Mark Cavendish wins Tour de France stage 5

The tears flowed as Mark Cavendish stood on the podium in Montargis after winning his first stage win of this year's Tour de France.

Yesterday he was well beaten and showed his frustration by flinging his bike down when he got back to the HTC-Columbia bus. Moments later he hurled his helmet out of the door of the bus too. A season of low points showed no signs of turning around.

But you can't write off Cavendish. HTC-Columbia rejigged their approach to the finale, allowing Garmin-Transitions to take up the pace in the final couple of kilometres. Instead of putting their own train - weakened by the withdrawal of Adam Hansen a few days ago - on the front throughout the run-in, HTC-Columbia tried a different tactic. They put Mark Renshaw in front of Cavendish and the Australian fought off all-comers to steer his team-mate into the perfect position.

Cavendish, always an emotional person, said: "It means everything. It's been hard this year. We came to the Tour and things haven't really gone our way the first few days.

"Yesterday my team did an incredible job and I let them down massively at the end. It would have been easy for them to say 'Oh he hasn't got it' like a lot of other people have but they believed in me and they did an amazing job again.

"It was a technical finish and the other teams came at us from all sides. Mark Renshaw was fighting with Thor [Hushovd] and Oscar [Freire] and I knew he'd get me where I needed to be.

"We looked at the finish on Google Earth this morning and we thought it was a flat finish but when we got the information relayed back from Erik Zabel later in the day we knew it was an uphill finish.

"All that emotion, all that pressure that's built up all year has finally come to an end."

It was the 11th Tour de France stage win of Cavendish's career and the 55th professional victory he has notched.

After the crashes and the cobbles, the Tour could be forgiven for settling into a more laid back rhythm. With the temperature well over 30 degrees, the bunch was happy to let the three early escapees cook in the sunshine.

The Spanish road race champion Jose Ivan Gutierrez (Caisse d'Epargne) kicked off the attacks inside the first ten kilometres of the 187.5-kilometre stage from Epernay to Montargis, home town of the Tour de France competitions director, Jean-Francois Pescheux.

Gutierrez was joined by Julien El Fares (Cofidis) and Jurgen Van de Walle (Quick Step). The trio work well together and the lead reached around seven minutes at its maximum. The bunch kept it within reach to avoid a hard chase later in the day.

Inevitably, the advantage began to tumble and the leaders failed to reach the 20 kilometre to go mark with the two minutes they needed to make a fight of it.

With 6.6km to go, Gutierrez, a fine time triallist, tried to go on his own but the lead was only 20 seconds. There was no chance of making it to the line.

The bunch finally caught him with 4km to go. The approach to the line was technical in places, although free of the successive roundabouts that made viewers hold their breath yesterday.

The sprints have been very open so far, with no single team able to control things completely. Lampre and Garmin both looked strong in numbers and as they came round the final bend, the Garmin team seemed to have things in hand, perhaps surprisingly considering Tyler Farrar's injuries.

Renshaw pulled off and Cavendish opened his sprint. Unlike yesterday, when he said he had been unable to get his chain onto the 11-toothed sprocket, there were no problems and he was able to stretch clear to the line.

This was more like the Cavendish of old, although he is still not quite back to his very best.

His former team-mate, Gerald Ciolek (Milram) took second, with Team Sky's Edvald Boasson Hagen taking third for a second successive day.

Thor Hushovd was only fifth but he will be happy to have added another healthy haul of points to his total. Alessandro Petacchi, who has won two stages so far, was eighth.

Overall there was no change to the top of the classification, with Fabian Cancellara keeping his hold on the yellow jersey, ahead of Britain's Geraint Thomas.

Although Cavendish trails Hushovd by 52 points in the green jersey race, he will take heart from today's result.

The overall favourites were all home safely. Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky) crashed in the neutralised zone but was not seriously hurt.

Friday's sixth stage from Montargis to Gueugnon is the longest of the race, at 227.5km. It is another one for the sprinters, although there are two fourth-category climbs towards the end which may help the attackers.

