94th Tour de France - ProT
France, July 7-29, 2007
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Stage 7 - Saturday, July 14: Bourg-en-Bresse - Le-Grand-Bornand, 197.5km
Complete live report
Bonne fête nationale! Cyclingnews welcomes all the readers on
our live coverage from France, where the festivities are in full swing to celebrate
Bastille day on this 14 juillet. Traditionally this is the day where
all the French riders are extremely motivated to get a stage win. Anybody who
wants to get first today better have their climbing legs packed, as on their
route between Bourg-en-Bresse and Le Grand Bornard over 197.5 kilometres the
riders have to go over several category 3 and 4 climbs before heading up the
category 1 Colombière pass. from there it's fast descent down into Le
Grand Bornard.
13:03 CEST 34.5km/163km to go We are at the first
climb of the day and there is an acceleration immediately from Michael Rasmussen
(Rabobank) and Mikel Astarloza (Euskaltel-Euskadi)
13:04 CEST Behind yellow jersey Fabian Cancellara
is already in trouble.
13:05 CEST The peloton is already down to fifty
people on that vicious acceleration.
13:05 CEST The results of the first climb of
the day are Rasmussen, picking up four points toward the climber's jersey, followed
by Gorka Verdugo (Euskaltel - Euskadi) with three, Chavanel with two and Discovery's
Sergio Paulinho with the last point. The Euskaltel rider was
obviously Verdugo, not Astarloza.
13:07 CEST Four guys are slightly off the front
right now. The field in the back is stretched out in an desperate attempt to
getting back to front peloton.
13:08 CEST There are a flurry of attacks right
now. Several smaller groups are trying to break away from the front peloton.
The second big group including Cancellara is about 37 seconds back.
13:11 CEST An Astana guy joins the front which
has already swelled to six.
13:12 CEST The front group contains: Linus Gerdemann
(T-Mobile), Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Rubén Pérez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)
Laurent Lefèvre (Bouygues Telecom) among others.
13:13 CEST Here is the complete break down of
the group in the front. There are seven now: Egoi Martinez (Discovery Channel),
Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard (Française des Jeux), Ruben Perez
Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli (Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit
Agricole) and Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom)
13:14 CEST Oscar Freire pulled out before the
stage today - it was a planned withdrawal so he could avoid having surgery for
the cyst on his undercarriage. He was 5th overall, and third in the points classification.
The Rabobank team's focus is now changing toward the mountains classification
for Rasmussen.
13:17 CEST 44.5km/153km to go Inigo Landaluze
(Euskaltel - Euskadi) and David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval) have bridge to
our seven leaders, and we now have a very strong breakaway. The race has definitely
heated up - both figuratively and literally. It was 27 degrees at the start,
and the riders have already averaged 40.6km/h.
13:18 CEST 46.5km/151km to go Juan Antonio Flecha
(Rabobank), a Quickstep rider and a Caisse d'Epargne rider are trying to bridge
to the nine up front.
13:19 CEST There are still plenty of riders
in the main bunch - Alexandre Vinokourov (Astana) is soldiering on and is there
with his teammate Ivanov. John Gadret (Ag2r) is there with Moreau and Yaroslav
Popovych (Discovery Channel) has been spotted there as well.
13:22 CEST Christophe Moreau is on the front
of the field, pushing the pace. He'd really like to be in the front group right
now. He's French after all and it's Bastille Day and he's the French Champion.
13:25 CEST Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio
Flecha (Rabobank) and José Ivan Gutierrez (Caisse d'Epargne) are still trying
to bridge. The nine ahead are working smoothly together, but Gutierrez is the
winner of the Tour de Med this year - he's not a weakling. The yellow
jersey has rejoined the main peloton thanks to hard work from Jens Voigt.
13:26 CEST 52.5km/145km to go Now that the yellow
jersey has rejoined, the bunch has sat up and that should help our 12 men up
front get together.
13:27 CEST 53.5km/144km to go There's still a
second peloton, but it appears to be the sprinters' 'grupetto' - McEwen, Boonen
- the guys with the fast twitch. Thanks to the mass natural of the yellow jersey
group, they get back on in the narrow roads of a small village.
13:29 CEST The front nine are hammering down
the French country roads. The trio behind is still at 20 seconds and it will
be very hard for them to see the front.
13:30 CEST Phew! After an interesting start
to the day, things are starting to settle down a bit and we'll take this time
to list our unfortunate victims of the 94th Tour de France. Only
181 riders remain in the race at the start of stage 7.
