Sunday, May 19, 2024

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 10; Escaldes-Engordany – Revel. Bling When You’re Winning

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLe Tour de France 2016 - Stage 10; Escaldes-Engordany - Revel. Bling...

Mont-Saint-MichelThe sprinters are denied – but it’s a sprinter who wins. It was big smiled Aussie, Michael ‘Bling’ Matthews (Orica) kicking to glory from Peter Sagan (Tinkoff) with Edvald Boasson Hagen (Dimension Data) in third spot – a podium of real quality from the big day-long breakaway.

And whilst Sagan may not have taken the stage bouquet he took the stage by the scruff of the neck and thrust himself back into green – possible all the way to Paris, now.

There was no change on GC on a stress free day for Sky.

Peugeot and Raleigh ex-pro Billy Bilsland always says the that the race is the last hour – and coming to that point with 45 K or so to go we have; Landa (Sky), G. Izagirre (Movistar), Nibali (Astana), Sagan (Tinkoff), S. Dumoulin (AG2R), Caruso (BMC), Cummings (Dimension Data), Rui Costa (Lampre), GVA (Lotto), Matthews (Orica), Boasson Hagen (Dimension Data), Gallopin (Lotto), Durbridge (Orica), Chavanel (Direct Energie) and Impey (Orica).

Bling
Michael Matthews enjoys his first Tour stage win. Photo©Orica

The desperados got away off the day’s big climb – which reared from the start – the Port d’Envalira and worked cohesively to build a lead.

Da Silva took the points on the Envalira, whilst Sagan – it almost goes without saying – took the intermediate sprint points of the day, uncontested.

And that was the early story – we’re now at 40 K to go with the rain on, the break beginning to squabble and the chase on with the gap at 4:40 – and that’s closable.

IAM are doing a lot of the chasing – why?

They have no GC contender and no sprinter – a favour ? punishment from the Boss for a lack lustre first week?

Direct Energie are on the case too – but that’s for Coquard.

There’s a second, minor ascent late in the day – a third cat. where there’s guaranteed to be an attack out of the break – especially with Big Guns like GVA, Sagan and Cummings.

Inside 30 K now and the break still has four minutes – that doesn’t look like it’s coming back.

And the break has split; at the ‘right’ end we have Sagan, GVA, Dumoulin, Boasson Hagen – and all three Oricas.

Advantage Oz with 23 K to go.

And no stage win for Steve Cummings…

Sky on point now, Froome’s yellow cape flaps in the breeze – just when we think he can’t look any worse…

But the peloton has clocked off, the sprinters’ teams are saving it for tomorrow as the gap goes to six minutes and growing.

Boasson Hagen tells Matthews he has to work; ‘we’re not daft you know, Michael!

But Matthews refuses to go through, Durbridge and Impey are working for him – but Sagan, GVA and Boasson Hagen will ease back on their workload now.

This should be a real tactical finish.

Bling
The Orica riders played it perfectly. Photo©Orica

As you’d expect from a Belgian, GVA has installs himself at the rear but Sagan is still going through – he’s a beast and this world champion doesn’t mess around.

Inside 10 K it’s till ‘advantage Orica’ but Durbo and Impey are liable to pop on the climb after all their graft.

And there’s the 1.8 K to the K o M line banner.

Durbridge continues to lead up the grade, Sagan cruises, GVA schemes.

Bling
Sagan looked like a man on a mission today. Photo©Luca Bettini

Sagan turns it on, Durbo pops but Impey attacks, the right thing to do, he’s closed down, quickly.

Impey goes again, Sagan brings him back then goes to the front constantly looking back to see what’s what.

Sagan turns it on from the front – he’s hurting them for sure but Matthews has to be favourite, he’s done so little.

Boasson Hagen jumps on the descent with five to go but Sagan closes him down, they’re hurtling down this descent.

Flat road now, Impey will go for sure – he does and Sagan reacts; three K to go now.

Impey tries it again but Sagan covers it easily before it’s even started.

Impey leads into the final, Sagan second, Matthews third, Boasson Hagen, Dumoulin, GVA and there’s the red kite.

