93rd Tour de France - ProT
France, July 1-23, 2006
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Results & report
Stage Details
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Next Stage Stage 1 - Sunday, July 2: Strasbourg - Strasbourg, 184.5 km
Live Commentary by Jeff Jones, with additional reporting from Anthony Tan,
Tim Maloney, and Brecht Decaluwé
Live report
Live coverage starts: 13:00 CEST Estimated finish: 17:00 CEST
Ready to start
Photo ©: Sirotti
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11:58 CEST Sunday's Stage 1 flat sprinters'
stage starts and finishes in Strasbourg, with a 30km incursion into Germany
midway through the stage. It will be a tight, tense day with plenty of crashes
and a big battle between Boonen's Quick.Step, McEwen's Davitamon-Lotto and Zabel's
Milram teams to win the first en ligne stage at Le Tour 2006.
13:06 CEST Today's first stage starts in Strasbourg's
Place de la Cathédrale, with a few kilometres of neutral riding before the race
kicks off on the outskirts of town and heads west. There is just one categorised
climb today, the Cat. 4 Côte de Heiligenstein after 101.5 km, and the winner
of that will wear the first polkadot jersey of the Tour. There are also intermediate
sprints, at Saverne (km 53), Plobsheim (km 137) and Kehl (km 175.5). Plenty
available in what is expected to be a sprinters' stage. The weather
today is rather nice: It's about 30 degrees, with beautiful clear blue skies,
with no clouds. There's a slight wind from the southwest blowing up the Rhine
valley that will be a headwind for the riders as they're heading south. But
when they turn around and head north into the last 50 km, they'll have a tailwind.
There will be some fast racing at the end.
13:17 CEST 2km/182.5km to go After riding 7.2
km at a relaxed pace, the flag drops and the race is on! Discovery
Channel team manager Johan Bruyneel told Cyclingnews this morning, "It
will start off nervous like it always does. Hopefully there are not too many
crashes. A lot of teams want a bunch sprint, so obviously that's going to be
part of the tactics for today. Guys like Boonen, McEwen, Hushovd, Bennati, O'Grady
- those teams are going to want to keep it together."
13:25 CEST 7km/177.5km to go The French commence
the hostilities in the 2006 Tour, with Stephane Auge (Cofidis), Matthieu Sprick
(Bouygues Telecom) and Benoît Vaugrenard (Française des Jeux) making the first
breakaway after 3 km.
13:30 CEST 12km/172.5km to go Another Frenchman,
Nicolas Portal (Caisse d'Epargne), has joined the three leaders out front, and
the group has a 150m lead on the bunch.
13:35 CEST 16km/168.5km to go The four leaders
now have 1'05 on the bunch, but are about to be joined by three more: Fabian
Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Unai Etxebarria (Euskaltel) and Walter Beneteau (Bouygues
Telecom), who are just 12 seconds behind the leading break. Looks like the break
of the day is being established.
13:38 CEST For those of you who follow our rider
diaries, we have something a bit special this year: Levi Leipheimer's video
diary. To watch it, click on this
link.
13:42 CEST 20km/164.5km to go The break has swelled
to seven riders now, with the junction being made at the 13 km mark. The leaders
again: Stephane Auge (Cofidis), Matthieu Sprick (Bouygues Telecom), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Nicolas Portal (Caisse d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner),
Unai Etxebarria (Euskaltel) and Walter Beneteau (Bouygues Telecom). Vaugrenard
is the best placed on GC, lying in 31st at 19 seconds behind Hushovd.
Quite a few of the others in the break finished in the bottom 10 yesterday,
not that it's that important in a prologue.
13:45 CEST 22km/162.5km to go The leaders have
over three minutes now on the bunch, where Mighty Thor's Credit Agricole boys
have assumed the position on the front.
13:51 CEST 25km/159.5km to go As the advantage
continues to build over the four minute mark, things start to settle down in
the peloton. The successful break was initiated after only 3 km, which is a
bit rare for the Tour de France. Usually it takes 50 km of attacking before
the bunch relents and lets a group go. But this is a different Tour, of course.
