded with sprinters and riders to position and catapult their respective captains toward the line.
In Monday’s first “real” sprint, Lotto demonstrated it was ready to take the initiative. Greipel, who won his first Tour stage in last year’s edition, has five riders dedicated to helping him arrive at the sharp end of the action in the mass gallops.
On Monday, it worked out perfectly, except for one small detail — Cavendish was able to squirt around the “Gorilla” to snatch the win.
“Of course I wanted to win, but I am very pleased with how we rode the sprint. The team did everything perfect. We have the most horsepower in the sprints and I am sure we will achieve our goal of winning a stage,” Greipel said stoically. “Cavendish was in my slipstream. It’s like he was riding behind a truck.”
Lotto is taking a page from some classic set-up trains out of cycling’s past, with each rider receiving an assigned role.
Adam Hansen and Lars Bak have the job of doing the hard chasing in the closing 10km to reel in late breakaways and keeping the pace high enough to prevent late-stage counterattacks.
If things go to plan, Marcel Sieberg then surges forward with 2km to go, generating huge watts to ramp the speed up to 60kph.
Behind him, Jurgen Roelandts takes over next, sprinting at full speed at the front of the peloton under the red kite. Kiwi sprinter Greg Henderson then goes balls to the wall from about 400 meters to go to drop Greipel off at top-end sprinting speed within the final 200 meters or so from the line.
Lotto came excruciating close in Monday’s battle, with only Cavendish’s aerodynamic tuck taking advantage of the work on a slightly rising finale against headwinds.
“We’ve been working together and we are confident we’ll get some victories during this Tour,” Roelandts said. “It was perfect (Monday). You have to remember who beat us — Cavendish. He’s the best in the world.”
Cavendish has gallantly accepted his role as a freelancer in what could be an historic opportunity to help a British team win the Tour in an Olympic year with London hosting the 2012 Olympic Games.
Cavendish said the chance to be a part of Bradley Wiggins’ yellow-jersey effort overrides his personal ambitions in this year’s Tour.
“The chance to help the team win the Tour is something special,” Cavendish said. “I know I can still win stages without a full train. I’ve done it before and I’ve shown it again.”
In fact, Cavendish waved off the two riders who are designated to help him in the sprints during this Tour. With about 5km to go, he read the race and decided he didn’t need the help of Bernard Eisel and Edvald Boasson Hagen.
“It’s difficult to move up in the Tour and if I had to do that every day, I’d be killed by the end of the week. It’s easier just to do it on your own,” Cavendish said. “When I am weaving between Denis Menchov and Pierre Rolland, there’s too much going on, too many people. It’s better just to be alone.”
On Monday, Cavendish proved that he doesn’t need a train to win, but the fact that he lacks helpers is giving his rivals their best hope ever of at least reducing his Tour haul while augmenting their own.
Like Lotto, GreenEdge has also brought a team loaded with firepower for the sprints. Sport director Matt White said this year’s Tour opens a unique opportunity to out-run Cavendish.
“Cav’s shown that he’s beatable at the moment and he’s going to have to rely more on his own ability than rely on his teammates than in the past,” White told VeloNews. “It’s a lot easier to win when he has the train, but it’s easier to beat Cav’ without his train, but when you look at the sprints over the past couple years, nine times out of 10, when he got to the finish line, he won.”
Beyond the hilly-stage attackers such as Simon Gerrans and Michael Albasini, the entire GreenEdge lineup will be at the disposal for world runner-up Matt Goss.
Stuart O’Grady takes over with about 2km to go to organize the train. Baden Cooke and Brett Lancaster drive the bunch to within the final kilometer before Daryl Impey surges forward as Goss’s final set-up man.
Or at least that’s what they’re hoping for. It didn’t work that way Monday, when Cavendish muscled onto Impey’s wheel before crossing over to the surging Henderson on rival Lotto.
Despite getting upstaged by Lotto and Cavendish, White insisted he was satisfied with Goss’s third-place sprint.
“We knew that Lotto would take control of the race. They’re in Belgium and they have a specialized team for that,” White said. “The plan was to try to come over the top in the last 2kms, but our guys were not quite able to stick together. Daryl came over the top and dragged Cavendish with him. Gossie was a little too far back when the sprint started.”
Behind those two powerhouses, other squads will be trying their luck in the coming stages.
Teams such as Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank, Rabobank and Lampre will be putting a few men into the battle to try to position their fast men for a shot at victory.
Many are probably quietly hoping that one sprint powerhouse emerges to take control of the final kilometers in the bunch-sprint stages. These are already nervous enough, but things go from dicey to downright dangerous when more than a dozen sprinters believe they have chances to win.
Add nervous and inexperienced GC riders bumping elbows to stay near the front, and the chaos of a train-less peloton only heightens the danger and risk of devastating crashes.
“It’s not only Cavendish searching for the right wheel, right? It’s not as easy as it looks. It showed that there is a lot of competition out there,” Yates said. “When there is no clear train, too many others try their luck.”
With at least three more sprint opportunities likely between Wednesday and Saturday’s first taste of the climbs in the Vosges.
Whether Lotto, GreenEdge or someone else can take firm control of the highly unpredictable bunch remains to be seen.

