Marcel Kittel continued his domination of the Tour de France sprints when he won today's big battle on The Mall in London. The German claimed that he did one of the fastest sprints of his career but refuses the suggestion that there are no rival for him in this year's Tour de France.
Marcel Kittel has won his second stage of the 2014 Tour de France in a royal sprint finish in front of Buckingham Palace in Lonon. Kittel was once again set up perfectly by a near-perfect sprint formation that overcame wet roads on the fast run-in to central London.
The stage was set for a grandstand finish after the peloton swallowed up the final breakaway rider as the lined out peloton raced into the streets of the English capital and with four kilometres to go the Team Giant-Shimano sprint formation hit the front and never let up. Long pulls from John Degenkolb and Roy Curvers led the way before Kittel launched his finishing sprint, unchallenged to take a superb second win in three days and his sixth Tour stage.
The third stage of the race was a flat leg from Cambridge to The Mall in London, the finish of the 2012 Olympic Road Race, without one categorised climb on the route. With no KOM points up for grabs the peloton was happy to let two riders slip away early on and spend the day out front.
This left the team in an ideal position being able to not spend too much energy controlling the break. Cheng Ji once again did the lion’s share of the work as the controller and the first rider in the sprint formation before the race headed into the capital city.
The two riders split in the closing kilometres leaving a sole rider out front as the roads started to turn slick under the English rain. Once the race was all together again the lead-outs started to take shape and Team Giant-Shimano waited for the opportune moment to hit the front before leading right to the finish.
The team’s coaches looked at this stage earlier in the year and the information passed onto the team proved vital here, with everyone knowing what to expect and then how to react to different situations.
Coming around the final corner Kittel was in prime position sitting in the wheels before jumping with just over 200m to go. Nobody was able to come round him as he punched the air for the second time in three days showing his sprinting dominance in this race.
After the stage, Team Giant-Shimano coach Marc Reef said: “Once again I am so proud to be a part of this. Today was another amazing day, both with how the guys rode together and also for the amount of people out there.
“It was near perfect yes but there is always something extra you can do to make that bit better and even on a day like today we can learn and improve the sprint formation.
“It is always hard with rain and you have to react and come through a bit earlier but this means you need to gauge your effort and not run out of guys too quickly.
“The guys pulled great again today, Cheng [Ji] did a great job as controller and then there were some huge pulls at the end from the positioners to stay in front. The guys stayed calm, kept a cool head and made it another great day for the team.”
“Today was one of the best finish lines I have ever seen, with the amount of people lining the roads it was incredible,” said Marcel after the stage.
“The team did another great job today and the finish was a perfect finish for me. The coaches had looked at the stage earlier in the year and with their information we knew what to expect - this helped a lot today and meant we could react easily when we needed to.
"Emotionally, this win is close to the one I got on the Champs-Elysées in Paris last year. Winning on The Mall, that's what I dreamed of but even though I had a good chance to make it come true, it's not something I could take for granted. It's really fantastic to win here. On the finishing line, the crowd was fantastic. I love the atmosphere.
"This was one of the fastest sprints I've ever done. My job was 500 metres long but the biggest fight was already over. My boys had done a great job before that. I lost their wheels at some point but Tom Veelers brought me back to the wheel of Koen de Kort. Because of the rain, everybody was scared. But I didn't let myself being disturbed and it's a great day for us.
"So far I've won two stages out of three but I don't have a precise goal in terms of number of victories. I'll take it day by day. We'll keep working hard with the aim of winning more.
“There is still plenty of competition: this is the Tour de France. There is also Peter Sagan. This was a perfect sprint finish for me today but maybe another stage might be different with an uphill finish. I always have to take care.
“I think the stage today was a real stage for sprinters. It was really hard and the finish was just made for it. The sprint in front of Buckingham Palace was awesome. We had a straight, wide road, downhill – perfect for me.”
“The fact that Mark Cavendish isn’t in the race changes some things for us as a sprinter’s team. Maybe there won’t be as many teams who want to work for a sprint as before, and we have to take that into account for our planning.”
Koen De Kort added: “That was incredible. It was a very different finish to what we had on stage one with honest, flat, straight roads on the run in to the finish.
“As planned we came to the front with just over three kilometres to go. It was really hard to communicate out there as you tried to shout to each other but the crowds were shouting louder. So it came down to instinct and we showed that we can cope with something like this without problems.”
Temur MUKHAMEDOV 36 years | today |
Manuel MÜLLER 29 years | today |
Thomas ROHREGGER 42 years | today |
Josef HOSEK 33 years | today |
Julie BROUWERS 22 years | today |
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