Peter Sagan disqualified from Tour de France after causing crash at end of fourth stage
Demare claims maiden win as Sagan penalised for sending Cavendish to the
Mark Cavendish injured in ugly crash with Peter Sagan at the Tour de France
anasty crash involving Mark Cavendish marred Tuesday's fourth stage of the Tour de France, which was won by France's Arnaud Demare in a chaotic sprint finish and led to the disqualification of world champion Peter Sagan.
Replays showed Sagan elbowed Cavendish, who was squeezed against the barriers to his right, out of the way. Cavendish slammed into the barriers and two other riders plowed over the British sprint specialist, a winner of 30 Tour stages.
Sagan, who crossed the line second, was first given a 30-second penalty that relegated him to 115th place on the stage. He later was disqualified.
Race jury president Philippe Marien of the governing body UCI said, “We have decided to disqualify Peter Sagan from the 2017 Tour de France after the tumultuous sprint here in Vittel, where he endangered several riders, including Mark Cavendish and others who involved in the crash.”
Cavendish said he wanted an explanation from Sagan about the incident.
“I get on with Peter well, but I don't get if he came across is one thing, but the elbow. I'm not a fan of him putting his elbow in me like that,” Cavendish said.
“A crash is a crash, I'd just like to know about the elbow, really,” Cavendish added. “I'd just like to speak to him about it.”
After the crash, Sagan went over to see how Cavendish was and patted him on the back, while the British rider showed him his wounds.
The Slovak said later he had apologized to Cavendish.
“It's not nice to crash like that,” Sagan said.
“It's the sprint. I just didn't know that Mark is behind me, he's coming from the right side,” Sagan added. “Mark was coming pretty fast from the back and after I just didn't have time to react, to go left, and he just came (into) me and after into the fence.”
A medical team quickly ran out to treat Cavendish, jogging into the oncoming stream of riders to reach him.
When Cavendish was finally helped to his feet, his jersey was badly torn and blood was streaking down his side. Cavendish rode in with a teammate after treatment, gingerly holding his right arm close to his body, with his right hand in a bandage.
It's already been a difficult year for Cavendish, who came down with mononucleosis caused by the Epstein-Barr virus in April.
Demare's sprint victory ended a long wait for the home fans, with the previous French victory in a bunch sprint at the Tour being won by Jimmy Casper in Stage 1 in Strasbourg in 2006.
“It's extraordinary, it's marvelous,” said Demare, the French champion who finished second to Marcel Kittel in the mass sprint that concluded Stage 2.
There was another crash earlier that delayed Tour leader Geraint Thomas, but the Welshman retained the yellow jersey since it happened in the neutral zone near the stage finish.
Thomas leads Sky teammate and three-time champion Chris Froome by 12 seconds, with third-place Michael Matthews of Australia also 12 seconds back. Sagan is now 43 seconds adrift.
Thomas scraped his knee but said it was OK.
“I hit the deck but I'm fine,” Thomas said.
Demare clocked nearly five hours over the largely flat 129-mile route, which started and finished in two spa towns, Mondorf-les-Bains in Luxembourg and Vittel in France.
“We've been working with Arnaud for a long time on sprints,” said Marc Madiot, manager of Demare's FDJ team. “Winning in the Tour is the best.”
After Sagan's penalty, Alexander Kristoff moved up to second place in the stage, with Andre Greipel in third.
After starting in Mondorf, the hometown of 2010 Tour winner Andy Schleck, one of the first towns along the route was Schengen, where an agreement was signed in 1985 that enabled passport-free travel in mainland Europe.
Then it was a long, fairly straight slog through fields of grain, passing near the medieval city of Nancy into Vittel, home of the official mineral water supplier for the Tour.
It was the race's third consecutive stage of more than 125 miles and when Guillaume van Keirsbulck, a Belgian with the Wanty team, attacked from the starting gun there was no reaction from the pack.
Van Keirsbulck quickly built a lead of more than seven minutes before being caught with less than 17 kilometers to go.
“A really hard day,” Van Keirsbulck said. “It's not easy to stay in the front.”
Stage 5 on Wednesday concludes with the first serious climb of the Tour. The 100-mile leg begins in Vittel and winds its way to La Planche Des Belles Filles with a short but steep finishing ascent that features a leg-breaking 20% gradient in the final meters. All of the overall favorites should swing into action.
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