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #15 on: July 04, 2012, 05:18:46 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 4 results
July 4 Abbeville — Rouen 214.5km
Greipel wins stage 4 of the 2012 Tour de France; Cancellara retains yellow
Stage results
•   1. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol, in 5:18:32
•   2. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 0
•   3. Tom VEELERS, Argos-Shimano, at 0
•   4. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   5. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   21. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   26. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   27. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at 0
•   45. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   47. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   58. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 0
•   63. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   64. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   67. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   76. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 0
•   89. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   118. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   119. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   120. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   121. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 0
•   122. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 0
•   133. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 0
•   144. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 0
•   145. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at 0
•   154. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at 0
•   155. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   159. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 0
•   185. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 4:13
•   188. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 4:19
•   189. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at 4:19
•   195. Sebastian LANGEVELD, Orica-GreenEdge, at 7:01

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 20:04:02
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :11
•   6. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   7. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   8. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :18
•   9. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Barracuda, at :18
•   10. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   15. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :23
•   26. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   27. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   31. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   38. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   43. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :57
•   47. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:29
•   56. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   57. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 2:29
•   86. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 5:24
•   91. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 6:23
•   109. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 8:19
•   116. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 8:46
•   117. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 8:47
•   128. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 9:56
•   156. David MILLAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 12:11
•   162. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Barracuda, at 12:52
•   169. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Barracuda, at 13:26
•   170. David MONCOUTIE, Cofidis, at 13:38
•   195. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 35:03


Next Stage: July 5  Rouen — Saint-Quentin 196.5km

Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 147 points
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge: 92 points
•   3. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol: 87 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 9 points
•   2. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
•   3. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
White:       
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 20:04:12
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 60:12:40
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:
Stage 4:

Maarten TJALLINGII, Rabobank: DNS

Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 4  Review:
Greipel wins stage 4 of the 2012 Tour de France; Cancellara retains yellow
•   By VeloNews.com
•   Published Jul. 4, 2012

Emerging unscathed from a high-speed, late-race pileup, German André Greipel (Lotto-Belisol) won the Tour de France’s stage 4 bunch sprint in Rouen Wednesday, finishing ahead of Italian Alessandro Petacchi (Lampre-ISD) and Dutch rider Tom Veelers (Argos-Shimano).
Aussie Matt Goss (Orica-GreenEdge) finished fourth, with two-time stage winner Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale) in fifth.
Conspicuously absent from the final sprint, however, was world champion Mark Cavendish (Sky), winner of stage 2, who, along with his leadout man Bernhard Eisel, went down hard in a crash with 2.6km remaining.
TV pictures did not provide a clear image of what, or who, caused the crash. Leading out American Tyler Farrar, South African national champion Robbie Hunter (Garmin-Sharp) was the first to go down, setting off a chain reaction of top sprinters hitting the deck.
After the finish, Eisel claimed that he’d crashed first; the Austrian had a significant cut over his eye that required stitches.
Led by Kiwi sprinter Greg Henderson, Greipel was in front of the crash, as was Petacchi; Sagan narrowly squeezed past the carnage, which split the peloton.
Approaching the finish line it was Greipel’s to lose, with Lotto’s Marcel Seiberg and Jurgen Roelandts at the front ahead of Henderson. It looked as though the big German might have started his sprint a bit too early, with Petacchi closing in on him late, but the Italian simply ran out of road, bringing Greipel his first stage win of this Tour, and his second career Tour stage win.
“I’m just so happy to have those guys on my side,” Greipel said moments after giving Henderson an enthusiastic embrace. “We have such strong riders leading me out. It’s what we wanted to reach, winning a stage.”
Japan in the break
Wednesday’s 214.5km stage traveled from Abbeville to Rouen, starting 81km south of Tuesday’s finish in Boulogne-sur-Mer and following the coastline until turning inland for the final approach.
Japan’s Yukiya Arashiro (Europcar) attacked as soon as the flag fell to signal the start of stage 4. Arashiro was followed by Frenchmen David Montcoutie (Cofidis) and Anthony Deplace (Saur-Sojasun).
The trio opened up a maximum advantage of 8:40 just 18km into the stage, with Moncoutie, a two-time winner of the King of the Mountains crown at the Vuelta a España, beginning his quest for the polka dot jersey over the stage’s four Cat. 4 climbs.
The breakaway crossed the day’s intermediate sprint in Fécamp with a 6:45 lead and 71km remaining. Behind, Cavendish narrowly outkicked Goss for the 13 points available to the fourth-place finisher, with Mark Renshaw (Rabobank) sixth, Sagan seventh and Petacchi eighth. Greipel did not contest the intermediate sprint.
The fight for the intermediate sprint picked up the pace considerably, as RadioShack, defending Fabian Cancellara’s race lead, shared the pace-making with the sprint teams.
With 25km to go, as a light rain began to fall, the three leaders had only a two-minute advantage; Sky, Lotto, FDJ-BigMat, Lampre and Orica-GreenEdge began dialing up the speed for the sprint into Rouen.
Inside 15km to go, the breakaway riders began to ease off the pace, prompting attacks on the uncategorized Saint-Martin de Boscherville climb from Andriy Grivko (Astana), Philippe Gilbert (BMC Racing), Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-Quick Step) and Samuel Dumolin (Cofidis), but none were able to hold the hard-charging peloton at bay.
With just under 10km remaining, the three escapees were finally reeled in. Arashiro was named the day’s most aggressive rider.
“The team said have a go if you’d like to, and I said I’d like to,” Arashiro said. “It would have been nicer to climb up on the podium, to be honest, but I’m happy to get my red number for tomorrow.”
Dumoulin, Chavanel and Wouter Poels (Vacansoleil-DCM) forged ahead briefly, but with Orica and Lotto driving the pace, a field sprint was inevitable.
The crash
Just after the peloton crossed the 3km to go mark, the worst-case scenario became reality — a massive pileup at maximum speed. Eisel told Eurosport that he accepted the blame.
“That’s sprinters for you, isn’t it?” Eisel said. “It was going really, really fast. I touched Goss. I tried to correct it. I tried to stay on the wheel of Petacchi, but I lost my front wheel and that was it.”
After the crash both Eisel and Cavendish sat on the ground appearing dazed. Cavendish later rolled across the line alone, his white world champion’s jersey covered in black road grime and his yellow helmet broken.
At the front of the bunch, Henderson led out Greipel behind Lotto’s Marcel Seiberg and Jurgen Roelandts. Petacchi and Goss tucked in on Greipel’s wheel, but none could match the strong German.
“It was chaotic, the finale, to be honest,” Greipel said. “I was just focusing on what was going on, and for me, it’s fantastic.”
Cancellara finished without incident, maintaining his overall race lead.
“Today went how we thought it might, other than the crash, obviously,” Cancellara said. “I’m proud of the way I handled myself, with how I got away, and I’m just sorry for those that were on the ground.”
Beyond any potential injuries, and missing the opportunity for the stage win, the crash was devastating for Cavendish as his fight for the green points jersey took a substantial turn for the worse. By virtue of his fifth-place finish, Sagan now has 147 points; Goss sits second with 92, with Greipel third at 87 and Cavendish fourth at 86.
Cavendish got back to his team bus an angry man, but will live to fight another day according to Sky principal Dave Brailsford. “I can’t repeat what he said when he came into the bus,” Brailsford told French television. “Mark’s lost a bit of skin but it’s not bad. He’s in a little pain but he’s ok.”
Cavendish wrote on Twitter after the stage:
Ouch….. Crash at 2.5km to finish today. Taken some scuffs to my left side, but I’ve bounced pretty well again. Congrats to @AndreGreipel.
Sagan also offered his sympathy for Cav’s plight: “I’m disappointed for him. Every day someone can fall and I hope that he can get on and finish the Tour de France. I hope nothing like that happens to any of my teammates.”
For his part, Sagan was satisfied with a top-five result and another day in the green points jersey.
“I’m very happy,” Sagan said. “I’m happy that I’ve managed to get two stages so far and managed to stay up there and get points for the green jersey on a day like this. I was the last to make my way through the crash, I was really close to those guys. I just hope I stay on the bike and don’t fall off before I get to Paris.”
Tomorrow’s Stage
The 99th Tour de France continues Thursday with stage 5, a 214.5km affair from Rouen to Saint-Quentin that should result in another bunch finish. Hopefully, with less skin lost for the fast men.

