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Tag Archives: Marcel Kittel

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Stage 21: Et Maintenant, La Fin.

As we “knew” would be the case barring any last-day catastrophe, Italy’s Vincenzo Nibali is the champion of the 101st Tour de France– by a huge margin no less!  He joins only five other cyclists in history to win all three Grand Tours– the other two of course Italy’s and Spain’s.

Nibali in Paris

For the first time in more than 30 years, France saw two of its own take the yellow podium–Jean-Christophe Peraud in second and best young rider Thibaut Pinot third.  This, after Marcel Kittel’s second Champs-Elysees bookending victory shut out a stage win for Peter Sagan, even as a LeTour.fr survey of more than 4000 votes favored the man in green to take stage 21.  And let’s not forget our resilient American finishing fifth, Tejay Van Garderen, nor Jens Voigt’s swan song.

    Champagne time.   France's Tour Salute

And now, the end.  So passes another Tour de France into the history books for 164 riders who made it to Paris– big-name losses notwithstanding– complete with all the triumph, tradition and Parisian fanfare that defines the finale.  While I’ve yet to get there to see it all in person, for now having Phil Liggett, Bob Roll and all their comrades deliver the action every day for three weeks– plus a commendable first-year commentating job by 2013 retiree Christian Vande Velde— remains an acceptable substitute.  I’m happy to have cycled a mere one quarter of the Tour’s total distance during this time, less than I did last year, but nevertheless taking me there every day in spirit.  Vive Le Tour!

 
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Posted by on July 27, 2014 in 2014 Tour de France, Daily Activities

 

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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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One Colorful Centennial Celebration

From a chaotic beginning to a first-time evening end, along with everything good, bad, high and low spanning three weeks time, the 100th Tour de France has reached its always much-celebrated final destination.  With the major standings in place, one big question of course remained to be answered at the last moment of stage 21:  Would the Missile get his beyond record-breaking fifth consecutive win on Le Champs-Elysees?

The peloton arrives in Paris on a perfectly picturesque evening.

Yes, his goatee is green too!

Peter has his green, Nairo has his white AND his polka dots, the U.S. got a top-ten overall win even without any stage victories, and as we knew for a while would be the grand result, Chris Froome keeps yellow as the winner of the Tour de France.  On the other end, fun-themed Orica GreenEDGE— seeing all nine teammates to the finish– includes 36-year-old rookie Svein Tuft in last place overall– a distinction Phil Liggett quickly reminded us today that for the feat of completing this 3404-kilometer journey, carries no disgrace whatsoever.

The final finish in Paris ends the 100th Tour.

As for Cavendish, certainly no disgrace for him either.  It was close– very close— as his four consecutive Paris stage wins stand as a record not about to be broken, yet not to be added to today.  He lost his would-be fifth by a bike length to none other than “new sheriff” Marcel Kittel.

Chris Froome takes the first-place podium on this Paris night.

The leading color of the evening’s celebration!

Altogether, another spectacular French summer display of professional cycling prowess has now come and gone, all the more colorfully concluded with Paris’ well-planned Centennial year celebration.  Personally, I’m happy to have been able to stay in the cycling spirit with my own rides on every day of this Tour.  More than ever I look forward to my own miles to come in the saddle– as well as those of the awesome pros!

 
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Posted by on July 21, 2013 in 2013 Tour de France, Videos

 

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A Matter of Inches.

Now more than halfway to Paris, Phil Liggett stands corrected.  You CAN catch the Manx Missile at the line, and the man now with three Tour stage wins for the year was just the one to do it today in stage 12.  As if Cavendish hasn’t already endured a difficult past couple days– being sprayed with urine and then uninvited to a post-Tour race event following his disputed role in that stage 10 near-finish-line wipeout– this chateau-dotted sprinter’s stage ended with what his critics surely consider the perfect revenge, even by a matter of inches.

Stage 12:  A “New Sheriff in Town” as Bobke puts it!

 

 

 
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Posted by on July 11, 2013 in 2013 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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