94th Tour de France - ProT
France, July 7-29, 2007
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Next Stage  Stage 11 - Thursday, July 19: Marseille - Montpellier, 182.5km
Live commentary by Shane Stokes and Bjorn Haake 
Complete live report
Live coverage starts: 13:00 CEST 
  Estimated finish: 17:15 CEST 
Welcome back to the Cyclingnews live coverage from the Tour de France. 
  Today's stage 11 over 182.5 kilometres from Marseille to Montpellier is expected 
  to be one for the sprinters, as it's their last chance before the risk of getting 
  eliminated in the Pyrénées. But green jersey leader Tom Boonen 
  wants to make it to Paris, so is looking for another win to add more points 
  to his cushion. There is a long neutral start today (25 minutes). The Départ 
  réel is in about ten minutes. 
13:09 CEST      We expect a few more readers from 
  Germany as the public TV channels have stopped broadcasting the race as of yesterday, 
  following the news that T-Mobile rider Patrik Sinkewitz was tested positive 
  for testosterone in his A-sample. ARD and ZDF said they would 
  not broadcast until the result of the B-sample is known, which may come in only 
  after the Tour.  
13:13 CEST      Yesterday's tenth stage marked the 
  halfway point in the race and saw eleven riders go clear and fight it out for 
  the stage win. When hostilities commenced in the last hour of race five forged 
  ahead and in the final dash for the line, Cedric Vasseur (Quickstep Innergetic) 
  came out ahead of his fellow Frenchman Sandy Casar (Française des Jeux).     
  Michael Albasini (Liquigas), Patrice Halgand (Crédit Agricole) and Jens Voigt 
  (CSC) were also in the final-kilometre scrap but they were not quick enough 
  for the win.     Vasseur won a stage [and held yellow for five days] 
  back in 1997, ten years ago. So he's going out in style in what is his last 
  Tour.  
13:14 CEST      We want to point out once again our 
  new SRM and GPS data feature, thanks to our partners SRM and the sponsor of 
  the live telemetry, T-Mobile. On the bottom of the screen there is a link titled 
  "Click here to see Live Rider Data and Positioning." From there you can see 
  live data from several riders. Watts, heart rate, speed and cadence, along with 
  GPS data where the riders are.      We hope that this feature will 
  help you better judge the performances of the riders and hopefully also better 
  track the riders on the route    Please note the SRM and T-Mobile telemetry 
  needs the latest version of the Java runtime environment to be installed on 
  the user's system. If you don't have this - and it's useful, non-invasive software 
  needed for many web-based applications - please visit the Sun website for the 
  Java download 
  page. When the telemetry page opens, please select a rider and then wait 
  a few moments for the data to begin to load. Each day we will update the riders 
  using this equipment, as the group of riders who are connected each day will 
  change. In addition to today's group, other riders who may also be connected 
  in subsequent stages include Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Patrik Sinkewitz (T-Mobile), 
  Sven Krauss (Gerolsteiner) and Christian Vande Velde (CSC) .    And 
  feel free to email us to the commentary box what you think about the live data. 
13:15 CEST      The real start is happening right 
  now. 
13:16 CEST      As was seen yesterday, these long, 
  hot transition stages are perfect for breaks to succeed. The riders are starting 
  to tire at this point and so for many in the peloton, a slightly easier day 
  is just the ticket. The green jersey competition is also a factor; Tom Boonen's 
  Quickstep team didn't want to chase yesterday as that would expose Boonen to 
  losing a chunk of points if anything had gone wrong. In the end he finished 
  second in the bunch gallop, slightly fortifying his lead over closest maillot 
  vert rival Erik Zabel (Milram).     Of course, Vasseur is also from 
  Boonen's team so it all worked out well for the squad.  
13:21 CEST      Former pro Marcel Wüst, who 
  won a total of 14 stages in all three Grand Tours combined, answered questions 
  from Spiegel readers today and talked briefly about the wattage to be 
  expected from a sprinter. Read more in our Latest 
  News edition 
13:22 CEST      Immediately after the start of racing 
  Freddy Bichot (Agritubel) attacked. He was joined by former KOM leader Stéphane 
  Augé (Cofidis) and the two Frenchmen tried to steal a march. However this was 
  nullified at km 2.  
13:23 CEST      The peloton has split thanks to the 
  fast start. There are a lot of tired legs out there.  
13:23 CEST      There's perhaps 20 riders in the 
  front group. If it stays clear we'll give you some names.  
13:29 CEST    7km/175.5km to go  The leaders have 
  an advantage of approximately 15 seconds now.  
13:35 CEST      The riders of the T-Mobile team have 
  been dealing with yesterday's news about Patrik Sinkewitz' positive A sample. 
  He was tested while at the team training camp on June 8th and reportedly had 
  a testosterone level 6 times greater than the maximum permitted threshold.     
  Sinkewitz is not officially positive until the B sample confirms the first reading, 
  but there is seldom a difference between the two. It is likely that an IRMS 
  evaluation will be carried out to determine if the testosterone was indeed from 
  an artificial source. One idea for anti-doping authorities would be to randomly 
  subject a certain number of urine samples to this specific test. If for example 
  one in five of tests were screened for artificial testosterone (whether or not 
  it was above the 4:1 threshold) it would appear to be one way to drastically 
  reduce the use of the substance.  
13:35 CEST      No SRM data for Patrik Sinkewitz 
  is available, today, of course. It would be quite interesting to see his heart 
  rate display these days.  
13:40 CEST      The T-Mobile team has this year introduced 
  a lot of testing plus a very rigorous ethical code. The remaining T-Mobile riders 
  at the Tour were reportedly very angry and disappointed at yesterday's news, 
  knowing that it puts a question mark over the future of the team.     
  Given that it is one of the leaders in the anti-doping fight, it would seem 
  to be very unfortunate if it did indeed stop because of what one rider may have 
  done. 28 other riders, the team staff and their families would effectively pay 
  the price for the actions of one, after all.      
13:48 CEST      The situation: At km 12.5 nine riders 
  were ahead, namely David Arroyo (Caisse d’Epargne), Jens Voigt (CSC), Daniele 
  Bennati (Lampre - Fondital), Heinrich Haussler (Gerolsteiner), Pierrick Fédrigo 
  (Bouygues Telecom), Sylvain Chavanel and Nick Nuyens (Cofidis), Benoit Vaugrenard 
  (Française des Jeux) and Kanstantsin Siutsou (Barloworld).     There 
  are 19 chasers.  
13:49 CEST    25km/157.5km to go  The peloton caught 
  the chasers and is now approximately 50" behind the nine leaders.  
13:51 CEST      Voigt is clearly annoyed at having 
  missed out yesterday, and has gone up the road again. He was strong during the 
  stage to Marseille but couldn't shake off the others.  
13:57 CEST       
   French champion Christophe Moreau  
  Photo ©: Cyclingnews.com
  
