2008 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11

2008 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11

These are the profiles for the individual stages in the 2008 Tour de France, with Stage 1 on 5 July, and Stage 11 on 16 July.

tages

Stage 1

;July 5, 2008Brest > Plumelec, 197.5 km For the first time since 1967, the tour started with a road stage rather than the traditional prologue. The stage was hilly with four fourth category climbs through the Monts d'Arrée in the department of Finistère. The finish at Plumelec is uphill on the "Côte de Cadoual", with a 1.7km climb at 6.2%. As there were no time bonuses in the three intermediate sprints, the first rider home wore the yellow jersey at the start of stage 2. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/100/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 1 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-06]

An eight-man breakaway formed at the 3 km mark, and it got away for some time. At the first feeding station, Hervé Duclos-Lassalle crashed and sustained a broken left wrist, becoming the first rider to have to abandon the 2008 Tour. At about the 30 km to go mark, two in the break, Lilian Jegou and David de la Fuente got away from the other six after a short series of attacks and counter-attacks. The peloton, paced by Silence-Lotto, increased pace when the other six rejoined them, and Jegou and de la Fuente were caught at around the 7 km to go mark. At that point, the peloton split into several groups for the run in toward the finish, won by Alejandro Valverde. One of the pre-race favourites, Mauricio Soler, fell with 20km remaining and lost more than three minutes. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/100/journal_etape.html | title=Valiant victory Valverde! | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-05 | accessdate=2008-07-06]

Stage 1 Result and General Classification after Stage 1

Stage 3

;July 7, 2008Saint-Malo > Nantes, 208 km Stage 3 was flat, with no ranking climbs, which was expected to favour the sprinters at the finish alongside the River Loire in Nantes. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/300/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 3 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-06]

A four-man breakaway formed at the 9 km mark, comprising William Frischkorn, Samuel Dumoulin, Paolo Longo Borghini, and Romain Feillu. They quickly took the three intermediate sprints available on the course and had a maximum advantage of 14 minutes before the peloton began to reel them in, fairly early on in the stage. Several teams helped with the workload to bring the breakaway back. With the day's early rain saturating the road, Fabian Wegmann crashed around 60 km in, needing to change his bike minutes later.

For many kilometers, the time gap didn't decrease beyond about 6'30" to 6'45", leading to speculation that the four in the breakaway could survive to the line. The teams of the prominent sprinters came forward to make a faster pace at around 35 km to go. With about 23 km to go, Ángel Gómez and Nicki Sørensen were involved in a crash that split the peloton into three fragments, the second of which, which contained the white jersey Riccardo Riccò and Denis Menchov, finished 38 seconds behind the first, which contained the yellow jersey Alejandro Valverde. The third group contained Christophe Moreau. Gómez eventually had to abandon the Tour.

The breakaway survived to the finish, giving the Tour a new maillot jaune for the next day's individual time trial. Dumoulin won the sprint to the line. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/300/journal_etape.html | title=Dumoulin Wins & Feillu Also Grins | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-07 | accessdate=2008-07-08]

Stage 4

;July 8, 2008Cholet - 29.5 km (ITT) The fourth stage was an individual time trial over a flat course to the west of Cholet in the department of Maine-et-Loire. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/400/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 4 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-06]

Denis Menchov and Jens Voigt set nearly identical times about two-thirds of the way into the time trial, with Menchov one second better. It stood as best until reigning world time trial champion and stage favorite Fabian Cancellara gained a one second advantage, despite having been behind Menchov's and Voigt's pace at both intermediate time checks. The surprise of the day came when Stefan Schumacher beat Cancellara by 33 seconds, having similar leads at each time check. Cadel Evans, David Millar, and Kim Kirchen also beat Cancellara, but could not match Schumacher.

As was expected, the top three men in the GC, having been in a breakaway almost the entire previous day, fell in the overall standings after the time trial, and the Tour had its third different rider in yellow at the day's end. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/400/journal_etape.html | title=Schumacher’s Special Surprise! | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-08 | accessdate=2008-07-09]

Stage 5

;July 9, 2008Cholet > Châteauroux, 232 km This was the longest stage of the 2008 tour, over flat roads in the departments of Maine-et-Loire, Deux-Sèvres, Vienne, Indre-et-Loire and Indre. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/500/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 5 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-06]

Mauricio Soler fell in the neutral zone before the start; already suffering injuries from a fall on the opening day, the Colombian who won the polka-dot jersey last year finally succumbed and retired from the race at the 11 km mark of stage five.

The stage was led almost from start to finish by three breakaway riders. The French trio of Lilian Jegou, Florent Brard and national champion Nicolas Vogondy opened up a gap of more than eight minutes, which was slowly whittled away by the chasing peloton. Vogondy broke away from his compatriots in the final 1.5 km, only to be overhauled by the sprinters around 30 metres from the line.

