Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cavendish wins Tour stage amid protests

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FOUGERES, France — This time, they were happy tears.

In October, Mark Cavendish posted an insignific­ant 74th place at the Belgian classic Gent-Wevelgem. Depressed and dejected, with his contract with the Bahrain McLaren team almost over, the sprinter from the Isle of Man suggested in an emotional interview it could well have been his final race.

On Tuesday at the Tour de France, the tears of sadness made way for those of happiness after the “Manx Missile” posted a 31st stage win at cycling’s biggest event. Earlier in the day riders staged a protest at the start of the 93.4-mile flat stage to complain about perceived dangerous racing conditions after a flurry of crashes in the previous days reignited the issue of road safety.

Cavendish, 36, sat on the road and cried after his triumph in the fourth stage. He was congratula­ted by teammates, who worked hard in the stage finale to put Cavendish in an excellent position for the sprint.

“You just see what a great team this is. You’ve got the green jersey, the world champion Julian Alaphilipp­e coming to do the final pull just to try to catch the breakaway, putting everything in,” Cavendish said. “So many people didn’t believe in me but these guys do.”

After all the doubts about his future, Cavendish secured a new contract with his former Deceuninck-Quick Step team. He convinced manager Patrick Lefevere he could perform at the top level again, but he was not expected to ride at the Tour and did not train specifical­ly for the three-week race.

He received a last-minute call-up earlier this month, as a replacemen­t for Sam Bennett, the best sprinter of last year’s Tour.

“Three weeks ago I would not have imagined this,” said Cavendish, who is back at the Tour for the first time since 2018.

Lefevere’s bet paid off in the town of Fougeres, where Cavendish had already won in 2015. With a perfectly timed burst of speed — he reached an average speed of 39 mph in the last 500 meters — Cavendish edged Frenchman Nacer Bouhanni and Jasper Philipsen of Belgium.

Cavendish is second on the alltime list for the most stage wins behind Belgian great Eddy Merckx at 34. Cavendish’s previous stage win dated back to 2016.

Mathieu van der Poel kept the race leader’s yellow jersey with an eight-second lead over Alaphilipp­e ahead of today’s first time trial.

Having left the town of Redon in the western Brittany region to start Stage 4, the peloton rode at a moderate pace and all riders got off their bikes after about 1 kilometer. They waited silently for about a minute before hitting the road again.

After the crash-filled Stage 3, several riders have criticized race organizers for setting up what they considered a dangerous finale to a Tour stage, especially in the early days of the race when nervousnes­s is at its highest level.

An early breakaway formed soon after the protest as Brent Van Moer and Pierre-Luc Perichon moved away from the pack. They collaborat­ed well and had a maximum lead of more than three minutes before the peloton stepped up the pace.

 ??  ?? Great Britain’s Mark Cavendish bursts into tears as he is surrounded by photograph­ers after winning Tuesday’s fourth stage of the Tour de France in Fougeres, France. (AP/Tim De Waele)
Great Britain’s Mark Cavendish bursts into tears as he is surrounded by photograph­ers after winning Tuesday’s fourth stage of the Tour de France in Fougeres, France. (AP/Tim De Waele)

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