   
      
        
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13:57 CEST      The riders follow a mainly westerly 
  route today, initially moving north out of Marseille in the direction of the 
  beautiful city of Avignon, but then veering off towards Arles and Montpellier, 
  the finish point. It's really very flat, with just one categorised climb coming 
  38 km after the start. This is the fourth category Calissanne and won't pose 
  much problems to the heavier bodies in the field.     Just before that, 
  there is a sprint at La Fare Les Oliviers (km 31.5) and then another at Arles 
  (km 96.5). Immediately after that the riders hit the feed zone for some nosh. 
 
13:58 CEST    31km/151.5km to go  Christophe Moreau, 
  the French champion and leader of the Ag2r team, crashed but is back on his 
  bike. Meanwhile in the break, Bennati beat Nuyens and Fédrigo in the first sprint 
  of the day.  
14:01 CEST      Cyclingnews' Gregor Brown is on the 
  course and reports that the weather is a bit cooler today. It's about 30 degrees 
  Celsius out there, so that will give respite to the riders.  
14:04 CEST    38km/144.5km to go  At the Côte de 
  Calissanne (km 38), Siutsou took top points ahead of Fédrigo and Nuyens.  
14:12 CEST      The gap is now up to 1'45.  
14:17 CEST      The nine leaders have covered 50.8 
  kilometres in the first hour of racing.  
14:21 CEST      Alessandro Ballan (Lampre-Fondital) 
  told Cyclingnews' Gregor Brown before the start that he was hoping to 
  be in a break today. He expected tomorrow's stage to be harder than today, but 
  the bottom line for him is that "I need to try everyday." As he found out yesterday, 
  though, where he tried multiple times but missed the right move that stayed 
  clear, things don't always work out as planned to be in the break. It is instead 
  his teammate Daniele Bennati who couldn't wait for the sprint and is now in 
  that 9-man break. 
   Ballan rolls over the line  
  Photo ©: Sirotti
  
   
      