13:59 CEST In this Franco-German area of France
(and indeed we cross into Germany for a bit), there are a few similarities among
the names of the towns that we visit en route. e.g. Lingolsheim
Holtzheim Achenheim Ittenheim Hurtigheim Stutzheim
Offenheim Wiwersheim Truchtersheim Rumersheim Wingersheim
Waltenheim-Sur-Zorn Mommenheim Schwindratzheim Melsheim
Wilwisheim Marlenheim Furdenheim Ergersheim Molsheim
Dorlisheim Rosheim Bourgheim Obenheim Gerstheim
Plobsheim Griesheim Hands up (no, not you in front) who can
guess the recurring theme. First one to the buzzer wins...1 million dollars.
Hang on, wrong competition. [searches prize vault]. OK, how about a tube map
of London?
14:07 CEST 35km/149.5km to go As we wait for
our readers to try and answer the braintwister posted above, we'll give you
an update on the race. The last time check was at km 26, with the
seven man break holding a 4'30 lead over the peloton. One man who
is going to have some work to do today is Davitamon-Lotto's Fred Rodriguez,
who will try to get his man Robbie McEwen up the front when it counts. "Yesterday
I took it kinda easy in the prologue," Rodriguez told Cyclingnews at
the start. "Today my job is to make sure that Robbie is in the right position
to win the stage. I'm looking forward to it."
14:15 CEST 41km/143.5km to go The leaders have
covered 41 km now, and are 10 km from the first sprint in Saverne, still holding
4'30 over the Credit Agricole-led peloton. Hushovd's boys aren't going to let
the front seven get too far ahead.
14:20 CEST 45.5km/139km to go The break rolls
along in the sunshine with 4'15 over the bunch. There are two Bouygues riders
in the break: Matthieu Sprick and Walter Beneteau, and also five Frenchman out
of seven in front. And there's a French team chasing: Credit Agricole.
14:28 CEST 52km/132.5km to go The break comes
up to the sprint in Saverne and there is a bit of a fight for the points and
bonus seconds. It's slightly uphill, and the break gets a big cheer from the
crowds that line the roads. Vaugrenard attacks with about 200m to go and wins
it easily. 6 seconds now, which puts him at 13 seconds behind Hushovd on GC.
Etxebarria looked like he got second, but we'll confirm that in a tic.
14:29 CEST Second was Beneteau in fact, then
Etxebarria.
14:36 CEST Oscar Freire is an outsider for the
win in today's stage, but he has a chance. "We will see how the race unfolds
and I guess I will find my way," he told Cyclingnews at the start. "The
stages of tomorrow and the day after tomorrow are more interesting for me, because
the finish should fit my capabilities even more." The former world champion
also explained that the construction of the teams affects his chances: "Boonen
and Hushovd have a team that is built up around them. The teammates work only
for them and that means they can prepare the sprint just like they want it to
unfold."
14:37 CEST 60.5km/124km to go Portal has some
problems with his bike and gets some assistance. He gives the signal to his
team car and gets a new bike.
14:40 CEST 62.5km/122km to go Portal chases back
on through the mini-caravan behind the break, and rejoins his six companions.
The leaders again: Stephane Auge (Cofidis), Matthieu Sprick and Walter Beneteau
(Bouygues Telecom), Benoît Vaugrenard (Française des Jeux), Nicolas Portal (Caisse
d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Unai Etxebarria (Euskaltel). Vaugrenard
is the best placed on GC, sitting (now) at 13 seconds behind Hushovd. If he
can win another sprint (or better, two), he'll get very close. It's six seconds
per intermediate sprint and 20 seconds for the win.
14:44 CEST 63.5km/121km to go The terrain gets
a little lumpier now, and everyone is feeling the heat as the Credit Agricole
boys continue to lead the bunch in pursuit of the break. The gap has stayed
steady, and is now 4'35.
14:45 CEST Here's an interesting stat: Unai
Etxebarria has done the most work in the break, spending 20 percent of the time
in front. Stephane Auge has done the least, spending only 10 percent.
14:52 CEST The bunch races by a handful of fans
supporting Thomas Voeckler, as Credit Agricole's men continue to lead.
Isaac Galvez (Caisse d'Eparnge) is another outsider for a bunch sprint. "Our
leader is Valverde and all my teammates work for him, except for me," he told
Cyclingnews. "I need to find my way alone in the sprint." The Spanish
rider would like to see some mates working for him, but he played it down. "It's
very difficult but...c'est la vie, non!"