Mark Cavendish, who was led out by his German team-mate Gerald Ciolek, held off late attacks from Thor Hushovd, Óscar Freire and Erik Zabel, and pulled away from his rivals in the final metres to claim glory after almost five-and-a-half hours in the saddle. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/500/journal_etape.html | title= Cavendish Delivers As Promised | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-09 | accessdate=2008-07-09]

Stage 6

;July 10, 2008Aigurande > Super-Besse Sancy, 195.5 km This was the first mountain stage of the tour through the Massif Central, with two Fourth Category climbs in the first half of the race before the riders crossed the Second Category Col de la Croix-Morand after 158 km. The finish is at the ski station of Super Besse on the slopes of Puy de Sancy with a climb of 11 km at an average gradient of 4.7%, including the final 1.5 km with a maximum gradient of 10%. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/600/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 6 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-06]

A three-man breakaway, made up of Frenchmen Sylvain Chavanel, Benoît Vaugrenard and Freddy Bichot, claimed the sprints and the two small category 4 climbs early on in the stage. The group attained a maximum lead of 5'15" after 95km. The main field split on the climb of the Col de la Croix-Morand, with many of the sprinters and leadout men fell back into an "autobus", and many short-lived attempts to catch the two remaining riders from the breakaway, Vaugrenard having been dropped.

Chavanel and Bichot survived to the top of the Col de la Croix-Morand, giving Chavanel sufficient points on the day's climbs to gain the lead in the King of the Mountains classification, but he was caught with 20m remaining, and Bichot 7km later. The autobus rejoined the second peloton on the descent from the Col de la Croix-Morand, before the field split into several small groups again. Riders who posed no threat to the GC attacked on the way up to Super-Besse, and the yellow jersey group, still being paced by Caisse d'Epargne, let them all go. Even when Christian Vandevelde, sixth overall and a member of the first place team Garmin-Chipotle, launched an attack, Caisse d'Epargne did not respond.

Finally, at the 1 kilometer to go mark, the peloton came forward to bring back those who had broken away. Virtually all of the GC contenders were at the front of the main group. The last of Valverde's teammates peeled off to open the sprint to the line, won by Riccardo Riccò. In seeking a position for the final sprint, the yellow jersey wearer Stefan Schumacher caught the wheel of Kim Kirchen with 300m remaining, and fell. Since the finish was on an uphill climb, the rule giving anyone who crashes in the final 3 kilometers the same time as the group they were in upon crashing was not invoked, and he lost 32" on the stage, and Kirchen took the overall lead. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/600/journal_etape.html | title= Ricco Rises to the Occasion! | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-10 | accessdate=2008-07-12]

Stage 7

;July 11, 2008Brioude > Aurillac, 159 km This is a short stage along the steep roads of the Massif Central, through the Monts du Cantal with the third category Côte de Fraisse coming after only 11 km. After a fourth category climb came a pair of Category Two climbs: the Col d'Entremont after 101km, and the Pas de Peyrol, before descending to Aurillac via another fourth category climb. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/700/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 7 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-07]

Early crosswinds split the peloton. Damiano Cunego crashed after about 50 km and although he rejoined the leading group, he missed a later break, losing 33 seconds on the day. A breakaway made up of Josep Jufré, Luis León Sánchez, David de la Fuente and Vincenzo Nibali formed on the way up the Col d'Entremont and were caught by a group of nineteen, including most of the overall favourites, with about 9km remaining, but Sánchez counterattacked on the descent and held on to win the stage.

De la Fuente's three leads over the tops of climbs earned him the lead in the King of the Mountains classification, while four riders, including Agritubel team leader Christophe Moreau failed to finish and Magnus Bäckstedt finished outside regulation time. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/700/journal_etape.html | title= Luis Sanchez: King of the Descending Finish! | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-11 | accessdate=2008-07-12]

Liquigas rider Manuel Beltrán was revealed after this stage to have failed a blood doping test earlier in the tour, and was withdrawn by his team. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_sports/cycling/7502763.stm | title= Spaniard Beltran tests positive | publisher=BBC| date=2008-07-11 | accessdate=2008-07-12]

Stage 8

;July 12, 2008Figeac > Toulouse, 172.5 km This was a connecting stage from the Massif Central to the Pyrenees and had four categorized climbs in the first half of the race before the finish in Toulouse. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/800/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 8 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-07]

