Kittel gets past Cavendish, again

The pack passes during the 12th stage of the Tour de France between Fougeres and Tours—AP

The pack passes during the 12th stage of the Tour de France between Fougeres and Tours—AP

Germany’s Marcel Kittel claimed his third stage win of the 100th Tour de France when he beat Britain’s Mark Cavendish to victory in the 12th stage on Thursday.

Kenyan-born Briton Chris Froome of Team Sky finished the stage among the leaders to protect his 3min 25sec lead over Spain’s Alejandro Valverde of Movistar.
Froome did well to stay clear of two crashes in the closing kilometres, and despite the flat terrain, he admitted: “It seems like there’s no such thing as an easy day on the Tour de France. It was a hard day out there.
“Every time I cross the finish line there’s a little sigh of relief.”
As Froome took another step towards an anticipated yellow jersey battle in the Alps beginning Sunday, Kittel further underlined his status as the race’s top sprinter.
The victory was Kittel’s third win of the race after the opening stage and stage 10, when sprint rival Cavendish came third having caused a crash which brought down Kittel’s Argos teammate Tom Veelers.
“Today was a true sprint, that’s why I’m particularly happy,” said Kittel, who had beaten Cavendish earlier this season in the Grand Prix de l’Escaut.
“I’ve waited a long time for a moment like this.”
Kittel, though, had one less opponent to deal with for the bunch gallop to the finish after compatriot Andre Greipel (Lotto) was one of several riders brought down in a crash inside the closing four kilometres.
Edvald Boasson Hagen, Froome’s Sky teammate, was also involved and came over the finish holding his collarbone although team boss Dave Brailsford had reassuring news.
“Edvald got caught out in the crash but we don’t think his collarbone is broken,” said Brailsford.
“But we will be taking him to hospital for further examinations tonight.”
When it came to the crunch, Kittel, racing his second Tour having quit with a viral infection on his debut last year, showed his previous wins were no fluke.
After the final bend helped thin out the group of frontrunners even further, Cavendish was brought on to the home straight in textbook fashion by Belgian lead-out man Gert Steegmans.
Kittel, however, jumped quickly on to Cavendish’s wheel in the final 250 metres and pulled off to the left to pass the Manxman with relative ease in the closing 50.

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