14:54 CEST 69.5km/115km to go The break races
through Marlenheim. Does anyone know the answer to that question posed previously?
The answer isn't that all the towns have Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises,
although that was a good guess. Clearly not many people are enthused
about winning a free London tube map.
14:56 CEST A couple of tourists keep pace with
the break for a while on the bike path next to the main road. But not for long.
Saunier Duval and Liquigas are marshalling the all-important rear zone of the
peloton.
14:59 CEST 73.5km/111km to go Another couple
of tourists - on a tandem - wave to the break as it makes its way through the
flat farmland in the hot sun. Discovery Channel is wearing fluoro
back numbers, because they are leading the teams GC.
15:05 CEST 78km/106.5km to go The bunch makes
a right hand turn in front of a hundred people standing on the corner. Floyd
Landis (Phonak) has moved up right behind the Credit Agricole train, keeping
an eye on things. The last time check was 4'10, down from a max of 5'00.
15:15 CEST 86.5km/98km to go The average speed
after one hour is 44 km/h, which is to be expected on a stage like this. Actually,
if you go back to previous Tours, the average speed in the first hour is typically
50 km/h. Not that that's anything outrageous, but doing it day after day after
day is another matter. Let us say that eliminating doping will have
a negative affect on the speed (as one consequence). From a spectator's point
of view, does this actually matter? I'd argue no, because you can't really tell
how fast the riders are going unless you measure it. But it could have an affect
on the average intoxication level of a roadside fan, because they will have
to wait longer for the riders to get to where they have set up the campervan,
the esky full of beer, and the table. And in that time, they will have consumed
more of the beer, presuming they brought enough. So is the anti-doping
fight being funded by alcoholic beverage companies? There are wackier theories
out there...
15:17 CEST 87.5km/97km to go Anthony Charteau
leads the bunch, doing a lot of work for his captain Thor Hushovd.
Meanwhile, the break rolls along at a nice tempo, past Mont Ste Odile. The average
speed after two hours is consistent at 43.9 km/h.
15:20 CEST Ok, the answer to the trivia question
is not that all the towns have "heim" in them. That would be too obvious,
and yes, I do have an answer in mind. But it's clear that our readers really
want this tube map. I'll even sign it.
15:23 CEST 92.5km/92km to go The riders are still
heading south, on gently undulating roads. The bunch has the gap pegged at 4'37
as Florent Brard (Caisse d'Epargne) moves up near the front and chats to a teammate.
Hushovd sits about 20-30 wheels back. Phonak is actually in the second "rank"
of the peloton, looking after Floyd.
15:29 CEST 96.5km/88km to go Gert Steegmans is
a decent sprinter, but in this Tour de France, the young Belgian will work for
the big favourite, Australian Robbie McEwen. "We will try to arrange a bunch
sprint," he told Cyclingnews. "There are many teams who have the same
goal, so that should work out fine." What is his task in the sprint?
"I need to deliver Robbie in a good position in the last kilometre. There, Fred
(Rodriguez) will take over."
15:30 CEST 101km/83.5km to go The leaders are
almost on the first climb of the day, the Cat. 4 Côte de Heiligenstein. This
mighty ascent averages a leg-snapping 4% for an agonising 1.8 km (permit me
a little licence here).
15:33 CEST From Andrew E, who answered our question
thusly: "The tour is heading thru an anti-gravity field....cows float. Heim
theory is a term used to describe a non-mainstream theory of gravitation and
particle physics, proposed by Burkhard Heim." It's not that complex,
but I like the theory.
15:36 CEST 102km/82.5km to go The leaders are
on the climb now, riding through big crowds of fans waving green PMU hands.
Wegmann hits out early, but Etxebarria marks him. Wegmann gets it easy from
Sprick and Etxebarria. In the bunch, Slava Ekimov has to get a bike
change, but he's quickly under way after a push by Bruyneel.
15:38 CEST 104.5km/80km to go Portal keeps the
pressure on over the top, but Wegmann sits up and allows the dropped riders
to rejoin the break. All seven together now, with 4'35 on the bunch.
15:39 CEST A couple of readers have written
in with the answer to the trivia question as being, "They're all German names."
Well, that's nearly as lame as the answer I have in mind, but it's not the one.
15:43 CEST 108.5km/76km to go Aha - a change.