- Stage 1: DNF Eduardo Gonzalo Ramirez (Spa) Agritubel - broken collarbone
- Stage 3: DNS Tomas Vaitkus (Ltu) Discovery Channel - broken thumb stage
two
- Stage 4: DNF Xabier Zandio Echaide (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne - broken collarbone
- Stage 5: DNS Rémy Di Grégorio (Fra) Française des Jeux - broken elbow stage
four
- Stage 5: DNF Brett Lancaster (Aus) Team Milram - sciatica
- Stage 6: DNS Geoffroy Lequatre (Fra) Cofidis - multiple injuries
- Stage 7: DNS Oscar Freire (Spa) Rabobank - saddle sore/cyst
- Stage 7: DNS Ruben Lobato (Spa) Saunier Duval
13:30 CEST Gutiérrez is taking a long pull on
the front. Flecha and Tanking just try to stay on his wheel It is a desperate
chase for them to catch the front guys, who have a nice paceline going.
13:31 CEST Vladimir Karpets just crashed!
13:33 CEST Vinokourov has been in the front
group during the accelerations, and could hold the pace. Now after his natural
break he is also lighter and should be ok to get up the climbs. We'll see if
his knees hold up.
13:34 CEST Before we started our live coverage
today, the first intermediate sprint took place after a flurry of attacks. The
Quickstep team, interested in taking every opportunity to build on Boonen's
lead in the points competition controlled the moves until the sprint, just 16.5km
into the day, where Boonen took max points ahead of Erik Zabel - who isn't giving
up without a fight - and Lampre's Daniele Bennati.
13:34 CEST Flecha got slightly gapped on a downhill
stretch but is now back with Tanking and Gutiérrez. Karpets is back in the peloton.
He had a mishap, but apparently did not really crash. Phew.
13:35 CEST The trio can see the nine in front
now. It is a desperate chase, but now only a few more seconds of advantage.
13:36 CEST And the three have made it! It is
now a group of 12 in the front, with the peloton, who has led up, more than
five minutes back. Elmiger and Wegmann are trying to bridge. The
two are 40 seconds behind right now.
13:37 CEST Back to our recap, after the first
intermediate sprint, a group of 15 split including Americans George Hincapie
and Christian Vande Velde, Thomas Voeckler, Felix Cardenas, Philippe Gilbert
and more, but with mountain points coming at the 35.5km mark, the Cofidis and
Rabobank teams were motivated to bring that group back for Chavanel and Rasmussen.
Current situation
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli
(Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir), Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom),
Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank) and José Ivan Gutierrez
(Caisse d'Epargne)
- Peloton with Yellow jersey at 5.07
13:40 CEST 65.5km/132km to go We have another
group trying to bridge up to the front - three men, Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues
Telecom), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r) and German champion Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner)
are 40" behind the leaders.
13:42 CEST Radio Tour says that the last-placed
rider Enrico Degano (Barloworld) has abandoned the race. They said the same
yesterday, but he finished, in fact in 16th place. He did crash yesterday and
was behind for a while. We will wait for some more confirmation, but it looks
like the rider who was the first to start this Tour by kicking off the prologue
last Saturday, is out of the race.
13:42 CEST 67.5km/130km to go The race is heading
down the long, gradual and sinuous descent from the plateau, and are just about
to the bottom where the roads will be relatively flat for 40km or so - all the
way until the feed zone at km 106.5 where the road kicks up to the second climb
of the day.
13:44 CEST Twelve years ago it was Frenchman
Laurent Jalabert, who took one of the most beautiful victories in his career
on Bastille Day. So beautiful that the climb near Mende, where stage 12 ended,
was named after him and is no called Montée Jalabert. Not only
did he win the stage, but his whole Once team had put the pressure on Miguel
Indurain all day. Indurain survived one more year before his reign came to an
end. Laurent Jalabert now follows the Tour for French television
on a motorized two-wheeler. His brother Nicolas Jalabert is still in the peloton
with Agritubel, and in fact is in the Tour this year. He also rode the Montée
Jalabert in Paris-Nice this year, a moment that still fills him with proud
as he revealed that in 1995 "I was watching the stage on TV."
13:46 CEST The trio behind the twelve is now
at 16 seconds and they may actually make it. The front dozen is riding consistent,
but not quite hammering like before.
13:47 CEST 70.5km/127km to go The trio has made
it and there are now 15 people in front.
13:50 CEST The break of 15 men isn't just a
throw away move. With a two time Giro winner Paolo Savoldelli in the move, Martinez,
who was 12th overall and won the mountains classification in the Vuelta last
year, 'Guti', who won the Tour of the Med, and De La Fuente, who was 3rd best
climber in last year's Tour, the GC contenders will want to keep this break
under control. The Ag2r team of Christophe Moreau will be called
upon to do the work not only because they want to win the overall, but because
it's Bastille day and they want to win the stage. John Gadret spoke
with Cyclingnews at the start and explained that "it's a special day
- I'm going to be at the front, but I don't have the liberty to attack - it's
all for Moreau."
13:52 CEST There are 'only' three Frenchman.
For Bastille Day we would have expected a few more. They are outnumbered by
the six Spanish riders. The number of German speaking racers is also equal to
the French. The Italian, Kazakh and Dutch are feeling a bit lonely.
