Update: Peter Sagan has indeed been relegated for his shoulder-barge on Wout van Aert in the sprint!
Right then, my race is run. Bye!
Here’s a report on Caleb Ewan’s victory in Poitiers:
Here’s former UCI president Brian Cookson’s verdict on Peter Sagan’s shoulder-barge on Wout van Aert in the final sprint.
Sorry, but that was an outrageously dangerous move by Peter Sagan.
— Brian Cookson OBE (@BrianCooksonOBE) September 9, 2020
There hasn’t been a stage winner presentation, presumably because the Commissaires are poring over footage of the sprint and deciding what to do with Peter Sagan.
Lukas Pöstlberger explains his attempted break in the closing kilometres:
We had a plan to make the final hard, and to put the printers a little bit under pressure. With the climb and the uphill finish it suits Peter usually, but if everybody’s fresh and on a day like this it’s hard to beat the sprinters for him. The plan was to go and to try, because if it works I might win, and if I get caught Pter has a chance with the sprinters. It was pretty tough and hard, but if we don’t try we don’t know.
Caleb Ewan talks us through the conclusion:
It was very very hectic. I was really close to the front with 2km to go, I was more forward than I wanted to be, especially with a headwind finish, but I dropped back into the bunch a little bit and from there it was quite crazy. I just had to keep calm and wait for the right gap to open, and it did in the end, quite late but I just had a real desire to win after yesterday - I was quite disappointed with my sprint and I was happy to repay my teammates with a win.
He’s asked if he instantly knew he had won:
Not really. I saluted just in case. I did a bit throw and when you throw you’re basically just looking down at the ground, so you don’t see if you’ve won or not. Sometimes you can feel it and I felt I was quite close. I haven’t seen the photo yet but I think it was quite close.
I’m super happy with my two stage wins. One takes the pressure off and then after the first you want a second. I’m sure I’ll want a third, especially in Paris.
Today’s top 10:
- Caleb Ewan (Lotto Soudal)
- Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe)
- Sam Bennett (Deceuninck-Quick Step)
- Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma)
- Bryan Coquard (B&B Hotels/Vital Concept)
- Clement Venturini (AG2R La Mondiale)
- Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo)
- Luka Mezgec (Mitchelton-Scott)
- Hugo Hofstetter (Israel Start-up Nation)
- Oliver Naesen (AG2R La Mondiale)
Sagan actually finished second (just), but only after bumping into Van Aert in the sprint, and you’d have thought the authorities will be having a closer look at that. Bennett comes third.
Caleb Ewan wins stage 11!
An absolutely manic conclusion, and at its end Peter Sagan, Sam Bennett and Wout van Aert are overtaken at the very last by Caleb Ewan, who pips Sagan by a few inches!
Updated
1.5km to go: This is anyone’s. Greg van Avermaet leads, for now.
2km to go: This is a bit of a nasty climb into Poitiers, and the two at the front are obviously hating it. They duly fade, and are gobbled.
3km to go: Asgreen pulls off, to leave Jungels a run at the front. Postlberger sticks with him. The lead is only five seconds.
4km to go: The trio lead by less than 10 seconds, but they all count.
5km to go: The other two are Bob Jungels and Kasper Asgreen.
6km to go: Bora-Hansgrohe’s Lukas Postlberger launches himself off the front, and two Deceuninck-Quick Step riders follow, the three of them swiftly opening a bit of a gap.
8km to go: Pretty narrow roads in the approach to Poitiers, making life difficult.
10km to go: The 10km barrier has jsut been past. Looks like Roger Kluge at the front at the moment.
13km to go: Jose Rojas, he of the grated shirt, is now a bit off the pace at the back.
15km to go: Other teams handily placed at the front include Sunweb and Quick Step.
17km to go: Cameras catch someone, presumably employed by one of the teams, at the side of the road offering riders bags of refreshment. He is ignored and just as well - “all feeding is strictly forbidden during the last 20km” of a race, according to UCI rules, and a hefty time penalty would have resulted.
20km to go: The proper actual genuinely racey race has begun. Jumbo-Visma have particularly good representation at the front of the peloton, though their jerseys are particularly noticeable.
25km to go: Ion Izagirre has indeed abandoned. A couple of other riders have been affected by that crash, including Jose Rojas of Movistar, who is back on his bike with his number torn from a now-grated shirt and a very nasty graze to his right buttock.
