The stage started out in the sunshine today, a good omen for the race
that was to come. The stunning scenery of northern France lent a
beautiful backdrop to a much calmer, happier stage than we’ve seen
recently with a thoroughly exciting finish to round things out.
Stage 4 from Abbéville to Rouen saw the Tour leave coastal Normandy
and head inland towards the river Seine, which will greet the riders
again when they roll into Paris. The peloton had a much slower start to
the day than anticipated at an average 37km/h, perhaps enjoying the
views as they rode along the sheer cliffs of the ‘Alabaster Coast’,
reminiscent of the cliffs of Dover in their pure white colour. Europcar rider Yukiya Arashiro
clearly wasn’t watching the countryside, attacking as soon as the
peloton was clear of the neutral zone. He was soon joined by David Moncoutié of Cofidis and Anthony Delaplace of Saur-Sojasun, the trio rocketing away to a lead of 8’40” within 20 kilometres.
Though the peloton was taking the morning off to have a more relaxing ride, even celebrating Vladimir Gusev’s (Katusha) 30th birthday, it was a flat stage with plenty of sprint finish potential and the peloton wasn’t going to let a breakaway ruin it. Lotto Belisol, the team of André Greipel,
jumped on the front and began pulling, reducing the escapee trio’s lead
to seven and a half minutes. They relaxed a bit too soon, though, and
when the gap went out to 8’35” again the team of yellow jersey wearer Fabian Cancellara, Radioshack-Nissan-Trek, stepped up to do their turn of defending the maillot jaune – Arashiro’s time gap was enough to put him in virtual yellow.
Up the front in the breakaway, Arashiro and his companions had been
making their way over the first three of four Category 4 climbs for the
day, climber Moncoutié taking the King of the Mountain points on offer
each time. The beautiful coastal views continued to flash by the
riders, a cool sea breeze sweeping in from the clear blue ocean keeping
the temperature down. The race route finally turned away from the
cliffs and headed inland, straight for the day’s intermediate sprint
point, which the breakaway, unconcerned with the green jersey, passed
without incident.
The peloton was certainly concerned with the green jersey, however, and Orica-GreenEDGE began setting up the win for their rider, Matt Goss. Today’s train certainly seemed better than yesterday’s, but in the end Mark Cavendish (Sky) proved once again that he is indeed the fastest man on two wheels, narrowly taking fourth place ahead of Gossy, Rabobank’s Mark Renshaw and Liquigas-Cannondale’s Peter Sagan.
A little spot of rain further on down the road caused the peloton to
take just a little more care on the newly-soaked roads, but if a crash
is going to happen in a bike race then it seems no force in the world
can stop it. Australian neo Jonathan Cantwell from Team Saxobank-Tinkoff Bank
clipped his wheel on the edge of the road with 45 kilometres to go and
took a tumble, taking a handful of other riders down with him. Luckily
there was no damage done apart from some bumped bodies and bruised egos,
and all riders were soon continuing on their way to Rouen.
Over the next few kilometres the lead group’s break continued ticking
down as the race began passing through typical French countryside,
brilliantly green and full of grand, ancient chateaux and cathédrales.
Arashiro definitely didn’t want to be caught, even trying a solo break
at one point and earning the day’s Fighting Spirit Award, but he was the
first rider to falter and fall when the peloton came knocking.
Delaplace and Moncoutié took a little longer, initially being joined by a
series of riders sprinting out from the front of the peloton, the most
notable being Omega Pharma-Quickstep’s Sylvain Chavanel and Philippe Gilbert
of BMC. But the peloton was hungry for the sprint, and the race came
back together with about five kilometres to go, 195 riders all
barrelling towards the final few kilometres of the stage.
The sprint trains were setting themselves up, Orica-GreenEDGE, Lotto Belisol and Lampre-ISD
preparing to deliver their men to the line for victory, Mark Cavendish
floating on the nearest wheel as a makeshift leadout train. But nothing
complicates or livens things up like a crash less than three kilometres
from the finish, especially when the rainbow jersey of Mark Cavendish
is sitting on the ground with pieces scraped off his back.
The front section of the peloton continued on, leaving those behind
to pick themselves up, focussing instead on the sprint finish to be
won. Australia’s Adam Hansen and New Zealand’s Greg Henderson
led the Lotto Belisol sprint train powering down the final straight
with the same implacability once seen in the HTC-Highroad express.
Though the Lampre-ISD train kept pulling for Alessandro Petacchi,
and Orica-GreenEDGE’s Daryl Impey did his best to bring Matt Goss
forward, no-one could stand in the way of the ‘Gorilla’ André Greipel,
Petacchi and Goss sliding into second and fourth respectively with
Argos-Shimano’s Tom Veelers
rounding out the podium. Cavendish rolled over the line a few minutes
later, looking very much the worse for wear but mostly unhurt, the same
as his fellow victims.
As the crash happened within the last three kilometres, all those
affected had their time gaps neutralised and received the same time as
the group they were riding in prior to the crash. As such Peter Sagan
maintains his green jersey, and with the time gaps neutralised Fabian
Cancellara maintains his yellow into tomorrow’s stage, as does Bradley Wiggins
his second place on GC. Tomorrow’s stage to Saint-Quentin is as flat
as today’s, but after missing out on a chance at the win today, it will
be a safe bet to keep your eyes on Mark Cavendish gunning for a second
chance to be on the podium.
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