Chattanooga Times Free Press

Long, quiet day on Tour

- BY ANDREW DAMPF

CHARTRES, France — Peter Sagan thrust an arm and fist forward à la Superman.

Chris Froome calmly dropped back to his team car to have his seat adjusted by a mechanic.

Other cyclists chatted as they admired the rolling countrysid­e.

With nearly six hours in the saddle and hardly any action until the final stretch, there was plenty of time to relax and fool around Friday during the seventh stage of the Tour de France, the longest of 21 in this year’s race.

“Boring stage,” said Sagan, the three-time reigning world champion. “You’re happy it was a sunny day, no wind, without stress.

“But it was boring.” Sagan finished third in the mass sprint with and uphill finish that suited him, and he said he was pleased with the result because he “had no legs to beat the first two guys.”

Dutch cyclist Dylan Groenewege­n won the stage ahead of Fernando Gaviria. Four-time Tour champion Froome and the other favorites finished safely in the main pack. Unlike earlier sprinting legs in the race’s first week, this one was without serious crashes.

Greg Van Avermaet held on to the yellow jersey he earned in the third stage, and he doubled his lead on Geraint Thomas to six seconds by winning an intermedia­te bonus sprint. Froome is 14th, 1:05 behind Van Avermaet.

Gaviria and Sagan were marking each other — each has won two stages in this year’s race — when Groenewege­n surprised them and surged ahead on the final straight. Groenewege­n also won a sprint in last year’s concluding stage on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.

After crossing the line, Groenewege­n placed his finger to his lips in a gesture of silence.

“People said I was not good enough after the first sprints, but that’s not true,” he said.

The 143-mile trek from Fougeres, home to the best-preserved and largest medieval fortress in Europe, concluded in Chartres, site of a vast cathedral known for its stained-glass windows.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dylan Groenewege­n celebrates as he crosses the finish line ahead of Fernando Gaviria, left, to win the seventh stage of the Tour de France on Friday in Chartres.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dylan Groenewege­n celebrates as he crosses the finish line ahead of Fernando Gaviria, left, to win the seventh stage of the Tour de France on Friday in Chartres.

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