The significant break of the day saw Laurent Lefevre go clear on the second climb, and was followed by his Bouygues Télécom team mate Jérôme Pineau, Amets Txurruka, and Christophe Riblon. Eventually Lefevre allowed the other three to join him, and the group attained a maximum advantage of 5' 15" at 110km, but pressure from sprinters' teams reduced the gap rapidly over the following 20km, to less than three minutes. Riccardo Riccò was one of four fallers at 116km, and after being assisted to catch up with the peloton, needed medical attention. With 13km to go, Pineau and Txurruka moved clear of their colleagues in the break, who were absorbed into the peloton 3km later. The pursuit of the peloton, which had eased up to avoid regrouping too soon and allow other attacks, put on pressure again in the last 20 km, finally catching the two escapees with 3.5km left. In a bunch sprint, Mark Cavendish gained his second stage victory. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/800/journal_etape.html | title= Cavendish First, Ciolek Second… Columbia’s Domination Continues | publisher=www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-12 | accessdate=2008-07-14]

Stage 9

;July 13, 2008Toulouse > Bagnères-de-Bigorre, 224 kmThis stage took the riders into the Pyrenees with a series of fourth category climbs in the early stages before the third category Col des Ares at the 100 km mark. After passing through Bagnères-de-Luchon, the riders climbed the First Category Col de Peyresourde before the final climb over the Col d'Aspin, after which came a 26 km descent to the finish at Bagnères-de-Bigorre. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/900/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 9 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-08]

Aleksandr Kuschynski, Nicolas Jalabert, and Sebastian Lang formed a breakaway after 22km that claimed the intermediate sprint and first few small climbs. They attained a maximum advantage of 14' 20" at 55km before the peloton, being paced by Euskaltel-Euskadi, started bringing them back. Cadel Evans crashed after about 105km, injuring his left elbow and needing to ride with torn clothing the rest of the stage. He had to change bikes and was paced back into the peloton by the rest of his Silence-Lotto team. He, and subsequently Alejandro Valverde, needed to seek medical attention.

The leaders' advantage, after staying at around ten minutes for many kilometers, began to fall on the ascent of the Col de Peyresourde, and first Jalabert, then Kuschynski, dropped off Lang's pace. Maxime Monfort and King of the Mountains leader David de la Fuente moved ahead of the peloton before the first major mountain pass of the tour.

After consolidating on the descent from the Peyresourde, the peloton thinned and split again on the way up the Col d'Aspin. The main GC contenders came to the front of the peloton as it neared the summit, and only Lang of the early escapees remained clear. After several other riders attempted unsuccessfully to do so, Luis León Sánchez bridged the gap to Monfort and de la Fuente, only for the latter to drop away. The decisive attack of the stage came from Riccardo Riccò, who rapidly passed the four riders ahead of the peloton and crossed the top of the Col d'Aspin 1' 15" ahead of the yellow jersey group he had left 4 km earlier.

Riccò preserved that margin on the descent to win the stage, with only Vladimir Efimkin moving clear of the peloton on the descent, to claim second position on the road. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/900/journal_etape.html | title= Ricco Rockets Ahead To Second Stage Victory| publisher =www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-13 | accessdate=2008-07-14]

Stage 10

;July 14, 2008Pau > Hautacam, 156 km

This stage was selected for the 2008 L'Étape du Tour run on Sunday 6 July when nearly 7,500 amateur and club cyclists raced over the route, with Laurent Four coming home in the fastest time of 5 hours 38 minutes. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letapedutour.com/2008/ETDT/presentation/us/communiques.htm | title=The 2008 Mondovelo Etape Du Tour – 16th Edition: Pau / Hautacam | publisher=www.letapedutour.com| date=2008-07-06 | accessdate=2008-07-07]

The highlight of this short, intense stage is the Hors Categorie climb over the Col du Tourmalet at 2115 m, with the finish at the ski-station at Hautacam. The final climb is 14.4 km, with an average gradient of 7.2 %, with the steepest section at 10 %. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/1000/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 10 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-08]

Twenty-four riders representing seventeen teams broke away from the peloton almost immediately. Included in the group were three riders each for Gerolsteiner and Bouygues Télécom as well as the green and polka-dot jersey wearers Óscar Freire and David de la Fuente. Only Team Milram, Lampre, and Garmin-Chipotle were unrepresented. Freire took the first intermediate sprint and with it the outright lead in the points classification.

Seven of the twenty-four came clear on the way up the Côte de Loucrup. Freire was among them and took the second sprint to cement his lead. The leaders' time gap grew to over nine minutes before the peloton thinned as chases came forward to bring them back. Rémy Di Gregorio attacked and got free of the group of seven, going it alone to be the first over the Tourmalet.

