Kasper Asgreen leads: 161st on GC this morning, Kasper Asgreen finishes the course in 35min 52sec before Chad can plant his backside in the chair traditionally occupied by the clubhouse leader. Asgreen, by contrast, mnight be sitting in it for a while – that’s a good time. Both Haga and Asgreen started after Tony Martin, who is still out on the course.
Yoann Offredo finishes the course: The lanterne rouge finishes the course in a time of 40min 10sec, but his time is quickly obliterated by Chad Haga of Team Sunweb, who completes the circuit in 36min 22sec.
An email: “I do wonder whether Team Ineos do a lot of work on behalf of the peloton, which enables other teams to be able to spread their resources a bit better,” writes Thomas Atkins. |There only needs to be one team controlling the tempo, policing which breaks are allowed to go, and setting the speed of the peloton during the boring bits of the race. Michelton Scott probably don’t need eight riders focusing solely on the GC race most of the time, which frees up the likes of Simon Yates to do their thing.”
A fair point, well made. It did not go unnoticed that Ineos had all eight of their riders at the front of the yellow jersey group in the closing stages yesterday.
Mikel Landa is 20th on GC and is due to go out at 4.03pm, followed by the rest of the GC big hitters. While I’m always grateful for the company, I won’t be in the least bit offended if you decided to abandon me and come back then!
In the meantime, Kasper Asgreen has been quickest through the first checkpoint so far, posting a time of 11min 50sec at 7.7km. The Deceuninck- Quick Step rider was also fastest through the second checkpoint in 22min 42sec.
Tony Martin is caught by his minute-man: And now he’s been caught by the guy who started two minutes after him. He’s clearly not trying a leg today and has probably decided to take the day off in order to recover from all his exertions at the front of the bunch on this Tour.
An email: “I’m a little baffled about the Mitchelton Scott tactics yesterday,” writes Matt Emerson. “As a Vuelta winner Simon Yates is just about the best domestique you could have, so why let him waste energy on a stage win – he finished nine and a half minutes ahead of the GC riders, which must have been a big effort – when the Tourmalet is coming up in two days’ time? I’m pretty sure Ineos wouldn’t have let him do that. Any ideas?”
I’m pretty sure Ineos wouldn’t have let him do it either, but then not all teams are as stupendously dull as The Artists Formerly Known As Sky. It seems very harsh to describe a stage win as a waste of energy, when winning stages brings so much prestige and is a very difficult thing to do. Unlike Ineos, Mitchelton Scott seem happy to give their leader’s lieutenants the opportunity to win stages while simultaneously focussing on the GC standing of Adam Yates. It is a tactic that may not yield the ultimate dividend, but it’s heartwarming to see and they’ve done very well out of it so far.
We have four checkpoints today: The first is at Ceriset at the 7.7km mark, the second is at Cote D’Esquillot (15.5km), the third is at Juancon (21.9km) and the fourth and all important one is at the finish in Pau (27.2km). There are eight riders out on the road already.
Our first four riders are away: Tony Martin has just set off and as a former world champion, will certainly be one to watch. He may not be as good as he used to be, but he’ll fancy his chances to day and will almost certainly set a time to beat. In the early stages, however, he doesn’t look like he’s going at full gas.
166 riders left: Rohan Dennis and Giacomo Nizzolo quite the Tour yesterday, one on the back of a hissy-fit and the other due to injuries sustained in a crash the previous day. Jasper Philipsen was also withdrawn by UAE Team Emirates, his employers having decided that half a Tour was enough for the 21-year-old Belgian.
Currently in last place on GC, Yoann Offredo will be the first man down the ramp today and will set off in approximately five minutes. It’s difficult to imagine he’ll be too fussed about he gets on. Once he’s set off, riders will go off at one-minute intervals.
Mitchelton Scott’s stage 12 diary
It was another good day for the Australian team, who won their second stage of this year’s Tour, when Simon Yates completed his set of Grand Tour stage wins. Matteo Trentin also took the combativity award and the team can now focus on trying to get Yates’s twin brother Adam as high as possible up the General Classification. He is currently in 7th place, 1min 47sec behind Julian Alaphilippe.
