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Giro d'Italia Stage 6: Cavendish takes second stage win on day Wiggins' GC hopes nearly took a big blow

TDF champ's Giro challenge nearly hits a snag as he's caught up behind big crash... but he manages to rejoin peloton...

Mark Cavendish has won Stage 6 of the 2013 Giro d'Italia in Margherita di Savoia, his second of this year's race, with Cannondale's Elia Viviani second and Matt Goss of Orica-GreenEdge third on a stage tailor-made for the sprinters that turned out to provide yet another dramatic day's racing. By taking the stage, Cavendish makes it back into the red jersey of points classification leader.

For what must have seemed a heart-stopping few minutes for Team Sky, Sir Bradley Wiggins' Giro challenge seemed set to suffer a blow as he - together with most of the peloton - was held up behind a big crash.

However, the 40 or so riders up the road declined to benefit from their rivals' misfortune, the group coming back together ahead of the final kilometres and inevitable bunch sprint. The stage ended with no change on GC, with Katusha's Luca Paolini retaining the maglia rosa.

Today marked the second anniversary of Wouter Weylandt’s death when the Belgian, then with RadioShack-Leopard, crashed during a descent on Stage 3 of the 2011 race.

His sole Giro stage win had come the previous year in the colours of Quick Step, Cavendish’s win today for the Belgian team, which he dedicated to Weylandt, thereby providing a fitting tribute.

Although he is back in the red points jersey, Cavendish told Italy's RAI TV after the stage that he doesn't think it will be possible to take it all the way to the end of the race in Brescia, given the few opportunities for sprinters in this year's race.

Last year, Cavendish was pipped to the points jersey on the penultimate day by Joaquim Rodriguez of Katusha, who had taken it almost by accident as he sought to defend his GC lead.

That leaves Cavendish, who has won the points classification at both the Tour de France and the Vuelta, still waiting to become just the fifth man to have claimed a full set from all three Grand Tours.

The main drama of today’s stage came as Wiggins chased back on after a puncture with around 33 kilometres to go as he found himself caught behind a big crash that took place on the first passage of the finish line.

Some 40 riders, including maglia rosa Paolini and defending champion Ryder Hesjedal of Garmin-Sharp, had avoided that crash and were clear away up the road while the tangle of bikes and riders was still being unravelled behind them.

To their credit, however, Katusha, who had numbers in the front group, knocked off the pace and Wiggins, who together with dozens of other riders including most of his Sky team mates, had been held up by well over a minute, was able to rejoin the front group within the next ten kilometres.

The riders who seemed to come off worst in that incident were Movistar’s Giovanni Visconti and Orica GreenEdge’s Leigh Howard, both of whom continued to receive attention from race medical staff within the cavalcade of cars following the peloton.

Shortly beforehand, there had been another crash as the riders headed towards the 16.3km closing circuit, to be lapped twice, this one involving riders including Movistar’s Juan Jose Cobo and AG2R’s Domenico Pozzovivo.

Wiggins was taking absolutely no chances, leading the group into the final 3 kilometres before the sprinters’ teams moved to the fore to try and set their men up for the finale, Cavendish getting a great leadout from Gert Steegmans and holding off his rivals for the win.

Today’s 169km stage took the peloton up the Adriatic Coast from Mola di Bari to the town of Margherita di Savoia, named after the same queen of Italy who lent her name to perhaps the quintessential pizza, and also home to Europe’s biggest saltworks.

Shortly before entering that closing circuit, which had some narrow roads and tight corners, the two riders who had formed the day’s break, Jack Bobridge of Blanco and fellow Australian Cameron Wurf – the latter spent much of the opening stage in Naples out on his own – had been swept up.

The race was heading towards the bunch sprint that ended with the victory of the red-hot favourite for the stage win today, but not before those few anxious moments for Cavendish’s former team mate, Wiggins.

Tomorrow brings the first week of this year’s Giro to a close with what looks like a very tough stage to Pescara with a number of short and sharp climbs, ahead of an individual time trial on Saturday that should result in a big shake-up in the general classification.

Giro d'Italia Stage 6 result 
 
1  CAVENDISH Mark        OPQ 03:56:03 
2  VIVIANI Elia          CAN All at same time 
3  GOSS Matthew          OGE 
4  BOUHANNI Nacer        FDJ  
5  GAVAZZI Mattia        AND  
6  BELLETTI Manuel       ALM  
7  APPOLLONIO Davide     ALM  
8  NIZZOLO Giacomo       RLT  
9  BRESCHEL Matti        TST  
10 FERRARI Roberto       LAM  
11 AVILA Edwin           COL  
12 DE HAES Kenny         LTB  
13 BLYTHE Adam           BMC  
14 KEISSE Iljo           OPQ  
15 TAMOURIDIS Ioannis    EUS  
16 PIRAZZI Stefano       BAR  
17 VENTOSO Francisco     MOV  
18 DEGENKOLB John        ARG  
19 JEANNESSON Arnold     FDJ  
20 BRUTT Pavel           KAT  
 
Overall Standings after Stage 6 
 
1 PAOLINI Luca           KAT 23:52:42
2 URAN Rigoberto         SKY    00:17
3 INTXAUSTI Benat        MOV    00:26
4 NIBALI Vincenzo        AST    00:31
5 HESJEDAL Ryder         GRS    00:34
6 WIGGINS Bradley        SKY    00:34
7 CARUSO Giampaolo       KAT    00:36
8 HENAO Sergio           SKY    00:37
9 SANTAMBROGIO Mauro     VIN    00:39
10 EVANS Cadel           BMC    00:42

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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10 comments

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a.jumper | 10 years ago
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I thought Wiggo's sprint was an up-yours to the sprint teams for making him have to chase back on for so long. An I'm still here you swines move, raising the tempo too early, 2.5k out.

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Super Domestique | 10 years ago
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Got to love Cav's illustration of the kit car and him being the exhaust.

Quality!

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notfastenough | 10 years ago
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Yes, think it was due to the tacks. BMC/Cadel/a few others went and thanked everyone afterwards.

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Roberj4 | 10 years ago
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Did we see a similar situation in last years TDF? A large crash with Sky Team found off the front alone, to then slow the race to allow everyone back on?

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Colin Peyresourde | 10 years ago
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It was such a big crash that it effectively stopped the entire peloton. It's a shame that the cameras didn't catch it.

Wonder whether Brad's turn at the front was a 'thank you' to the sprint teams.

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Super Domestique replied to Colin Peyresourde | 10 years ago
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Colin Peyresourde wrote:

It was such a big crash that it effectively stopped the entire peloton. It's a shame that the cameras didn't catch it.

Wonder whether Brad's turn at the front was a 'thank you' to the sprint teams.

If that is the case what a moment of class.

I'd like to think it's true.

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joc replied to Colin Peyresourde | 10 years ago
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Colin Peyresourde wrote:

It was such a big crash that it effectively stopped the entire peloton. It's a shame that the cameras didn't catch it.

Wonder whether Brad's turn at the front was a 'thank you' to the sprint teams.

that's the way i read it....in the article it's implying that brad went to the front to stay out of trouble, but i felt he was paying his dues for earlier. wiggins is no stranger to a supreme sporting gesture

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drfabulous0 | 10 years ago
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"However, the 40 or so riders up the road declined to benefit from their rivals' misfortune, the group coming back together ahead of the final kilometres and inevitable bunch sprint."

This is why I love cycling, a proper gentleman's sport.

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Simon_MacMichael | 10 years ago
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True, Jam Dog... though you feel if he's going to win this race, he needs to gain big time on rivals in Saturday's ITT, rather than use it to claw back time lost, which is what he risked happening today.

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Jam Dog | 10 years ago
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I think "hung by a thread" is a little over the top - only stage 6.

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