Gulf Today

Cavendish closes oses on Merckx record cord ater new Tour ur de France win n

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PARIS: The Mark Cavendish comeback gathered pace Thursday as he won his second stage in three days with a triumph on a day for pure sprinters along a 1.7km home straight at Chateaurou­x.

Ater a barren five-year spell on the Tour, the win on stage six took Cavendish’s tally on the world’s greatest bike race to 32, just two short of Belgian great Eddy Merckx’s all-time record of 34.

“Please don’t ask me that question,” Cavendish said at the line when asked about the record.

Nobody else dared, but the rider himself broached the subject.

“You can’t look at this as ‘ there’s no two without three’, let’s just take it one day at a time,” he explained.

On a pancake-flat sixth stage run over a scenic 160km run through the Loire Valley, Dutch rookie Mathieu van der Poel kept hold of the yellow jersey on a race that, for this first time on this edition, passed off without any major incident.

- Less of a shock - The stage finished in the actor Gerard Depardieu’s hometown, a city Cavendish knows well ater two previous stage victories in 2008 and 2011 on a finale that suits out-and-out sprinting and on Thursday he once again produced a deadly last-second pounce for the line.

“When I knew there was a finish here it didn’t make me feel romantic as such but, there’s this massive old school Tour de France sprint finish. Here, Paris and Bordeaux are the big sprint towns,” he said.

Two days ago Cavendish shook his head in disbelief ater winning stage four, but he was all grace and smiles ater launching his 70km/h (43.5mph) finish ater a sign from world champion teammate Julian Alaphilipp­e.

“It was less of a shock today than Tuesday’s win, we knew we could do it now, but it means just as much as that win,” said the 36-year-old, who keeps the green jersey for best sprinter.

The man known as the Manx Missile dismissed any suggestion that the quality of sprinters remaining operationa­l was diminished due to the crashes that marred the opening stages.

“I’m sorry about my friend Caleb Ewan, it would have been an honour to sprint against him,” he said of the Australian who won three stages in 2019, but crashed out on stage three.

“But look at the speed today. When I won here in 2011 52km/h was standard, now it’s 54 or 55 km/h,” he said. “There’s an incredible group of sprinters here.”

Cavendish was teamless in December but his old mentor Patrick Lefevere took him in at Deceuninck with a sponsor providing the salary.

In his old Belgian hunting grounds Cavendish refound his smile ater recovering from the Epstein Barr virus, an energy-sapping infection.

Against all expectatio­n, when he was sent to the Tour of Turkey in April he won four stages, and another one in the Tour of Belgium in June.

Stunning everyone, Lefevere then selected him ahead of Irish sprinter Sam Bennet for the Tour roster.

“What a story this is, something you couldn’t make up. It’s incredible,” a glowing Lefevere said at the finish line.

Race favourite and defending champion Tadej Pogacar said he had enjoyed the incident-free stage ater winning the time-trial Wednesday.

“It was fast but I felt good racing here,” he said of the pacey run alongside vast wheat fields and through vaunted vineyards.

“Tomorrow might be tricky, tough with that punchy finish,” Pogacar warned.

Friday’s stage is the longest on the Tour at almost 250km and features a finish hard to call: either a shake up of the peloton or perhaps another chance for Cavendish to take a further step towards Merckx’s record.

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Mark Cavendish celebrates as he crosses the finish line of the 6th stage at the Tour de France on Thursday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Mark Cavendish celebrates as he crosses the finish line of the 6th stage at the Tour de France on Thursday.

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