Scottish Daily Mail

Cavendish clinches historic Tour win

- By DANIEL MATTHEWS

BY the time Mark Cavendish hobbled in front of the cameras, his legs seemed close to deserting him. His eyes needed wiping and his mouth was hardly working, either. The 36-year-old huffed and sighed. He was virtually speechless. For everyone else, too, it is hard to know what more there is to say. Lucky, then, that yesterday provided two more words to describe this Manxman: history maker. After 220 gruelling kilometres between Nimes and Carcassonn­e, Cavendish did the unthinkabl­e. He secured a 34th stage win on the Tour de France. He equalled the all-time record of Belgian great Eddy Merckx. This victory, by the length of a wheel from team-mate and lead-out man Michael Morkov, sparked an outpouring of emotion. Cavendish slumped to the floor before embracing his team-mates. Eventually he found some words. ‘I can’t even think about the record. I’m afraid I’m so dead after 220km in that heat, that wind and that finale, phwoar,’ he said. ‘I went deep, I went so deep there. The boys were incredible. I can’t believe it. A lot of the day it didn’t feel like it was going to happen but it had to happen because I had the guys riding like they were. I was so on the limit there.’ And no wonder. Remember, Cavendish was only a last minute call-up for this race. He was never supposed to be on the start line in Brittany, let alone win four of the first 13 stages. Now, the outright record is within his grasp. If Cavendish can survive the upcoming trip into the Pyrenees, he could end this Tour out in front. Just as he did yesterday. Again his victory was made possible by the brilliance of his Deceuninck-Quick-Step team-mates. Carcassonn­e had never seen a sprint finish but a crash around 65km from the line set up a tense finale. Cavendish needed a late bike change but come the finish the Manxman weaved himself into enough space to hold off Jasper Philipsen. Asked about the record again, he added: ‘It’s what I dreamed of as a kid and it’s what I dream of now.’ Yesterday’s win also strengthen­ed his grip on the green jersey — he leads by more than 100 points from Michael Matthews — while defending champion Tadej Pogacar remains in the yellow jersey.

 ??  ?? All smiles: Cavendish celebrates his stage victory
All smiles: Cavendish celebrates his stage victory

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