13:54 CEST The gap has gone out to almost eight
minutes as the situation for the day has been set. 15 in the front will try
to have a good enough advantage on the Colombière to hold off the rest.
13:55 CEST The race is heading into some of
the most scenic areas of the Rhône-Alpes, home to many a bike race, but also
to stunning chateaus, vistas and waterfalls. One of the nearby waterfalls, the
Cascade de Cerveyrieu comes from a hole in the side of the mountain and falls
60 metres onto huge rocks below.
13:59 CEST Two of the strong men in the break
are current and former national champions: current German champion Fabian Wegmann
is in the rotation ahead of the former Swiss champion Martin Elmiger. They're
getting more time now as they roll through in a pace line, but now Predictor-Lotto
is on the front chasing.
13:59 CEST 80.5km/117km to go Chavanel is leading
the mountain's classification and has added two more points on his account by
getting third at the first climb of the day, the Corlier. But first over the
top was Rasmussen, who got the maximum of four points. He has now twelve points
total and is still over 25 points behind the Frenchman.
14:02 CEST Chavanel said yesterday that he expected
to keep the jersey today. He must be feeling strong. But the lengthy Dane will
surely eat into Chavanel's lead on the French National holiday. Currently, however,
neither is in the break and the mountain points will be divided between the
men in front. Good for Chavanel, bad for Rasmussen.
Benoit Vaugrenard (FdJ)
Photo ©: AFP Photo
|
14:02 CEST 83.5km/114km to go Predictor-Lotto
is setting the tempo for their GC hopeful, Australian Cadel Evans. Evans has
been quietly confident, and while he's not as explosive a climber as Valverde
or Sastre, his skills against the clock put him in a very good position for
a high finish in Paris. At the start today, Evans told Cyclingnews'
Gregor Brown that he thought some teams would ride to put Vinokourov into difficulty
- probably the French teams like Ag2r, but their team wouldn't waste any energy
on that. Chris Horner vowed that he would stay by Evans' side. While
he might have a chance to take a stage if the opportunity comes, the first priority
is to stay with Evans.
14:05 CEST 85.5km/112km to go Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux) is in this move, and he's long since become the virtual
leader of the Tour - he was 12th place, just 52" behind Cancellara at the start
of the day, and in the distinguished position as best placed Frenchman in the
race.
14:06 CEST 85.5km/112km to go Gerdemann attacks!
He's going for the money at the intermediate sprint. He opens up a massive lead.
14:09 CEST Pérez took second in the sprint with
a pretty mean kick ahead of Bram Tankink. They get 450 and 300 euros to Gerdemann's
800 for the sprint - that's worth the effort!
14:10 CEST Gerdemann has a little chat with
his directeur sportif. Maybe he was told to not try to go for all the sprint
points. Make enemies in a group of 15 and you'll get screwed at some point.
It's all about tactics and collaborations.
14:12 CEST The ASO puts up good money for the
biggest bike race in the world, and there's a chance for just about everyone
to line their pockets. From 450,000€ for the overall down to just 400€ for 150th
place on GC in Paris, the list is rather top-heavy. 20th place gets 950€.
14:12 CEST 89.5km/108km to go After Gerdemann
has taken the sprint, it is Pérez and Tanking in second and third. After the
sprint the pace line was temporarily disrupted for taking on some drinks and
advise.
14:14 CEST Winning a road stage nets €8000,
while Tom Boonen will be looking for €25,000 if he takes the green to Paris.
That's some decent motivation to get over the mountains! Prize money for a mountain
sprint depends on the category of the climb, from €800 for a 'Hors category'
down to just €200 for a category 4.
Current situation
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli
(Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir), Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom),
Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank), José Ivan Gutierrez
(Caisse d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r Prévoyance)
and Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues Telecom)
- Peloton at 8.12
14:15 CEST We are in the Rhône valley
on a beautiful, warm day. A nice day for a little ride out in the country side
and going up some hills. Lotto is riding on the front of the peloton together
with CSC. McEwen must be thinking about the sprint after the last climb of the
day.
14:17 CEST For every day he's spent in yellow,
Fabian Cancellara not only gets the Credit Lyonnaise stuffed Lion and the kisses
from the podium girls, but he also gets a cool €350 - he's earned more than
€4000 so far with his two stage wins.
14:17 CEST The road is currently very flat.
Time for Cancellara to fulfil his duty in yellow - going back to the team car
and grab some bottles for the rest.
14:19 CEST The CSC team has overtaken the Astana
squad as best team after Vinokourov's crash and subsequent team time trial that
spent many of the men, and there's good reason for them to keep going to hold
that classification - €50,000 to the winning team in Paris and €2,800 for each
day they keep the bright yellow numbers.
