|  Tour de France Cycling News Extra for July 16, 2006Edited by Jeff Jones  Stage 13 wrap-upPereiro takes yellow; Voigt rewarded at last
         Jens Voigt (CSC) Photo ©: AFP
  
          |   |  The longest and hottest stage of the Tour was also one of the strangest, 
        as Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d'Epargne) took over the maillot jaune 
        from Floyd Landis despite starting the day 28'50 behind the American rider. 
        Pereiro was second in the stage behind Jens Voigt (CSC), who rode a great 
        final kilometre to win ahead of the Spaniard. The pair were part of a 
        break of five that escaped after only 23 km, and were half an hour ahead 
        of the peloton at the finish. That time gap was enough to put Pereiro 
        in yellow. "This totally saves my Tour de France – yeah, in fact my whole season. 
        I'm completely ecstatic and I almost feel like I could do the stage all 
        over again," said Voigt.  "It was a great day for us. This was just what we needed – now we can 
        start to have fun," said Bjarne Riis after the stage. "Both Jens and the 
        team really deserve this and it definitely does wonders for the morale.   
  The full composition of the break was Voigt, Pereiro, Sylvain Chavanel 
        (Cofidis), Manuel Quinziato (Liquigas), and Andriy Grivko (Milram). Once 
        they got clear, Phonak set tempo and no other team seemed to be concerned 
        with chasing them. Thus, the gap kept growing. Grivko was the first to 
        be dropped when he attacked and blew himself up on a climb with 25 km 
        to go. Then in the last 4 km, Pereiro and Voigt got away from Chavanel 
        and Quinziato. In the last kilometre, Voigt tried a pre-emptive attack 
        at 800m to go, which failed, but then wound it up at 100m out to successfully 
        hold off Pereiro. Chavanel was third at 40 seconds, while McEwen won the 
        bunch sprint for sixth and increased his lead in the green jersey competition. 
    | Coming up on          Cyclingnews will cover the 60th edition of 
        the Dauphiné Libéré live 
        as of stage 4 on Wednesday, June 10, at approximately 15:00 local Europe 
        time (CEST)/ 23:00 Australian time (CDT)/ 9:00 (USA East). 
 WAP-enabled mobile devices: http://live.cyclingnews.com/wap/
 |  Landis and his team didn't seem too concerned about holding the maillot 
        jaune today, as they can now hand the pressure onto Caisse d'Epargne 
        for a few days, without really threatening Landis' chances. Pereiro only 
        has 1'29 on Floyd, and it's unlikely that he'll hold that after the first 
        Alpine stage.  Click here for the full 
        results, report & photos, live 
        report, and video. 
         An interview with Jens Voigt "Oh no, not me again!"  Jens Voigt has been on the attack almost every day in the past week, 
        but today on the way to Montélimar was the first time it actually worked. 
        Voigt won the 13th stage 
        from Oscar Pereiro after a 200+ km breakaway, and all the suffering in 
        the past couple of weeks has finally paid off. Brecht Decaluwé reports 
        from the finish.  
         A happy Jensy Photo ©: Sirotti
  
          |   |  Q: Did you think you were the best rider in that group?   JV: Maybe it wasn't me who had the best legs in that 
        break. But maybe you could say that if I won today, it might have been 
        that I was the one rider who was most desperate for a win.   Q: Is that on your own behalf or on that of the team?   JV: Of course I wasn't only winning for myself, but 
        also for the team. All these crashes and explanations on why I finished 
        last in the time trial... Now I can say, 'I saved this energy for today!' 
        But I also won for my team. We only have six riders left in the race, 
        and out of the six, four have already crashed. So we only have two riders 
        left who have not yet crashed. There was a lot of bad luck, and we just 
        tried to keep the morale up. We had a good day in the mountains with Carlos 
        Sastre and Fränk Schleck, and today, we have this stage win which I think 
        is going to take a lot of pressure off us.   Click 
        here for the full interview    An interview with Oscar Pereiro Expect the unexpected  Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d'Epargne) was slightly disappointed to miss out 
        on the stage win today in Montélimar, 
        but received an unexpected reward when Phonak slowed down the peloton 
        so much that he jumped from 46th to 1st in the general classification. 
        Hedwig Kröner was there when the new maillot jaune spoke 
        about his achievement.  
         Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d'Epargne) 
        Photo ©: Sirotti
  
