Third French win as contenders content with ceasefire

Pierrick Fedrigo wins, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

French fans were treated to their third stage win in this year’s Tour de France, thanks to Pierrick Fedrigo of the Bbox Bouygues Telecom team.

The ninth stage from Saint Gaudens to Tarbes was a day largely expected to see a further shake-up amongst the overall contenders, but fortune once again favoured the brave as Fedrigo survived a day-long break to take his team’s second stage win of the race.

Fedrigo, along with Liquigas’s Franco Pellizotti, escaped from an early breakaway and commanded a maximum advantage of five minutes over the peloton.

Having descended the mighty Col du Tourmalet, the Franco-Italian duo still had some four minutes with forty kilometres remaining. Working by the age-old cycling arithmetic that a peloton can capture a break at around one minute for every ten kilometres, it looked agonisingly close.

With Mark Cavendish (Columbia-HTC), Tom Boonen (Quick Step) and Thor Hushovd (Cervelo) distanced on the Tourmalet, the impetus to chase fell on the shoulders of Caisse d’Epargne and Rabobank who were visibly fatigued after three days in the Pyrenees.

With ten kilometres to go, the peloton had trimmed Fedrigo and Pellizotti’s advantage to just 1-23 and it looked increasingly certain that they would be captured. The earlier ascents of the Col d’Aspin and the Tourmalet had obviously taken their toll on the main field as the break worked well together to fend off the bloodthirsty peloton.

Under the flamme rouge, Pellizotti had manoeuvred Fedrigo into leading out the sprint, but the Italian underestimated the Frenchman’s tactical nous. Jumping from Fedrigo’s wheel, Pellizotti gained a few metres but Fedrigo kept his nerve, waited, jumped again and swerved around the Italian for an emphatic win.

Ceasefire among the contenders

With the Col d’Aspin and the Tourmalet on the menu today, it was an unpredictable stage to predict but the overall contenders were content to exert a de facto ceasefire over the race.

“It was fairly neutral today,” explained Garmin’s Christian Vande Velde after the stage, “it wasn’t worth [attacking] today”. With a long descent from the Tourmalet and a largely flat valley road into Tarbes, it would have taken some daring for any of the contenders to risk attacking.

Bradley Wiggins, who has remodelled himself as a Grand Tour rider, echoed Vande Velde’s thoughts after the stage. “It was quite neutral today. I don’t think Lance or Contador want the yellow jersey at this point and Ag2r are happy to defend it.

“All in all it was another good day for me. I’ve had a pretty good first week but I’m just going to take it day by day,” explained Wiggins.

With two weeks of racing remaining and the Pyrenees not having had the impact over the overall standings that perhaps some were expecting, it looks increasingly likely that the race will be decided in the Alps.

RESULTS

Stage nine: Saint Gaudens-Tarbes, 160km

1. Pierrick Fedrigo (Bouygues Telecom) 4-05-31

2. Franco Pellizotti (5-31Liquigas)

3. Oscar Freire (Rabobank) at 0-34

4. Serguei Ivanov (Katusha)

5. Peter Velits (Milram)

6. Jose Rojas (Caisse d’Epargne)

7. Greg van Avermaet (Silence-Lotto)

8. Geoffroy Lequatre (Agritubel)

9. Alessandro Ballan (Lampre)

10. Jeremy Roy (Francaise des Jeux)

Overall classification after stage nine

1. Rinaldo Nocentini (Ita) Ag2r in 34-24-21

2. Alberto Contador (Spa) Astana at 6sec

3. Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana at 8sec

4. Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana at 39sec

5. Bradley Wiggins (GB) Garmin-Slipstream at 46sec

6. Andreas Kloden (Ger) Astana at 54sec

7. Tony Martin (Ger) Columbia-HTC at 1-00

8. Christian Vande Velde (USA) Garmin-Slipstream at 1-24

9. Andy Schleck (Lux) Saxo Bank at 1-49

10. Vincenzo Nibali (Ita) Liquigas at 1-54

Other

16. Carlos Sastre (Spa) Cervelo at 2-52

18. Cadel Evans (Aus) Silence-Lotto at 3-07

62. David Millar (GB) Garmin-Slipstream at 27-18

80. Charly Wegelius (GB) Silence-Lotto at 35-40

135. Mark Cavendish (GB) Columbia-HTC at 1-13-54

Points classification

1. Thor Hushovd (Cervelo) 117 pts

2. Mark Cavendish (Columbia) 106 pts

King of the Mountains

Egoi Martinez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)

Young riders’ classification

Tony Martin (Columbia)

 

Bradley Wiggins, Lance Armstrong, Alberto Contador, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

Bradley Wiggins rides ahead of Lance Armstrong and Alberto Contador

Col du Tourmalet, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

The Col du Tourmalet

Rinaldo Nocentini, Vladimir Efimkin, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

Race leader Rinaldo Nocentini remained in the yellow jersey unchallenged

David Millar, Charly Wegelius, Alberto Contador, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

Britons David Millar (r) and Charly Wegelius (l) with Alberto Contador (centre)

Pierrick Fedrigo wins, Tour de France 2009, stage 9

Pierrick Fedrigo takes the win ahead of Franco Pellizotti

TOUR DE FRANCE 2009 LINKS

Tour de France 2009 - the hub: Index to reports, photos, previews and more.

STAGE REPORTS

stage eight: Sanchez wins from break as Tour favourites cancel each other out

Stage seven: Feillu wins at Arcalis, Nocentini takes yellow, Contador leap-frogs Lance

Stage six: Millar's brave bid denied on Barcelona hill as Hushovd triumphs

Stage five: Voeckler survives chase to win his first Tour stage

Stage four: Astana on top but Armstrong misses yellow by hundredths of a second

Live Tour de France stage four TTT coverage

Stage three: Cavendish wins second stage as Armstrong distances Contador

Stage two: Cavendish takes first sprint

Stage one: Cancellara wins opening time trial

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TOUR DE FRANCE 2009 PHOTOS

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TOUR GUIDE

Tour de France 2009 - the hub

Tour de France 2009: Who's riding

Tour de France 2009: Team guide

About the Tour de France

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