Jens Voigt and Team CSC Saxo Bank set a blistering pace up the Tourmalet in the peloton, with the intention of knocking off as many teammates of the overall contenders as they could while protecting Carlos Sastre. Several team leaders, including Alejandro Valverde, eventually dropped as well. Di Gregorio at last was caught by the yellow jersey's group of contenders at the 12 kilometers to go mark. The contenders traded attacks on the way up to Hautacam, and the yellow jersey himself Kim Kirchen was dropped along the way. Fränk Schleck, Juan José Cobo, and Leonardo Piepoli came forward and gained a maximum advantage of two minutes on the other contenders. The Saunier Duval riders went on to drop Schleck, and the time gap between Schleck and Cadel Evans was very close to see who would wear yellow at the day's end. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/1000/journal_etape.html | title= Promise Fulfilled: Piepoli’s Stage Win & Evans Into Yellow| publisher =www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-14 | accessdate=2008-07-14]

Rest Day 1

;July 15, 2008

Stage 11

;July 16, 2008Lannemezan > Foix, 167.5 kmStage 11 was a relatively straightforward ride through the foothills of the Pyrenees, with one first category climb over the Col de Portel at the 110 km mark, and two third category climbs. [cite web| first=| last=| author= | url=http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/1100/etape_par_etape.html | title=Stage 11 route map and profile | publisher=www.letour.fr| date= | accessdate=2008-07-08]

Before the stage began, Moisés Dueñas was revealed to have failed a test for evidence of blood-doping at the end of stage 4, and was withdrawn by his team. Two more Barloworld riders withdrew injured during the stage, Félix Cárdenas and Paolo Longo Borghini. After 35km, a 13-man breakaway, initiated by Fabian Wegmann and Kurt Asle Arvesen, formed, and with no rider within 20 minutes of the lead, came under no pressure from the main peloton. Gert Steegmans was dropped from this group on the first climb, but the rest of the breakaway increased their margin over the peloton. On the ascent of the Col de Portel, Amaël Moinard moved clear of the other escapees, and reached the top of the climb almost 2 minutes ahead of the rest of the group, while Óscar Pereiro moved ahead of the peloton, prompting a response by the CSC-Saxo team, and a split in the main field, but not isolating any GC contenders. Pereiro was re-integrated into the peloton with about 20km remaining, while at the front of the race, Martin Elmiger and Arvesen attacked with 4km left, shortly before Moinard was caught by the chasing group. They were joined by Alessandro Ballan, and briefly by Koos Moerenhout, and in the final 200m Arvesen started the sprint, hanging on to win the stage in a photo-finish. The main peloton, including all the main contenders, finished over 14 minutes behind, but leading standings were unaffected by the day's events. [cite news | first=| last=| author= | url= http://www.letour.fr/2008/TDF/LIVE/us/1100/journal_etape.html | title= Arvesen Delivers a Victory For CSC-Saxo Bank| publisher =www.letour.fr| date=2008-07-16 | accessdate=2008-07-16]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 2008 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 21 — These are the profiles for the individual stages in the 2008 Tour de France, with Stage 12 on 17 July, and Stage 21 on 27 July.tages Stage 12 ;July 17, 2008 Lavelanet > Narbonne, 168 kmThis stage featured one fourth category climb over the Col du …   Wikipedia

  • 2008 Tour de France — Infobox Cycling race report name = 2008 Tour de France image caption = Tour de France 2008 Course Outline date = July 5 ndash;July 27 stages = 21 distance = 3559 unit = km time = 87h 52 52 speed = 40.50 first = Carlos Sastre first nat = Spain… …   Wikipedia

  • List of teams and cyclists in the 2008 Tour de France — The list of teams and cyclists in the 2008 Tour de France contains the professional road bicycle racers who will compete at the 2008 Tour de France from July 5 to July 27, 2008. Of the 18 UCI ProTour teams, only Astana was not invited.… …   Wikipedia

  • Tour de France 2008 — Austragungsland Frankreich  Frankreich Italien   …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Champs-Élysées stage in the Tour de France — Tour 2004 Tour 2006: David Millar, Jens Voigt …   Wikipedia

  • Tour de France Féminin — Grande Boucle is also a common nickname for the (men s) Tour de France. The Grande Boucle, formerly known as the Tour Cycliste Féminin, or simply Tour Féminin, is one of the Grand Tours of women s cycle races. Grande Boucle means great loop and… …   Wikipedia

  • Tour de France — Das Logo der Tour de France Siegerpodest der Tour de France …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tour de France during the Second World War — The Tour de France was not held during the Second World War because the organisers refused German requests. Instead, some other races were organized, often with riders who might otherwise have ridden the Tour.HistoryPolitics and the shadow of war …   Wikipedia

  • 15e étape du Tour de France 2009 — Tour de France 2009 15e étape …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 2008 Vuelta a España, Stage 1 to Stage 11 — These are the individual stages of the 2008 Vuelta a España, with Stage 1 on August 30 and Stage 11 on September 10. Stages Stage 1 August 30, 2008 Granada 7 km (TTT)The 2008 Vuelta began with a short team time trial over a perfectly flat course… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”