Wilfried Cretskens (Quick.Step) gets to the front of the bunch to help out the
tiring Credit Agricole boys.
15:46 CEST "How about that if you pronounce
the entire list backwards it summons the shade of Goethe?" writes Christopher
Rowe. I like that one! Let me test that theory [tries to turn potpal dnuora].
Ouch, that hurt. Oh look: 'Begone, shade of Goethe!' But it wasn't
the answer to the trivia question.
15:48 CEST 112.5km/72km to go The breakaways
enjoy a little shade now as they race along 4'08 ahead of the peloton. It's
still a bit of a headwind, and it seems Liquigas have got the upper hand in
numbers at the rear of the peloton.
15:50 CEST 113.5km/71km to go The competition
will close with 40 km to go. If no-one has guessed the (admittedly lame) answer
by then, I'll save the signed London tube map for another trivia question.
Portal takes a turn in front, then Beneteau, Auge and Wegmann. All the breakaways
are cooperating very well, trying to keep their gap over the bunch for as long
as possible. It's a big ask, as now a Milram rider has joined the Credit Agricole
train.
15:53 CEST 114.5km/70km to go It's nothing to
do with 'heim' meaning home either. Well it does mean that in German, but it's
not the answer I desire. CSC has moved up in the bunch too. Despite
losing Basso, they still have Sastre and Schleck for the GC, O'Grady for the
sprints, Voigt for the breakaways, and Zabriskie for the time trials. It's not
a bad team.
15:56 CEST 116.5km/68km to go The gap falls to
3'55 as now Davitamon, Quick.Step, Milram and Credit Agricole have joined the
chase. The bunch rides along another tree-lined road, past clumps of spectators
trying to keep hydrated. The breakaways ride over a bridge and enter
Sand, where another large crowd has come out to watch the Tour. It's still popular,
never fear.
15:58 CEST Erik Dekker is often a rider for
an early break, but at the start, he told us that wasn't his plan. "I ain't
going to attack! I need to stay with Menchov," the Dutchman said. For a natural
born attacker, that's hard to accept, but he will probably take his chances
later on. "Let's see what today brings, things can change. I'm feeling very
fit for the moment, but from now on it will gradually decrease."
16:01 CEST 121.5km/63km to go Sprick rolls through
for a turn, as Etxebarria signals for his team car. Auge comes through next,
trying but failing to improve his ratio of time spent at the front (still 10
percent). It's still 4'00 to the bunch, which hasn't started riding hard yet.
16:03 CEST 162.5km/22km to go Yes, all the towns
noted above will see the Tour come past today. But that is not the answer to
the trivia question, which seems to have stumped a few people. Only another
22 km to get it!
16:05 CEST Philippe Gilbert is fast at the finish,
but he explained to Cyclingnews that he would work for someone else:
"There are guys in the team who are more specialised in sprints then me; so
we're going to work for Eisel." Will we see an FDJ train in the
sprint? "No, there are teams who are stronger than us so we're try to deliver
Eisel to the right spot. I'm going to ride just before or after him."
16:08 CEST 126.5km/58km to go I failed to mention
Bobby Julich above in the CSC list. Although he did place third in the 1998
Tour, he is probably going to ride support for someone like Sastre or Schleck
this time, and maybe go for it in the time trials.
16:10 CEST 127.5km/57km to go Charteau and Cretskens
are leading the peloton, now 3'36 behind the break of seven. The bunch is riding
through Obenheim while the break is through Gerstheim. Yes, they have 'heim'
in them and yes, this area of France was part of Germany at one time, but no,
you don't win a signed London tube map with those answers.
16:13 CEST 129.5km/55km to go The break should
make it to the next sprint at Plobsheim with a fair bit of its lead intact.
It's only 8 km hence, and Vaugrenard will be looking to build on his time bonuses
to move up on GC. He's in a virtual 15th at the moment.
16:14 CEST Vansevenant moves to the front of
the peloton with Vasseur, Vansummeren and a largish Milram rider.
16:16 CEST 131.5km/53km to go It's the 198cm
tall figure of Johan Vansummeren leading the bunch at the moment, followed by
Ralf Grabsch (Milram). Cedric Vasseur (Quick.Step) rolls through for his turn,
then a Credit Agricole rider. Boonen moves up alongside Hushovd. Last position
in the peloton is being held by Maxim Iglinsky (Milram). 2'47 between
the seven in front and the 169 behind.
