Marcel Kittel of Quick Step Floors has won Stage 7 of the Tour de France by the narrowest of margins from Dimension Data's Edvald Boasson Hagen in what must be one of the closest sprint finishes in the race's 114-year history.
There was nothing to separate the riders on the finish-line photo in the Burgundy wine-growing town of Nuits-St-Georges, but it was KIttel who got the decision for his 12th career Tour de France stage win and his third of this year's race.
The German had chosen to follow Boasson Hagan's wheel as the Norwegian, taking over sprinting duties from the injured Mark Cavednish, was given a terrific leadout by Reinardt Jansevan Rensburg, and it proved to be the correct decision as he also got back into the lead of the points competition.
Tissot, official timekeepers for the race, said afterwards that the gap between the pair was just 3/10,000ths of a second, equivalent to 6 millimetres - although it looked less than that on the photo-finish, with many querying on social media why a dead heat hadn't been called.
With strong winds raising fears that the race might split into echelons, it was a nervous day in the peloton with the teams with riders contesting the overall forcing the pace at the front of the bunch at times.
The threatened splits on the peloton did not happen, and there's no change in the general classification, with defending champion Chris Froome continuing to hold a 12-second lead over Team Sky colleague Geraint Thomas.
The day's break, comprising four riders - Manuele Mori of UAE Team Emirates, Direct Energie's Yohann Gène, Dylan van Baarle of Cannondale-Drapac and the Fortuneo-Oscaro rider Maxime Bouet - was given little leeway as a result, and was eventually caught with 6 kilometres remaining of the 213.5 kilometre stage from Troyes.
Reaction
Stage winner Marcel Kittel
When I crossed the line, I really had no clue if I won or not. Before the finish, I knew it was going to be close. At 150m to go, I thought it was still 200, but luckily, the door opened on the right side I could pass Edvald [Boasson Hagen].
To reach twelve stage wins at the Tour is an incredible success. I'm in a great shape. I'm super happy. The lead out was great. It's just crazy. I already have three wins in this Tour. I'm so happy about that.
Overall leader Chris Froome
To have the yellow jersey since day has been a dream scenario for Team Sky. It's been an amazing first week of racing.
The teams of the sprinters and BMC in stage 5 having done most of the work, it's been a blessing for us and it has kept the guys relatively fresh.
It wasn't this hot when we started in Germany but I love the heat of the past three days. Summer, that's what the Tour de France feels like.
I'm grateful that I got a feel of Mont du Chat at the Dauphiné and especially its downhill but I expect more damage in Sunday's stage than at the Dauphiné because of the two climbs before the Mont du Chat.
The top 10 riders on GC are still very close. We'll know more about each other after the coming weekend.
Add new comment
6 comments
From a feature on Kittel's bike...
From a feature published elsewhere on Boasson Hagen's bike...
The ultimate marginal gain?
(OK, the latter was what he was riding back in April at the Tour of Flanders, but if anything you'd fit your widest tyres for on the cobbles.)
Demare has pissed me off, mostly by his sprinting lines but partly by being French and therefore the lack of the organisers clamping down on the former, so I'm quite happy for Kittel to be in green.
I have a feeling the intermediate sprints may have more of an effect on the vert than in previous years.
I'm hoping that McLay manages to pull everything together, including choosing the right wheel.
Sagan won it by miles in 2015 without winning a stage. The organisers keep changing the points to make the intermediate sprints less important, not more.
Shame; Boasson Hagen deserved a stage win. I suppose after the Cavendish-Sagan 'handbags on the finish straight' episode, we now have to suffer endless teutonic sprinting victories.
The idiot commentators didn't even mention Kittel until after he'd actually crossed the finish line.
Amazing finish though.
It was even closer than that, great finish.