        
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14:24 CEST    57km/125.5km to go  Australian rider 
  Simon Gerrans also fell in the crash with Moreau. We presume he has been able 
  to continue.     Meanwhile, Milram, Predictor Lotto, Rabobank and Euskaltel 
  are chasing behind. Zabel is second in the points classification and so Milram 
  want to give him every chance in that competition.     Given that he 
  is quite a good climber when compared to other sprinters, tomorrow's stage may 
  be his best chance. There is a second category climb with 48 kilometres to go 
  and then quite a lumpy parcours for another 20 kilometres or so. If Boonen gets 
  left behind Zabel might have a chance.  
Current situation
  - David Arroyo (Caisse d'Epargne), Jens Voigt (Team CSC), Daniele Bennati 
    (Lampre-Fondital), Heinrich Haussler (Gerolsteiner), Pierrick Fédrigo (Bouygues 
    Telecom), Sylvain Chavanel and Nick Nuyens (Cofidis), Benoît Vaugrenard (Française 
    Des Jeux) and Kanstantsin Siutsou (Barloworld) 
  
 - Peloton at 1.20 
  
14:32 CEST    63km/119.5km to go  The gap is falling; 
  it's now just 55" 
14:36 CEST      Hans Michael Holczer, the team director 
  of the Gerolsteiner team, is following the break, which contains Heinrich Haussler. 
  Holczer said that the break has one problem, it's called Arroyo. "Well, the 
  problem is his GC standing, he's only about 7 and 1/2 minutes back, so this 
  is not a break that will get 15 or 20 minutes." Holczer has seen the chase going 
  on for about 60 kilometres at some 50 km/h. 
14:39 CEST      Sylvain Calzati (Ag2r Prévoyance) 
  has pulled out of the race. He won a stage last year but like his team-mate 
  Cyril Dessel, didn't make much of an impression this year. Dessel finished seventh 
  overall in 2006, 8'41 behind the did he/didn't he winner Floyd Landis, but this 
  year he is now 153rd overall, 1 hour 34'50 back.     Meanwhile Moreau 
  continues. He looks fine but his shorts are not doing too well...they are quite 
  tattered after his fall. Fortunately they preserve his modesty; we wonder what 
  would happen otherwise. Do team cars carry spares in case of emergencies?  
14:41 CEST      There are now three leaders; Chavanel 
  is clear with Vaugrenard and Bennati. They have shaken off Arroyo so that will 
  help their chances.  
14:44 CEST      We just passed some fans with Viking 
  hats on and the Norwegian flag on hand. We guess that may be supporters of Hagar 
  the Horrible, or maybe of Thor Hushovd, the nice guy. He wouldn't talk to Cyclingnews 
  or anybody else, however, before the start and his game face on. It was teammate 
  Julian Dean who revealed the tactic to Gregor Brown. "We want to have someone 
  in the break. I will work for Thor in the sprint." 
14:46 CEST    70km/112.5km to go  They attacked the 
  others at km 65. Eight others were then chasing, namely Vincente Garcia Acosta 
  (Caisse d’Epargne), Kurt-Asle Arvesen (CSC), Haimar Zubeldia (Euskaltel Euskadi), 
  Alessandro Ballan (Lampre Fondital), Thomas Voeckler (Bouygues Telecom) , Enrico 
  Poitschke (Milram), 1998 King of the Mountains Christophe Rinero and Saunier 
  Duval sprinter Fran Ventoso.  
14:48 CEST    79.5km/103km to go  The chasers have 
  been caught and the three leaders are now giving up. Savoldelli (Astana) is 
  riding back through the cars after puncturing.     Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner) 
  attacked the peloton just before the three were hauled back.  
Current situation
  - Benoît Vaugrenard (Française Des Jeux), Sylvain Chavanel (Cofidis) and Daniele 
    Bennati (Lampre-Fondital) 
  
 - Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner) 
  