14:22 CEST 97.5km/100km to go Cadel Evans is
apparently feeling good, so his team is on the front. We expect an attack from
the Australian today. Other riders who will try to lighten up the mountains
are Michael Rogers, Alberto Contador, the Caisse d'Epargne trio (Pereiro, Karpets,
Valverde), Sastre, Schleck of CSC and of course Christophe Moreau. It should
be an interesting day ahead of us. The lead is just under eight minutes with
100 kilometres to go.
14:24 CEST We are passing Seyssel, which is
divided by the Rhône river and connected via smaller foot bridge in the
older part of town.
14:26 CEST Robbie McEwen has the jersey zipped
wide open and the sleeves rolled up. He went back to the team car to get some
bottles. It is hot, hot, hot.
14:28 CEST Despite the feed zone being less
than 10km away, rider in the break are getting bottles from their team cars,
causing a little split in the group of 15.
14:31 CEST Have we mentioned it's hot out there?
The sun is blazing down on the Tour today - sapping the strength of the peloton
and frying their skin. Cofidis' Nick Nuyens was looking mighty pale at the start
- the fair skinned Belgian said he was slathering on the sunscreen, and scowled
at the temperatures - "it's too hot for me down here!"
14:38 CEST To quote the 'teen talk' Barbie,
"Math is hard". We made a little error with a zero in Cancellara's prizes so
far - he's taken €8000 each for the two stages, putting his total toward the
€20,000 mark when you factor in the split on the team prizes and his days in
yellow. The riders don't get to keep all of that however, they have
to share the prizes with the other riders and the team staff.
14:39 CEST Navarro brings back up Kashechkin,
who took a little time out. The lead is down to 6'36"
14:40 CEST 108.5km/89km to go The breakaway men
have gotten their feed, and Wegmann is off the back fiddling with his bottles,
but no worries for the German - the other 14 will wait for him. They're cruising
along and will see the road tip up soon. We should see the gaps start to fall
as the peloton remains on flat ground and the break is slowed by the increasing
grade on the way to the Cruiseilles - a 3rd category climb.
14:42 CEST 110.5km/87km to go The break, as predicted,
is losing its advantage. Down to 6'30 now. But the race today is quite a bit
faster than previous stages. They averaged a whopping 47.5 km/h for the second
hour - for a total of 44.2 km/h on the day. Now that's more like Tour de France
pace!
14:43 CEST The peloton now gets to the feed
zone, and are single file behind the Predictor-Lotto train. Let's hope they
all get through safely after feed zone crashes two days in a row!
14:45 CEST It's when the riders empty their
bags and discard the musettes that things get dangerous, but the single-file
peloton seems to have gotten through just fine. They face a long, lonely highway
weaving through dense trees toward the hills ahead.
Current situation
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli
(Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir), Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom),
Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank), José Ivan Gutierrez
(Caisse d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r Prévoyance)
and Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues Telecom)
- Peloton at 5.58
14:46 CEST We are coming up to the Cruseilles
climb, a category 3 hill. Not as bad as the last mountain, which is La Colombière.
Yes, the same mountain featured in stage 17 of last year's Tour where Landis
had his astonishing comeback to win the stage and put him back into contention
for the overall. Back then they went up the other side as they will face today.
Christian Prudhomme, the Tour director, said that "did not spent one second
thinking about last year." All that ASO wanted some "difficult mountains and
no mountaintop finish, to keep the suspense up."
14:49 CEST Henrik Redant, the directeur sportif
of Predictor-Lotto, confirmed that the team does not want the gap get too high
up, so they are riding tempo now. CSC is also on the front, but not for the
yellow jersey of Cancellara anymore. They will want to protect Sastre and Schleck.
14:50 CEST 115.5km/82km to go The breakaway is
passing a unique sculpture - it's a string of cable suspended from a tall scaffold
and has dozens of bicycles dangling from it. They're on quite narrow roads now
and passing a construction zone that seriously narrows the road.
A horse gets starts when they come by, but keeps cool enough not to bolt onto
the road and chase after the riders.
14:52 CEST 116.5km/81km to go Six kilometres
until the top of the Cruseilles climb, and the peloton is still bringing the
breakaway closer. Predictor-Lotto has the front 30 men single file.
14:52 CEST 116.5km/81km to go Paolo Savoldelli
of Astana is looking good. He looks easy leading the group when it is his turn
to pull through and makes the uphill look easy.
14:55 CEST Mickaël Delage (Française Des Jeux)
has currently a heart rate of 167 and the speed is 42 km/h. They are going uphill,
by the way, as they are approaching the cat 3 climb.
14:56 CEST One rider who won't be doing much
except recovering today is yesterday's solo breakaway, Bradley Wiggins (Cofidis).
He spent 191km off the front yesterday, and he told Cyclingnews this
morning that he was going to climb off today - but was just joking! He said,
"I'm glad I did it - I've always wanted to do something like that."
14:57 CEST Romain Feillu (Agritubel) is hanging
at the back and struggling to keep up. His body is going left and right over
his machine as he is struggling to get more power out of his legs.
