Peter Sagan of Slovakia won the second stage of his debut Tour de France on Tuesday as the race returned home, while Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland remained the overall leader for a fourth straight day.
The cyclists, who opened in Belgium, completed a crash-marred 197km ride from Orchies that featured five small climbs to an uphill finish in the fishing port of Boulogne-sur-Mer.
Sagan, aged 22 and one of cycling’s brightest stars, won the third stage by bolting from the splintered peloton with fewer than 300m left. He crossed the line several lengths — and one second — ahead of runner-up Edvald Boasson Hagen of Norway and third-placed Peter Velits of Slovakia.
Photo: AFP
Sagan enjoys putting on a show for fans. He churned his arms, as a runner might, in a nod to the title character in the movie Forrest Gump as he crossed the line.
“It’s a thing I’d discussed with my teammates, about what kind of gesture I’d do on the line,” Sagan said of his Liquigas-Cannondale squad, “Everybody said: ‘Do a Forrest Gump’ because when he was told to run, he ran, and when I’m told to win, I win.”
Sagan also showed a humbler side, saying he felt honored to ride alongside complete riders such as Vincenzo Nibali and two-time Giro d’Italia winner Ivan Basso on the Italian squad.
Photo: EPA
“With Basso, I feel like I’m on the level of someone who would shine his shoes,” Sagan said.
Some race watchers simply marveled at the skill and promise of the young Slovakian, who with his Stage 1 victory on Sunday became the youngest rider to win a Tour stage since Lance Armstrong in 1993 — at age 21.
“You’ve gotta give Sagan credit for the way he’s riding at the minute. When you see something like that you just have to stand back and admire it, and smile and say well done,” Team Sky manager Dave Brailsford said.
Photo: EPA
“It’s a bit like watching Messi playing football or something isn’t it?” he said, referring to Barcelona’s Lionel Messi. “He’s winning with such apparent ease at the moment that it’s pretty phenomenal.”
After a time-trial prologue won by Cancellara and a generally flat first few stages, the race is as open as ever. Cancellara has 43 riders within a minute of his overall time, but that is likely to change when the peloton heads to the Alps in the second week and the Pyrenees in the third, if not sooner.
Tuesday’s ride marked the first crash-related withdrawals from the 99th Tour, which ends on July 22 on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.
Overall, Cancellara leads Bradley Wiggins, who is hoping to become Britain’s first Tour winner, in second and Sylvain Chavanel of France in third — both seven seconds back. Defending champion Cadel Evans climbed one spot to seventh place, 17 seconds behind, while Sagan was 15th, another six seconds slower.
The Swiss leader and the expected Tour title hopefuls trailed Sagan in a 45-rider group that crossed one second behind the Slovakian star — leaving the top standings little changed.
Belgium’s Philippe Gilbert, who last year had 18 victories in all competitions and was the top-ranked rider in the UCI’s standings, went tumbling after getting hit from behind. He clambered back onto his bike with scrapes on his left leg and arm, and kept going, but lost more time to change a shoe damaged in the crash, BMC team manager John Lelangue said.
Gilbert straggled across the finish line 7 minutes, 46 seconds after Sagan, plunging to 104th place overall. The Belgian began the day in seventh place, 13 seconds behind Cancellara. Gilbert’s slide meant Evans rose a notch.
It was one of at least four crashes that marred the stage as riders jostled to get up to the front of a nervous peloton for the climbs near the finish — including one within the last kilometer. Some riders also had mechanical trouble and flat tires.
“The group was nervous. Everyone wanted to be up front,” Sagan told France-2 TV. “There were a lot of crashes ... it was a very dangerous stage.”
Five breakaway riders got out early through northern France’s wheat fields and former steel industry hubs, and through medieval villages like Isbergues — named after a sister of Charlemagne, who, legend has it, could cure skin and eye illnesses.
With about 50km to go, several riders crashed on a flat portion of road through a wheat field on a slight turn.
Sky’s Kanstantsin Sivtsov of Belarus became the first competitor to drop out this year. A Tour medical report said he broke his left shin and that he was looking at surgery.
Rabobank domestique Maarten Tjallingii broke his left hip in the same accident, but finished the stage. Richard Plugge, a team spokesman, said Tjallingii was taken to a hospital in Abbeville where the fracture was diagnosed.
The lead-out rider for Rabobank sprinter Mark Renshaw was being taken to hospital in Amersfoort, the Netherlands, on Tuesday for surgery, Plugge said.
About 30km later, another crash sent riders flying off the shoulder of the road on both sides — one flying into a wire fence.
Spain’s Jose Joaquin Rojas of Movistar clambered into an ambulance and dropped out. He was hospitalized with a broken collarbone, the medical report said.
That second big spill split the peloton into mini bunches and the front group overtook the breakaway riders.
US sprint specialist Tyler Farrar went down in the first crash and was delayed in the second. He and several of his Garmin-Sharp teammates rallied together to rejoin the peloton.
The fourth stage takes the riders on a 215km leg from Abbeville to Rouen in the heart of Normandy.
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