Dan Levy’s comments from a while back have elicited a few angry responses. “One, the green pate is in fact farci de poitevin made from cabbage. It is not a green pate but would agree not nice. Two, Pineau de Charentes is a pleasant aperitif but comes from the area around Cognac – Charentes not Deux Sevres. Three, the fromage de chevre from this area is excellent,” fumes David Boardman.
30km to go: Crash! There’s an Astana rider down and he looks in some distress. Gorka Izagirre has stopped to look after him until medical assistance arrives, and it looks like the man down could be his brother Ion.
37km to go: Mühlberger’s abandonment has now been confirmed.
38km to go: Poor Gregor Mühlberger has stopped, and is resting on the bonnet of a support car, his race apparently run.
40km to go: Ladagnous has been swallowed up by the group, and there’s nothing ahead of us but slowly mounting speed and indeed excitement and 40km or so of road.
42km to go: They pass a feeding station, and several riders energy up ahead of the sprint to come.
43km to go: Ladagnous leads by six seconds. “It’s crazy they let Mühlberger race, right??” boggles Rob on Twitter. Well he’s clearly no use to anyone at present, but if he recovers quickly he might come in handy later in the race and given the nature of today’s stage it was probably worth making him stick around if nobody thinks it might be Covid. I’m not sure they’ll push him through another day unless he improves, and Friday’s stage, with two category one climbs, a couple of category twos and a trio of threes, would surely be beyond him.
49km to go: Ladagnous’ lead is down to 20 seconds, and he’ll be caught within the next couple of minutes. On the plus side, we’re about to get a new storyline.
52km to go: Ladagnous’ fun is coming to an end, I fear. His lead is down below a minute, and shrinking. Meanwhile the results of the intermediate sprint are in, and are as follows:
- Matthieu Ladagnous 20 points
- Sam Bennett 17 (213 points overall)
- Michael Morkov 15 (92)
- Peter Sagan 13 (188)
- Matteo Trentin 11 (134)
- Bryan Coquard 10 (139)
- Jens Debusschere 9 (9)
- Geoffrey Soupe 8 (12)
- Thomas de Gendt 7 (7)
- Ryan Gibbons 6 (6)
- Daniel Oss 5 (53)
- Remi Cavagna 4 (16)
- Anthony Turgis 3 (11)
- Pierre Latour 2 (4)
- Damiano Caruso 1 (12)
57km to go: Mühlberger was apparently feeling ropey last night, but had a normal temperature this morning so was passed fit to race. He has caught up with the back of the peloton, though.
59km to go: With some sprint points to fight for the peloton has upped the pace, and Ladagnous has thus had his lead trimmed to 1min 45sec.
60km to go: Gregor Mühlberger is hanging off the back of the peloton at the moment, with a couple of EF riders.
61km to go: “You’d think the organisers would ensure that a duller stage would go through an area where the food is worth talking about,” writes Dan Levy. “Today we have green pate, an undrinkable aperitif (pineau de charente), and unremarkable goats cheeses.” This is a fair criticism, but on the other hand, flowery boats!
63km to go: In 3km there’s an intermediate sprint to Les Grands Ajoncs. An ajonc is apparently a gorse bush.
67km to go: They reach Saint-Maixent-l’Ecole. The town is twinned with Horsham in Sussex, and has an old-fashioned British red phone box outside the mairie in celebration (tiny photo here as proof).
Saint-Maixent-l’Ecole hosts the annual Festival des Enfants du Monde, festival of the children of the world. This seems to focus largely on costumes and dancing, as so many good things do. The team above apparently represented Kyrgyzstan last year. There is a video below of some festival-based fun, which looks bonkers but fun.
Updated
70km to go: I wish I had an actual update to genuine sporting importance to bring you. The most exciting thing we’ve seen of late was Sam Bennett tying a shoelace. Meanwhile Lennard Kamna is 24 years old today, and his teammates all wore special Happy Birthday masks before the start of today’s stage to celebrate.
76.5km to go: Ladagnous has crested the day’s one categorised climb with a lead of around 2min 55sec.
78km to go: Cherveux, which is currently being passed, has a very nice castle. Much of the castle was built in around 1470 by Robert Conningham, a Scot who was also head of Louis XI’s personal bodyguard.
80km to go: We are more than half way through today’s stage, and only minutes away from An Actual Thing, namely the category four climb to the Côte de Cherveux.
84km to go: The lead is being trimmed slightly, now down to 2min 25sec. They go through Saint-Gelais. There is a remote chance that the name rings a bell, from the popular 16th-century poet (as in, he was popular in the 16th century) Mellin de Saint Gelais. Mellin was apparently named after popular British fictional character Merlin. Sadly he was born in Angouleme, about 100km away from Saint-Gelais.
