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Crosswinds wreak havoc on stage 11

July 14, 2016
Crosswinds wreak havoc on stage 11

Peter Sagan (Tinkoff) took his second stage win at the 2016 Tour de France in Montpellier on Wednesday with the maillot jaune of Chris Froome (Team Sky) finishing second, as the peloton shattered in the crosswinds in the finale of the stage.

Sagan won the stage from a group of four; he was joined by teammate Maciej Bodnar, while Froome was supported by teammate Geraint Thomas. The four riders jumped clear from a splintered peloton with 10km remaining, and opened a maximum gap of 23 seconds. They finished six seconds ahead of the peloton, with Froome taking six seconds in time bonus for finishing second on the stage.

“To go in a breakaway with the yellow jersey, the green jersey, and guys like Bodnar and Thomas, you cannot plan that,” Sagan said. “It just happens. Crazy.”


Arrivée / Finish - Étape 11 / Stage 11... by tourdefrance The stage was marked by strong crosswinds. With 15km to go, Fabian Cancellara (Trek-Segafredo) put his significant power to use on the front of the peloton. Bodnar then took over with Sagan and the duo opened up a gap. Froome was attentive at the front and quickly sprinted up to Sagan and Bodnar. Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) was the last rider to make the split.

The quartet opened up a significant advantage, and panic ensued behind. BMC Racing tried to bring Van Garderen and Richie Porte back to the front, with Etixx-QuickStep also contributing in the chase. Nairo Quintana’s Movistar team was not to be seen near the front.

With 5km to go the leading four containing the malliot jaune of Froome and the maillot vert of Sagan held a 23-second advantage over the chasing peloton. Meanwhile, Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data) was dropped from the group with a mechanical problem. Team Katusha also came to the front of the peloton to assist Etixx-QuickStep in the chase.

Sagan easily sprinted to victory with Froome capturing second, and six bonus seconds. Alexander Kristoff (Katusha) brought home the main peloton 11 seconds behind, along with all of the other GC contenders.

“I was asking myself the question today in those last 10km of whether it was worth spending that energy,” Froome said. “I think in this moment I really am going to try and take any advantage I can get, especially knowing that Nairo (Quintana) in particular is really strong in the third week.”

Froome extended his lead on a day that was supposed to be for the sprinters. Adam Yates (Orica-BikeExchange) trails Froome by 28 seconds in the overall with Dan Martin in third, 31 seconds behind. Quintana sits fourth overall, 35 seconds back.

“It was a difficult day for me,” Quintana said. “There was a lot of wind and it was all flat. And the sprinters were favoured. Froome took a few seconds by taking advantage of the moment, but I want to remain positive. We didn’t crash, while it was very nervous. Organisers are thinking about the show, but we take chances with our lives every day and especially in stages like this.”

HOW IT HAPPENED

The 2016 Tour de France traveled from Carcassonne to Montpellier on stage 11. The flattish 162.5km (101mi) route included two Category 4 climbs early in the stage, lending itself to a likely day for the sprinters. However, traversing the coast, many in the peloton expected crosswinds.

“It’s going to be a hectic day with crosswinds,” said BMC rider Greg Van Avermaet before the start. “The team who can take advantage of it? BMC! We have a bunch of strong guys who know how to race in these conditions. I believe there will be a split and a few big guys could be surprised. It’s not only us. Lotto or Etixx-QuickStep also love to race in these conditions.”

The high winds at the start of the stage saw a nervous peloton and fast speeds. Arthur Vichot (FDJ) and Leigh Howard (IAM) escaped off the front and began building an advantage, as riders were hitting the pavement in the bunch. George Bennett (LottoNL-Jumbo) went tumbling into a ditch about 25km into the race along with the polka-dot jersey of Thibaut Pinot (FDJ). FDJ performed a massive chase to get the Frenchman back. The riders were flying along, with 47.4km covered in the opening hour of racing.

Alex Howes and Lawson Craddock of Cannondale-Drapac both also went down in separate crashes, adding to what has been a taxing past few days of racing for the American team. Cannondale team leader Pierre Rolland hit a wall on the descent of the Col du Pyresourde on Stage 8 and suffered significant road rash. Sebastian Langeveld abandoned the race on stage 10. And on Wednesday, Craddock spent a considerable time in the caravan trying to rejoin the peloton. He finished last on the stage, 17:01 down, but within the time cut.


137 KM à parcourir / to go - Étape 11 / Stage... by tourdefrance

With 100km to go, the peloton settled down and the leading duo held an advantage of 4:15. The riders were slowly moving closer and closer to the coast, which meant crosswinds would be coming again. Team Sky, Lotto-Soudal, and BMC Racing were seen being attentive at the front of the peloton.

The Belgian team of Etixx-QuickStep came to the fore 10 kilometres later and split the peloton. Dutch rider Wilco Kelderman (LottoNL-Jumbo) was caught out, along with Pinot and Tuesday’s stage winner Michael Matthews (Orica-BikeExchange).

The speed of the riders did not let up, and Trek-Segafredo further split the peloton into multiple echelons. Riders were spread all over the course. Howes was behind with a small group containing Matthews, but Craddock was in trouble, off the back, alone.

Team Sky used Classics strongmen Ian Stannard and Luke Rowe to bring the splintered peloton onto the back of the breakaway with 61Km still to go.

