2017 Tour de France Stage 13 Results & Recap
Stage 13 of the 2017 Tour de France is in the books. The final results and standings are below, followed by our recap of how the race unfolded.
Race Recap
CyclingTips race recap
A Frenchman on Bastille Day: Barguil fights his way to Stage 13 victory at Tour de France
by Evan Hartig
Frenchman Warren Barguil (Sunweb) was victorious on Stage 13 of the Tour de France on Friday, out-sprinting Nairo Quintana (Movistar) and Alberto Contador (Trek-Segafredo) on a technical finale out of a breakaway group of four riders that also included Team Skyâs Mikel Landa.
Barguil, clad in the polka-dot jersey as King of the Mountains, crossed the line first amid raucous crowds on Bastille Day, the first French stage win at the Tour on their national holiday since 2005.
The win came as vindication for Barguil, who was denied victory on Stage 9 after a photo finish determined Rigoberto Uran (Cannondale-Drapac) had narrowly beaten him.
âItâs exceptional to win on Bastille Day, Iâm super happy.â Barguil said, ecstatic after his win. âI saw that Contador was attacking, and I got onto his wheel. I took the outside of last corner, and I was the quickest of the four riders. Iâm super happy. To beat Alberto Contador is an exceptional feeling, heâs always been one of my idols, so to beat him is amazing.â
The finish in Foix came at the conclusion of a short but difficult day â only 100 kilometers, but with three Category 1 climbs. The finish came after the descent off the final climb of the Mur de PĂŠguère, and a 10km flat run-in. The final kilometer delivered multiple corners, requiring the winner of the day be not only strong, but technically astute.
Behind, white jersey Simon Yates (Orica-Scott) and Dan Martin (Quick-Step Floors) battled to maintain a narrow gap over a chase group of GC contenders. After a combative final descent off the Mur de PÊguère, the duo crossed the line 1:39 behind Barguil but nine seconds ahead of the yellow jersey group containing Fabio Aru (Astana), Chris Froome and Michal Kwiatkowski (Sky), Uran, Romain Bardet (Ag2r La Mondiale) and Louis Meintjes (UAE Team Emirates).
Landa moved up a position on the general classification for his efforts on Stage 13, now just 1:09 behind Aru, while Quintana moved into eighth overall, 2:07 down. Aru retains yellow, with six seconds over Froome.
Dane Jakob Fuglsang (Astana), winner of the Criterium du Dauphine in June and a critical domestique for Aru, was forced to abandon after a Stage 11 crash resulted in a fractured wrist and elbow.
âIt was a spectacular day, it was a great day, Iâm just smiling, Iâm so happy,â said Aru after the finish in Foix. âI just tried to stay calm, without stress. Itâs bad news that Fuglsang abandoned. We saw the crash two days ago. Itâs a big loss for us. Weâll recover tonight and try to look after this jersey tomorrow.â\nHow it happened
The 13th stage of the 2017 Tour de France was designed to instigate chaos. The stage from Saint-Girons to Foix included three Category 1 climbs over only 100 kilometers. The course designers got their wish, as from the gun, aggressiveness pervaded despite tired legs from Thursdayâs difficult stage.
The combativeness demonstrated seemed to emulate that of a one-day classic, with numerous attacks all the way into the final kilometers of the race.
Drawing inspiration on their national holiday, the French were the first aggressors. Barguil, ultimately the stage winner, was the first rider to go. French veteran Thomas Voeckler (Direct Energie) followed. The peloton, not yet content to let something roll, brought the duo back.
Countering the initial move was yet another standby of French cycling, Sylvain Chavanel (Direct Energie), drawing out Alessandro De Marchi (BMC Racing) and Philippe Gilbert (Quick-Step Floors). The trio began to ascend the first climb of the day, the 6km Col de Latrape.