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #16 on: July 05, 2012, 04:38:13 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 5 results
July 5 Rouen — Saint-Quentin 196.5km
Greipel wins stage 5 of the Tour de France; Cancellara retains overall lead
Stage results
•   1. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol, in 4:41:30
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   3. Juan José HAEDO, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank, at 0
•   4. Samuel DUMOULIN, Cofidis, at 0
•   5. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 0
•   7. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at 0
•   8. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 0
•   18. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at 0
•   19. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 0
•   22. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   26. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at 0
•   32. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   35. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp, at 0
•   37. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 0
•   40. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 0
•   42. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   43. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at 0
•   45. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 0
•   50. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   69. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 0
•   71. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 0
•   81. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   91. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 0
•   103. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 0
•   165. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 0
•   177. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   179. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at 0
•   180. Thomas DANIELSON, Garmin-Sharp, at 0
•   182. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 0
•   190. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 0
•   194. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 0

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 24:45:32
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :9
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :9
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :12
•   5. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :13
•   6. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :15
•   7. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :19
•   9. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp, at :20
•   10. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :21
•   15. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :23
•   26. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   27. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at :35
•   31. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :38
•   38. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   43. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at :57
•   47. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:29
•   56. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   57. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 2:29
•   86. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 5:24
•   91. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 6:23
•   109. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 8:19
•   116. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 8:46
•   117. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 8:47
•   123. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at 8:59
•   128. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 9:56
•   156. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 12:11
•   169. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:26
•   194. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 39:10


Next Stage: July 6 Épernay — Metz (128.9 miles/207.5km)

Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 155 points
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge: 137 points
•   3. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol: 132 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 9 points
•   2. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
•   3. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
White:       
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 24:45:42
•   2. Edvald BOASSON HAGEN, Sky, at :1
•   3. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 74:17:10
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:
Stage 5:
Marcel KITTEL, Argos-Shimano: DNF
Stage 4:

Maarten TJALLINGII, Rabobank: DNS

Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 5  Review:
Greipel wins stage 5 of the Tour de France; Cancellara retains overall lead
•   By VeloNews.com
•   Published Jul. 5, 2012
•   Updated 5 hours ago