 - Peloton at 0.10 
  
14:50 CEST    81km/101.5km to go  Chavanel has attacked 
  on his own, going just before they were reeled in.  
14:51 CEST      Of all things, German TV is now showing 
  a cooking programme instead of the Tour de France. Even with Sinkewitz' positive 
  A sample, that could lead to a few complaints! 
14:54 CEST    83km/99.5km to go  It's all over for 
  Chavanel. He's been caught.  
14:58 CEST      On the theme of doping in sports, 
  golf player Gary Player yesterday called for testing in pro golf. There is currently 
  none taking place, despite the huge prize money involved. Player said that growth 
  hormones and steroids are being used.    
15:03 CEST      After Chavanel's recapture, there 
  are now four riders clear on what has been a very aggressive stage thus far. 
  They are Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Philippe 
  Gilbert (Française Des Jeux) and Xavier Florencio (Bouygues Telecom).     
  David Millar (Saunier Duval Prodir) is chasing alone.  
15:07 CEST      Hans-Michael Holczer had some more 
  words about the TV mess in Germany and said that it affects the teams financially 
  because the sponsors need to TV exposure, otherwise they won't support cycling. 
  He also thought that riders who dope should have to be prosecuted (there is 
  no law right now in Germany against 'sports cheating', unlike for example in 
  Italy). Holczer also said that SAT 1, a cable channel, has taken over 
  the. coverage and he thought it'd be interesting to see how they do, given that 
  they had to do it from one day to the other. As he spoke, the T-Mobile car drove 
  by and Bob Stapleton said hi. 
15:08 CEST    95.5km/87km to go  In the peloton, 
  white jersey Alberto Contador chats to fellow Spaniard Iker Camaño (Saunier 
  Duval-Prodir). The peloton has taken the foot off the gas and is 3'03 back.    
  Millar, meanwhile, is still chasing. He is 31 seconds behind the four leaders. 
  It's probably in their interests that he gets up as he will help drive this 
  move along.  
   Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner)  
  Photo ©: Bjorn Haake
  
   
      
        
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15:10 CEST    96.7km/85.8km to go  Millar is closing 
  the gap. He is just 15" back now. He's a strong time trialist and so should 
  have the horsepower to do it.  
15:12 CEST      The leaders went through Arles a 
  couple of minutes ago, where the first sprint was taking place.     
  Millar now catches them. He'll sit on for a while and get his energy back, then 
  start going through.     By the way, Florencio, Wegmann and Gilbert 
  were the first three over the line in that intermediate sprint.  
   David Millar (Saunier Duval-Prodir)  
  Photo ©: AFP
  
   
      
        
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15:13 CEST      Millar has been reportedly suffering 
  from what has been described as a 'sun allergy'. We are not sure how this differs 
  from sunburn, but he's having bad sleep because of it.  
15:16 CEST      For those of you who might be watching 
  French television, they can't seem to make up their minds if they are covering 
  the Tour de France or local tourist hotspots! The cameras have wandered off 
  to show images of Arles' ancient outdoor theatre. It's interesting stuff, but 
  they are spending more time on such forays than on the race itself!  
15:17 CEST      From the Hindenberg IV and its trusty 
  pirate's telescope, we can spot Christophe Moreau getting some attention from 
  the race doctor. He is disinfecting the skin grazes he has, but his injuries 
  don't look serious. Probably more a precaution than anything else.  
15:18 CEST    102.5km/80km to go  There is a stall 
  in the bunch and the riders are across the road. Rabobank, Milram and T-Mobile 
  are on the front. The gap should increase considerably as a result.  
15:23 CEST    106.5km/76km to go  When Millar performed 
  below par in the prologue, he vowed to win a stage. This would appear to be 
  his chance today.     The peloton are crossing the Rhône now. The river 
  beings at the Rhône Glacier in Valais, Switzerland, and flows down through France. 
  It's 800 kilometres in length and passes such places as Brig, Sion and Geneva 
  in Switzerland, and Lyon, Montélimar, Avignon and Arles in France.     
  The gap is over six minutes now.  
15:25 CEST      CyclingNews' Brecht Decaluwé, 
  who has finally shaven yesterday following the unfortunate break-in into the 
  Cyclingnews team car, is now aerodynamic enough that he was able to catch 
  up with sprinter Bernhard Eisel before the start. Eisel said that Patrik Sinkewitz 
  is a good friend of his and he won't "make red cross over his name just because 
  of what happened." He wants to stay friends and called Sinkewitz "a great guy," 
  but did acknowledge that "Patrik wasn't very smart and he did something really 
  stupid." 
Current situation
  - Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole) and Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Philippe 
    Gilbert (Française Des Jeux), David Millar (Saunier Duval-Prodir) and Xavier 
    Florencio (Bouygues Telecom) 
  
 - Peloton at 6.51 
  
15:27 CEST      France certainly has a huge amount 
  of historic and cultural sights. Little wonder it's the most visited country 
  in the world. It had 75 million foreign tourists back in 2003 and we presume 
  that number has increased since. The Tour de France must certainly add to that, 
  given that the TV images are a moving postcard for viewers all around the world. 
 