16:17 CEST "Adding the square of the number
representing each letter (A=1, B=2 etc), then taking the cube root of that sum,
results in an ascending order of all prime numbers, which incidentally are identical
to the same formula applied to the birthdates of the last tour victors" writes
'jdege'. Interesting theory, but I'm not going to test it like I did the last
one.
16:18 CEST Nothing to do with Leipheimer being
Tour favourite either.
16:20 CEST 134.5km/50km to go The bunch crosses
the canal du Rhone de Rhine, with the main Rhine river in the background. Ralf
Grabsch does a big turn on the front of the peloton, and the gap is 2'22 with
50 km to go.
16:21 CEST 135.5km/49km to go The breakaways
are getting close to the second sprint of the day, which is due in 3 km. There's
also another sprint at 9 km to go, which could be entertaining. It doesn't look
like the leaders will survive that long, but we'll see. Cretskens
and Vansevenant share a can of cola as the pace eases a bit in the bunch. Many
cans are being consumed now.
16:23 CEST Yes, all the towns are on the Tour's
route today, but that's a little trivial for a trivia question. Trust me, the
answer is really trivial.
16:25 CEST 137.5km/47km to go Beneteau hits out
for the sprint and wins it easily from Vaugrenard and Sprick. That means Vaugrenard
has picked up 10 bonus seconds today, moving him into a virtual 10th overall,
just behind Landis. But not quite close enough to take the white jersey from
Sebastian Lang.
16:26 CEST The break reforms as it exits Plobsheim,
stage left. Meanwhile, the bunch enters the town 2'00 behind the group in front.
16:28 CEST 139.5km/45km to go Each town has a
brewery? Good guess, but the speed of the race is making it hard for us to fully
test that answer. Now the bunch has eased off the throttle a bit,
letting the break dangle out there at 2'20.
16:31 CEST 141.5km/43km to go The break hits
a wider road now, and is just about to head into German territory for a bit.
16:32 CEST 142.5km/42km to go Only 2 more km
to guess the trivia question to win a signed London tube map. Think outside
the box!
16:34 CEST 143.5km/41km to go Vasseur is on the
front of the bunch again with the tall Vansummeren. They cross the Rhine river,
and are in Germany. In Baden-Württemberg to be slightly more precise. 2'10 over
the bunch.
16:36 CEST 144.5km/40km to go As the break finishes
its crossing of the Rhine, we close our trivia question, which was, what do
the following towns all have in common? Lingolsheim Holtzheim
Achenheim Ittenheim Hurtigheim Stutzheim Offenheim
Wiwersheim Truchtersheim Rumersheim Wingersheim Waltenheim-Sur-Zorn
Mommenheim Schwindratzheim Melsheim Wilwisheim Marlenheim
Furdenheim Ergersheim Molsheim Dorlisheim Rosheim Bourgheim
Obenheim Gerstheim Plobsheim Griesheim After reading
the last batch of answers, I will reveal the answer!
16:39 CEST "All the cities on the route have
names that sound like bitchin' heavy metal bands (so long as no one puts "Steamroller"
behind the city name)." [Pedro Candell]. But it doesn't win you a tube map.
And while they are not serviced by the London Underground, that is not the answer
to the question. The answer is...
16:39 CEST ...that each town name has at least
seven letters. I told you it was lame [ducks].
16:41 CEST 147.5km/37km to go Back to the race.
The seven leaders, Stephane Auge (Cofidis), Matthieu Sprick and Walter Beneteau
(Bouygues Telecom), Benoît Vaugrenard (Française des Jeux), Nicolas Portal (Caisse
d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), and Unai Etxebarria (Euskaltel),
now have 1'48 of their lead intact as they ride into Germany.
16:44 CEST 150.5km/34km to go Cretskens works
on the front of the peloton, riding fairly steadily as Vasseur chats with Vansevenant.
The pace is not too high yet. Agritubel has moved to the rear of the bunch,
ready to strike.
16:46 CEST 153.5km/31km to go The bunch fans
out across the road, as it rides 1'30 behind the break. It's an opportune moment
to counter attack, actually...
16:48 CEST 154.5km/30km to go George Hincapie
cruises up the bunch in the green jersey. He missed out on yellow by 0.73 seconds
yesterday, but hopes to rectify that before the end of the race.