15:00 CEST Robbie McEwen has done his team work
and is dropping back, along with Napolitano. The sprinters will try to form
a 'grupetto' today. The more people that are in that group the easier it is
to convince the organizers to leave them in the race, even if they missed the
time cut.
15:02 CEST 121.5km/76km to go Now on the lower
slopes of the second climb, the peloton is no longer lined out, and have bunched
up for the moment. The break ahead is 1km from the top.
15:03 CEST The Cruseilles is 7.1km in length,
but a mere 4.4% average. Like most of the Alpine climbs, the grade is fairly
steady but relentless.
Current situation
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli
(Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir), Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom),
Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank), José Ivan Gutierrez
(Caisse d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r Prévoyance)
and Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues Telecom)
- Peloton at 6.09
15:04 CEST The field is passing the giant polka-dot
gate that the community under the Cruiselles has put up.
15:05 CEST 122.5km/75km to go Near the top of
the climb we have an attack! It's De La Fuente who goes for the points, and
opens up a large gap.
15:06 CEST Just after the climb, the road goes
past the community of Copponex, and they've spelled the town's name out in -
something, hay bales maybe? - that are visible from above.
15:08 CEST David De La Fuente was last year's
Tour most aggressive rider - he's up to his old tricks again, but was caught
over the top. In one of the towns along the route, the peloton passes
a big herd of cows and a group of people who have made a heart shape out of
their hay. They've painted three of the poor animals up in yellow, green and
white and red dots.
15:09 CEST The town has also drawn a huge bicycle
in a field, and have a sort of maypole in the center of each hub with people
wearing yellow t-shirts prancing around the rims holding ribbons for 'spokes'.
15:11 CEST 127.5km/70km to go The CSC team has
come to the front today to join Predictor-Lotto in the chase now that the gap
has gone out a little bit to 6'47. They're just now reaching the top of the
climb and will make up time on the descent.
15:14 CEST 129.5km/68km to go Landaluze leads
on the long, wide open and straight descent toward the Peguin climb.
15:16 CEST 130.5km/67km to go Lefevre pulls through
as the breakaway heads up the Peguin - not Penguin mind you. Cancellara has
come to the front of the chasing peloton and is second wheel behind Wim Vansevenant
(Predictor - Lotto) and in an aero position with his hands draped over the bars.
15:18 CEST Cancellara will almost assuredly
give up the yellow today, but is hoping to pass it along to a team-mate. Perhaps
Frank Schleck? He takes the front on a descent and is taking it very fast.
15:21 CEST 131.5km/66km to go The break is holding
a six minute plus lead as they head up the Peguin - the peloton is still descending
behind.
15:22 CEST The leaders are nearing the top of
the Peguin, and it's a big ring affair. Wegmann is sitting on the back, getting
out of the saddle as Landaluze pulls off and De La Fuente accelerates on the
front.
15:23 CEST 134.5km/63km to go The Saunier Duval
rider again gets clear in ahead of the line, and is cheered on by a slew of
fans waving big green hands and banging noise makers.
15:25 CEST 135.5km/62km to go The grupetto is
small today - Romain Feillu (Agritubel), Danilo Napolitano (Lampre), Sébastien
Chavanel (Française des Jeux) and Robbie McEwen (Predictor - Lotto) are distanced
from the peloton well in advance of the end of the race. They'll have a long
62 kilometre team pursuit to make the time cut, but will most likely get some
help before the end of the race. Tom Boonen, in contrast to these other sprinters,
is sitting comfortably in the chasing peloton.
15:27 CEST The four men off the back are still
going uphill, and still have contact with the team cars, so there is hope that
they'll rejoin on the descent. They've got more than 10km of downhill to aide
their chase.
15:27 CEST Brian Holm, the directeur sportif
of T-Mobile, said from the comfort of his team car that the team really wanted
to have someone in the break, and first it was Marcus Burghardt who tried twice,
then Gerdemann once. The second time that Linus Gerdemann went he finally made
it into the right break. Holm thinks that if they have five minutes it may be
enough to win the day. Once over the top of the Colombière it is just
downhill to the finish in Le Grand Bornard.
David Zabriskie (Team CSC)
Photo ©: Bjorn Haake
|
15:29 CEST David Zabriskie (CSC) pours a bottle
of water over his head, and joins Kurt-Asle Arvesen (CSC) in the delivery of
bottles to the rest of the CSC team. As the peloton heads over the climb, McEwen
and crew get back onto the tail end of the bunch. Whew! That's it before the
daunting Col de la Colombière, so they should be safe.
15:30 CEST CSC is still setting the tempo, but
now Ag2r is bringing up Christophe Moreau on the right. They still have a long
haul to the final climb, but will start to help bring the break back to try
and give their team a French victory on Bastille Day in Le Grand Bornand.