For the second day in a row, a high-speed crash in the final kilometers of a sprint stage took out several top sprinters at the Tour de France, and for the second day in a row, German André Greipel (Lotto-Belisol) was the fastest to the line.
Aussie Matt Goss (Orica-GreenEdge) finished second, with Argentinean J.J. Haedo (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank) taking third.
Unlike Wednesday’s stage, when Mark Cavendish (Sky) went down in a nasty crash, in Saint-Quentin the world champion was in the fight for the finish line this time, though the best he could summon on a slightly uphill drag was fifth.
Those caught up in the crash included American Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Sharp), who hit the deck for the fourth time in six stages, Aussie Jonathan Cantwell (Saxo Bank) and green jersey leader Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale).
Farrar was the first to hit the deck after Italian Alessandro Petacchi (Lampre-ISD) cut in front of Farrar, coming right, just as Farrar was being squeezed on the left by Tom Veelers (Argos-Shimano).
After the stage, a bloodied Farrar went to the Argos team bus to confront Veelers, who finished sixth.
Also absent from the sprint was Veelers’ Argos teammate Marcel Kittel, who abandoned the stage 40km in after suffering from a stomach bug and knee tendonitis.
The late stage crash happened just as the peloton was about to catch the day’s four-man breakaway, giving hope to the escapees.
First, Jan Ghyselinck (Cofidis) attacked solo from the breakaway with 1.1km to go, and gave concern to the sprint teams; next was Euskaltel-Euskadi’s Pablo Urtasun, also from the breakaway. The bunch, led by Lotto’s Greg Henderson, finally caught Urtasun inside 500 meters to the line. Goss launched his sprint off that catch, but with 300 to go, it was too early, allowing Greipel to pass in the final 50 meters.
“With the lead-out he’s got and the acceleration he has, he’s [Greipel] super hard to come around. The way I’ve got to try and beat him is do what we did today — get the jump on him and go,” Goss told Agence France Presse. “Unfortunately the jump was just a little bit too far for me to make it uphill.”
The break that nearly went the distance
Along with Ghyselinck and Urtasun, the other two men in the breakaway on the flat 196.km stage from Rouen to Saint-Quentin were Julien Simon (Saur-Sojasun) and Matthieu Ladagnous (FDJ-BigMat). Ladagnous, who attacked in the opening kilometer, was best placed in the group, 8:04 behind race leader Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan).
RadioShack, Lotto-Belisol, Orica-GreenEdge shared the pace-making and finally, in the final 30km, Sky chipped in to position Cavendish and its overall contender, Bradley Wiggins.
“To be honest, I was quite sad at the end,” Simon said. “When [Ghyselinck] attacked, it was too much for me. It was a good day for us. I have no regrets. To be honest with you, I never expected to make it all the way, but you get some belief right at the end… If one of the other guys I was with had won it, I think I would have been sad.”
Noteworthy was that Greipel did not contest the day’s intermediate sprint in the town of Breteuil, won by Cavendish (following the escape taking the top four spots). Goss was second in the field at the intermediate sprint, followed by Mark Renshaw (Rabobank) and Sagan.
With 25km to go, the bunch was 1:30 behind the break, and at 15km to go the gap was 1:12 — all signs pointed to the inevitable catch in the final 5km. However, Ghyselinck’s attack lit a fire in the break and Farrar’s crash disrupted the chase; the bunch only caught the breakaways inside the final kilometer.
Greipel rides close call to a win
Greipel’s win was especially impressive considering that he miraculously dodged Farrar’s tumble, braking into a near track stand and putting a foot out to deflect Farrar’s somersaulting body.
“It was a bit crazy because I was behind the crash with 3km to go. Greg Henderson was there, waiting for me, and brought me back in,” Greipel said. “It was one of the hardest sprints I’ve ever had.”
For the second day in a row there was a nasty crash, and for a second day in a row, Greipel emerged the winner.
“I’m very happy with this second win and I want to say thank you to my teammates for all their hard work,” said Greipel. “I don’t know why everyone believes I can’t beat [Cavendish]. I already beat him last year and I have the best team around me. Yesterday he crashed, but today he was there. I’m very happy to win my second stage in this Tour de France.”
As for Cavendish, he blamed his fifth-place result on poor positioning in the run-up to the sprint, writing on Twitter:
“Shit, tried to drop back a bit with 1km to go to get a run-up. Didn’t work, as I left myself too much ground to gain. Congrats @AndreGreipel.”
Though he missed the sprint, Sagan continues to lead the points competition, with 155 points; Goss sits second, with 137, and Greipel third, with 132. Cavendish is fourth, with 119, and Petacchi is fifth, with 91.
“In the images it is clear that a rider is determined to go, and his move is what brought us all down,” Sagan said. “This should not happen at this point in the race. I am angry because I lost points. When I came to the finish I was not scared. What’s there to be afraid of? I was just angry. One of my teammates, Sylvester Szmyd, lent me a wheel in order to race again. But it was too late to participate in the sprint.”
Cancellara held onto the leader’s yellow jersey by seven seconds from Wiggins with Australia’s defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) in seventh, at 17 seconds. The RadioShack rider will spend his 27th day in the yellow jersey on
Friday, overtaking Rene Vietto’s record for the record number of days in the maillot jaune for a rider that has not won the overall title.