16:50 CEST Vasseur back on the front as the
big bunch rides through a heavily wooded section. Plenty of German fans on the
road, but nothing like the same as last year.
16:52 CEST The stream of commentator email has
suddenly stopped, as people presumably sit staring at the screen, dumbfounded
at how poor that trivia question was. I'll try to think of a better one tomorrow.
16:54 CEST 157.5km/27km to go The gap comes down
to 1'24 as the breakaways get to within 27 km of the finish. Will they survive
until 9 km to go, when the day's final sprint is located?
16:55 CEST 158.5km/26km to go Through Offenburg,
with the bunch now in more of a chase mode. A Lampre-Fondital rider moves to
the front, to help out Quick.Step, Milram, Davitamon and Credit Agricole. There
are quite a few teams interested in a sprint today. But who will get it? Hushovd?
Boonen? McEwen? Zabel? Bennati? Galvez? Freire? So many options.
16:58 CEST 160.5km/24km to go The bunch passes
under 25 km to go just 1'09 behind the suffering seven in front. The crowds
are thicker in town here, but it just ain't the same for the Germans without
Der Jan.
16:59 CEST 161.5km/23km to go Vasseur and Cretskens
are doing the work for Quick.Step. Bruseghin is up there for Lampre-Fondital.
Towards the back of the bunch, Di Luca is suffering a bit, not moving up.
17:01 CEST 162.5km/22km to go The wind is behind
them now as the race gets close to the final 20 km. Through Bühl, and the pace
is high.
17:02 CEST 163.5km/21km to go Now the battle
for position will start among the sprinters, as the domestiques lift the pace
inside the final 20 km. The break will survive a little longer, but has almost
no chance of making it to the finish.
17:03 CEST 164.5km/20km to go Etxebarria sits
on the back a bit. He has a stack of bidons in his jersey for his teammates,
for when they catch him.
17:05 CEST 165.5km/19km to go The bunch passes
under 20 km to go with three teams working hard in front. CSC is in the second
rank, protecting its GC men. The gap is just 40 seconds.
17:05 CEST Beneteau looks back to see where
the bunch is. The break rides a little harder to keep out in front for as long
as possible. Maybe not enough to make it to the third intermediate sprint.
17:06 CEST 166.5km/18km to go Etxebarria is probably
hoping that they get caught soon, as his jersey full of bidons is getting uncomfortable...
17:07 CEST 167.5km/17km to go The bunch isn't
backing off the pace now, so it doesn't look like the break will survive for
much longer. 28 seconds with 17 km to go.
17:08 CEST 168.5km/16km to go Vansummeren does
another turn, closing the gap to just 20 seconds. The bunch is hungry for a
mass sprint.
17:09 CEST An attack in front as Beneteau flies
away, pursued by the rest of the break. Nope, they sit up and let Beneteau have
his chance. Portal is the only one to chase.
17:10 CEST 169.5km/15km to go Wegmann is now
chasing with Portal, but it's still Beneteau out front. The rest of the break
sits up and is absorbed.
17:11 CEST Beneteau gives it everything to stay
clear, trying to make it to the next sprint. He uses the race motos as much
as possible. Wegmann and Portal have sat up.
17:12 CEST 172km/12.5km to go The bunch is working
well though, and although Beneteau might be able to make it to the sprint, he's
going to have to really fight to win the stage.
17:13 CEST 172.5km/12km to go Beneteau has 34
seconds - nice riding, he'll make it to the sprint. He is giving it max effort,
hands draped over the front of the bars.
17:15 CEST 173.5km/11km to go The leader is pedaling
at 95-100 rpm, trying to get the most out of his lead, looking for motos to
shelter behind. The bunch has him pegged at 25 seconds though.
17:16 CEST 175.5km/9km to go Boonen is sitting
well back in the bunch, maybe 50th position. Beneteau has 20 seconds
of his lead left, as he rides into the town of Kehl. Plenty of fans to cheer
him here, as he wins the sprint.
17:17 CEST Hincapie gets third in the sprint
behind a Credit Agricole rider, and is the virtual yellow jersey now! 2 seconds
was all he needed.
17:18 CEST 176.5km/8km to go Well, Hincapie might
be in yellow tonight, but we will see if Hushovd can make it into the top three
of the stage. That will give it back to the Viking.
