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Twenty-nine at the line! Cavendish surpasses Hinault, slots into second in all-time Tour stage wins

July 07, 2016
Twenty-nine at the line! Cavendish surpasses Hinault, slots into second in all-time Tour stage wins

The “Manx Missile,” Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data), made it a hat-trick of wins at the 2016 Tour de France on Thursday, beating out Marcel Kittel (Etixx-QuickStep) and Tour rookie Dan Mclay (Fortuneo-Vital Concept) to win Stage 6 in Montauban.

Cavendish, 31, continues to turn back the years and with this victory he has now surpassed Frenchman Bernard Hinault for sole position of second place on the all-time Tour stage win list. As Cavendish’s Tour stage wins came fewer and far between in recent years, it appeared Eddy Merckx’s win total of 34 would be a tough feat to match for the rider from the Isle of Man. However his uptick in speed at this year’s race has put Merckx’s record back on the table.

A tricky final three kilometers, which featured three roundabouts, created a disorganized run-in and saw several different leadout trains lead the peloton into the finish. Katusha and LottoNL-Jumbo powered the peloton with Kittel and Cavendish seen a bit far down in the peloton. The two perennial sprinters showered their experience though and got into position near the front with 500 meters remaining.

Kittel launched first and Cavendish followed, the two going shoulder-to-shoulder down the center of the road. The Dimension Data rider proved to be the strongest and was able to out-kick the German to capture Tour stage win number 29.

“Today I sprinted like in the old days,” Cavendish said. “I stayed safe in the fast long run-in. It was slightly downhill. I needed to do the right thing. I agree with [Dimension Data performance manager] Rolf Aldag when he says that my return to the track has helped me take the split-second decisions. He has been part of my team’s staff almost my entire career. He listens to me, solves the problems. He knows how it works. He knows how to support someone. Him and [directeur sportif] Roger Hammond are the most formidable managers to make decisions. My wins don’t happen ‘like that.’ They come from a plan we get each day.”

tdf 2016 stage6 dimension data

McLay showed his potential on the first few sprint stages by garnering top-10 positions, but broke through on Stage 6, sprinting to a podium position. Alexander Kristoff (Katusha) finished fourth, with Andre Greipel (Lotto-Soudal) a distant 15th.

Cavendish takes over the lead in the points competition from Peter Sagan (Tinkoff), who finished sixth on the stage.

No changes occurred in the general classification, meaning Greg Van Avermaet (BMC Racing) will wear the maillot jaune on Friday as the race heads into the high mountains.

“It couldn’t have gone better I think,” Van Avermaet said. “It was a beautiful day, not too hilly, beautiful weather, no stress, and just a hard final. In the end it was really good, there were a lot of Belgian people on the road on vacation with flags and they supported me really well so it was a wonderful day for me. We are a cycling country, so it’s really nice to have a few Belgians up there in the final and a stage win with me, and the Yellow Jersey. It was one of the best days of my career, so far.”

HOW IT HAPPENED

The sixth stage of the 2016 Tour de France allowed the peloton to catch its collective breath after a lumpy stage across the Massif Central and before a tough three days in the Pyrenees of France, Spain, and Andorra beginning on Friday. The 190.5km (118.3mi) flat stage from Arpajon-sur-Cère to Montauban was the last opportunity for the pure sprinters until after the Tour’s first rest day on Monday.

The Tour had only finished in Montauban once before, in 1998, and on that occasion the great breakaway specialist of the 1990s, Jacky Durand, won out of a breakaway with a fierce finishing sprint.

Jan Barta (Bora-Aron 18) and Yukiya Arashiro (Lampre-Merida) escaped after three kilometers and built an advantage of more than five minutes before Lotto-Soudal, Etixx-QuickStep, and Dimension Data began reeling them back in, so their respective sprinters could contest for victory at stage’s end.

With important stages to come and temperatures touching 32 degrees Celsius (90F), hydration was key, and riders were constantly collecting bidons from their respective team cars at the back of the peloton.

With 113km to go, Barta crossed the intermediate sprint point first with the peloton trailing the leading duo by about four minutes. Bryan Coquard (Direct Energie) crossed the intermediate sprint point first out of the peloton.

tdf 2016 stage 6 conquard points

The category 3 Côte de Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val (3.2km at 5.1%), topping out with under 40km to the finish, failed to put any of the sprinters in difficulty and the peloton, led by Thomas Voeckler (Direct Energie), brought the gap to the leaders down to under a minute.

Direct Energie did the bulk of the work on the front of the peloton after the final KOM point of the stage and brought back the leading duo of Barta and Arashiro with 22 kilometres remaining.

Stage 6 Breakaway Evolution 1

The riders successfully navigated the twisting final three kilometres and the teams of Kristoff and Dylan Groenewegen (LottoNL-Jumbo) fought for control of the front of the peloton under the red kite.

Etixx-QuickStep surged to the front in the final 500 metres with Kittel in tow and Cavendish locked on his wheel.

tdf 2016 stage 6 kittel

Kittel opened up the sprint, but Cavendish had the greater power of the two and won the stage by half a wheel.

“Only one stage victory at the Tour de France makes a career or a season, so I’m obviously happy with three this year,” Cavendish said. “If I win only one more by the end of my career, I’ll be happy as well.”

tdf 2016 stage 6 1000m

Julian Alaphilippe (Etixx-QuickStep) kept his white jersey as the Tour’s Best Young Rider for another day, and Thomas De Gendt (Lotto-Soudal) will wear the polka-dot jersey as leader of the King of the Mountains competition into the Pyrenees.

On Friday the Tour finally enters the high mountains with a 162.5 (101mi) stage from L’Isle-Jourdain to Lac de Payolle. With 2,230m (7,316ft) of climbing on the docket, it is a stage for the climbers of the peloton. The category 1 Col d’Aspin (12km at 6.5%) comes just before the finish, as the stage finishes in the valley below the climb, not on the summit. With a seven-kilometre descent to the finish a climber with cagey descending skills could see themselves victorious in Lac de Payolle.


Race Notes:

  • Peter Sagan has spent 74 out of 89 days in his Tour de France career leading the points classification

This article was originally published on cyclingtips.com


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