Two days after wearing the yellow jersey, France’s Tony Gallopin claimed the 11th stage of the Tour de France thanks to late attacks in a nervous finale on Wednesday.
German John Degenkolb was second and Italian Matteo Trentin took third place at the end of a 187.5km ride from Besancon.
Italian Vincenzo Nibali retained the overall leader’s yellow jersey after staying safe by the front of the bunch in the final descent.
Photo: EPA
Gallopin, who gave France its second stage win this year after Blel Kadri prevailed last week, powered away in the last climb and after being rejoined by Michal Kwiatkowski, Peter Sagan and Michael Rogers, he counterattacked 2.5km from the line.
The Lotto-Belisol rider looked back several times, but held off the peloton to cross the line with the bunch breathing down his neck.
“It’s incredible. I want to thank my family because my father had told me that we should check up this stage, and it clearly helped,” said Gallopin, who wore the yellow jersey during Monday’s 10th stage.
“I would not have imagined that, but I had marked that stage after coming close in Sheffield and Nancy,” he added.
Nibali’s Astana team suffered a minor wobble when the Italian’s lieutenant, Michele Scarponi, fell off his bike in a climb, but he finished the stage.
Ireland’s Nicolas Roche was voted the most aggressive rider in the stage after trying his luck several times in the finale as the Tinkoff-Saxo team turned their focus to stage wins following Alberto Contador’s exit from the race.
Roche was reined in when Sagan, who has yet to win a stage this year despite coming very close, led the peloton at breakneck speed in the descent toward Oyonnax.
Meanwhile, Tinkoff-Saxo are adapting to life without Contador.
“We need to get into the breakaways to put pressure on the peloton, but we are strong and we can counter each other,” team member Rogers said. “I think we showed today that even though we aren’t fully over the shock of losing Alberto, we are determined on creating big results here at the Tour.”
For the first time since the start in Leeds, the peloton experienced the heat as temperatures reached 33?C, causing tar to melt on some of the tiny roads between Besancon and Oyonnax.
“As expected, it hurt,” said Frenchman Thibaut Pinot, who remained sixth overall in an unchanged top 10. “It is very hard to adapt after 10 days in the rain.”
Yesterday’s 12th stage was to take the peloton from Bourg en Bresse to St Etienne and should favor a breakaway.
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