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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Barry Glendenning

Tour de France 2020: Lennard Kämna escapes to win stage 16 – as it happened

Stage winner Team Bora rider Germany’s Lennard Kamna celebrates as he crosses the finish line.
Stage winner Team Bora rider Germany’s Lennard Kamna celebrates as he crosses the finish line. Photograph: Christophe Ena/AFP/Getty Images

Stage 16 report

Lennard Kämna held off the more experienced Richard Carapaz to score his maiden Grand Tour stage win, while Primoz Roglic remains in yellow. Jeremy Whittle was there ...

The top 10 on GC after stage 16

Primoz Roglic remains in the lead, 40 seconds ahead of his compatriot Tadej Pogacar

Tour de France 2020
The top 10 on General Classification after Stage 16. Photograph: Eurosport

The yellow jersey crosses the line. In first, second and fourth place overall, Roglic, Pogacar and Miguel Anguel Lopez all cross the line within a second or two of each other.

The birthday boy takes over: Wout van Aert moves ahead of De La Cruz and Kagacar, while Primoz Roglic sits on his young compatriot’s wheel.

Pogacar attacks! David De La Cruz and Tadej Pogacar move to the front of the yellow jersey group, forcing a strong tempo. Nairo Quintana is dropped.

Onwards and upwards: The yellow jersey groups starts the final climb, which is 2.2 kilometres in length.

Egan Bernal: The reigning champion is having another bad day and is not in the yellow jersey group. I’m not sure he’s particularly bothered - his chances of retaining his title ended on Sunday.

Back out on the road: Jumbo-Visma continue to make the pace as the peloton rolls towards the finish. They have five kilometres to go and the riders of Team Movistar are keeping tabs on them at the front of the bunch.

Updated

Tour de France 2020
The top 10 in stage 16. Photograph: Eurosport

Lennard Kemna
Lennard Kamna wins stage 16. Photograph: Lennard Kemna from Team Bora Hansgrohe wins stage 16 of the Tour.

Updated

Reichenbach is third: Sebastien Reichenbach finishes third for Switzerland and his Groupama-FDJ team.

Carapaz finishes second: Richard Carapaz, last year’s Giro d’Italia rider, comes second for Team Ineos, well over a minute behind the winner. It’s another bad day for the British team, who had three riders in the breakaway, but couldn’t manage to win the stage

Lennard Kamna wins stage 16

The 24-year-old German gets a wonderful welcome to Villard de Lans as he wins his first ever stage in the Tour de France. Chapeau, young man. He beats his chest and throws an arm in the air as he crosses the line.

Lennard Kamna celebrates as he crosses the finish line.
Lennard Kamna celebrates as he crosses the finish line. Photograph: Stuart Franklin/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

1km to go: Kamna passes under the banner telling him he’s just 1000m from victory.

1.6km to go: Lennard Kamna leads Richard Carapaz by 1min 17sec and looks set to win the stage barring an accident.

2km to go: The gap between the stage leader and the yellow jersey group is now 16 minutes.

3km to go: Kamna increases his lead to 1min 09sec. A further 25 seconds back, Reichenbach bunny-hops a traffic island rather than riding around it. Every little helps.

4km to go: Lennard Kamna leads the stage by 55 seconds from Richard Carapaz. Sebastien Reichenbach is a further 22 seconds back. The Barguil group are a little under a minute behind him.

8km to go: Warren Barguil is in a group of seven riders including Roche, Sivakov, Geschke, Pacher and Benoot that is 2min 04sec behind Kamner.

10km to go: Bora Hansgrohe rider Lennard Kamna has a lead of 34 seconds over Richard Carapaz from Team Ineos. The 33-year-old is something of a time trial specialist and may well fancy his chances of staying away.

15km to go: Today’s finish is at the top of the category three Villard de Lens, the finish line at a height of 1,152m above sea level. The climb to the top is 2.2km and the gradient is a calf-burning 6.5%.

Tour de France 2020
The all too familiar sight of Jumbo Visma readers leading the yellow jersey group. Photograph: Eurosport

20km to go: Kamna is first over the Montee de Saint Nizier du Moucherotte and begins the descent.