They leave it late; GVA reacts first, they all respond and spread across the road, Matthews is initially blocked but finds the space, it’s an elbow to elbow drag race to the line – and Matthews is quickest.

Bling
Matthews is the fastest and freshest in the sprint. Photo©Orica

No surprise.

The Aussie has now won a stage in all three Grand Tours.

Naivety on Sagan’s part?

No! – he has his stage win and with his intermediate sprint today took green, any points at the line just add to his advantage.

And he took second so that’s another shed load of points.

Perhaps the Slovak should have done less in the finale – but that’s just not the ‘Sagan way’ and Matthews is damn quick.

Bling
Peter Sagan takes Green from Cavendish. Photo©Tinkoff

Matthews the stage then, Sagan bludgeons himself into green and Froomey is untroubled.

Just another day at the office; sprinter stage tomorrow, oh dear – but we can always hope…

[vsw id=”MGnzDvx07UM” source=”youtube” width=”615″ height=”430″ autoplay=”no”]

Bling
Matthews was grateful to his two teammates in the break. Photo©Orica
Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 4; Saumur – Limoges. Kittel Out-Powers the Rest

"Ja!" Screams Marcel Kittel (Etixx) as he leaps back to his feet and cuddles his soigneur after sitting on the tarmac with his head buried in his elbows to await the verdict from the photo finish technicians - he has every right to be chuffed, he’s just won Stage Four of the 2016 Tour de France. In theory it should have been one for the smaller sprinters - 600 metres @ 4% to the finish line - not a beast like Kittel but he was the man producing most watts.

Cancellara broke our hearts at the Ronde van Vlaanderen

Fabian Cancellara rode a clever race to take his first Ronde van Vlaanderen this afternoon, making sure he was always in the important part of the peloton, biding his time perfectly, and attacking with such force that only Tom Boonen could go with him.

Le Tour de France 2009 – Stage 1: Monaco, 15.5km ITT

Lance going off early in the Monaco TT surprised me, but there will be a reason-nothing happens by chance with the man from Plano. The cadence was high and he had the Jenson Button lines on the corners, but somehow he wasn't 'on it.'

Tour de Yorkshire 2018 – Stage 4 Wrap Up; Greg Van Avermaet takes the Stage and GC

Greg van Avermaet dedicated his stunning Tour de Yorkshire success to the memory of BMC Racing Team owner Andy Rihs after a superb final stage saw him crowned champion in Leeds. Rihs passed away at the age of 75 last month, with BMC still in mourning after losing a friend and passionate cycling fan as well as owner.

At Random

Alejandro Valverde reaches seventh heaven

After six times finishing on the podium of the Men Elite Road World Championship, Alejandro Valverde claimed the gold medal for Spain for the first time at the age of 38. He rode away up the Höll, the gruelling climb at the end of the race, along with France’s Romain Bardet and Canada’s Michael Woods to beat them in a four-man sprint after the return of the Dutchman Tom Dumoulin. The final event crowned a wonderful week of sport in Innsbruck-Tirol.

You’ve Bloody Done It: Eneco 2010 Stage 5

You've Bloody Done It. Stage 5 of the Eneco Tour had the race heading back into the bumpy territory that did so much damage on Stage 3, this time on similar roads to those used in the Amstel Gold spring classic.

Harry Tanfield – Enjoying Success in the Kermises

If you remember our Gordon Arms Time Trial report earlier in the season then you’ll remember the name Harry Tanfield, he eventually took third spot. Harry also won last year’s Dave Campbell Memorial Race in the Kingdom of Fife, another race which VeloVeritas was present at.

World Road Championships 2007 – Day 1: Espoirs Time Trial

I'm sitting in the press room at the World Road Championships 2007, sharing a table with my boyhood hero, Hugh Porter, four time world pursuit champion and on the podium in that event for seven years straight-he'll need to get interviewed, I can't let that opportunity go! We're here for the Worlds in Stuttgart, the Under-23 time trial was this morning and ladies time trial was this afternoon. I was lucky-enough to follow the Latvian rider, Gatis Smukulis in the test.