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #17 on: July 06, 2012, 06:19:18 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 6 results
 July 6 Épernay — Metz 207.5km
‘Metz Massacre’ rips through the Tour’s GC ranks
Stage results
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, in 4:37:00
•   2. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol, at 0
•   3. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge, at 0
•   4. Kenny Robert VAN HUMMEL, Vacansoleil-DCM, at 0
•   5. Juan José HAEDO, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank, at 0
•   7. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 0
•   14. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :4
•   15. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at :4
•   18. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :4
•   21. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :4
•   29. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at :4
•   37. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at :4
•   38. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :4
•   39. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :4
•   44. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at :4
•   46. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :4
•   51. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :4
•   54. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :4
•   61. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at :4
•   72. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at :55
•   77. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 1:22
•   82. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:09
•   130. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 6:02
•   135. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at 6:02
•   161. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 13:24
•   172. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:24
•   181. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:24
•   182. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:24
•   183. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:24
•   190. Johan VAN SUMMEREN, Garmin-Sharp, at 16:12

GC Standings:

•   1. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, in 29:22:36
•   2. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :7
•   3. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :7
•   4. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at :10
•   5. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :13
•   6. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :17
•   8. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :19
•   9. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :19
•   18. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :29
•   22. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at :45
•   24. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:29
•   32. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 2:27
•   34. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 2:40
•   37. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:43
•   62. Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha, at 6:55
•   66. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 7:41
•   73. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 8:43
•   74. Sandy CASAR, FDJ-BigMat, at 8:44
•   75. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 8:46
•   77. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at 8:59
•   108. Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:38
•   114. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 14:17
•   115. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 14:17
•   127. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 15:49
•   128. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 15:54
•   142. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 18:44
•   174. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 25:31
•   175. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 26:12
•   190. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 52:30


Next Stage: July 7 Tomblaine — La Planche des Belles Filles 199km
Jerseys:

Yellow:      Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 209 points
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge: 178 points
•   3. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol: 167 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Michael MORKOV, Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank: 9 points
•   2. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
•   3. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 2 points
White:       
•   1. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, in 29:22:46
•   2. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :9
•   3. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :12

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 88:08:22
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at :4
•   3. Bmc Racing Team, at :6

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:
Stage 6:
Mikel ASTARLOZA CHAURREAU, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNF
Davide VIGANO, Lampre-ISD: DNF
Thomas DANIELSON, Garmin-Sharp: DNF
Wouter POELS, Vacansoleil-DCM: DNF

Stage 5:
Marcel KITTEL, Argos-Shimano: DNF
Stage 4:

Maarten TJALLINGII, Rabobank: DNS

Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 6  Review:
‘Metz Massacre’ rips through the Tour’s GC ranks
•   By Andrew Hood
•   Published Jul. 6, 2012

METZ, France (VN) – There are always crashes in the first week of the Tour de France, but this year seemed a little more forgiving.
Going into Friday’s stage, most of the major GC riders had avoided a disastrous crash, accident or mishap that would torpedo his yellow jersey dreams.
Just as the Tour was poised to shift gears with a tidy little sprint into Metz before turning into the first climbing stages of the 99th edition, disaster struck just 25km from the finish line.
No one quite knows who caused it, but the reasons were the same and the aftermath cruel.
“Someone doesn’t know how to ride their bike!” cursed Valverde, who had cuts and scrapes to his left side. “Someone fell in front of me and then people plowed into my back and I got knocked off my bike. Today was not a day to lose time.”
That was the verdict among a party of GC candidates that ceded valuable time Friday, all but sinking their maillot jaune ambitions even before the Tour enters the decisive stages.
Joining Valverde with GC hopes in the ICU were Frank Schleck (RadioShack), Robert Gesink (Rabobank), Janez Brajkovic (Astana) and Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Sharp). Outsiders Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD) and Jean-Cristophe Peraud (Ag2r La Mondiale) were licking wounds as well, while Tom Danielson (Garmin) abandoned.
None of those were five-star favorites for victory, but the benign brutality of the crash confirmed the old idiom that the Tour can be lost in an instant.
“Some of those guys lost a couple of minutes and that’s not where you want to be,” said Sky manager David Brailsford. “When you see those guys behind you, losing time, you realize the importance of spending that little bit extra more of energy to be at the front.”
While the likes of Cadel Evans (BMC Racing), Bradley Wiggins (Sky), Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale), Levi Leipheimer (Omega Pharma-Quick Step) and Denis Menchov (Katusha) dodged the bullet, others were not so lucky.
Garmin-Sharp was among the worse of the bunch, seeing eight of its nine riders crashing, including Giro d’Italia champion Hesjedal, who lost more than 13 minutes.
Johan Van Summeren was knocked unconscious in the crash and finished last, at 16:12 back.
“One second I was on my bike and the next, I was sliding, sliding, sliding across the road. There were bikes and bodies all over me,” Van Summeren said. “It was awful. I am really cut up. I hope to start tomorrow.”
About 75 riders made it through with the lead group. Behind that, riders were picking up the pieces to try to salvage their Tours.
Teams will have to reassess their GC ambitions and, in some instances, ditch them altogether.
Some saw their GC hopes erased, meaning that there will be less riders trying to crowd onto the final podium in Paris.
Here’s a run-down of the major GC victims:
Rabobank: All three of the Dutch outfit’s GC options lost time. Amgen Tour of California champion Robert Gesink crashed early in the stage at 35km, but was not seriously affected. He went down again in the pileup and then couldn’t hold pace with the main chase group, losing 3:31 to drop to 51st at 4:13 back.
“Greipel took my wheel out when he slipped on wet roads in roundabout, but that was not a big deal,” Gesink said. “In the second crash, someone crashed in front of me and I couldn’t do anything but go over the handlebars. My bike was broken and I waited a long time for a new bike, and finally used the bike of (Luis Léon Sanchez). I am not hurt. What hurts is the time I lost.”
Stephen Kruijswijk stayed with Gesink to finish on the same time while Bauke Mollema finished in the group at 2:09 back.
RadioShack: Fränk Schleck stood impatiently at the side of the pile-up waiting for a new bike, knowing his GC chances were disappearing up the road with the chasing peloton that included teammates Andreas Klöden, Haimar Zubeldia and Chris Horner, none of whom lose time. Schleck lost 2:09.
“Now that I have lost time, it changes things,” said last year’s third-place man. “I wasn’t one of the top favorites to win, but this is untimely. We’ll see with the team if we change my strategy.”
Lampre: Michele Scarponi also crossed the line in shock and disbelief that he had lost 2:09 with the lead chasing group. The 2011 Giro d’Italia champion was knocked off his bike in the melée.
“Losing two minutes in a sprint stage is certainly not what I had planned today,” Scarponi said at the line. “In an instant, suddenly everyone was on the ground. There was nothing especially interesting about the road. It was straight, slightly downhill. We were going fast and then – boom! – I am tangled up with someone on top of me.”
Movistar: Alejandro Valverde was livid at the line after finishing with the big chase group at 2:09 back.
Valverde, who is racing his first grand tour since 2009, wasn’t the only Movistar rider to crash. In fact, all nine members of the team fell, including 2011 Vuelta champion Juanjo Cobo and Tour de Suisse winner Rui Costa, who landed hard on his back. Their teammate Imanol Erviti abandoned with what the team called a “deep wound in his right leg with loss of muscular mass that will require surgery — probably.” Ivan Gutierrez is also likely to withdraw before Saturday’s stage, leaving Movistar with six riders in the race.
Garmin: Among the worst off of the peloton, Garmin-Sharp lost Tom Danielson, who abandoned, and saw Giro champ Ryder Hesjedal lose 13:24. It’s unsure if Hesjedal will be able to start tomorrow (see “Black day for the black and blue”).
Europcar: It looks like there will not be a repeat of last year’s miracle rider for the French team. Pierre Rolland, who won the best young rider’s jersey and the Alpe d’Huez stage and finished 10th overall, lost 2:09 and dropped to 40th, at 2:50 back. Thomas Voeckler, last year’s fourth-place man, lost 6:02.
Astana: Janez Brajkovic crashed for the second time this week, pulling the group at 2:09 across the line, while team captain Alexander Vinokourov lost 13:24. Vinokourov is not riding for GC, but he hopes to be able to contend for a stage win. Brajkovic, however, dipped to 31st, at 2:27 back.