21km to go: Alaphilippe looks to have shot his bolt today. Richard Carapaz leads the stage with Lennard Kamna on his wheel. Reichenbach is struggling to stay in touch. The gap from the leaders to the yellow jerset group is 13min 30sec.

22km to go: Richard Carapaz attacks off the front of the lead group, but is quickly reeled in by Julian Alaphilippe. Lennard Kamna and Sebastien Reichenbach hang on.

25km to go: Quentin Bacher is caught by four pursuers at the head of the course. Alaphilippe, Kämna, Carapaz and Reichenbach lead today’s stage as the Frenchman is dropped and there are three kilometres to the penultimate summit of the day.

25km to go: Martin Guillaume and another Cofidis rider attack off the front of the peloton.

26km to go: Quentin Pacher leads from a group of nine riders including Warren Barguil, Richard Carapaz, Julian Alaphilippe, Nicolas Roche and Pavel Sivakov.

27km to go: Here are the time gaps ...

Tour de France 2020
27 kilometres to go ... Photograph: The time gaps as the stage approaches its knockings.

28km to go: Quentin Pacher, a 28 year old Frenchman, continues his audacious ascent, leading the rest of the escape party by 46 seconds.

30km to go: Quentin Pacher has a lead of 55 seconds over the rest of the breakaway group as the long ascent continues. The peloton are 13 minutes behind.

34km to go: Daniel Oss cracks, his work done for the day in the breakaway. B&B Hotels rider Quentin Pacher has attacked off the front of the breakaway and put a bit of distance between him and the chasing posse as he begins the climb to the snappily titled Montee de Saint Nizier du Moucherotte.

35km to go: Wout van Aert, who turned 26 today, gives a thumbs-up to a camera rolling alongside him on the back of a motorbike. Happy birthday, Wout!

36km to go: The apparently tireless Daniel Oss continues to crank out the rhythm at the front of the breakaway group.

40km to go: Jumbo-Visma continue to control the peloton, while the breakaway group of 23 riders lead by 12min 39sec.

Thibaut Pinot
Thibaut Pinot pootles along on stage 16. Photograph: Eurosport

Tour de France 2020
Team Jumbo-Visma riders lead the peloton. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images

51km to go: At the front of the lead group, the 33-year-old Bora Hansgrohe rider Daniel Oss continues to make the pace, his forearms resting on his handlebars, hands hanging in the breeze.

55km to go: The next summit, the Montee de Saint Nizier du Moucherotte is at the 20.9km-to-go mark. It’s a Category 1 climb at 1,169m that’s 11.1km in length. There is a group of 23 riders in the lead over the peloton, which is 11min 22sec back.

Five of our lead group have won Tour de France stages before: Julian Alaphilippe, Warren Barguil, Matteo Trentin, Simon Geschke and Pierre Rolland.

66km to go: The riders pass through the feed station, sling their musettes over their shoulders and start emptying the contents into their pockets.

69km to go: Pierre Rolland is first over the Cote de Revel, where he receives a raucous welcome from the crowd lining both sides of the road. He’s followed by the rest of the breakaway group and is now level at the top of the King of the Mountains classification with Cosnefroy, who hasn’t won a point since before the first rest day.

70km to go: With 1.5km to go to the summit of Cote de Revel, Pierre Rolland jumps off the front of the lead group to snaffle up a few more King of the Mountains points. Currently in the polka-dot jersey, Benoit Cosnefroy is back in the peloton.

71km to go: Your leaders: Neilson Powless (EF), Pavel Sivakov (Ineos-Grenadier), Romain Sicard (Total Direct Energie), Mikel Nieve (Mitchelton-Scott) and Simon Geschke (CCC), Andrey Amador and Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers), Lennard Kämna and Daniel Oss (Bora-Hansgrohe), Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-Quick Step), Sébastien Reichenbach (Groupama-FDJ), Alberto Bettiol (EF Education First), Winner Anacona, Warren Barguil (Arkéa-Samsic), Imanol Erviti, Carlos Verona (Movistar Team), Matteo Trentin (CCC Team), Chris Juul Jensen (Mitchelton-Scott), Nicholas Roche (Team Sunweb), Quentin Pacher (B&B Hotels-Vital Concept).

