BMC Racing have won the team time trial at the Tour de France this afternoon to put Greg van Avermaet into the race leader’s yellow jersey.
Team Sky, who were greeted with boos as they negotiated the course, finished in the runner’s-up spot, 4 seconds behind, with Geraint Thomas moving into third place overall before van Avermaet and the Belgian’s team mate, Tejay van Garderen.
The 35.5-kilometre Stage 4, which started and finished in Cholet, saw a reshuffling in the overall standings and gave a number of riders who had lost time due to crashes on the opening stage a chance to recoup time.
Among those to take advantage were two riders who lost 51 seconds to some of their rivals on Saturday, Adam Yates, whose Mitchelton-Scott team were first off the ramp this afternoon, as well as defending champion Chris Froome, with Team Sky the next to start.
BMC Racing’s win provided a boost for their hope for the overall title, Richie Porte, as other teams with riders harbouring ambitions of the overall title struggled.
Among the big losers today were Nairo Quintana, whose Movistar team came home 53 seconds down on BMC Racing, Bahrain-Merida with 2014 Tour de France winner Vincenzo Nibali, 1 minute and 6 seconds down, and Romain Bardet’s AG2R-La Mondiale, who came home 1 minute 15 seconds behind the day’s winner.
Quick Step Floors had gone out onto the course with the opportunity of getting Fernando Gaviria back into the overall lead, and also had a chance of getting Philippe Gilbert into the yellow jersey should the Colombian be tailed off.
On a short climb at the halfway point in the course, however, the Belgian team was forced to regroup as the pace forced riders – including Gaviria – off the back, costing the handful of seconds that might have put Gilbert in yellow.
The last team out on the course was the one with the rider in the overall lead, Bora Hansgrohe, and as they approached the second time check it was clear that Peter Sagan would be surrendering the yellow jersey, the road world champion blowing up moments later, putting it beyond doubt that the lead would change hands.
I came to say the opposite, I always liked Giro shoes but they're insanely narrow. I hope they did change the fit.
"Amazing" has been in use as an adverb since the 18th century, most often, though not exclusively, as a modifier for other adverbs, e.g. "He writes...
Presumably they could also be tracked by their telemetry transponders, which have a signal strength strong enough to transmit power data et cetera...
Frame weight is about a hundred grams less than a CAAD 12 disc, which can be picked up cheap these days on gumtree. Heck, get the CAAD12 non disc...
You're too kind. They just seem to be unpleasant trolls.
And in Southampton today we had another example of those entitled ambulances going through red lights without a care for anyone else!...
The spokes and nipples are not anodised for environmental reasons, but the rims are. Which is a lot more metal. Hmm...
Yeah, they'll be great after being crushed in your jersey pocket for three hours. ...
I'm afraid so, anything operated by TfL apart from the Woolwich ferry and the Silvertown Tunnel bike bus when it opens next month.
That's a bit hard on the cat...