88km to go: They’re already getting excited about next year’s flowery boats, it seems:
A Saint-Maxire, on ne perd pas le nord : on profite du passage du #TDF2020 pour faire la promo de la prochaine fête des bâteaux fleuris ! pic.twitter.com/LsElqj0Esh
— La NR Niort (@NRNiort) September 9, 2020
90km to go: They go through St-Maxire. Every year St Maxire celebrates La Fete des Bateaux Fleuris, or the festival of the flowery boats, a tradition that dates back to 1942 and sees up to 10 boats decorated with “between 10 and 15,000 crepe paper flowers” according to a different theme. This year’s was sadly postponed, so you’ll have to wait until July 2021 if you want to witness this phenomenon for yourself.
La fête foraine était le thème de la 69e édition de la fête des bateaux fleuris qui s'est tenue dimanche à Saint-Maxire. Cette année encore, les spectateurs sont venus nombreux assister au défilé. https://t.co/b4f27Z1UIH pic.twitter.com/NSXABJDp2Q
— Niort Agglo (@NiortAgglo) July 29, 2019
93km to go: Still not much by way of action here. Ladagnous leads by 2min 45sec.
100km to go: The increasingly lonely Ladagnous remains in solo leadership, with a gap of a shade under three minutes separating him from the peloton.
104km to go: They now reach Coulon. Just before they hit the centre of town when they abruptly turn right, so really they only experienced a semi-Coulon.
106km to go: Now they’re going around Niort (as opposed to through the middle of it). I’m angry about this, because Niort is not mentioned on the stage’s list of estimated timings from which I have been taking names of towns I should look up, and Niort has a lot more going on than the likes of La Repentie. Notably there’s a donjon, which according to Eurosport “has a particular Plantagenet look about it”, which is well above my level of knowledge.
Back to one of the day’s previous staging posts: “Angire’s efforts were not in vain,” writes Phil Woolever. “Due to your listing I noticed three of the bikes via livestream. You can thus consider yourself a civil servant, thanks for the thorough coverage.” You’re most welcome.
111km to go: They’re about to reach La Repentie. This is nothing to do with the poorly-reviewed 2002 Isabelle Adjani film of the same name. It was at the time her first film for four years, and was known in English as The Repentant.
121km to go: Ladagnous leads by 3min 15sec. There’s really not a lot happening, which explains why on Eurosport they are discussing the farci poitevin, the green vegetable pate traditional in the Poitou-Charentes region.
127km to go: With the breakaway swiftly squashed like an irritant mosquito Ladagnous has been able to extend his lead again, up now to 2min 40sec.
🟡 On 2 of the 3 occasions the Tour has held a finish in Poitiers, the GC leader on the day went on to claim Yellow in Paris. Louison Bobet in 1955 and Eddy Merckx in 1971.#TDF2020 pic.twitter.com/dNdMQNF4q0
— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) September 9, 2020
130km to go: They pass through Angiré. Looking at the town website it seems they tried to line the route with yellow bikes and put out a call - “If you have an old bike let us know so we can customise it and put it on display.” I’m ashamed to say I didn’t notice them.
135km to go: Ladagnous passes Benon, and the cameras linger on the Abbaye de la Grace-Dieu, ranked by TripAdvisor as the best and indeed only attraction in town. The six people who were chasing him have been sucked back into the peloton, who are 1min 20sec behind the leader.
141km to go: A group of six riders has broken clear and set off in pursuit of Ladagnous. They are Stefan Kung, Jasper Stuyven, Oli Naesen, Michael Gogl, Tom van Asbroeck and Lukas Postlberger, so six different teams are represented. Ladagnous’ lead is now shrinking rapidly, but the six are only half a minute or so ahead of the peloton.
“Apparently the last time the Tour finished in Poitiers was a while back, and the winner was an Irishman from Carrick-on-Suir famous for regularly wearing the green jersey, one Sean Kelly,” writes Robin Hazlehurst. “You’d get pretty good odds on today’s return to Poitiers being won by an Irishman from Carrick-on-Suir currently wearing the green jersey, one Sam Bennett. A pleasing symmetry.”