15:27 CEST      Millar is working so he's recovered 
  from his effort.  
15:30 CEST      According to Cyclingnews' Brecht 
  Decaluwé, the two German channels who pulled out of live coverage yesterday 
  (ARD and ZDF) were forced to give in their accreditation today, presumably by 
  the Tour organisers. As mentioned above, SAT1 has taken over the broadcasting 
  for Germany.  
15:30 CEST      For more details on Slipstream read 
  this interview with Jonathan Vaughters. 
15:32 CEST    111.5km/71km to go  The Astana team 
  have now hit the front and are really ramping up the pace! There are some side 
  winds and they are trying to split the field. Vinokourov is also rolling through, 
  so we can only guess he is feeling better.     Riders at the back of 
  the peloton are losing contact now.     Igor Anton (Euskaltel Euskadi) 
  has abandoned.  
15:33 CEST      There are echelons forming at the 
  back of the race; we don't know yet if any major players have been isolated.     
  Astana are driving it, with occasional assistance from Caisse d'Epargne.  
15:36 CEST      Discovery are also driving it. There 
  is a sizeable dropped group now. We estimate that the front bunch is down to 
  perhaps 70 to 90 riders now.     The riders will continue to turn the 
  screw, hoping that more get dropped. The bunch is really splitting, and Christophe 
  Moreau has been left behind! He is riding to try to get back on, but has a ten 
  second gap to close.  
15:39 CEST    117.5km/65km to go  That elastic has 
  snapped, methinks. He could lose a lot of time here if he is not careful.....     
  Caisse d'Epargne are now driving it. Vinokourov is clearly feeling somewhat 
  better as he was right up there.     The AG2R riders are on the front, 
  four of them riding for Moreau.     Rasmussen, Hincapie, Contador and 
  Boonen are amongst those up front.  
15:40 CEST      The leaders are now just 5 minutes 
  ahead. Their chances may well be affected by the riding behind. The groups are 
  not trying to bring them back, but rather shell some of the favourites.     
  This transition stage got a whole lot more exciting!  
15:42 CEST      The Rasmussen/Vinokourov peloton 
  with many of the race favourites is 4'47 behind the break. Moreau's group is 
  5'14 back, thus 27 seconds down, and another big group containing Thor Hushovd 
  and others is at 6'18.  
15:43 CEST    119.5km/63km to go  The Moreau group 
  appears to have cracked. He is doing a lot of riding but they seem to be moving 
  quite a bit slower.  
15:47 CEST      The Astana riders must have spotted 
  that Moreau was towards the back of the field after his visit to the doctor's 
  car, and decided to take advantage of that. Halgand (Credit Agricole) and Michael 
  Boogerd (Rabobank) are also in the Moreau group.  
15:48 CEST      Moreau's group have slipped back 
  rather dramatically. They are over a minute back now. The peloton is 3'18 behind 
  the break, with Moreau 4'33 in arrears. Hushovd's group is 5'45 down.   
 
15:50 CEST    125.5km/57km to go  It's still Astana 
  doing the bulk of the work.     Martin Elmiger and Jose Luis Arrieta 
  are back with Moreau, riding for him.     The break is losing time here. 
  That's unfortunate for them.     There's still quite a way to go to 
  the finish. If this continues, Moreau could lose five minutes.  
   Alexander Vinokourov (Astana) grits  
  Photo ©: AFP
  
   
      
        
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15:53 CEST      This morning, Moreau started sixth 
  overall, 3'18 behind maillot jauneMichael Rasmussen.     Vinokourov 
  has now told his team to stop working! He is annoyed that no other teams are 
  riding. So Moreau may have been handed a lifeline.    
15:53 CEST      It is up to the other teams now to 
  decide if they want to ride, or if they are happy for a regrouping to take place. 
 
   Robert Hunter (Barloworld) on the left 
   
  Photo ©: AFP
  
   
      
        
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15:56 CEST      Cyclingnews' Brecht Decaluwé points 
  out that the riders are passing through the Camargue regional park. He says 
  it is a windy river delta near the coast with bulls, Camargue horses, flamingos...and 
  mosquitoes.  
15:58 CEST    129.5km/53km to go  Quickstep - Innergetic 
  and Barloworld are now riding. They clearly want this to keep going. Quickstep 
  will be riding for Boonen and his stage-win chances, while the Barloworld guys 
  have Robert Hunter as their fast man.  
15:59 CEST      The peloton is 2'07 behind the break, 
  which looks likely to be caught if this continues. Moreau's group is 3'31 back 
  so he is still in trouble.  
16:03 CEST      Barloworld and Quickstep can now 
  be dreaming of an easier win, as the other sprinters such as Zabel, Hushovd 
  and Förster are back in the second peloton. 
16:04 CEST      Vinokourov is Astana's captain but 
  they also have Andreas Klöden for the overall; he started today 8th overall, 
  3'50 back. Vino is 21st overall, 8'05 down. Those gaps sounds considerable but 
  if you look at the time gaps between everyone bar Rasmussen (in other words, 
  where all the other contenders are), second-placed Valverde is 2'35 back.     
  Time trialists Klöden and Vinokourov are therefore 1'15 and 5'30 behind Valverde, 
  and should make up time on him in the TT. If Rasmussen loses considerable time 
  in Saturday's time trial (as is expected), things could be quite a bit tighter 
  heading into the next mountain stages.     There is also another time 
  trial to come later in the race so Astana know that they still have a strong 
  chance of doing something overall.  
16:05 CEST      It all depends on how Klöden and 
  Vinokourov are recovering from their injuries.     Watch out for Cadel 
  Evans, though; he's a strong time trialist and is clearly going well.  
16:06 CEST      Sven Krauss is at the back of the 
  second peloton, which is strung out in one ling line. It's not a good place 
  to be. Lose the wheel in front of you and you are gone. The only way to come 
  back is to hang onto the team car and accept a time penalty... 
16:09 CEST    138.5km/44km to go  Moreau is now 1'50 
  behind the yellow jersey group. Barloworld and Quickstep remain on the front, 
  pushing for a sprint finish.     The break is now just a minute ahead. 
  Millar is talking to his team car and takes on bottles; that's clever, because 
  once they are caught he can hand them over to others on the team. It'll save 
  somebody else going back to the cars later and having to chase back on.     
 
16:10 CEST    139.5km/43km to go  The group of Moreau 
  and the 2nd peloton have now rejoined. Good news for Moreau, who can now count 
  on many helpers, like Credit Agricole and Milram, who want their sprinters to 
  get back up to the front. 
16:12 CEST    141.5km/41km to go  The break is doomed. 
  The riders there are now just 34 seconds ahead.  
16:16 CEST      With Zabel in the chasing group, 
  a win by Boonen would give him a considerable lead in the green jersey competition.     
  Ag2r are still doing almost all of the work behind.     The yellow jersey 
  group is now just 11" behind the break. Moreau is 2'14. Millar has already sat 
  up, deciding to save some energy. He is caught and the others also get reeled 
  in.  
16:18 CEST      The peloton is passing near the walled 
  city of Aigues Mortes. French TV are off again, violins a-playin' in the background... 
 
16:19 CEST    147km/35.5km to go  Discovery Channel 
  is in the front group, including George Hincapie and Levi Leipheimer. We also 
  presume Cadel Evans is in there, but he tends to get very aerodynamic and is 
  hard to spot. Vladimir Gusev was one of the guys stuck in the second peloton 
  earlier. At some point today he carried 10 bottles, that may have been his down 
  fall. 
16:20 CEST      We have a rather neat solar-powered 
  TV set in the Hindenburg; at times we can only fly so close, you know... The 
  Tour has fixed wing craft and helicopters, so it can get quite crowded.  
16:23 CEST    150.5km/32km to go  Ag2r continue their 
  chase behind, with some assistance from a Lampre rider. However the gap is coming 
  down now, 1'32. Realising that, Astana get back on the front.  
16:24 CEST      Iván Gutiérrez (Caisse d'Epargne) 
  is also stuck in the back group, whereas Cadel Evans can count on teammate Chris 
  Horner, who is in the front. 
16:24 CEST      A rider from Saunier Duval-Prodir 
  is also up there at the head of the peloton. They have a sprinter who could 
  do well, Francisco Ventoso.  
16:26 CEST      The peloton heads through Saint Just. 
  It's a nice town with sandstone-coloured buildings.  
16:26 CEST    152.4km/30.1km to go  Dario Cioni is 
  taking on some bottles for his Predictor teammates. It is not as warm as yesterday, 
  but with the real race on now, the riders still lose a lot of fluids. 
16:27 CEST      Boonen is near the front, smiling. 
  He can smell the bunch sprint.     Astana's driving has pushed the gap 
  back up a little. It's now 1'44. Simon Gerrans is assisting the chase, so he 
  is clearly also okay after his earlier fall.  
16:29 CEST      Stéphane Goubert (Ag2r Prévoyance) 
  is riding on the front, trying to get his captain back into overall contention. 
  He often trains in this area, but would have imagined a quieter day for riding 
  in his backyard. 
16:29 CEST      Française des Jeux are also helping 
  Ag2r at this point.  
16:30 CEST      The fields on the side of the road 
  have been mostly harvested already, which makes the countryside look a bit bleak. 
16:33 CEST      Some trees line the left hand side 
  of the road and provide some shade for the few spectators who decided to come 
  out to watch the stage, instead of hopping into the nearby ocean, which the 
  field has done on occasions.  
16:34 CEST    159.5km/23km to go  Quite a few teams 
  have sent riders to the front of the peloton now, so the gap should go up again. 
  The gap now is 1'56; Moreau may have lost all chance of winning the Tour today. 
 