RESULTS

Stage five: Épernay - Montargis

1. Mark Cavendish (GB) HTC-Columbia 187.5km in 4-30-50

2. Gerald Ciolek (Ger) Milram

3. Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor) Team Sky

4. Jose Joaquin Rojas (Spa) Caisse d'Epargne

5. Thor Hushovd (Nor) Cervélo Test Team

6. Sébastien Turgot (Fra) Bbox Bouygues Telecom

7. Robbie McEwen (Aus) Katusha

8. Alessandro Petacchi (Ita) Lampre

9. Lloyd Mondory (Fra) Ag2r-La Mondiale

10. Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin-Transitions

Overall classification after stage five

1. Fabian Cancellara (Swi) Saxo Bank in 22-59-45

2. Geraint Thomas (GB) Team Sky at 23sec

3. Cadel Evans (Aus) BMC Racing at 39sec

4. Ryder Hesjedal (Can) Garmin-Transitions at 46sec

5. Sylvain Chavanel (Fra) Quick Step at 1-01

6. Andy Schleck (Lux) Saxo Bank at 1-09

7. Thor Hushovd (Nor) Cervélo at 1-19

8. Alexandre Vinokourov (Kaz) Astana at 1-31

9. Alberto Contador (Spa) Astana at 1-40

10. Jurgen Van den Broeck (Bel) Omega Pharma at 1-42

Points competition Thor Hushovd (Nor) Cervélo

King of the mountains Jérôme Pineau (Fra) Quick Step

Young rider Geraint Thomas (GB) Team Sky

Teams Saxo Bank

Bradley Wiggins and Geraint Thomas Tour de France 2010 stage 5

Bradley Wiggins (l) and Geraint Thomas

Mark Cavendish wins Tour de France stage 5

Mark Cavendish takes his first stage win of the 2010 Tour

Tour de France 2010: Latest news

Thomas happy with Tour's white jersey; but says 'All for Brad'

Cavendish keeps up fight for first Tour win

Sky delivers Boasson Hagen to third without pressure

Thomas in tour's white jersey; Wiggins gains time

Evans and Schleck gain in Tour's hell of the north

The Feed Zone: Tour news and views (July 6)

Vande Velde abandons Tour following crash

Andy Schleck has a laugh after stage two crash

The Feed Zone: News and views (July 5)

Sky banks on Thomas ahead of cobbled stage

Cavendish's sprint train weakened with Hansen out

Armstrong under fire as Landis allegations reach mainstream

Team Sky's decision to put Wiggins off early back fires

Tour de France 2010: Stage reports

Stage four: Petacchi wins into Reims

Stage three: Hushovd takes dramatic win; Thomas second on stage and GC

Stage three live coverage: As it happened

Stage two: Comeback man Chavanel takes victory in Spa

Stage one: Petacchi wins in Brussels as bunch left in tatters

Prologue: Cancellara pips Martin to win

Tour de France 2010: Photos

Stage three photo gallery

Stage two photo gallery

Stage one gallery

Prologue photo gallery

Tour de France 2010: Videos

Stage four video highlights

Stage three video highlights

Stage two video highlights

Stage one video highlights

Prologue video highlights

Tour de France 2010: Race guide

Tour de France 2010: Cycling Weekly's coverage index

Official start list, with race numbers

Brits at the Tour 2010

Tout team guide

Tour jerseys: What they are and what they mean

Brits in the Tours: From Robinson to Wiggins

Tour de France 2010: Pictures

Tour team presentation, Rotterdam

Tour teams take to the cobbles: Photo special

 

Thank you for reading 20 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Founded in 1891, Cycling Weekly and its team of expert journalists brings cyclists in-depth reviews, extensive coverage of both professional and domestic racing, as well as fitness advice and 'brew a cuppa and put your feet up' features. Cycling Weekly serves its audience across a range of platforms, from good old-fashioned print to online journalism, and video.