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Tour de France Stage 9: Dan Martin holds on for stage win, Chris Froome resists pressure to keep yellow

Garmin-Sharp rider atacks with Astana's Jakob Fuglsang 35km from end of big day in the Pyrenees...

Dan Martin of Garmin-Sharp, a past stage winner in the Vuelta and victor in Liege-Bastogne-Liege and the Tour of Catalonia earlier this year, has added a stage win of the Tour de France to his palmarès. The 26-year-old attacked along with Astana's Jakob Fuglsang on the last of five big climbs on today's 168.5km stage from Saint-Girons to Bagnères de Bigorre, the pair staying out front on the 22 kilometre descent to the finish.

With Peter Kennaugh crashing and Richie Porte suffering following yesterday's exertions, race leader Chris Froome of Team Sky found himself isolated from his team mates for almost the entire stage, but managed to withstand a series of attacks from his rivals and retains the yellow jersey ahead as the race heads north, with a rest day in Saint-Nazaire tomorrow.

Martin becomes the fifth Irishman to win a Tour de France stage – the others are his uncle, Stephen Roche, Shay Elliott, Sean Kelly and Martin Earley.

It’s a curiosity, however, that Martin, who hails from Birmingham, is also the first UK-born stage winner since Chris Boardman won the 1998 Prologue in, of, all places, Dublin; no subsequent British stage winner – Bradley Wiggins, Chris Froome, David Millar or Mark Cavendish – was actually born in the Uk.

With a saw toothed profile due to those four big climbs – a Category 2, followed by five Category 1 ascents – today’s second Pyrenean stage of the 100th edition of cycling’s biggest race represented an opportunity for Froome’s rivals to try and claw back some of the time they had lost yesterday.

In that stage, ahead of Froome’s emphatic win at Ax 3 Domaines, Kennaugh and Porte had put in huge turns on the front on behalf of their team leader. Indeed, such was Sky’s dominance that Porte lay second on GC this morning, the only rider able to keep within a minute of Froome yesterday.

But this had always looked like a stage for a potential ambush to be laid against Sky’s plans, and Garmin-Sharp and Movistar would be among the day’s major protagonists.

The racing was furious from the start, with a series of attacks from the likes of Vacansoleil-DCM’s Johnny Hoogerland, Garmin-Sharp’s David Millar and Jack Bauer, and Tejay van Garderen of BMC Racing all trying and failing to get away inside the first 20 kilometres ahead of the day’s first ascent, the Col de Portet d’Aspet.

The pace left Froome, whose Sky colleagues had been setting the pace at the front of the group, with just four team mates to help him as the climb began and almost 150 kilometres left to ride.

Soon there was one less as the 24-year-old Kennaugh, riding his debut Tour de France, crashed into a roadside ditch, resulting in him looking shaken and nursing a gash on his elbow.

Briefly, Froome found himself with no team mates as Porte fell back and worse, a number of riders had formed a group slightly ahead, with the yellow jersey battling to get back on.

He would be rejoined by Porte ahead of the next climb, the Col de Menté, but this time the Australian found the going to tough and was dropped, eventually toiling home some 18 minutes down.

Garmin-Sharp, through attacks from riders including Martin, Jack Bauer and David Millar, had been among the most prominent of the day’s protagonists, and now it was Tom Danielson followed by Ryder Hesjedal who crested that Category 1 summit at the head of the race.

With 124.5 kilometres left to ride, the isolated Froome now found himself under repeated attack as his rivals sought to dislodge him, with Movistar taking their turn to go on the offensive, Rui Costa, Alejandro Valverde and Ruben Plaza all trying to put the Team Sky man under pressure.

Up ahead, the identity of the men, and the size of the groups, at the head of the race would ebb and flow over the next two climbs, with Thomas de Gendt of Vacansoleil-DCM pipping Europcar’s Pierre Rolland to the maximum mountains points on the Col de Peyresourde.

Next, Orica-GreenEdge’s Simon Clarke riding alone over the summit of the Col de Val Louron-Azet, which came with 58 kilometres left. Back in the maillot jaune group, Froome’s rivals had still failed to break him.

One more climb remained, La Hourquette d’Ancizan, an ascent of 9.9 kilometres at an average gradient of 7.5%, with Ag2R-La Mondiale's Romain Bardet, now out in front on his own as the road began to head uphill, but he would soon be caught.

Quintana would launch a series of attacks to try and dislodge Froome, and other riders too made bids to break clear of what was becoming an ever-shrinking GC group, but the decisive one came from Martin and Fuglsang who crested the summit around three quarters of a minute clear.

That margin would be slashed by half ahead of the finish, but they wouldn’t be caught, Martin outsprinting the Dane for the win. Behind, Michal Kwiatowski of Omega Pharma-Quick Step led the bunch home to take third place on the stage.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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Colin Peyresourde | 10 years ago
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It is actually heartening that they had an off day. It is certainly a human response (I.e. shows that they may not have covered all the bases by doping).

It was odd that Movistar could not make more of the situation. They didn't really seem to make an 1-2 combinations count.

Agree about Contador too. Though, at present, his comments about him getting stronger make me think he is going to blood dope later. But maybe he is saying that to save face.

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notfastenough | 10 years ago
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Certainly a strange day. After yesterday Andy Schleck is reported to have said that Sky would pay later for their big efforts, and so it proved, although as said above, how does a 7-man Movistar team fail to take the stage or dislodge a lone leader? Still, they moved up to 2nd. Contador may as well have been somewhere else, such was his anonymity.

Rest day just in time, Pete Kennaugh's off was rather spectacular.

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Metjas | 10 years ago
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One of the most exciting stages of the TdF I've seen. What a performance of Froome to hang on, and how Movistar managed to not get more out of this stage is beyond me.

Kreuziger seems stronger than his leader Contador who did nothing to make life for Froome any harder, clearly not the man he once was in the mountains.

Rather worrying though how team Sky apart from Froomey has fallen apart so dramatically in this stage, with Kiryienka eliminated from the race. I can't quite remember the last time a yellow jersey team so spectacularly disintegrated. Rest day just in time.

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Colin Peyresourde | 10 years ago
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Anyone see the mooner in Azet? Proper pull your pants down and show the world your whites. Quite a lingering shot by the helicopter too. Classic.

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Mostyn | 10 years ago
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Racing was as it should be in the TDF. Todys race was excellant; well done Dan Martin; and Valverde, Contador and Schleck. Chris Froome did well to hold on. Seems there was no elixir in the Sky Bottles today? What a difference a day makes.

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The Rumpo Kid | 10 years ago
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Phil Liggett: "And on the podium is Neil Martin." Why is this useless lying incompetent still on television?

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Ghedebrav replied to The Rumpo Kid | 10 years ago
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The Rumpo Kid wrote:

Phil Liggett: "And on the podium is Neil Martin." Why is this useless lying incompetent still on television?

Yeah, I heard that! How many times will he be allowed to get the winner's name wrong?!

Mind you, speaking of blunders, that was all of today's stage I managed to see, having mistimed my errands and not checked the race times properly (or indeed at all).

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