16:36 CEST      Alexandre Botcharov (Crédit Agricole) 
  has taken over the last spot from Sven Krauss, but neither is a threat to Vansevenant 
  for the last place overall 
16:38 CEST      Both fields are riding through Mauguio 
  at 50 kilometres an hour. That's about the speed limit so they can't ride faster. 
 
16:38 CEST      Somebody reported the peloton to 
  the police in the Giro a few years ago for speeding. Jan Ullrich once got a 
  ticket in Berlin while motor pacing. 
16:40 CEST    164.5km/18km to go  Gerdemann is also 
  in the front part of the field. He has lost both jerseys he had, but is still 
  in good spirits. The field is going through a gigantic roundabout. 
16:41 CEST    165.5km/17km to go  We are on one long 
  straight road, next to a canal. It will be very hard for someone trying a break 
  off the front now, as the sprinters are trying to control it. 
16:43 CEST    167.5km/15km to go  Quickstep and Barloworld 
  are still the teams to do most of the work. And of course Ag2r, but in the second 
  field. Milram is also putting in some work to get Zabel up front, but it will 
  be hard. Hunter finished second to Hushovd last week. If it stays like this 
  he will beat the Norwegian today, but can he get past Boonen? 
16:44 CEST      And traffic for another roundabout. 
  The Tour would certainly look different if we wouldn't have those. 
Current situation
  - first Peloton with Rasmussen, Vinokourov, Boonen 
  
 - second Peloton with Moreau, Hushovd, Zabel at 2.09 
  
   Tom Boonen (Quickstep-Innergetic)  
  Photo ©: Cyclingnews.com
  
   
      