Current situation
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile), Benoît Vaugrenard
(Française des Jeux), Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli
(Astana), Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole), Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir), Laurent Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom),
Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha (Rabobank), José Ivan Gutierrez
(Caisse d'Epargne), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r Prévoyance)
and Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues Telecom)
- Peloton at 6.11
15:34 CEST Rolf Aldag told Cyclingnews'
Brecht Decaluwé yesterday that the team is going well and they wanted to check
out how Vino and Klöden are doing. The team may just control and not attack
this weekend. It is a dangerous stage and Aldag told his riders to be on the
lookout.
15:37 CEST The Discovery Channel will be happy
to know that their man Allan Davis has won the first stage of the tour of Qinghai
lake. The Australian sprinter won the sprint from a break of 18.
15:40 CEST As the peloton speeds down the hill
at 57km/h, only the men on the front and the ones going back for bottles like
Murilo Fischer (Liquigas) are doing much work - Auge's heart rate is only 119
bpm. The break heads past a roundabout, and the guys up front get
their heart rates up as Flecha, De La Fuente and Martinez have to bunny hop
the median - whoops!
15:44 CEST 152.5km/45km to go And in the peloton
the yellow jersey continues to have frequent brushes with danger - he has to
bunny hop a sudden traffic island as the peloton races to bring the gap down.
6'16 now for the 15 up front.
15:45 CEST The finishing town of Le Grand Bornard
is known for hiking in the summer and skiing in the winter, but is also the
leading agricultural town in the Savoy region, offering dairy reblochon cheese.
15:46 CEST 153.5km/44km to go Now is the time
when we here at Cyclingnews try to amuse ourselves with a little game
called 'guess the catch'. With our 15 men working smoothly together ahead of
an animated peloton, they're holding over six minutes advantage. With just 44
km to go, and 15km before the start of the final climb, when do you think they'll
be caught if at all?
15:47 CEST The first category 1 climb of the
race averages 6.8% - significantly tougher than the other climbs of the race
so far. But the first day in the mountains can make or break a rider's GC hopes.
Some have a hard time finding their climbing legs while others shine at the
start and then fade after a few days.
15:48 CEST If the break stays away, look to
Savoldelli to try and salvage the Astana team's Tour after Vino and Klöden's
injuries.
15:49 CEST Didi Thurau and his younger son Urs
are on the route. Thurau was 15 days in yellow in 1977. Thurau thinks that
Vino's injuries hurt tremendously, but are also bad mentally and the he and
Klöden will have started today's stage with a different mindset.
15:50 CEST 157.5km/40km to go The peloton splits
around another median, and we see American Chris Horner at the back getting
bottles. Cancellara is still up front swapping pulls with the tall, thin, long-legged
Predictor-Lotto rider Wim Vansevenant.
15:51 CEST Thurau predicts Savoldelli to win,
his son thinks it will be Moreau. The older son Björn Thurau just signed
a contract as a neo-pro.
15:55 CEST 160.5km/37km to go With a few kilometres
before the last climb officially starts, the road is already starting to kick
up and Pérez launches an attack!
15:56 CEST 162.5km/35km to go Perez' attack has
split the front group somewhat, and Tankink has bridged up.
15:59 CEST 163.5km/34km to go The break comes
back together, but Perez continues hammering on the front while De La Fuente
shakes out his legs. Their gap is down to 5'33.
16:01 CEST 164.5km/33km to go We now see Lampre
coming to the front to pick up the pace in the peloton. They have plenty of
sprinters, but climbers?
16:02 CEST Lampre's Spanish rider Patxi Vila
was 15th in the final classification in the Giro, so he goes uphill fairly well.
16:03 CEST The high pace has stretched out the
field. Ventoso is all the way in the back, hanging on for dear life. McEwen
is also way in the back, along with Steegmans.
16:06 CEST The speed of the peloton has tremendously
increased and the lead has dropped to 4'37"
16:07 CEST And Cancellara still on the front.
He will do all he can to deliver his captains to the final climb in perfect
position to catch the front group.
16:08 CEST 169.5km/28km to go The gap is now
down to 4'20.
16:08 CEST 169.5km/28km to go Gutierrez goes!
The break is on the climb but have a long way to go, and De La Fuente goes after
him.
16:09 CEST The two open up a 200m gap, but still
have a whopping 13km to go. Savoldelli can't hold the pace - he started the
Tour a bit sick and isn't looking smooth at all.
16:10 CEST 170.5km/27km to go Detonation! The
break is blown apart and Vaugrenard is the next to lose it, as does Lefevre.
So much for the French hopes in the break!
16:11 CEST 170.5km/27km to go Cancellara waves
goodbye and drops off into the grupetto with Boonen, Wiggins, Hushovd and more
friends.
16:12 CEST Gerdemann was able to go up to De
La Fuente and 'Guti' - they've got one more coming up.
16:13 CEST 170.7km/26.8km to go Fofonov is the
rider coming up and Gerdemann goes! Fovonov gets on terms and counters - dropping
De La Fuente and Guti.