73km to go: All eight riders from Jumbo-Visma are lined up in single file at the front of the peloton as they tow the bunch along. They’re travelling uphill, towards the Cote de Revel. Bora Hansgrohe rider Daniel Oss continues to lead the breakaway group.

73km to go: Julian Alaphilippe gets another new bike (or possibly his old one back after being repaired) as the chase group joins the breakaway to make it 23 in number. the gap to the peloton is just over 10 minutes.

76km to go: In the lead group, Julian Alaphilippe has a mechanical, has to wait briefly for a new bike and ends up back in the chase group. THey’re 37 seconds behind the stage leaders.

85km to go: With everyone descending the Col de Porte, the gap from the stage leaders to the peloton is 10min 17sec. The stage leaders have just hit ther bottom of the descent and the cat-two Cote de Revel is next on the agenda after about six kilometres of flat. The chase group with Nieve, Sivakov and a few others is 41 seconds back.

Sam Bennett
Sam Bennett (No43) pedals along at the back of the peloton. Photograph: Eurosport

An email: “Maybe readers would like to know about the eponymous local drink of La Chatreuse region – through which the peloton are currently peddling?” writes Ben, from The Thinking Drinkers. “Eh? Oh. Whatever. I’ll tell you regardless. Chartreuse is a glorious green gear and a gift from the Gods – what with it being made by monks (Carthusian) up in the mountains near Grenoble.

“The Chartreuse recipe rests in the hands of just three monks and each one only knows two-thirds of a formula. They’re sworn to secrecy – which is easy as they’re also not allowed to talk too much.

“Anyway, it contains 130 herbs and spices, it’s thrice macerated in alcohol, distilled four times and, after the addition of honey and golden syrup, aged in giant oak casks for between three and five years.

“Most commonly consumed chilled over ice as a digestif, Chartreuse’s most illustrious imbibers include Hunter S Thompson, Jon Bon Jovi and Charles de Gaule. It’s also used by local farmers to cure flatulence in cows and racing horses have been known to perk-up a bit after an elixir-soaked sugar lump or two. The Queen Mother also enjoyed it when she went to Ascot – presumably not to reduce ‘windypops’ though.

“More of this kind of thing, and less, can be discovered on our Pour de France podcast – part of Around The World in 80 Drinks.”

96km to go: Rolland collects the points unopposed by Roche and the rest of the breakaway crest the Col de Porte soon afterwards.

98km to go: Pierre Rolland jumps from the front of the breakaway group a little over a kilometre from the top of the Col de Porte. Nicolas Roche gets on his wheel and the pair have a conversation. If Rolland gets the five points at the top, he’ll half the deficit between himself and Benoit Cosnefroy in the battle for the King of the Mountains jersey to five points.

101km to go: Led by Daniel Oss from Bora Hansgrohe, the breakaway group continue their ascent of the Col de Porte, keeping the gap between themselves to the chasing quintet to 1min 22sec. The breakaway are 7min 57sec clear of the peloton.

An email: “In the midst of the Tour and Geraint winning (coming second in) a warm up stage race for the Giro, the Guardian seem to have overlooked Great Britain’s (and Sheffield resident) Lizzy Banks winning a stage of the Giro Rosa,” writes Peter. Here’s some info on the dual Giro Rosa stage winner and former medical student, from the ProCycling website.

Updated

103km to go: Casper Pedersen joins the breakaway, which is now 18 riders strong. The Nieve group is 1min 10sec back.

104km to go: Near the back of the bunch, a motorcycle cameraman pulls alongside Sam Bennett, who looks down the lens, raises a hand and smiles.

107km to go: The breakaway group is 6min 24sec behind the peloton, which is being led along by Jumbo-Visma’s Tony Martin. Pierre Rolland and Tiesj Benoot have joined the breakaway group, while Pavel Sivakov, Neilson Powless and Mikel Nieve are part of a five-man group that is 1min 30sec behind the stage leaders.

112km to go: The stage has finally settled down into some kind of orderas the riders begin the climb towards the cat-two Col de Porte.

