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Tag Archives: Andre Greipel

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After Two Weeks: Yet Another

Stage 10

Froome propels to victory in stage 10.

This year’s first French victory du jour in stage 8, followed by the team time trial of stage 9, close chapter one of the Tour leading into the first rest day, just in time for the wearer of le maillot jaune to gear up for the Pyrenean mountains ahead.  And more than geared he proves by the end of stage 10 with his not-to-be-caught solo win on La Pierre-Saint-Martin, reinforcing Chris Froome’s general classification (GC) lead by almost three minutes.  Meanwhile, in green, out of green, and back in green again, Peter Sagan keeps a not-so-tight hold on his best color.

Stage 11

Stage 11’s Col du Tourmalet

Stage 11 to the top of the Col du Tourmalet keeps Froome on top overall, far ahead of defending champion Vincenzo Nibali who’s clearly not having his greatest Tour. If that’s not enough, what some consider the hardest climbing day comes in stage 12 to the Plateau de Beille, amid extreme weather variations from dry heat to hailing downpour–  but ultimately still no shakeup in the overall standings.  Stage 13 into Rodez offers up the most exciting and unpredictable finish of the week, as Sagan propels to yet another almost-win but must settle for yet another second place du jour. At least he propels ahead in his points total after a momentary mid-stage loss, again showing he actually has to work to keep the green jersey for a change, courtesy of Andre Greipel of course. Still meanwhile– no GC shakeup.

Stage 13 Stage 14

Two-thirds of the 102nd Tour de France close with stage 14, seeing the first win for the first African team in Tour history, renewed points dominance for the “green machine” amid yet another top five stage finish, and in addition to a 2-3 switch in the GC, now an overall lead of more than three minutes for the man in yellow.

It might seem by now that le maillot jaune is wrapped up for this Tour– but then, is it?  As always, we shall see.  So comes and goes yet another July week across France.  Next up, the Alps!

 
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Posted by on July 18, 2015 in 2015 Tour de France

 

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Highs & Lows: One Week in the Books

Stage 4  Stage 5

His risky solo breakaway proves awesomely successful, winning Tony Martin stage 4 and putting him in yellow.  The German “Gorilla” throws the hammer down once again in the final meters of stage 5, Greipel’s second win for a second time eclipsing a Cavendish stage victory.  Bad luck repeats itself for le maillot jaune, as a crash in the last moments of stage 6 sees Martin across the line with a broken collarbone.  And in the next big sprint finish of stage 7, amid anticipation of dominance or payback, the latter ultimately prevails.  The “Missile” triumphantly kills the pressure and wins his first stage of this year’s Tour!

Stage 6  Stage 7

Thrilling highs alternate with shattering lows, again and again in that unpredictable and unforgiving pattern that defines bicycle racing.  One week of the 2015 Tour de France is now in the books, with the harsh-yet-glorious reminder that anything we might anticipate will always meet the unforeseen.  This said, onward they go to the inevitable highs and lows that come next.

 
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Posted by on July 10, 2015 in 2015 Tour de France

 

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Stage Six: Feeling It, And Not.

Stage 6 start French flowers

Subtract the cobbles, add the crosswinds, keep the wetness, and we get stage 6 through the flat and flowery northern French countryside from Arras to Reims.  Apparently Kittel just wasn’t feeling his sprint-finish best after his wipe out yesterday.  And Sagan likely wasn’t feeling 100% either following his own tumble today, though as usual he made it back among the top finishers.  Rather, Andre Greipel sure felt it, as this became the German powerhouse’s day in the sun, so to speak.

 
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Posted by on July 10, 2014 in 2014 Tour de France

 

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An Unpredictable Prediction

The peloton finally catches the day’s early breakaway.

As epic as the climbing stages typically are, they always reshuffle the deck.  In other words, I was missing my favorite sprinters until their grand return today in quite a charmingly picturesque stage 10.  Throughout this lovely 122-mile day of predominantly flat western countryside terrain– made for the likes of Greipel, Sagan and the famous Missile, among others– the stage winner remained an unpredictable prediction.

The beach-front final stretch in Saint Malo.

 In the end my sense got blown apart, thanks to a literal turn in the final sprint, coupled with a last-second crash that rattled the lines and had fingers pointing at the Missile himself.  As the dust settled, my predictions came in fourth, third and second, all behind today’s first repeat-stage winner of the year, German Marcel Kittel.

Today’s big unpredictable finish!

 
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Posted by on July 9, 2013 in 2013 Tour de France

 

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Thinking Fast.

As the sprinters raced to the finish line of today’s primarily flat stage, my own thoughts sped along with them.  Would this finally be Peter Sagan’s day, giving him a well-deserved first Tour win of the year?  Or rather, would “The Missile” take back-to-back stage victories and up his magic number to 25?  As usual, they got to the front of the peloton in those key final moments today, after both having to do some unusual– for them at least– catching-up.  Bike trouble delayed Sagan momentarily, while Cavendish picked himself up from a crash.  From there– impressive as always– it was all about teamwork and rolling mechanics to put them back in position.

Talk about thinking fast.  It turns out my speeding thoughts couldn’t keep up, because I was wrong on both questions.  The Missile had to settle for the number four spot today, while the 23-year-old Slovakian saw his THIRD second-place finish of the year thus far.  After all these “seconds”, I’m really looking forward to a stage win for Sagan.  For now I’m glad he holds onto the sprinter’s green jersey.

In any case, another day in France is done, now with four more rider losses unfortunately.  Today’s accolades for stage 6 go to– in addition to the impressive teamwork of Sagan’s Cannondale and the valiant yet unsuccessful effort of Nacer Bouhanni– the big winner du jour of course, the always-powerful Andre Greipel.

It’s Greipel’s Day!

 
 

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The Missile Does It (Again)!

Andre Greipel was right there, as was Peter Sagan of course.  Today however, I was cheering for a much-anticipated victory by the Manx Missile.  And sure enough, he came through!  The awesome Mark Cavendish won stage 5 in Marseille, his first stage win of this year’s Tour de France and his 24th overall.

July 3, 2013:  The Missile Takes It!

Meanwhile, after a crash about 10 miles from the finish line, let’s hope American veteran Christian Vande Velde is not too banged up to have to end his final Tour this soon.  Sadly– and some will say harshly– another American, the already-injured Ted King, is now out by rule of the Tour judges for finishing yesterday’s team time trial seven seconds outside the time limit, despite his best-though-crippled efforts.

Altogether, for a long 142 miles complete with another multiple-rider crash just yards from the end, along with raw emotions spanning victory to elimination, this riveting day– the second longest– has exemplified Le Tour in truest form.  From the making of winners to “the shattering of dreams and breaking of hearts” as Bob Roll reminds us, it’s on to tomorrow of course, still far from yet all the closer to Paris.

 

 
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Posted by on July 3, 2013 in 2013 Tour de France

 

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Triumphant on the Flats

After six stages and the prologue, the first week of the 2012 Tour de France has coasted into history with plenty of memorable results and of course no shortage of coverage.

Here’s to a week of truly triumphant finishes on relatively flat stretches of road!

 Next come the mountains following this predominantly flat week, bringing with them a certain reshuffling of stage winners.  In other words, we may not be seeing a fourth victory photo of young Peter Sagan right away.  Stay tuned!

 
 

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