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Tour de France Stage 5: Mark Cavendish wins in Marseille as big sprint names go head to head

First victory in national champion's jersey, first in 100th Tour and 24th TDF stage for Manxman...

Mark Cavendish of Omega Pharma-Quick Step has won his first stage of the 100th edition of the Tour de France - and 24th in total - winning the bunch sprint at the end of Stage 5 in Marseille. Former Sky team mate Edvald Boasson Hagen was second and points classification leader Peter Sagan of Cannondale third. Lotto-Belisol's Andre Greipel took fourth place in the first head-to-head meeting of the world's top sprinter's in this year's race.

It's Cavendish's first win in the British national champion's jersey, and what more one that is secured as he overcomes the bronchitis that has laid him low in recent days. Behind, there was a big crash in the peloton on the finishing straight, leaving a number of riders on the ground. Orica-GreenEdge's Simon Gerrans stays in the race leader's maillot jaune.

Six riders had got away right at the start of the 228.5km stage from Cagnes-sur-Mer, just west of Nice, which had a jagged profile including four categorised climbs and a number of smaller ones, the last of the latter crested just 12.5km from the finish.

Those were the Europcar pair of Kevin Reza and Yukiya Arashiro, in the red and white kit of Japanese national champion, Vacansoleil-DCM’s Thomas de Gendt, Astana’s under 23 world champion Alexey Lutsenko and Sojasun’s Anthony Deplace, the final pair being dropped with 50km still to ride.

With 20 kilometres remaining, the last four riders had an advantage of 2 minutes 16 seconds over the chasing peloton, De Gendt urging his three companions to help force the pace to try and stay away.

The gap was halved over the following 5 kilometres despite a big crash in the peloton that brought down a number of riders, including mountains classication leader Pierre Rolland of Europcar, and Garmin-Sharp’s Christian Vande Velde, who sat by the roadside afterwards holding up his arm in what seemed like a telltale sign of a broken collarbone, although he did complete the stage.

With 8km left, De Gendt and Arashiro had been brought back and with Omega Pharma-Quick Step working for Cavendish and Sagan’s Cannondale also forcing the pace, it wasn’t long until the final pair were caught.

Also near the front of the peloton was Orica-GreenEdge, looking for a third successive stage win, hopes today resting on Matt Goss, as well as seeking to protect maillot jaune Simon Gerrans, who avoided the crash at the finish.

Today’s stage saw 195 riders take to the start in Cagnes-sur-Mer – missing, despite the protests of fans and fellow riders, was Cannondale’s Ted King, nursing an injury from the opening day of the race and who missed the time cut by just 7 seconds in yesterday’s team time trial in Nice.

One of the other riders injured on Stage 1, Team Sky’s Geraint Thomas, had what was undoubtedly a wince inducing moment when, after a bike change, a well-intentioned spectator gave him a helpful shove to get going – right where he has a fracture on his pelvis.

That wasn’t the only issue with over-enthusiastic fans today who crowded some of the climbs that punctuated today’s stage, with some near misses as the peloton swept by.

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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7 comments

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TeamCC | 11 years ago
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Damn, someone pushed Geraint's bum!? Spolier alert please! I was going to watch the highlights, not anymore! Capital Cycles

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Tony Farrelly | 11 years ago
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Hi Maccruiskeen,
I know this irritates some people, but as some of the other commenters have pointed out, we are a news website - and its our job to get the news out there as quickly as possible and to try and get as many people as possible to read it. Giving them the salient point, that Cav won, in this case is part of that process - it got you to read it I'm guessing  3

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kitkat | 11 years ago
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I raised this issue in the forum and sadly the only way to avoid finding out these days is a complete Internet, radio & tv embargo until you've watched the highlights. I remember the days of 30min on channel 4 and if you missed that you'd only find out who won by reading cycling weekly.

Great win for Cav, his train doesn't have the power or organisation but his direct lead out man was great today. I laugh at Cav going out the back on hills as I can't understand why he can't do them but his sprint is just crazy. A bike length above everyone else.

The break today was strange, it was like the Europe Car guys couldn't be bothered. I felt sorry for the other two. If they'd worked hard it could have gone to the wire.

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Colin Peyresourde | 11 years ago
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Chuckles

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Scowel | 11 years ago
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Would have been better if you had finished that last sentence with "you knob" lol

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maccruiskeen | 11 years ago
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Just an idea.... given the highlights haven't been broadcast yet.... How about you put the results in the body of the article rather than in the headline.

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stewieatb replied to maccruiskeen | 11 years ago
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maccruiskeen wrote:

Just an idea.... given the highlights haven't been broadcast yet.... How about you put the results in the body of the article rather than in the headline.

It's a cycling news website. The winner of the day's Tour stage is about the biggest news in cycling on any given day at the moment. If you don't want to see the cycling news, then don't visit a cycling news website until you've seen the highlights.

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