Gulf Today

Cavendish on fire after first Tour stage win in five years

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PARIS: Mark Cavendish broke down and wept ater sprinting to his first Tour de France stage victory in five years on Tuesday, taking his tally of wins to 31 on the world’s greatest bike race.

Cavendish only made the Deceuninck Tour de France roster ater Irish sprinter Sam Bennet pulled out at the last minute and was generous in his praise of the team’s crucial role in his return to the top.

The signs looked good early on in the fourth stage when Cavendish won the intermedia­te sprint, his maximum 70-point gain on the day handing him the green jersey awarded to the sprint points leader.

In the sprint on this relatively short stage Cavendish showed all his savvy, biding his time to edge ahead with 50 metres to go and eventually finishing ahead of French sprinter Nacer Bouhanni.

Known as the “Manx Missile”, the rider from the Isle of Man shook his head in disbelief as he pulled on the green jersey.

“It’s been five years too long,” said Cavendish, inching closer to Belgian cycling legend Eddie Merckx’s record of 34 individual stage wins between 1969-75.

“There has been a lot of talk about my condition and I hope this gives hope to people in my condition,” said the 36-year-old who was diagnosed in 2017 with the Epstein-barr virus, which can cause persistent fatigue.

Conversely there was heartbreak for Belgian rookie Brent Van Moer as the 23-year-old Loto rider was caught just 150 metres from the finish line ater leading an escape for the majority of the atack.

Cavendish hailed world champion Julian Alaphilipp­e, from whom he inherits the green jersey, ater the Frenchman gave everything to get Cavendish into position.

“I didn’t think we were going to catch him,” Cavendish admited.

“The GC (overall standings) guys were ahead blocking the road and we couldn’t get them going.

“But I had fire in my eyes,” said an emotional Cavendish.

“It’s not easy winning a Tour de France stage, the hardest thing has been people not understand­ing how hard it was to win those stages,” he said of the years when his career seemed to have stalled.

“It’s not about proving anyone wrong. I knew I could do it, I just need someone to believe in me and that was Patrick Lefevere, and my wife at home, those are the people I wanted to believe.”

Cavendish was out of contract in December but was taken ‘home’ to Deceuninck Quick-step, who call themselves ‘the Wolfpack’, by maverick Belgian team boss Lefevere, a larger-than-life character Cavendish has always trusted and believed in.

Lefevere sent Cavendish to the level two Tour of Turkey in April and when he won four stages there, the foundation stone for a return to the top had been laid.

“I know why I’m good or bad, and I need a happy place, a team that functions as team, a bike that fited me, that’s why I came back to Quick Step (Deceuninck) for the happiest time of my life,” said the stocky sprinter.

“The Wolfpack thing is not just the face of wolf on a t-shirt, look at Julian Alaphilipp­e today giving all that, I feel privileged,” Cavendish said.

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