Your breakaway: Andrey Amador and Richard Carapaz (Ineos Grenadiers), Lennard Kämna and Daniel Oss (Bora-Hansgrohe), Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-Quick Step), Sébastien Reichenbach (Groupama-FDJ), Alberto Bettiol (EF Education First), Winner Anacona, Warren Barguil (Arkéa-Samsic), Imanol Erviti, Carlos Verona (Movistar Team), Matteo Trentin (CCC Team), Chris Juul Jensen (Mitchelton-Scott), Nicholas Roche (Team Sunweb), Quentin Pacher (B&B Hotels-Vital Concept).

The gap to the peloton is 4min 02sec and there are five riders on the road between both groups.

Riders are pictured through trees.
Riders are pictured through trees. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP

Updated

117km to go: Having been spotted struggling at the very start of the stage, Groupama-FDJ rider David Gaudau steps off his bike, has his race number removed and abandons.

119km to go: The 15-man breakaway pass the intermediate sprint line, with Matteo Trentin first past the post and still in the green jersey mixer . They’re 1min 16sec clear of the peloton, with three riders on the road between the two groups.

125km to go: Our group of 15 breakaway riders remain 1min 11sec clear of a peloton that is being towed along by Jumbo-Visma’s Robert Gesink. With points available to the first 15 riders to cross the line at the intermediate sprint, this will suit Sam Bennett just fine. Bennett leads Sagan by 42 points in the green jersey standings.

129km to go: We’ve got a group of 15 riders up the road, leading the bunch by 1min 31sec. Quite a few riders are trying to bridge the gap, while Bora Hansgrohe are making the pace at the front of the bunch so they can close the gap and try to get Peter Sagan into a breakaway. The intermediate sprint he’s hoping to win some points in comes at the “119km to go” mark.

136km to go: The gruppetto has already formed at the back of the race, with a group of 13 riders including Caleb Ewan and Andre Greipel already dropped.

140km to go: It’s been a breathless start with an average speed of 45km per hour and the stage has yet to settle. A group of 15 riders, including Carapaz, Roche, Warren Barguil, Julian Alaphilippe and Sebastien Reichenbach have opened a gap of 30 seconds on the peloton.

143km to go: Roche and Carapaz are caught, while Peter Sagan tries to break off the front of the bunch. He wants to get himself in a breakaway so he can snaffle some intermediate sprint points and try to get himself back in green, but Sam Bennett is wise to his scheming and is immediately on his tail.

146km to go: The large breakaway group is swamped by the peloton before Ineos rider Richard Carapaz and Team Sunweb’s Nico Roche attack off the front.

151km to go: The breakaway, which is far from settled yet, is about to reach the top of the first of five categorised climbs today, the cat-four Cote de Virieu.

Updated

152km to go: The gap from the front of the peloton to the breakaway group is 47 seconds and in the polka-dot jersey, Benoit Cosnefroy is trying desperately hard to bridge it. Ineos rider Pavel Sivakov is currently leading the escape party.

153km to go: But it’s actually 35 riders ...

153km to go: Well, I say “about 25 riders” ...

156km to go: On the first of the day’s downhills, a group of about 25 riders seem to have put a bit of distance between themselves and the peloton, which is being led by Bora-Hansgrohe. The gap is 36 seconds.

159km to go: Still waiting for the stage to settle as the aforementioned group is absorbed back into the peloton. At the back of the peloton, Groupama-FDJ rider David Gaudu already looks to be struggling.

161km to go: Quentin Pacher is reeled in as the riders tackle a punchy early climb. At the front of the bunch, a group of about 25 riders have opened a small gap, which Peter Sagan is trying to close.

And they’re off: Back from his spell in self-isolation and having passed all his Covid-19 tests, Christian Prudhomme emerges from his Skoda’s sun-roof and semaphores the signal to start to racing. It’s a fairly narrow country road and B&B Hotels rider Quentin Pacher is immediately off the front of a bunch that splits quickly.

The roll-out continues: The riders continue to barrel along at a leisurely pace, while ITV have shown an interview conducted by Ned Boulting with Chris Froome on the day Egan Bernal lost over seven minutes in stage 15. Froome, like Geraint Thomas, was not selected for the Tour by Team Ineos and will be riding in the Spanish Vuelta instead.