16:14 CEST Guti and De La Fuente are holding
a steady pace compared with the out of the saddle effort of Gerdemann. It's
still a long way to go! Meanwhile Zabel has joined the autobus.
16:23 CEST 175.1km/22.4km to go The gap to Gerdemann
and Fovonov is at 24 seconds. There are 7.5 kms to the top of the climb.
16:23 CEST Rabobank is on the front, Moreau
can be seen near the front. Niermann is riding tempo for Rabobank.
16:24 CEST Maxim Iglinskiy (Astana) drops off
the back. Boogerd is also on the front. Rabobank seems to be working for Rasmussen
and the polka-dot jersey - or perhaps Menchov for the overall.
16:25 CEST De la Fuente and Gutiérrez have been
joined by Landaluze.
16:26 CEST Gutiérrez is dropping back. Fovonov
and Gerdemann are still on the front,, five kilometres form the top.
Gerdemann attacks.!
16:27 CEST 177.5km/20km to go A vicious attack
by the German, less than five km form the top
16:28 CEST Fofonov can't hold the pace. Once
Gerdemann is over the top, all he has to master is the downhill.
16:30 CEST The main field is about 5 minutes
back, so it could be enough to win the stage for the breakaway, which has now
broken up in many little groups.
16:31 CEST The Barloworld rider that attacked
out of the field, is back in. Sandy Casar has trouble. Flecha is caught and
will help the Rabo train in the front
16:31 CEST 178.5km/19km to go Gerdemann pedals
along on the front, where the other German, Stefan Schumacher, is on the back
end of the field.
16:32 CEST 179km/18.5km to go The Rabobank chase
is heading under the 20km banner as Gerdeman soldiers along ahead - speeding
up the climb.
16:32 CEST Chavanel will not get any points
today. He'll have enough, though, to keep the Polka-dot.
Current situation
- Linus Gerdemann (T-Mobile) and Dmitriy Fofonov (Crédit Agricole)
- Iñigo Landaluze (Euskaltel-Euskadi), David De La Fuente (Saunier Duval-Prodir)
at 0.45
- Egoi Martínez (Discovery Channel), Benoît Vaugrenard (Française des Jeux),
Rubén Pérez Moreno (Euskaltel - Euskadi), Paolo Savoldelli (Astana), Laurent
Lefevre (Bouygues Telecom), Bram Tankink (Quickstep), Juan Antonio Flecha
(Rabobank), Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner), Martin Elmiger (Ag2r Prévoyance),
Jérôme Pineau (Bouygues Telecom) and José Ivan Gutierrez (Caisse d'Epargne)
spread out
- Peloton at 4.10
- Second Peloton with Yellow and Green Jersey at 5.30
16:33 CEST Savoldelli is caught by the Peloton.
Vino and Kloedi are in the group still.
16:34 CEST Fovonov is caught by De La Fuente
and Landaluz. Gerdemann should have about 50 seconds over the threesome.
16:34 CEST Hincapie is in the group with Casar.
16:35 CEST 179.5km/18km to go Savoldelli is dropped.
16:35 CEST 179.5km/18km to go Michael Boogerd,
in his last year as a professional racer, takes the front setting pace with
Rasmussen behind. The leader has 3.5 km to go before the top.
16:36 CEST 180km/17.5km to go De La Fuente has
lost contact with Landaluze and Gerdemann has 46" on the Euskaltel rider with
3km to go to the top.
16:38 CEST 180.5km/17km to go In the peloton,
Moreau, Valverde, Evans are all looking comfortable with the pace.
16:39 CEST 180.8km/16.7km to go Caisse d'Epargne
has hit the front for Valverde, but they still have several minutes gap behind
Gerdemann.
16:40 CEST There is a group of about 25 riders
in this select group - John Gadret (Ag2r) is one of the elite men, he'll be
working for Moreau.
16:40 CEST The road is on the side of a steep
drop, and if Gerdemann wasn't working so hard he could take in the stunning
view. But Landaluze can see him, and De La Fuente is digging deep to get on
terms.
16:42 CEST 181.5km/16km to go Alberto Contador
and Leipheimer are there for Discovery, Rogers, too. Rogers looks pretty solid
on the climb.
16:42 CEST Sastre is there, as is Kashechkin
and even the battered duo from Astana - Klodie and Vino. Gusev is even here
still.
16:43 CEST Rasmussen, Menchov, Boogerd - all
of them are here. Gerdemann looks parched - he's got a film of salt
around his mouth and is wagging his tongue - surely he's dehydrated in this
heat.
16:45 CEST 182.1km/15.4km to go Landaluze is
losing ground now as the T-Mobile rider is within the 1km to the top of the
climb. Gadret, who set pace for Moreau, lets go of the first group but is still
struggling. Iban Mayo is in the group with Moreau as well.