          |   |  Q: Did you expect this to happen; was this premeditated?   OP: No, I was surprised to be in this situation! 
        When I got into the breakaway, I didn't think about finding myself wearing 
        the yellow jersey in the evening! During the stage, I realized that this 
        was a possibility, when we saw the gap get bigger and bigger. But it's 
        definitely a surprise to me.   Q: What did you talk about with Voigt in the last kilometres; 
        was it to leave the stage win to him?   OP: No, not at all. We did talk before within the 
        break, and agreed that if I was certain to get the yellow jersey, I wouldn't 
        go for the stage win - if we would have been at 30 minutes within the 
        last 5 kilometres. But then, we only had an advantage of about 27 minutes, 
        so I told him that I was sorry, that I wanted to go for the stage as well, 
        as there was a risk of not winning anything for me.   Click 
        here for the full interview   It's show time in Phonak  By Brecht Decaluwé in Montélimar  
         Floyd Landis (Phonak) Photo ©: AFP
  
          |   |   John Lelangue, manager of the Phonak team, commented on the team tactics 
        of today's stage. He explained that giving away the yellow jersey was 
        an option they considered before the start of the stage: "This tactic 
        was discussed during our team meeting this morning. We didn't want to 
        chase again all day long. Our main objective is July 23, when the Tour 
        is over so it's not possible to chase every rider."   It looked like a dangerous gamble to allow Oscar Pereiro Sio to take 
        so much time back on Landis. The Spanish rider finished twice in the top 
        10 during the two previous editions of the Tour de France. "I know Oscar 
        (Pereiro Sio) very well, as he was in our team last year. I saw how he 
        was riding in the Pyrenees and I think he's not a big risk for us."   Pereiro in yellow means that tomorrow another team will have to control 
        the race. "If they want to play along in the race, then we have an extra 
        team to control the race. That means that our guys can enjoy some holiday, 
        just like today. This was a good day for us."   Lelangue explained that the main goal of team Phonak's strategy was 
        saving energy during the coming stages. "There are still seven stages 
        left, and we only have eight riders to work for Landis. Yesterday, we 
        saw that we didn't receive any help, not even from the sprinter teams. 
        So we would have worked today, tomorrow and then in the mountains … we 
        had to find a way to spare our riders."   It was probably not an easy choice to give the yellow jersey away. John 
        Lelangue tried to compare his strategy with those of a football coach. 
        "For an unimportant match before the final, the coach will play with his 
        B-team, to spare his big names for the final."   Ballan disappointed  By Hedwig Kröner in Montélimar  
         Alessandro Ballan (Lampre-Fondital) 
        Photo ©: Anthony Tan
  
          |   |   Italian rider Alessandro Ballan was feeling rather low after losing 
        out to Yaroslav Popovych (Discovery Channel) on Friday's stage 
        12 to Carcassonne. Cyclingnews talked to the tall Lampre man 
        on the very next day, at the start of another breakaway stage in Béziers, 
        as he was having coffee in the village.   "I did a great stage, but then there was Freire and Popovych... I'm 
        disappointed, as I got to the finish very tired, and then I could only 
        get second," Ballan said.   The victory of the Ukrainian had prompted a lot of discussion in the 
        media: rumour had it that there had been an agreement between two riders, 
        the stage winner Popovych and sprinter Oscar Freire (Rabobank), and their 
        two respective teams. Supposedly, Rabobank allowed the Discovery rider 
        to win under the condition that the American team help them later in the 
        Alps to get team leader Denis Menchov in a good position.   "I don't know," Ballan honestly replied when asked if he thought such 
        a deal had been made. "Freire is a sprinter, he's a very fast finisher. 
        I just didn't have the power anymore. If there was an agreement, I'm sorry 
        about it. I'm just disappointed."   Nevertheless, the Italian hopes to do be out there again in the near 
        future. "There are still five stages ahead, where I hope to do well. So 
        maybe there is another chance for me, as I still feel good," he concluded. 
        
       Previous 
        News    Next News (All rights reserved/Copyright Knapp Communications Pty Limited 2006) |