“Today was a massive blow,” he said of Bernal’s poor showing. “Egan looks like he’s out of the GC race. I didn’t see that coming because he seemed to be there or thereabouts and I thought he’d keep within hitting distance all the way to Paris. Once you win that first Tour de France your life is never the same again. When you’ve got that No1 on your back, you’re marked in every race.”

Asked about comments he made suggesting he should be at the Tour, he claims to have been quoted slightly out of context. “I was more than willing to go to France,” he says. “I wasn’t pushing to say I should be there. In the build-up to the Tour I knew I wouldn’t be going to try to win it, but I was prepared to give everything to help Egan win it.”

And on the domination of team Jumbo-Visma in this year’s Tour. “The way they rode today on that final climb was amazing,” he says. “They were completely in control of the race. They set a tempo that meant nobody felt they could attack.”

The roll-out begins: With just six stages of this year’s Tour remaining, the riders set off from La Tour du Pin, led by the main jersey-wearers Primoz Roglic (yellow), Benoit Cosnefroy (polka-dot), Sam Bennett (green) and Tadej Pogacar (white). They’ll have six kilometres or so of a procession before being given the signal to start racing.

Meanwhile in Italy ...

A man who is never slow in blowing long solos on his own trumpet when things are going well for his team, Ineos Grenadiers boss David Brailsford declined requests to speak to the media during yesterday’s rest day.

Meanwhile in San Benedetto del Tronto, Geraint Thomas finished a highly creditable second in Italy’s prestigious Tirreno-Adriatico stage race after being dropped from this year’s Tour de France team by Brailsford.

Tirreno-Adriatico
Geraint Thomas finished second behind Simon Yates in the 55th Tirreno-Adriatico in San Benedetto del Tronto. Rafal Majka was third. Photograph: Roberto Bettini/EPA

Race director Christian Prudhomme on today’s stage: “La Chartreuse area could inspire the many breakaway experts if they feel ready enough to battle it out on the climb up the Col de Porte,” he said. “The mountains of Vercors also offer all the ingredients of a tricky stage. A similar cocktail to the one offered in Villard de Lans in 1987 that had left a bad taste in the mouth of Jean-François Bernard.”

Primoz Roglic on stage 15

“We had a plan to let the breakaway go,” said the race leader. “It’s not up to us to do the race but we saw that we could control it. The guys did it really well. Unfortunately, I was a bit too short at the end. I didn’t make any gift to Tadej [Pogacar]. We are good friends but we both want to win. He was just stronger and I was a bit disappointed to lose the stage. Chapeau to him. I don’t think the suspense on GC is over. I would like it was! We are in a really good position but it’s far from over yet.”

Tour de France 2020
Tadej Pogacar (right) outsprints Primoz Roglic in the final climb to the summit of Grand Colombier. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images

Stage 15 recap

Tadej Pogacar was first to the top of Grand Colombier to win his second stage of this year’s Tour, while Ineos rider and reigning champion Egan Bernal plummeted down the overall standings after losing more than seven minutes amid rumblings of discontent from within and without the camp. Jeremy Whittle was there for the Guardian ...

Updated

The top 10 on General Classification

It’s a Slovenian one-two at the moment as Primoz Roglic leads his compatriot Tadej Pogacar by 40 seconds. Colombian veteran Rigoberto Uran is a further 54 seconds back in third.

Tour de France
The top 10 on general classification after stage 15 Photograph: www.letour.fr

Stage 16: La Tour du Pin to Villard de Lans (164km)

From William Fotheringham’s stage-by-stage guide: Never flat, and with an 11km climb into the Vercors Massif, this stage favours an early break, and the winner will probably escape on the ascent 20km from the finish. It’s the sort of stage that suits a climber who isn’t afraid to go solo , such as the Dutchman Bauke Mollema if he isn’t in the overall mix . [Narrator’s voice: “Bauke Mollema abandoned after crashing during stage 13”]

Stage 16
This afternoon’s stage profile. Photograph: www.letour.fr

Updated

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