The Commercial Appeal

Cavendish wins stage 5; Gerrans keeps his lead

- By Jerome Pugmire

Associated Press

MARSEILLE, France — Mark Cavendish fi nally shook off an illness and a drop in form to earn his 24th career stage win at the Tour de France on Wednesday and close the gap on rival Peter Sagan for the top sprinter’s green jersey.

The British sprinter relinquish­ed his green jersey to Sagan last year and trails the Slovak again. But by winning the fifth stage, Cavendish closed within 35 points of his rival, who finished third in the crashmarre­d trek to the southern seaport of Marseille.

“Now the pressure’s off and hopefully it has started the ball rolling,” Cavendish said.

Australian veteran Simon Gerrans kept the overall leader’s yellow jersey by avoiding two crashes — the first as riders neared the end of the stage and the second moments after Cavendish had comfortabl­y beaten Norwegian Edvald Boasson Hagen in their dash to the line.

“I don’t think it’s a matter of the course being dangerous. Today we huge roads, (a) big wide run-in and there’s still crashes,” Gerrans said. “I think dangerous finishes cause crashes, but today that wasn’t the case whatsoever.”

Cavendish made a poor start to the Tour while he struggled with a cold. He watched his Omega Pharma-QuickStep squad lose the team time trial Tuesday by less than a second to Gerrans’ Orica Greenedge squad.

“I’m still suffering a bit. I’m a lot better but still not 100 percent,” Cavendish said. “Finally, after the disappoint­ment of the first stage and (losing by) less than a second yesterday, we’ve got the account open.”

With a few hundred meters to go, Cavendish stayed behind his teammate Gert Steegmans’ wheel and got into a perfect position to hold off Boasson Hagen.

“To be fair, today the sprint wasn’t too difficult for me,” Cavendish said. “If I’d have lost that today, I would have let the guys down.”

The 84-year-old Andre Darrigade, who won 22 Tour stages as a sprinter, warmly greeted Cavendish after his win.

“Really, really a true gent,” Cavendish said. “I’m proud to have met him.”

Cavendish needs one more stage win to tie Andre Leducq for third on the all-time list of stage winners at the 110-year- old race — which is celebratin­g its 100th edition — and he could do that on Thursday as stage six again favors sprinters.

That would put him within range of Bernard Hinault’s 28 wins, the second-highest total after Eddie Merckx’s imperious record of 34.

“You have to show the Tour de France the respect it deserves. One stage (win) on the Tour de France makes a rider’s career, let alone one stage every year,” Cavendish said. “But to set any goals, it does one of two things: It sets you up to fail or puts a limit on what you want to achieve.”

While Cavendish was raising his arms in triumph, behind him about a dozen riders hit the tarmac on the day’s second crash.

American rider Tejay van Garderen was one of those involved in the pileup.

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