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #18 on: July 07, 2012, 05:18:51 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 7 results
 July 7 Tomblaine — La Planche des Belles Filles 199km
Froome wins stage 7 of the Tour; Wiggins takes the overall lead
Stage results
•   1. Christopher FROOME, Sky, in 4:58:35
•   2. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :2
•   3. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :2
•   4. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :7
•   5. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :19
•   6. Haimar ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, RadioShack-Nissan, at :44
•   9. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :50
•   12. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:09
•   20. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:52
•   24. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 2:05
•   26. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 2:17
•   27. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 2:19
•   30. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:19
•   32. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:19
•   33. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 2:24
•   40. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 2:53
•   46. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 3:08
•   48. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 3:11
•   88. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 8:00
•   103. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 9:48
•   107. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 10:18
•   133. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 12:25
•   142. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 13:21
•   146. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 14:21
•   180. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 20:29
•   181. Gorka VERDUGO MARCOTEGUI, Euskaltel-Euskadi, at 20:29

GC Standings:

•   1. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, in 34:21:20
•   2. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :10
•   3. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :16
•   4. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, at :32
•   5. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :54
•   6. Haimar ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, RadioShack-Nissan, at :59
•   9. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 1:32
•   11. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 1:43
•   14. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 2:22
•   16. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:29
•   18. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 3:09
•   20. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 3:13
•   24. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:39
•   26. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:43
•   27. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 3:47
•   35. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 4:50
•   46. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 10:18
•   51. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 12:11 
•   65. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 16:13
•   75. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 18:25
•   84. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 19:57
•   87. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 20:52
•   130. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 27:29
•   146. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 30:06
•   159. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 35:40
•   178. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 46:32
•   181. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 55:24


Next Stage: July 8 Belfort — Porrentruy (97.9mi / 157.5km)
Jerseys:

Yellow:      Bradley WIGGINS, Sky
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 217 points
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge: 185 points
•   3. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol: 172 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Christopher FROOME, Sky: 20 points
•   2. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing: 16 points
•   3. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky: 12 points
 White:       
•   1. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, in 34:21:52
•   2. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 2:37
•   3. Tony GALLOPIN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:41

Teams:       
•   1. Sky Procycling, in 103:05:23
•   2. Radioshack-Nissan, at 1:37
•   3. Katusha Team, at 5:54

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:
Stage 7:
Amets TXURRUKA, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNS
Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp: DNS
Robert HUNTER, Garmin-Sharp: DNS
Hubert DUPONT, Ag2r La Mondiale: DNS
Anthony DELAPLACE, Saur-Sojasun: DNF
Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha: DNS
Maarten WYNANTS, Rabobank: DNS
Imanol ERVITI, Movistar: DNS
José Ivan GUTIERREZ PALACIOS, Movistar: DNS