        
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16:48 CEST    170.5km/12km to go  The winner gets 
  35 points today and Zabel will likely not get any as only the first 25 score 
  at the finish. More good news for Boonen, who is in the front group that now 
  passes a tree lined road. 
16:48 CEST      Riders from Saunier Duval, QuickStep, 
  Liquigas, Barloworld and Discovery Channel are on the front.  
16:50 CEST    172.5km/10km to go  Ag2r continue their 
  forlorn chase but it's a losing battle now.     Barloworld are very 
  focussed. They've taken one stage win so far in the race; confidence is high 
  and a second would be welcome.  
16:51 CEST      The Tour isn't won today but it certainly 
  can be lost any day, even in the flats. Moreau will lose over two minutes today 
  and lose his sixth place, where Tadej Valjavec (Lampre-Fondital) will drop out 
  of the top 20 
16:51 CEST      The riders are already in Montpellier, 
  threading their way along the streets. The roads are nice and wide here.  
16:53 CEST      The CSC riders are wearing neon yellow 
  numbers. They are the leading team thanks to Voigt's ride yesterday.     
  Moreau goes through. It's been a hard day for the team. He and Simon Gerrans 
  crashed, they had two punctures and Calzati pulled out.  
16:55 CEST      Chris Horner is perhaps 20 riders 
  back in the yellow jersey group. They no longer have Robbie McEwen for the sprints, 
  but Freddy Rodriguez might go okay.  
16:57 CEST    177.7km/4.8km to go  1998 King of the 
  Mountains Christophe Rinero jumped clear but was brought back. QuickStep are 
  on the front with Boonen third wheel. However another rider goes; Vinokourov! 
16:57 CEST      He is clearly feeling better. He 
  has got about 2" so far but the whole peloton is behind him.  
16:57 CEST      The DS for Predictor told Cyclingnews 
  that in a sprint Fast Freddie Rodriguez can have a go, but it is now all for 
  Cadel Evans and the overall. Rodriguez still has bandages, but is going better 
16:59 CEST      He's been caught again. However it 
  looks like he is coming around again after his crash. Don't forget that in last 
  year's Vuelta, he was in patchy form in the first week but got stronger towards 
  the end. So if he recovers completely from his injuries and also follows this 
  pattern, he could do some damage.     Boonen is in sixth position.  
16:59 CEST    181.5km/1km to go  A CSC rider tries 
  to go. No joy.  
17:00 CEST      Some riders went down on a bad bend; 
  Boonen is not there any more.  
17:00 CEST      Liquigas are up there, T-Mobile... 
17:00 CEST      And Hunter goes! 
17:01 CEST      He gets it!     Boonen fell 
  with four or five others. Ventoso went down, also Schleck. 
17:02 CEST      Correction - Boonen didn't actually 
  fall...He got brought off to one side, though, when the riders went too fast 
  into a tight roundabout.  
17:02 CEST      Cancellara came right up on Hunter 
  at the end, nearly getting it...  
17:03 CEST      The Moreau group just rounded the 
  corner where the crash was, and had to avoid the ambulance there.  
17:03 CEST      Ouch..they are over three minutes 
  back.  
17:04 CEST      That's a great ride by Hunter! Cancellara 
  was a close second, then Fischer, Pozzato.. 
17:09 CEST      So two wins in three days for Barloworld! 
  They were originally a South African-based team and still have four riders from 
  there. A reshuffling of team management happened at the end of 2005 with John 
  Robertson leaving and Claudio Corti taking over. This led to a dilution of the 
  South African contingent, but they still have strong riders from the country. 
  The main sponsor also originates from there, even though it is now a global 
  company. 
17:10 CEST      That's the first South African win 
  in the history of the race. Well done to Hunter..     He was with the 
  Phonak team last year but moved to Barloworld when the Swiss squad folded.  
17:12 CEST      A T-Mobile rider was right up there 
  with 500 metres to go but seemed to mis-time his move, going too early. We think 
  it was their sprinter Bernhard Eisel, but not sure as yet. Kim Kirchen got tenth, 
  though.  
17:14 CEST      Kirchen has been riding strongly 
  and should fare well overall.  
17:16 CEST      Boonen nearly hit the barriers but 
  got his foot down in time. That roundabout was very dangerous and the guys on 
  the front of the peloton got the entry wrong.     He is okay, but will 
  rue the missed opportunity to build a big lead in the points competition. 35 
  points were on offer today to the winner. As a result of this, Hunter moves 
  to within 11 points of him in that classification.  
17:27 CEST      So Rasmussen continues in yellow 
  for now. The only significant change in the top ten was clearly Moreau's loss 
  today. He is now very unlikely to win this race. That's unfortunate for him, 
  as it seems that it was his crash and resulting medical treatment which ultimately 
  led to him being in a vulnerable position in the bunch.     He's gone 
  from sixth place to dropping out of top ten, with Astarloza moving up from his 
  overnight position of eleventh.     That completes our live coverage 
  of today's eleventh stage of the race. Thanks for reading! It was quite an exciting 
  day thanks to that Astana move in the crosswinds.     The acceleration 
  in pace cost Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), 
  Philippe Gilbert (Française Des Jeux), Xavier Florencio (Bouygues Telecom) and 
  David Millar (Saunier Duval - Prodir) their chance. They were unlucky to be 
  caught in the crossfire of the GC battle.  
Provisional results
1 Robert Hunter (RSA) Barloworld
2 Fabian Cancellara (Swi) Team CSC
3 Murilo Fischer (Bra) Liquigas
4 Filippo Pozzato (Ita) Liquigas
5 Alessandro Ballan (Ita) Lampre-Fondital
6 Paolo Bossoni (Ita) Lampre-Fondital
7 Claudio Corioni (Ita) Lampre-Fondital
8 Philippe Gilbert (Bel) Française Des Jeux
9 William Bonnet (Fra) Crédit Agricole
10 Kim Kirchen (Lux) T-Mobile
General classification
1 Michael Rasmussen (Den) Rabobank                                         
2 Alejandro Valverde Belmonte (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne                           2.35
3 Iban Mayo Diez (Spa) Saunier Duval - Prodir                                  2.39
4 Cadel Evans (Aus) Predictor - Lotto                                          2.41
5 Alberto Contador Velasco (Spa) Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team            3.08
6 Carlos Sastre Candil (Spa) Team CSC                                          3.39
7 Andreas Klöden (Ger) Astana                                                  3.50
8 Levi Leipheimer (USA) Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team                     3.53
9 Kim Kirchen (Lux) T-Mobile Team                                              5.06
10 Mikel Astarloza Chaurreau (Spa) Euskaltel - Euskadi                         5.20
 
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