Discontent with his partners, De Marchi attacked with three kilometers to the summit of Latrape. Chavanel and Gilbert, fatigued from their effort on the first climb of the day, drifted back to the already-fractured peloton.
Yet again, Barguil accelerated and left the peloton, aiming to bridge to the two out front, who were holding onto a narrow gap. Following him was Alberto Contador (Trek-Segafredo) and Mikel Landa (Team Sky). De Marchi crested the Col de Latrape with 15 seconds over the three chasers, taking 10 KOM points in the process. Barguil, leading the pursuing trio, received eight KOM points, solidifying his lead in the competition.
âI woke up this morning with very bad feelings. But I had a good talk and a good look at the different climbs with [sport director Steven de Jongh] on the way to the start and I said Iâd attack in the first climb if possible,â Contador said. âIâm hoping to keep getting better and better with all the injuries I have. For the moment, this Tour de France pushes me to my limits. I prepared for the race very well. I even set a new record in my training climbs before coming to the Tour but I had a very bad crash in the first mountain stage. But I still want to fight till the end and repay Trek-Segafredo for the confidence they have in me.â
The four leaders began the descent off the Col de Latrape, De Marchi holding a narrow margin. The Italian was caught by the three behind heading into the next climb of the day, the 10km Col dâAgnes.
Contador was the first aggressor, followed by Landa. De Marchi and Barguil were distanced from Landa and Contador, but Barguil had alternative plans.
âI think Contador was a nice wheel to follow. He is a very good rider in those kind of stages and I followed him,â Landa said. âI thought about the stage win but I knew it was difficult.â
As De Marchi drifted back to the field, another move formed â Nairo Quintana (Movistar) with teammate Carlos Betancur , Alexis Vuillermoz (Ag2r), and Michal Kwiatkowski (Team Sky). Barguil jumped aboard and completed the five-man chasing group.
Behind, in the 21-rider main field, Cannondale-Drapac domestique Alberto Bettiol led the chase along with Diego Ulissi (UAE Team Emirates)
Skyâs plans seemed to adapt as up front, Landa began working with Contador. Less than three minutes down in GC, sitting seventh, Landa could function as an alternative GC contender to their perennial leader, Chris Froome. After visibly receiving the go-ahead over race radio, Landa took the front on the Col dâAgnes.
âWe saw yesterday that Mikel was feeling great so it was a great card for us to play today.â Froome said. âIâve got a lot of faith in Mikel and I think he showed that today. Heâs a real threat now for the overall title in Paris and itâs a great card for us to play, especially when Astana donât have the numbers to control the race.â
There was a lot of looking around within the GC group on Stage 13 from Saint-Girons to Foix.
Behind, 30 seconds back, rode the chase group of Barguil, Quintana, and Kwiatkowski. Vuillermoz and Betancur had been distanced. Barguil, doing the majority of the chasing, was visibly motivated to make the catch.
The trio brought back another 20 seconds on the descent. Onto the lower slopes of the final climb of the day, the Mur de PÊguère, the leaders were visible and within reach. It would take the entire ascent, however, for the chasing three to gain contact.
Behind, it appeared as if Froome was in difficulty. He drifted to the back of the now seven-rider yellow jersey group on the 18% slopes of the Mur de PÊguère. The formidable group ahead of him also contained GC leader Fabio Aru (Astana), in addition to Dan Martin (Quick-Step Floors), Rigoberto Uran (Cannondale-Drapac), Romain Bardet (Ag2r La Mondiale), white jersey Simon Yates (Orica-Scott), and Louis Meintjes (UAE Team Emirates).
Ahead, Barguil and Quintana finally joined Contador and Landa, only 500 meters from the summit of the Mur de PÊguère. Barguil led over the summit, receiving full KOM points.
In the chase group 2:30 behind, Froome was resurgent, attacking near the summit. Aru didnât hesitate in the slightest, immediately attaching himself to the wheel of the defending champion. Uran vigilantly covered Froome as well, but the seven immediately came back together on the descent.
