The progress report
There were 182 riders remaining in the 2013 Tour de France at the sign on for the 10th stage from Staint-Gildas-des-Bois to Saint-Malo. The official start of the stage was at 12.55pm and the riders faced 197km, with only one categorised hill on the road to the northern coastline of Brittany (the cote de Dinan, cat-4 at 142km). The intermediate sprint was in Le Hinglè (at 127.5km). Five escapees joined forces at the 1.5km mark, they were: Oroz (EUS), Simon (SOJ), Maté (COF), Westra (VCD) and Cousin (EUC). By 9km, the quintet was ahead by 3'30” when Sky led the peloton. At 15km three teams moved forward to share the pacesetting duties for the peloton: Lotto-Belisol, Omega Pharma-Quickstep and Argos-Shimano. The advantage of the escapees continued to grow until the 32km mark when 5'05” was the maximum gain. The average speed for the first hour was 42.5km/h; the second hour: 36.5km/h; the third hour 37.9km/h...
Greipel leads Sagan and Cavendish to the sprint
Maté raced ahead to claim the 20 points for first and the intermediate sprint, almost doubling Cofidis' prize money by taking 1,500 euros for the prime (the squad had only earned 1,670 euros up until stage nine). The peloton closed in quickly as Cannondale put three riders on the front – for the first time in the stage – two kilometres before the sprint but it was Greipel (LTB) who collected sixth-place ahead of Sagan (CAN) and Cavendish (OPQ). On the côte de Dinan, Westra attacked the lead group, took the point and continued on ahead alone briefly. The peloton was only 2'30” behind.
GC teams move forward near the coast
With 42km to go, the same sprinters' teams help their positions at the head of the peloton but on the approach to coast, the GC teams – Sky, Movistar, BMC, RadioShack, Belkin and Saxo-Tinkoff – also moved forward. With 27.5km to go, Oroz was the first to attack the lead group. He was chased down after only 1km. Westra quit his effort at the front and was caught 18km from the finish. Talansky (GRS) and Tuft (OGE) crashed with 17km to go both remounted and rejoined the peloton before the finish.
Kittel claims a second stage win
Oroz, Simon, Maté and Cousin were caught 6km from the line. It was Saxo-Tinkoff and Garmin-Sharp that was at the front for much of the finale but, in the closing three kilometres, Argos-Shimano and Lotto-Belisol dominated the lead-out for the sprint. Inside the final 500m, a rider from Argos-Shimano, Tom Veelers, crashed; while he didn't bring down any other riders, he forced riders like Goss (OGE) and Cavendish (OPQ) to take evasive action. The British champion tried to chase down Marcel Kittel and André Greipel who were further ahead of the fall but he shook his head in frustration inside the final 200m and had to watch on as the winner of stage one, Kittel beat his compatriot to the line by the a wheel. This was the German's second stage win in the Tour de France, after his success in Bastia on day one.
Froome finished 24th in the stage, avoiding any incident, and he will be the last rider to start the time trial of stage nine. There was no change to the top order of GC as the first 100 riders were all on the same time as Kittel.
The stage film
July 9
th
2013
- 18:10
Kittel ahead of Greipel in a sprint of the Germans
Tour de France 2013 | Stage 10 | Saint-Gildas-des-Bois > Saint-Malo