Like so many of the ‘flat’, sprinters’ stages at this year’s Tour de France, yesterday’s jaunt to Villeneuve-sur-Lot switched from a run-of-the-mill, if startlingly fast, day for the fast men to one of the more dramatic, consequential, and controversial legs of the whole race in the space of 15km.
After a late high-speed crash seemingly scuppered Primož Roglič’s yellow jersey hopes (more on that later), Biniam Girmay won a strange, stop-start sprint for his third victory of this year’s Tour.
Behind the rampant Eritrean, Arnaud Démare finished an encouraging third and Mark Cavendish crossed the line in fifth, his best result since that record-breaking triumph in Saint-Vulbas.
(Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
Well, those were the results for a few minutes anyway. As we reported yesterday on the live blog, Cavendish and Démare were soon relegated by the commissaires to the back of the bunch for ‘irregular sprinting’ – in this case, Cav’s sharp movement to the left as the sprint launched, and the French rider’s drift towards the barriers, which forced Wout van Aert to stop pedalling.
However, even with 35 wins under his belt at the Tour, the relegation nevertheless left Cavendish “really upset and angry”, according to his Astana DS and former lead-out man Mark Renshaw, who blamed the Manx Missile’s sudden jump on Arkéa–B&B Hotels lead-out man Dan McLay’s decision to stop pedalling after dropping Démare off with 200m to go.
“We are obviously very disappointed in that sprint, because we think it was a solid, earned fifth place from Cavendish today,” Renshaw told ITV4 after the stage.
“There were two decisions in the final that the commissaires’ panel that was taken. One of them affects us, and Cavendish is really upset with this decision, as I am, as the team, because we thought it was a hard-fought place, and there are many reasons why for that sprint.
“If we really analyse this move and break down this 50 metres, we can see that McLay is leading out [Arnaud] Démare. If you stack it up against the white line, you can see that he is parallel about .8 of a metre to the right of the white line. He finishes his lead-out, and he moves to the left. My estimate is about 1.5 metres, he moves to the left and stops pedalling.”
He continued: “I’m sure [Tour organiser and course designer] Thierry Gouvenou said in the first meeting of the day that if you’re a lead-out man and you stop pedalling, please keep pedalling.
“So, I think this move by McLay, who completely stops pedalling, probably deserves more of a sanction than what Mark Cavendish deserves. Especially I as a lead-out man know, that if you stop pedalling in a sprint like this, there will be a reaction. And the reaction to that move by McLay stopping pedalling was Cav deviating to the left, also with [Bryan] Coquard hard on the wheel.
“I think with both riders, Cav and Coquard, had committed to jumping to the left. So, you've got a rider like McLay, who stops pedalling at 70kph, Cav in the same moment has already committed to jumping to the left, and that’s the reaction from that action.
“Look, he’s really upset and angry about the decision because he believes it was unfair, and that was an action from McLay coming back.”
Despite Renshaw’s take on the sprint, British rider McLay wasn’t too happy with the criticism being hurled in his direction, judging by his post on social media last night:
In any case, Renshaw believed, with one, maybe two, opportunities remaining at this year’s Tour for Cavendish to nab win No. 36, that Astana could take heart by their performance yesterday, even with key lead-out man Michael Mørkøv failing to start the stage after testing positive for Covid.
“It wasn’t perfect – we had a really difficult day with Mørkøv going home, and Yevgeniy Fedorov [who finished outside the time limit on the stage] was not good at all, and dropped early, and Lutsenko crashed with 15km to go,” Renshaw concluded.
“So all in all, to finish fifth on the stage with all that happened, I think the team did exceptionally well.”
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18 comments
Cheaper solution to the concrete divider removal problem, line of straw bales on it, which are in abundance in France based on all the land art with them, and a safety marshall. Simple ain't it.
Anyone know if this is accurate ?
https://roaddamagecalculator.com/?vehicle_one=road-bike&vehicle_two=larg...
404 on how it works
It may just be using the 4th power rule. 110589^0.25 = 18.24, and that's a pretty reasonable mass ratio of a hatchback + driver to roadbike + rider, say 1500 kg / 82 kg or 1600 kg / 88 kg.
That lane divider in the photo looks nothing like the ones in the video. Also missing in the photo, the concrete kerb one rider landed on.
That's what I thought, the divider that caused the grief was way longer, straighter, wider and in several sections, no? Screenshot from YouTube doesn't match it at all.
The one pictured could be the last of those sections (it comes to a point at the far end) so technically the same divider, but not actually the same section of it.
-Stonehenge tunnel could 'cost £250k per metre'-
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4ng8l2lnpdo
I appreciate that figure is for a tunnel rather than a normal road, but would be good to get the figures for comparison to hold up when people complain that the money spent on cycle lanes is a waste.
It's getting the alignment with the solstice just so and avoiding the underground power lines (ley) what puts the cost up... plus it's a large tunnel, being a druid carriageway.
Another cyclist killed
https://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/24438875.tributes-paid-colchester-ha...
He ran and cycled everywhere.
One twitter comment was
"In his later years Arthur did not own a car, his bike was his primary means of transport. In 2018 he cycled from Colchester to Dolgelleu, in Wales, to attend my husband's birthday."
Not sure how this cyclist remained upright - bmw of course
https://x.com/but_cyclists/status/1811596238418043016
WTF was the story there?? That looked deliberate.
(if it wasn't deliberate, that driver needs to hand their licence in RIGHT NOW).
Cyclist on main road, driver turns right out of side road, does not give way.
" Looks like early morning low sun straight into drivers eyeline (prob no sunglasses to minimise glare, maybe a fogged up windscreen as well), if cyclist in dark clothing would've blended into the shadows & background. "
" There’s something wrong with that BMW the indicator worked "
" Shocking how many people say “You were in the blind spot created by a pillar a few centimetres wide for a fraction of a second”, rather than “Bloody hell, you rode across the entire width of the windscreen and STILL they didn’t see you”. "
No indicators
Hazard Warning Lights came on after they had stopped.
They need to hand back their licence (and go to jail) if it was deliberate.
Had a similar situation and wary of the driver's blind spot I slowed.
Obviously we shouldn't have to, and the driver should look properly, but given the size of the vehicle I'd rather slow for a bit than the other option...
https://youtu.be/i96CaQEwuVk
Sun was in his eyes !
Sad news that Roglic has pulled out of the Tour after yesterday's crash. I know he's been criticised for his bike handling before, and sometimes rightly so, but yesterday was definitely not his fault.
I'm pretty sad about anybody having to withdraw, after all that effort, especially with a serious injury. In retrospect, Wright is a bit better off but it must have been a lonely and exhausting day