After numerous attacks on the descent by Martin and Uran, none of which stuck, the seven proceeded into the final flat 10 kilometers leading into the finish in Foix.
Again, with nothing to lose, Martin attacked. This one looked as if it would last. The white jersey of Simon Yates followed, and the two converged with five kilometers to the line.
Two minutes up the road, the leading four entered the final kilometer. Landa led â on his wheel, Barguil, Quintana, and Contador.
Contador was the first to jump, sprinting from fourth wheel at about 500 meters from the line. Barguil followed, immediately attaching himself to the Spaniardâs wheel.
Around the final right-hander, Barguil jumped Contador to his outside, leaning hard into the corner. Barguilâs momentum through the corner allowed him a gap upon its exit, and rising from the saddle, he held it to the line.
This time, there would be no photo finish inquiry needed.
âIâve been looking for success for a long time,â Barguil said. âIâve been close on several occasions so to win on Bastille Day and being the first Breton stage winner for a long time [1993] makes me super happy because I feel like I have the double nationality [French and Breton]. Beating Alberto Contador who I mimicked when I won races as a young rider in Brittany means a lot to me. Iâve been criticized on social media for losing time on purpose but I came to the Tour de France with the only goal to finish it.
âTwo months ago I was on a bed at hospital and when I resumed racing at the DauphinĂŠ, I got dropped on the first day along with the sprinters. Being fresh helps me perform at the Tour now. Iâm close to my top form but I had to spend some time at the back of peloton to be able to enjoy those moments in the mountains. Now I wish Romain Bardet to win the Tour de France. Iâd like to be part of the spectacle in the Alps and help him out if it happens. It would be a great satisfaction for us to have a French winner of the Tour de France.â
Meanwhile Aru was thrilled after his first day defending the maillot jaune of the Tour de France.
âI was expecting attacks from everyone,â Aru said. âSo I focused on following those who were the closest to me on GC. I know [former teammate] Mikel Landa very well. Heâs strong but he had more room because he was three minutes adrift. Now that heâs back up, I wonât give him so much freedom again. Had I tried to follow everyone, I could have gone in a state of crisis because it was a hard and fast race. Iâm satisfied with the outcome.â
Link: https://cyclingtips.com/2017/07/frenchman-bastille-day-barguil-fights-way-stage-13-victory-tour-de-france/\n______________
âNot a guy who is going to become a mental milkshakeâ: Could Uran win the 2017 Tour?
by Shane Stokes
There was a buzz around Cannondale-Drapac on Friday morning in Foix. Clusters of print and TV media waited by the American squadâs team bus, with one thing on their mind: just how far could Rigoberto Uran go in this race?
Winning stage nine to Chambery despite being stuck for kilometers in his bikeâs highest gear had shown his condition. So too his second to Romain Bardet on Thursdayâs tough uphill finish in Peyragudes. Both performances ensured he started Fridayâs stage fourth overall, just 35 seconds off yellow.
The Colombian is in form, heâs psyched and heâs dangerous.
âWe will see what he can do, but I think he can do a lot,â Cannondale-Drapac directeur sportif Tom Southam told CyclingTips prior to the start. âAnd heâs not a guy who is going to particularly feel the pressure or stress, or become a mental milkshake. So thatâs an important thing.
âI think he can go far. I mean, the guy has been second in the Giro twiceâŚâ
Uran rode well in the hours after that, finishing with his main GC riders in Foix. They crossed the line one minute 48 seconds behind stage winner Warren Barguil (Team Sunweb), who won a four-man sprint.
He remained fourth overall, staying 35 seconds behind Fabio Aru (Astana) and 29 off three-time Tour champion Chris Froome (Team Sky). He is just ten seconds behind the third place of Romain Bardet (Ag2r la Mondiale) and, with plenty more racing coming up, will be thinking of yellow.
Heâs both a strong climber and decent against the clock and this combination means he could well pose a major threat in the battle for the final maillot jaune.
âYou would be an idiot not to aim for yellow,â said Southam. âThe [stage 20] time trial should suit him. He has been up there in TTs before and he can time trial well when he is shape. So why not?â
The Tourâs Stage 9 marked Rigo Uranâs first major win in muliple seasons. Taking the queen stage at the Tour de France was sure to re-start his momentum.
Uran moved to Cannondale prior to the start of the 2016 season. As a double runner-up in the Giro dâItalia, he was seen as someone who could continue contending for Grand Tour titles.
He lined out in that yearâs Giro dâItalia hoping to wear the final pink jersey in Turin, but things didnât work out. Uran was below his previous level and ended up seventh overall, over 11 minutes behind the race winner Vincenzo Nibali (Astana).
He didnât ride that yearâs Tour, but rallied later in the season to take a hat-trick of third places, in the Giro dellâEmilia, Milan-Turin and Il Lombardia.
And, while he was eighth in this yearâs Vuelta a Andalucia and Tirreno-Adriatico plus ninth in the Vuelta al Pais Vasco, he didnât appear high on the list of pre-race favourites for the Tour de France.
With the media and the bookies focussing on Froome, Richie Porte (BMC Racing Team), Alberto Contador (Trek-Segafredo) and Nairo Quintana (Movistar), he didnât face anything like as much expectation.
So, is Southam surprised by how well he is going?
âNot at all, to be honest,â he answered. âSeeing how well he went at Tirreno already at the start of the year, seeing how good he was with the Ardennes. We were riding for him at Liège. He didnât quite have it in the final, but was super good.
âHe was third in Lombardy last year and nearly won the World Cup there. So his form has been coming up and he is a top-quality rider.
âIt is not like he has been not performing, but now it is just clicking a bit more and it has been working.â
Still, even if his team had faith in him, itâs clear that he has flown under the radar to some extent.
Southam accepts that took the pressure off early on. âWe have to be realistic that we havenât come here as a Sky, to try and dominate and just bulldoze every day,â he said.
âSo that kinds of suits us. But everybody knows Rigo. He rode for Sky, he rode for Etixx. Itâs not like heâs a surprise to them. He didnât ride for those teams for no reason.â
His message is clear: his quality has been shown before, and people shouldnât be surprised as to where he is now. Even if he wasnât watched closely early on, he has pushed himself into the spotlight with his performances thus far.
And, with Froome suffering an unexpected time loss on Thursday, it has increased speculation that there could be a new winner in Paris.
Seeing the Briton lose yellow was one key topic of conversation on Thursday evening and Friday morning. However Southam said that Uran and Cannondale-Drapac werenât focussing on that.
âWe are genuinely not looking at other people like that,â he insisted. âWe are looking at ourselves and what we can do. And to have the most positive race that way. Because once you start going down the road of what so and so is doing, you are already not concentrating on what youâre doing. We are just focussed on what we doing.â
The race now changes focus slightly, with a lumpy stage on Saturday being followed by a somewhat hillier race to Le Puy En Velay on Sunday. The profiles arenât as tough as the past two stages, and it is possible that the GC battle might be a little quieter prior to the Alps.
However Uran and his team will continue to look for opportunities, and will seize any chance they can to make up time and inch closer to yellow.
Southam has faith that he can continue to contend all the way.
âHe is climbing with the best. He is tactically astute,â he said, listing his attributes. âHeâs looking after himself incredibly well. To me, the stage he won â he didnât look under pressure at all on the climb.
âIn terms of his qualities, the course is so hard. And it just gets harder and harder and harder. And that is what is going to suit him, in my opinion.â
Rivals be warned. He might not have been high on the favourites list in Dusseldorf, but nobody will forget Rigoberto Uran now.
Link: https://cyclingtips.com/2017/07/not-guy-going-become-mental-milkshake-uran-win-2017-tour/
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