145km to go: With Declercq not allowed to break from the peloton but still at the front of it it, the lead has started to gently shrink. “With regard to crashes, why don’t riders use carbon fibre armour on elbows, shoulders etc on flat stages?” wonders Gary Naylor. “Sprinters and leadouts might forego it (or remove it en route), but the reward is surely worth the risk of a little extra weight if you’re in the peloton.” I think that wouldn’t be allowed, under UCI regulations that clothing mustn’t change a rider’s “morphology”.
149km to go: Ladagnous leads by over five minutes. Tim Declercq has just launched himself off the front of the peloton, giving chase.
155km to go: Ladagnous extends his lead beyond three minutes. It is 10 years since he first raced the Tour, and his best ever result was in his first ever stage, when he came fifth. He came ninth in his second stage, and hasn’t come in the top 10 since. This is his seventh Tour, and he failed to finish only once, in 2016. Also yesterday, Nicolas Roche lost a “very precious bracelet”, made by Bulgari no less. He has offered a cash reward.
Not really what i had in mind.
— nicholas roche (@nicholasroche) September 8, 2020
Actually lost a very precious bracelet kilometer 75 ish in the crash if any founds it would be great! Thanks! pic.twitter.com/YWyMFaH9G3
157km to go: Ladagnous has stretched his lead to 1min 45sec, and nobody seems particularly worried about it. One bit of news since yesterday: Davide Formolo, part of Tadej Pogacar’s Team Emirates, has retired with a broken collarbone.
Unlucky the suspect become true, wasn’t easy to finish the stage with broke collarbone!!! But with the stronger guy at TDF in the team so far I did! NOW The only think I can do it’s to get operated ASP than try to be back for my dream 🌈 and ARDENS CLASSIC https://t.co/vKaTaAFnyB
— roccia (@davideformolo) September 8, 2020
163.5km to go: The Groupama-FDJ rider Mathieu Ladagnous has launched himself off the front immediately, and is already 35 seconds ahead of the peloton.
167.5km to go: They’re off! A few minutes later than scheduled, the racing begins.
They will apparently be riding into a headwind for most of the day, which will slow things down a bit. In other news, a few riders have just come off their bikes at a roundabout in the neutralised zone. Alexey Lutsenko and Soren Kragh Andersen were among them, I think.
They are rolling out. Châtelaillon-Plage is twinned with Knebworth, which on the French town’s website they describe as “a party town known to all rock lovers”.
The riders are gathered in Châtelaillon-Plage ahead of the rollout. Looks like a thoroughly splendid day by the Atlantic, blue skies and light breeze.
Hello world!
Today’s test is a 167km eastwards rip from Chatelaillon Plage to Poitiers. This is what William Fotheringham has to say about it:
The only truly innocuous stage in the first 10 days, and there should be a westerly so this will be rapid. By now it will be obvious which sprinters are in the mix so there will be pressure on the second-stringers such as Nacer Bouhanni of France and Giacomo Nizzolo of Italy if they haven’t landed one yet.
Ah, the perils of the preview. Nizzolo has abandoned with a knee injury, so the pressure on him is over for now, while Bouhanni was left out of the Arkéa-Samsic team so didn’t start the race at all. Still, there will be others sniffing opportunity in the coastal air this morning. Here’s the stage profile:
Here’s the current top 10 in the general classification:
- Primoz Roglic Team Jumbo-Visma 42:15:23.
- Egan Bernal Ineos Grenadiers :21.
- Guillaume Martin Cofidis :28.
- Romain Bardet AG2R la Mondiale :30.
- Nairo Quintana Team Arkea-Samsic :32.
- Rigoberto Uran EF Pro Cycling :32.
- Tadej Pogacar UAE Team Emirates :44
- Adam Yates Mitchelton-Scott 01:02.
- Miguel Angel Lopez Astana Pro Team 01:15.
- Mikel Landa Bahrain McLaren 01:42.
And here’s Jeremy Whittle’s report on Stage 10:
Sam Bennett stole back into the green jersey in the Tour de France, after taking his debut victory on stage 10 from Île d’Oléron to Île de Ré on the Atlantic coast. Bennett has now won stages in all three of Europe’s Grand Tours.
Racing for Deceuninck-Quick-Step, the Irish sprinter had so far been the 2020 Tour’s nearly man, frustrated by rivals such as Caleb Ewan of Lotto Soudal, Wout Van Aert of Jumbo-Visma and Alexander Kristoff of UAE Team Emirates. This time, however, there was no mistake and he edged ahead of both Ewan and the multiple green jersey winner Peter Sagan to take the stage and the lead in the points classification from the Bora-Hansgrohe rider.
Much more here: