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Tour de France Stage 7: Mark Cavendish wins as Bradley Wiggins crashes out with suspected broken collarbone

Cavendish says he and Wiggins could have brought both green and yellow jerseys home

Mark Cavendish this afternoon won the 17th Tour de France stage of his career in Chatearoux, the town he won his first in, winning a bunch sprint from Lampre-ISD's Alessandro Petacchi and Omega Pharma Lotto's Andre Greipel but the big news for British fans is that Bradley Wiggins’ Tour de France is over after the Team Sky rider was involved in a big crash in the peloton just under 40 kilometres from the finish. Thor Hushovd retains the race leader's yellow jersey.

Wiggins, clutching his left arm and possibly having broken his collarbone, received immediate attention from the race doctor, but was in no position to get back on his bike and has been taken to hospital. The incident took place just after a day-long headwind whipped round into a tailwind.

The British champion, sixth overall in the general classification this morning after a solid start to the race, had come to the 98th edition of the Tour de France in the best road racing form of his life, with victory in last month’s Criterium du Dauphiné coming on top of his third place overall in Paris-Nice.

Those performances led to high hopes among both Team Sky and British fans that the 31-year-old could match or even improve upon the fourth place he had achieved in 2009 while riding for Garmin-Cervelo, but those dreams were shattered as the peloton rode through a wooded stretch of road around four fifths of the way through the 218km stage.

Other riders involved in the crash, which caused a big split in the peloton as some riders were held up while those at the front of the bunch stepped up the pace not only to gain time on potential rivals but also with the afternoon’s intermediate sprint looming included RadioShack’s Chris Horner and Astana’s Roman Kreuziger. The latter had only just rejoined the peloton after an earlier crash, but both he and Horner were able to continue riding.

Tyler Farrar, though apparently not directly involved in the crash, was among those held up in the second group, but his team mate and maillot jaune Thor Hushovd was safely in the front group.

Also distanced as a result of the crash were Wiggins’ team mates including Geraint Thomas in the best young rider’s white jersey, having waited in vain to provide support to their team leader should he have remounted. Thomas would finish the stage 3 minutes 6 seconds behind the winner, and the white jersey now passes to Rabobank's Robert Gesink.

Coming just 24 hours after Team Sky had been celebrating Edvald Boasson Hagen’s win in Lisieux, today the Tour de France showed how fortunes can change in a split second.

There had been no warning whatsoever of the drama about to unfold as the peloton headed southeast across the Loire Valley and into la France profonde, with the biggest incident of note being the abandonment with more than 100km left to ride of Quick Step's Tom Boonen, still struggling as a result of the injuries he sustained in a crash two days ago. For the rest of the peloton, it seemed set to be little more than a long, hard day in the saddle, a headwind resulting in a much slower pace then yesterday’s stage.

The riders’ moods wouldn’t have been helped by a 180km transfer to the stage start in Le Mans, where heavy rain awaited them, but the stage appeared to be headed towards a bunch stage finish before the drama unfolded, Wiggins immediately identifiable as he lay on the ground in his British national champion’s jersey.

Following the crash that put paid to Wiggins’ hopes, the peloton eased off in its pursuit of a four-man breakaway, one of whose members, the FDJ rider Mickael Delage, was therefore able to take the maximum 20 points. The other three members of the breakaway were Pablo Urtasun Perez, Yannick Talabardon of Saur-Sojasun, and another FDJ rider, Gianni Meersman.

Mark Cavendish, led out by Mark Renshaw, was able to claim the 13 points on offer to the main bunch, with Movistar’s Jose Joaquin Rojas crossing second behind the two HTC-Highroad riders and points classification leader Philippe Gilbert getting fourth place.

Into the closing kilometres, and for the first time in this race HTC-Highroad managed to get their train in motion in earnest, Tony Martin pulling his team mates up the drag to the flamme rouge before passing the baton to Matt Goss, peeling off for his fellow Australian Mark Renshaw to launch Cavendish for the line.

Petacchi and Greipel, Cavendish's team-mate-turned-rival at HTC in recent seasons, fought hard, but the Manx Missile was just too quick for them as he powered to the line.

Afterwards, learning for the first time of Wiggins' crash, Cavendish said: "I'm gutted for him, he was in the best form of his life. We could have brought home the green jersey and the yellow jersey."

Inevitably today’s stage, with some big time splits in the peloton, resulted in some reshuffling of the GC, the biggest change being that the trio of Sky riders who had occupied 6th, 7th and 8th places this morning - Wiggins, Thomas and Boasson Hagen - no longer feature in the top ten.

Tour de France Stage 7 
1  CAVENDISH Mark             HTC - HIGHROAD         5h 38' 53"
2  PETACCHI Alessandro        LAMPRE - ISD         All at same time
3  GREIPEL André              OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO
4  FEILLU Romain              VACANSOLEIL-DCM
5  BONNET William             FDJ
6  GALIMZYANOV Denis          KATUSHA
7  HUSHOVD Thor               GARMIN - CERVELO
8  TURGOT Sébastien           EUROPCAR
9  ROJAS Jose Joaquin         MOVISTAR
10 HINAULT Sébastien          AG2R LA MONDIALE
11 PINEAU Jérôme              QUICK STEP
12 JEANNESSON Arnold          FDJ
13 BOZIC Borut                VACANSOLEIL-DCM
14 GILBERT Philippe           OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO
15 ROCHE Nicolas              AG2R LA MONDIALE
16 SCHLECK Andy               LEOPARD-TREK
17 O’GRADY Stuart             LEOPARD-TREK
18 MILLAR David               GARMIN - CERVELO
19 VAN DEN BROECK Jurgen      OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO
20 RENSHAW Mark               HTC - HIGHROAD

Tour de France Overall Standings after Stage 7 
1  HUSHOVD Thor               GARMIN - CERVELO      28h 29' 27"
2  EVANS Cadel                BMC RACING              + 00' 01"
3  SCHLECK Frank              LEOPARD-TREK            + 00' 04"
4  MILLAR David               GARMIN - CERVELO        + 00' 08"
5  KLÖDEN Andréas             RADIOSHACK              + 00' 10"
6  FUGLSANG Jakob             LEOPARD-TREK            + 00' 12"
7  SCHLECK Andy               LEOPARD-TREK            + 00' 12"
8  MARTIN Tony                HTC - HIGHROAD          + 00' 13"
9  VELITS Peter	              HTC - HIGHROAD	      + 00' 13"
10 GESINK Robert	      RABOBANK 	              + 00' 20"
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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8 comments

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WolfieSmith | 12 years ago
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Damn. Gutted for Brad. My hopes are now for G to claw back 3 mins in the mountains (somehow...) and for Evans to hold off the lurking Albert to Paris on his last chance to win the big one. It was shaping up to be a classic tour after the joke that was the Giro but there's still something to root for.

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antonio | 12 years ago
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being in the form of his life and super fit, he will probably make a very quick recovery especially if the collarbone can be pinned. Let's hope so and wish him a speedy recovery anyway.

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RichK | 12 years ago
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well, i now have one thing in common with brad... a broken collar bone.

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jijiandnoah | 12 years ago
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Gutted. Had a feeling he was going to do really well this year, I can't imagine how disappointed he must be. Hope he recovers quickly

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cliveg1 | 12 years ago
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...awful news- was a definite podium contender: dauphine and uk road champion, so in the form of his life, right up the gc so far, and with evb winning sky's first tdf stage, the team was on a high - hope he bounces back

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stevevfr | 12 years ago
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Nooooooooooooooooo!!!!!  20

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Mat Brett | 12 years ago
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Noooooooooooo!

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Coleman | 12 years ago
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Very disappointed for Wiggins. Poor bloke. Hope he's not in too much pain.

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