16:48 CEST Gerdeman had his head down and nearly
ran into the back of a motorcycle that had stopped! Landaluze is getting pushes
from the Basque fans, but swats them away.
16:48 CEST Gerdemann is coming to the top through
a tunnel of spectators, struggling and reaches what looks like the edge of the
world!
16:49 CEST What a view - it's a steep drop from
the top of this climb, and now Landaluze comes over.
16:50 CEST 184km/13.5km to go Rasmussen attacks
for the rest of the points - 'the chicken' goes clear easily.
16:51 CEST 185.5km/12km to go The peloton is
still climbing, with a sheer rock face on their right. Rasmussen almost runs
into the Ag2r car! It stopped with 100m before the top and he nearly ran into
it but sprinted around and got the points.
16:52 CEST 186.5km/11km to go It's a race down
hill now, and all the riders are zipping up for the long descent to Le Grand
Bornard. Gerdemann is taking all sorts of risks - simply hammering down the
hill.
16:53 CEST 187.5km/10km to go Gerdemann's flying
- he sees the 10km to go, and Landaluze is behind nearly running off the road
in the attempt to catch him.
16:53 CEST 189km/8.5km to go This is going to
be a quick, quick last few kilometres and the chasing bunch is single file on
the descent - nice view without a tree to block the line of sight.
16:54 CEST 189.5km/8km to go Gerdemann is on
the top tube tucking as tight as he can - he's taking every advantage he can
in his 53x11 with 8km to go.
16:55 CEST Gerdemann is increasing his lead
with that supreme aero tuck - Landaluze is 28" back now.
16:56 CEST Vino is at the back of the chase
as the leader has 7km to go - he's not taking any risks with his injured body.
16:56 CEST Caisse d'Epargne leads the chase
through the 10km to go banner - 3.5km behind the lone leader
16:57 CEST 191.5km/6km to go With such a fast
descent, it looks like Gerdemann can pull this one off. He takes a hairpin bend
at speed and holds it up - Landaluze isn't gaining on him.
16:57 CEST Savoldelli would have a hard time
beating this frantic descent - Gerdemann is FLYING!
16:57 CEST 192.5km/5km to go Rasmussen is caught
by the chasers, and Vinokourov shakes his head - trying to keep his courage
and fingers off the brakes.
16:58 CEST 193km/4.5km to go Antoher hairpin
bend and Gerdemann is continuing to plummet to victory. He's very good at the
downhills - only 24 years old and still fearless.
16:59 CEST Gerdemann has opened up more real
estate on Landaluze - 34" now and he gets back into that tuck - sitting on the
top tube with his chin on the bars.
17:00 CEST 194.5km/3km to go Landaluze is 600m
behind - he won't overtake the German. He's from the cycling capital of Muenster.
17:00 CEST 195km/2.5km to go Gerdemann is taking
maximum risks - he's inside the barriers now and still just ripping the turns
- taking it very, very close to the outside on the exit.
17:01 CEST 195.5km/2km to go Gerdemann is not
in danger of being caught by the Caisse d'Epargne-led chase group. He's starting
to relax a bit now, perhaps his team director told him he had the win in the
bag and to make sure he holds the bike upright.
17:02 CEST It's a climb into Le Grand Bornard,
and Gerdemann has 36" now on Landaluze as he sees the 1km to go banner.
17:03 CEST The staunchly antidoping young rider
is looking to get T-Mobile's second big win after Marco Pinotti took pink in
the Giro - he could be in yellow tonight!
17:03 CEST He's within the final metres now
and has his mouth open wide - the fans are going wild here and there will be
plenty of German fans to cheer him on.
17:04 CEST And Gerdemann gets the win! 40.41km/h
and 4:53:13 on the day.
17:05 CEST Landaluze comes in 40 seconds back
and Gerdemann looks wrecked. He's covered in dried salt and is helped into the
RV. De La Fuente comes in 1'38 behind the winner. It's a long, painful
uphill drag.
17:06 CEST A Barloworld rider takes 4th ahead
of a Bouygues Telecom rider - and Wegmann is holding on for sixth from the break.
17:07 CEST Wegmann is dangling right ahead of
the chase group led by Bouygues Telecom and Quickstep.
17:08 CEST Bernard Kohl lost a little time when
he was dropped by the chasers. Gadret comes in trailing a bit behind the main
bunch.
17:09 CEST Christophe Moreau was 9th in the
bunch, and we still have some stragglers coming in. Chavanel comes in more than
five minutes behind in the polka dot jersey.
17:11 CEST That was a stellar effort by the
young T-Mobile rider.... George Hincapie is coming in with Zabriskie
in a small group seven minutes back.
17:12 CEST Gerdemann is in yellow tonight!
17:18 CEST Gerdemann will enjoy his one day
in yellow tomorrow, but it's going to be tough for the young rider to hold onto
it with three category one climbs in the second half of the stage.
Thanks for reading and come back tomorrow for the big mountain top finish in
the Alps!
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