17:18 CEST 177.5km/7km to go Beneteau is brought
back just after the sprint, with around seven kilometres to go. The bunch is
lined out.
17:19 CEST It's Quick.Step and Lampre leading
the bunch now, with a Davitamon rider also helping.
17:20 CEST 178.5km/6km to go The pace increases
on the wide roads back into Strasbourg. Boonen is up to 10th wheel, and there
are riders fighting for his wheel. McEwen, Casper and Hushovd are all there.
Merckx is near the front, protecting Landis.
17:21 CEST 180km/4.5km to go Around a right hander,
and no team really has control of the situation. There are a couple of Phonak
riders in front. Now a Milram rider does a big turn.
17:22 CEST 180.5km/4km to go Zabel is near the
front, but looks for a wheel. His teammate really isn't doing much.
Di Luca has been dropped.
17:22 CEST 181.2km/3.3km to go Valverde's white
jersey moves up too. Di Luca is gooone. That's a bad start, as it's
a dead flat stage. Auge is also back there.
17:23 CEST 181.5km/3km to go Quick.Step and Milram
are forming some sort of a train, but Rabobank has also got riders up there
for Freire. He's second wheel.
17:24 CEST 182.5km/2km to go Lövkvist leads now
for Eisel. But not for long. A Liquigas train forms on the right.
17:24 CEST Liquigas drives it under 2 km to
go, and the bunch lines out again. The sprints are in about 10th wheel and back.
Hushovd is still there.
17:25 CEST 183.5km/1km to go Liquigas leads all
the way until Pozzato takes over at 1km to go. Freire on his wheel. Boonen has
McEwen's wheel, behind Hushovd.
17:25 CEST Hushovd moves up to second behind
Julian Dean, but it's a long way. McEwen then Zabel and Bäckstedt. Boonen is
on de Jongh's wheel.
17:26 CEST 184.5km/0km to go Boonen leads out
way too early, then stops, like a track sprinter, then gives it full gas. Casper
challenges him and wins the first stage!!!!
17:27 CEST Hushovd has been sliced by one of
the green PMU hands, and is bleeding a lot and holding his arm. That happened
just before the finish. Hopefully it doesn't mean an exit for the maillot
jaune.
17:28 CEST Second went McEwen, then Zabel and
Bennati.
17:31 CEST So George Hincapie will take the
yellow jersey, as Hushovd didn't finish in the top three. he'll be OK for tomorrow,
but it doesn't look great.
17:39 CEST A strange incident that saw Hushovd
exit the stage in an ambulance. That's the danger of having spectators so close
to the race. Especially ones waving green hands. Bad luck for Thor, who lost
his yellow jersey anyway. Boonen also seemed to hit a spectator earlier.
But a great stage win by Casper, who, when Boonen realised he'd gone too early,
went very early himself...and won. Chapeau to the French sprinter.
That's all from us in the Hindenberg V-1 today. We'll be back with more trivia
for tomorrow's second stage between Obernai and Esch-sur-Alzette (Luxembourg).
Results
Provisional
1 Jimmy Casper (Fra) Cofidis 4.10.00
2 Robbie McEwen (Aus) Davitamon-Lotto
3 Erik Zabel (Ger) Milram
4 Daniele Bennati (Ita) Lampre-Fondital
5 Luca Paolini (Ita) Liquigas
6 Isaac Galvez (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne-Illes Balears
7 Stuart O'Grady (Aus) Team CSC
8 Bernhard Eisel (Aut) Francaise Des Jeux
9 Thor Hushovd (Nor) Crédit Agricole
10 Oscar Freire (Spa) Rabobank
General classification after stage 1
1 George Hincapie (USA) Discovery Channel 4.18.15
2 Thor Hushovd (Nor) Crédit Agricole 0.02
3 David Zabriskie (USA) Team CSC 0.06
4 Sebastian Lang (Ger) Gerolsteiner
5 Alejandro Valverde (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne-Illes Balears
6 Stuart O'Grady (Aus) Team CSC
7 Michael Rogers (Aus) T-Mobile 0.08
8 Paolo Savoldelli (Ita) Discovery Channel 0.10
9 Floyd Landis (USA) Phonak 0.11
10 Benoît Vaugrenard (Fra) Francaise Des Jeux
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