A few kilometres later a crash towards the front of the peloton saw Rafal Majka (Tinkoff) hit the ground hard and GC hopeful Tejay van Garderen (BMC Racing) delayed. Quintana’s loyal lieutenant Winner Anacona (Movistar) also went down, while Damiano Caruso (BMC Racing) desperately sought a new front wheel from neutral support, as the race went up the road. Van Garderen would safely rejoin the front group.

Marcel Kittel (Etixx-QuickStep) took the intermediate sprint point followed by Sagan and Cavendish with 48km to go. The second group on the road, containing Pinot, Matthews, and Majka, was 43 seconds behind. A lull in the wind helped Pinot’s group to rejoin the main peloton with 35km to go.

Tinkoff punched the pace with 25km to go, making sure they were at the front of the peloton as the race made a left-hand turn into a crosswind. The riders were touching speeds of 75kph, as teams fought to position their team leaders at the front.

With 15km to go, the race split to pieces in the crosswinds. Cancellara put many riders in the gutter, as he drove the pace. The neon yellow jerseys of Tinkoff quickly hit the front of the peloton and caused even more damage. Bodnar took a massive pull, which only Sagan could follow. Froome was attentive at the front and quickly jumped on the Tinkoff train that was leaving the station. Thomas joined the group and quartet began driving away from the peloton.

“When they went, Froomey just responded straight away and when I looked behind there was a gap,” Thomas said. “I got across to them and it was just full gas. We were at the front all day, staying out of trouble and waiting for something to go. Then Sagan and Bodnar just went and that was it. We got a gap and on the radio we heard we had 15, 20 seconds. So we just committed then. But boy that was hard!”


10 KM à parcourir / to go - Étape 11 / Stage 11... by tourdefrance

Sagan took the stage victory with Froome second, extending his advantage in the overall classification. The defending champ has shown a nifty hand of tactics this year by attacking and gaining time on a descent, and now gaining time on a flat stage, in the crosswinds.

“Froomey and Geraint Thomas came with us and I said, ‘We are too strong, they are never going to catch us,” Sagan said. “We pulled very hard and it happened. It was crazy wind in the last 15, 12 kilometres. It was not planning, you can’t plan that. It just happened. Today we’re not actors, we’re artists. I hope people have fun watching me racing, while I was just suffering doing that.”

Yates kept his white jersey of Best Young Rider of the Tour for another day and Pinot kept his King of the Mountains jersey. Sagan extended his lead in the points classification to 90 points over Cavendish, 309 to 219.

“Physically, I have no consequence from that crash,” Pinot said. “It happened early but everything after has been difficult. It was very risky. On those roads there wasn’t space for everyone. After I crashed, there was no reason to take risks. Peter Sagan is the world’s best rider at the moment, far ahead of any of us because he goes well on all the terrains! So he deserves to win today.”

Cavendish was in the leading group, but suffered a mechanical at the wrong moment.”When the group went, I got by alright,” he said. “But then someone touched my crank and I got blocked on a gear. It’s really a shame but it’s the way it is. We knew it was going to happen. The green jersey was not my objective anyway. There are not lots of riders who can beat Sagan. He’s a rider like no other.”

Van Garderen said he was just happy to have survived without losing time.

“To be honest I don’t even really know what happened,” he said. “The wind makes it crazy and stressful and I’m just glad to survive. It was an impressive ride by Chris Froome. But you don’t look back, you just look forward. I got tangled up a bit in one of the crashes but I didn’t go down thankfully. I had to chase back but Marcus Burghardt waited for me and I got back with no real issues. With 40 kilometer an hour winds we knew it was going to be a crazy day and I’m just glad to make it through.”

On Thursday, the Tour de France tackles the “Giant of Provence,” Mount Ventoux. The 184km (114mi) stage 12 travels from Montpellier to atop the feared mountain. The Tour last visited the famous climb in 2013, where Froome dispatched Quintana with vicious accelerations. The stage victory helped cement the British rider’s first overall victory at the Grande Boucle. Being Bastille Day, the French are sure to be on the attack. One who is riding well at the moment is Pinot. The FDJ rider also has a victory atop L’Alpe d’Huez and winning atop Ventoux would further strengthen his palmares.

ORICA-BikeExchange update

Strong winds and a nervous peloton made for a tense stage 11. Simon Gerrans on Twitter saying "That was up there with the most dangerous #TDF stages I've ever done. I was to scared to blink for 3:30hrs."

Crashes peppered the start of the race, but Adam Yates made it through the day holding on to his white jersey and second place overall.

White jersey holder Yates is 28seconds behind Froome ahead of tomorrow’s tough stage 12, which tackles the monstrous Mont Ventoux and arguably the most brutal summit finish in cycling.

Sport director Matt White was happy for the team to come through the stage unscathed and in one-piece ahead of stage 12.

“It was a very nerve-racking stage today,” said White. “There was a lot of tension in the peloton because of the strong wind and the road furniture which caused a few crashes in the early part of the race.”

“I am happy that the team all came through unscathed and without any issues. Adam (Yates) has a strong group of big guys around him and we didn’t have any problems today.

“Not a lot of riders gained time today but there were a few who lost a little bit and we are in a good position ahead of tomorrows stage up to Mont Ventoux.

“It’s a big test and we are excited about the challenge, everyone knows that Ventoux is a tough climb and it will be interesting to see how it plays out.”


This article is a modified version of that originally published on cyclingtips.com

Photography by Cor Vos


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