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Tour de France Stage 6: Cavendish shows how it's done in Guegnon

Great escape comes to nothing on longest day as Cav wins two on the trot

Mark Cavendish followed yesterday’s victory in Montargis by claiming his second win of this year’s Tour de France in Guegnon this afternoon to confirm that he is very much back at the top of his game following a difficult first few days of the race as he struggled to recapture his form after a build-up blighted by illness, injury and no small amount of controversy.

That was all forgotten as the Manxman held off Tyler Farrar of Garmin-Transitions and Lampre-Farnese Vini’s Alessandro Petacchi in a thrilling finish to Stage 6 in Gueugnon, as the peloton negotiated a tricky, twisting final couple of kilometres without mishap to set the stage for the bunch sprint.

With the earlier tailwind turning into a strong sidewind as the race entered its closing 10 kilometres, the big general classification contenders including Astana’s Alberto Contador and BMC Racing’s Cadel Evans moved up towards the front of the peleton to avoid a repeat of the split that happened last year on the stage into La Grande Motte, when HTC-Columbia took advantage to set up victory for Cavendish.

Afterwards, the 25-year-old, whose career tally now stands at a dozen stages of the Tour de France, said that his team had once again profited from the conditions, with the nervousness caused by the prospect of echelons forming bringing the race back together, and although it was Garmin-Transitions that once again led the race under the flamme rouge, it was HTC-Columbia’s Mark Renshaw who delivered his sprinter to the front at the right time.

At 227.5 kilometres, today was the longest stage of this year’s race, but that – and temperatures hitting over 30 degrees Celsius – didn’t deter a trio of intrepid escapees to get off the front of the peloton within minutes of the commissaire’s flag dropping outside Montargis.

That threesome, which spent more than 200km at the front of the race, comprised Perez Moreno of Euskaltel, Mathieu Perget of Caisse d’Epargne and Sebastien Lang of Omega-Pharma Lotto who swept up the points between them on the intermediate sprints and four Category 4 climbs, with Perget rising to second in the mountains classification, a point behind Jerome Pinaut of Quick Step.

But with the specialist climbers in the peloton now licking their lips at the prospect of the race heading into the Alps, the Frenchman now faces some serious competition to keep hold of it.

Meanwhile, the points classification is starting to bubble over nicely. Thor Hushovd remains in the green jersey by four points from Petacchi. But with the Norwegian finishing tenth today, the gap between him and Cavendish, who moves up to fifth, with Robbie McEwen of Katusha third and Caisse d’Epargne’s Jose Jouaquin Rojas fourth, has narrowed to 23 points.

The next few days, though, may well see Hushovd attack those sprint points that are available in the mountains to help consolidate his lead, a tactic that the Cervélo TestTeam rider employed successfully last year on his way to taking the maillot vert in Paris.

With the second half of tomorrow’s Stage 7 featuring three Category 2 climbs as it heads up to the finish at Station des Rousses, it’s likely that overall leader Fabian Cancellara will be spending his final day in the maillot jaune.

The question of whether it will be his fellow Team Saxo Bank rider Andy Schleck, defending champion Contador or one of the other overall contenders who takes it up – or a less heralded name after a successful break – should make for some gripping viewing.

Top 20 Tour de France 2010 Stage 6

1.  CAVENDISH Mark         TEAM HTC - COLUMBIA           5h 37' 42"
2.  FARRAR Tyler           GARMIN - TRANSITIONS           + 00' 00"
3.  PETACCHI Alessandro    LAMPRE - FARNESE               + 00' 00"
4.  MC EWEN Robbie         TEAM KATUSHA                   + 00' 00"
5.  CIOLEK Gerald          TEAM MILRAM                    + 00' 00"
6.  TURGOT Sébastien       BBOX BOUYGUES TELECOM          + 00' 00"
7.  ROJAS Jose Joaquin     CAISSE D’EPARGNE               + 00' 00"
8.  HAGEN Edvald Boasson   SKY PRO CYCLING                + 00' 00"
9.  HUNTER Robert          GARMIN - TRANSITION5           + 00' 00"
10. HUSHOVD Thor           CERVELO TEST TEAM              + 00' 00"
11. THOMAS Geraint         SKY PRO CYCLING                + 00' 00"
12. MONDORY Lloyd          AG2R LA MONDIALE               + 00' 00"
13. RENSHAW Mark           TEAM HTC - COLUMBIA            + 00' 00"
14. LANCASTER Brett        CERVELO TEST TEAM              + 00' 00"
15. ROELANDTS Jürgen       OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO           + 00' 03"
16. LADAGNOUS Matthieu     FDJ                            + 00' 03"
17. DUMOULIN Samuel        COFIDIS LE CREDIT EN LIGNE     + 00' 03"
18. KLUGE Roger            TEAM MILRAM                    + 00' 03"
19. ARASHIRO Yukiya BBOX BOUYGUES TELECOM + 00' 03
20. ROBERTS Luke TEAM MILRAM + 00' 03"

Top 20 on General Classification after stage 5

1.  CANCELLARA Fabian      TEAM SAXO BANK            28h 37' 30"
2.  THOMAS Geraint         SKY PRO CYCLING             + 00' 20"
3.  EVANS Cadel            BMC RACING TEAM             + 00' 39"
4.  HESJEDAL Ryder         GARMIN - TRANSITIONS        + 00' 46"
5.  CHAVANEL Sylvain       QUICK STEP                  + 01' 01"
6.  SCHLECK Andy           TEAM SAXO BANK              + 01' 09"
7.  HUSHOVD Thor           CERVELO TEST TEAM           + 01' 13"
8.  VINOKOUROV Alexandre   ASTANA                      + 01' 31"
9.  CONTADOR Alberto       ASTANA                      + 01' 40"
10. VAN DEN BROECK Jurgen  OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO        + 01' 42"
11. ROCHE Nicolas          AG2R LA MONDIALE            + 01' 42"
12. VAN SUMMEREN Johan     GARMIN - TRANSITIONS        + 01' 47"
13. MENCHOV Denis          RABOBANK                    + 01' 49"
14. WIGGINS Bradley        SKY PRO CYCLING             + 01' 49"
15. MILLAR David           GARMIN - TRANSITIONS        + 02' 06"
16. KREUZIGER Roman        LIQUIGAS-DOIMO              + 02' 24"
17. SANCHEZ Luis-Leon      CAISSE D’EPARGNE            + 02' 25"
18. ARMSTRONG Lance        TEAM RADIOSHACK             + 02' 30"
19. LÖVKVIST Thomas        SKY PRO CYCLIN              + 02' 34"
20. ROJAS Jose Joaquin     CAISSE D’EPARGNE            + 02' 35"

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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