Stage 6:
Mikel ASTARLOZA CHAURREAU, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNF
Davide VIGANO, Lampre-ISD: DNF
Thomas DANIELSON, Garmin-Sharp: DNF
Wouter POELS, Vacansoleil-DCM: DNF

Stage 5:
Marcel KITTEL, Argos-Shimano: DNF
Stage 4:

Maarten TJALLINGII, Rabobank: DNS

Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 7  Review:
Froome wins stage 7 of the Tour; Wiggins takes the overall lead
•   By VeloNews.com
•   Published 7 hours ago

LA PLANCHE DES BELLES FILLES (VN) — Bradley Wiggins took command of the Tour de France on Saturday as Sky teammate Christopher Froome secured a deserved maiden victory on stage 7.
Defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) finished second on the day, with Wiggins third only seconds behind, as Sky’s pace on the final 5.9km climb to the race’s first hilltop finish levied a costly toll on some contenders for the overall title in Paris.
“It’s something we practice a lot as a group,” said Froome. “I knew the finish. I thought, ‘I’m there, why not give it a nudge?’ And when I saw Cadel wasn’t there, I was surprised.”
The team reconnoitered the climb after the Dauphiné Libéré, Froome added.
“This is one of the principal GC days, so it was important for us,” he said.
As for the new race leader, Wiggins said he knew a kilometer from the line that his teammate could win the stage. He himself was after the maillot jaune.
“My first objective was to take this jersey,” he said. “In the Tour, it’s never too early to take the yellow jersey. It’s enormous to have it. I do not know if I will have in two weeks’ time but it’s great to have it now.”
Evans, who made a futile bid for the stage win only to be passed by Froome in the final 100 meters, is now second overall at 10 seconds behind Wiggins.
Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale), perhaps now the biggest challenger to Evans and Wiggins, is third at 16 seconds with Rein Taaramae of Cofidis in fourth at 32 seconds.
Team Sky came to the race with a number of talented climbers and their strong pace-setting from the bottom of the steep climb to the ski-station finish line was too much for some.
Former podium finisher Fränk Schleck was among the RadioShack-Nissan riders dropped relatively early, along with Andreas Klöden, Chris Horner and, as expected, the now-former race leader Fabian Cancellara, who nonetheless put up a strong defense of his yellow jersey. Not known as a climber, he nevertheless managed to finish 20th on the day at 1:52 and slipped to 11th overall, 1:43 down on Wiggins.
RadioShack’s best-placed rider now is veteran Haimar Zubeldia in fifth at 59 seconds.
Nairobi-born Froome’s victory, his first on the world’s biggest bike race, comes less than a year after a runner-up place at the Vuelta a España.
“To be honest, it was a real fight to be at the front of the peloton,” said Froome. “I am really happy — it wasn’t about sending messages, I just saw an opportunity there.”

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Re: 2012 Tour de France Thread
« Reply #19 on: July 08, 2012, 02:27:45 PM »

2012 Tour de France Stage 8 results
July 8 Belfort — Porrentruy 157.5km
Pinot wins stage 8 of the Tour de France; Wiggins defends yellow
Stage results
•   1. Thibaut PINOT, FDJ-BigMat, in 3:56:10
•   2. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :26
•   3. Tony GALLOPIN, RadioShack-Nissan, at :26
•   4. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, at :26
•   5. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :26
•   7. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at :26
•   8. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :26
•   9. Haimar ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, RadioShack-Nissan, at :26
•   10. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at :30
•   11. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at :30
•   18. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 1:25
•   20. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 1:25
•   22. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 1:25
•   24. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 1:25
•   30. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 2:21
•   31. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 2:21
•   42. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 4:58
•   45. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 4:58
•   52. Sandy CASAR, FDJ-BigMat, at 4:58
•   54. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 4:58
•   55. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 4:58
•   74. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 10:17
•   79. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 12:19
•   88. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 12:19
•   90. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 12:19
•   92. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 12:19
•   117. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 16:41
•   148. Mark CAVENDISH, Sky, at 22:19
•   149. Bernhard EISEL, Sky, at 22:19
•   165. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 23:31
•   178. Vladimir GUSEV, Katusha, at 23:31

GC Standings:

•   1. Bradley WIGGINS, Sky, in 38:17:56
•   2. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing, at :10
•   3. Vincenzo NIBALI, Liquigas-Cannondale, at :16
•   4. Denis MENCHOV, Katusha, at :54
•   5. Haimar ZUBELDIA AGIRRE, RadioShack-Nissan, at :59
•   6. Christopher FROOME, Sky, at 1:32
•   14. Christopher HORNER, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:43
•   15. Frank SCHLECK, RadioShack-Nissan, at 3:47
•   17. Tejay VAN GARDEREN, BMC Racing, at 4:08
•   18. Ivan BASSO, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 4:12
•   19. Andreas KLÖDEN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 4:24
•   21. Levi LEIPHEIMER, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 4:46
•   28. Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE, Movistar, at 6:45
•   29. Sylvain CHAVANEL, Omega Pharma-Quick Step, at 6:54
•   36. Fabian CANCELLARA, RadioShack-Nissan, at 13:36
•   39. Sandy CASAR, FDJ-BigMat, at 16:00
•   40. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale, at 16:43
•   50. George HINCAPIE, BMC Racing, at 20:09
•   52. Thomas VOECKLER, Europcar, at 20:45
•   54. Alexandr VINOKUROV, Astana, at 22:47
•   61. Stuart O’GRADY, Orica-GreenEdge, at 24:29
•   81. Christian VANDEVELDE, Garmin-Sharp, at 29:56
•   83. Jens VOIGT, RadioShack-Nissan, at 30:18
•   108. Alessandro PETACCHI, Lampre-ISD, at 35:49
•   120. David ZABRISKIE, Garmin-Sharp, at 39:22
•   135. David MILLAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 47:33
•   177. Tyler FARRAR, Garmin-Sharp, at 1:09:37
•   178. Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun, at 1:11:39