The curious abandonment of Rohan Dennis
While passing through the feed zone yesterday, Rohan Dennis decided to dismount his bicycle and quit this year’s Tour. Almost 24 hours later, mystery continues to surround the Australian’s decision. The world ITT champion, Dennis was among the favourites for today’s stage, but abandoned the Tour despite not being ill or injured. Although he was spotted near his team bus at the end of the stage, he refused to speak to reporters and his team were vague when asked about what happened too.
“We actually expected a big effort from him tomorrow,” said Bahrain-Merida sports director Gorazd Stangelj. “It was his decision today to stop in the feed zone. We tried to speak with him. He said, ‘I don’t want to talk’ and just abandoned the race. His condition is not bad, he’s good enough to perform at the Tour de France. For sure it has nothing to do with his condition.”
A notoriously spiky character, Dennis is rumoured to be unhappy with the Merida time trial bike he is obliged to use because of his team’s sponsors. Speaking to Lance Armstrong’s The Move podcast, former Radioshack and US Postal team director Johan Bruyneel, suggested there was also talk that Dennis spat the dummy because there was something wrong with the skin-suit he was due to wear today. It didn’t fit, or hadn’t turned up … something like that. While Bruyneel’s every utterance should be taken with several shovelfuls of salt, for obvious reasons, he is exceptionally well connected in the world of professional cycling, so there may well be more than a grain of truth to what he is saying.
Tour de France
With the ladies finished, it’s time to return our focus to the gentlemen, who have their Race of Truth this afternoon. Marianne Vos and chums did five laps of the circuit they’ll have to complete this afternoon. While this is ostensibly a day off for the majority of riders, it should go some way towards sorting out the men among the GC contenders from the boys. But first, a recap on stage three, which was won by Mitchelton Scott rider Simon Yates yesterday. Jeremy Whittle was there for the Guardian …
V for Victory (and Vos): Marianne Vos takes her second La Course, having won her first five years ago on different terrain. “I feel really good, I came with good motivation from the Giro Rosa,” she says, having won four stages in the Italian race.
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Marianne Vos wins La Course …
Heartbreak for Amanda Spratt as Marianne Vos sweeps past her on the final climb with just 300 metres to go, pulls away from her and wins at her leisure to CCC Live.
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1km to go: Spratt gets out of the saddle again, while Trek Segafredo go to the front of the bunch.
2.5km to go: Spratt leads by 12 seconds. At the front of the bunch, CCC Liv and Team Sunweb finally appear to have got their act together and are hunting her down.
6km to go: Hats off to Annemiek van Vleuten, Spratt’s team-mate, who is successfully disrupting any efforts the bunch are making to get themselves organised. At the moment, Riejanne Markus of CCC-Liv is trying to tow them along to get her team-mate Vos into contention.
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7km to go: The gap from Amanda Spratt to the chasing posse goes back out to 33 seconds, then back into 19. Can she hang on?
7.5km to go: Spratt is out of the saddle, her legs pumping . The gap is back out to 20 seconds in the wake of the aforementioned indecision and disorganisation in the pack, where the riders are squabbling over how best to organise their chase.
10km to go: Some indecision in the peloton, where Van Vleuten is policing the bunch on behalf her Aussie teammate up the road.
12km to go: It’s worth noting that Spratt’s Dutch team-mate, Annemiek van Vleuten is trying to win her third consecutive La Course title. She is currently chasing down Lucinda Brand and Marianne Vos, who are trying to bridge the gap from the peloton to Spratt. The gap is dissolving, however.
16km to go: Marianne Vos and her CCC Liv domestiques are towing the bunch along as Spratt, who was previously in a five-woman breakaway before dropping her travelling companions and striking for home on her own.
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La Course: You join us with 17 kilometres left of this year’s La Course, a race in which Annemiek van Vleuten, Anna van der Breggen, Marianne Vos and Lizzie Deignan are among the field of big-name cyclists riding five laps of the Individual Time Trial course their male counterparts will tackle in the Individual Time Trial later this afternoon. Described today by the Dame Sarah Storey as “a token gesture” even if “it’s better to have any race than no race”, this year’s La Course is currently being led by Mitchelton Scott rider Amanda Spratt, who has a lead of 28 seconds over the chasing pack.
Stage 13: Pau (Individual Time Trial) 27.2km
William Fotheringham: “At least one or two of the favourites who are weaker time triallists should be effectively put out of the reckoning.