Albuquerque Journal

Kittel wins his 2nd stage

But Tour favorites generally take it easy on long, flat course

- BY ANDREW DAMPF AND JOHN LEICESTER

TROYES, France — On long, mostly flat sultry stages like Thursday’s, all Chris Froome and the other leaders in the Tour de France want to do is take it easy.

Let the sprinters have their day in the sun and prepare for the next mountain stages this weekend.

Until a beach umbrella floats across the pack. That was the only incident of note amid hourslong stretches of uneventful cycling during Stage 6, which was won with ease by German sprinter Marcel Kittel.

“There was a bit of wind and the parasol took off and ended up in the road,” said Froome, who had to veer out of the way. “That’s the Tour.”

Otherwise, Froome said, he spent the day chatting with other riders and admiring the views as the peloton rode into champagne country and through Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises, the hometown of France’s wartime hero and former president, Gen. Charles de Gaulle.

“That’s the most relaxing day in the Tour I’ve ever had,” Froome said after five hours in the saddle. “I actually quite enjoy these long days.”

At the conclusion of the 134-mile leg from Vesoul to Troyes — the race’s second-longest stage — Kittel had little trouble in the sprint finish, with Peter Sagan and Mark Cavendish both no longer in the race.

As the other contenders bunched together on the right side of the road, Kittel burst forward

around them on the left and easily created a comfortabl­e gap allowing him to celebrate as he crossed the line.

It was Kittel’s second victory in this year’s race and 11th overall in his Tour career.

“I was really confident in my team,” Kittel said. “I was also really confident in myself today. There was just a moment when I broke free and started to go ahead.”

Stage 4 winner Arnaud Demare finished second and Andre Greipel was third.

Sagan, the world champion, was disqualifi­ed for elbowing Cavendish to the ground two days ago. The fall resulted in Cavendish, who has 30 Tour wins, abandoning the race with a broken shoulder.

Kittel said the absence of Cavendish and Sagan has altered the racing in that their teams are no longer battling out the sprint finishes.

He was repeatedly asked after his win about their absence.

“It’s a bit sad that it’s all about this decision,” he said. “The level that we have here for the sprints is still very, very high.”

The Tour remains in Troyes for the start of Stage 7 today, a 133-mile leg that again sets up well for sprinters with a finish in the Burgundy wine town of Nuits-Saint-Georges.

Today is “another long day and I think the aim of that is just to sap the energy a bit,” Porte said. “They sure are long days.”

 ?? PETER DEJONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? During a 134-mile ride through France, the pack passes the Lorraine Cross during the sixth stage of the Tour de France on Thursday.
PETER DEJONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS During a 134-mile ride through France, the pack passes the Lorraine Cross during the sixth stage of the Tour de France on Thursday.

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