Next Stage: July 9 Arc-et-Senans — Besancon 41.5km
Jerseys:

Yellow:      Bradley WIGGINS, Sky
Green:   
•   1. Peter SAGAN, Liquigas-Cannondale: 217 points
•   2. Matthew Harley GOSS, Orica-GreenEdge: 185 points
•   3. André GREIPEL, Lotto-Belisol: 172 points
 Polka Dot:
•   1. Fredrik Carl Wilhelm KESSIAKOFF, Astana: 21 points
•   2. Christopher FROOME, Sky: 20 points
•   3. Cadel EVANS, BMC Racing: 18 points
 White:       
•   1. Rein TAARAMAE, Cofidis, in 38:20:23
•   2. Tony GALLOPIN, RadioShack-Nissan, at 46
•   3. Thibaut PINOT, FDJ-BigMat, at 1:14

Teams:       
•   1. Radioshack-Nissan, in 114:56:52
•   2. Sky Procycling, at 2:51
•   3. Liquigas-Cannondale, at 10:06

 Lanterne Rouge:   Brice FEILLU, Saur-Sojasun
Withdrawals:
Stage 8:
Samuel SANCHEZ GONZALEZ, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNF
Gorka VERDUGO MARCOTEGUI, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNF
Johannes FRÖHLINGER, Argos-Shimano: DNS

Stage 7:
Amets TXURRUKA, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNS
Ryder HESJEDAL, Garmin-Sharp: DNS
Robert HUNTER, Garmin-Sharp: DNS
Hubert DUPONT, Ag2r La Mondiale: DNS
Anthony DELAPLACE, Saur-Sojasun: DNF
Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ, Katusha: DNS
Maarten WYNANTS, Rabobank: DNS
Imanol ERVITI, Movistar: DNS
José Ivan GUTIERREZ PALACIOS, Movistar: DNS

Stage 6:
Mikel ASTARLOZA CHAURREAU, Euskaltel-Euskadi: DNF
Davide VIGANO, Lampre-ISD: DNF
Thomas DANIELSON, Garmin-Sharp: DNF
Wouter POELS, Vacansoleil-DCM: DNF

Stage 5:
Marcel KITTEL, Argos-Shimano: DNF
Stage 4:

Maarten TJALLINGII, Rabobank: DNS

Stage 3:
Jose Joaquin ROJAS GIL, Movistar: DNF
Kanstantsin SIVTSOV, Sky: DNF

Stage 8  Review:
Pinot wins stage 8 of the Tour de France; Wiggins defends yellow
•   By Agence France Presse
•   Published Jul. 8, 2012
•   Updated 4 hours ago

PORRENTRUY, Switzerland (AFP) — Sky’s Bradley Wiggins defended his yellow jersey on the second day in the hills after seeing his lead come under attack for the first time in the Tour de France.
Thibaut Pinot (FDJ-Big Mat) won stage 8, his maiden win on what is his debut, after 157.5km of racing over several short but steep climbs in the Swiss Jura that exacted a toll on the peloton. His victory also gave him the polka-dot jersey of best climber.
Defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC) finished second at 26 seconds, leading home a select group after a failed attempt to shake off Wiggins on the way to the last summit and on the 16km descent to the finish.
Among those finishing with Evans were race leader Wiggins with teammate Chris Froome; Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale); Jurgen Van den Broeck (Lotto-Belisol); Denis Menchov (Katusha); and RadioShack-Nissan riders Fränk Schleck, Chris Horner, Tony Gallopin and Haimar Zubeldia.
Wiggins, spending his first day in the yellow jersey after his third-place finish on Saturday at La Planche des Belles Filles, retained his 10-second lead on second placed Evans with Nibali still third at 16.
Pinot, a climbing specialist who at 22 years old is the youngest rider in this year’s race, had pressured team manager Marc Madiot to take him to the three-week epic.
And despite starting the day with instructions to stay in the peloton, he seized his chance after teammate Jérémy Roy, who had been in an earlier breakaway, was reeled in but did plenty of the groundwork for him.
Pinot eventually went off on his own and caught Fredrik Kessiakoff (Astana) on the seventh and final climb of the day, the 3.7km Col de la Croix.
He came over the summit with a small lead and rode hard on the 16km descent to claim the first French win of this year’s race.
“It’s a dream come true,” said Pinot, who is from the nearby Franche-Comte region. “I just did the longest 10km of my life, I’ll never forget it. I was quite scared when I heard the peloton had closed the gap to 50 seconds.
“But a lot of this is down to Jérémy (Roy). He did a lot of the preparation work for me, I can’t thank him enough.”
Earlier in the stage Spain’s Olympic road race champion Samuel Sánchez crashed, suffering shoulder and hand injuries that could rule him out of the London Olympics later this month.
Monday’s ninth stage is the first of two long time trials in the race, a 41.5km race against the clock around Besancon.

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