Stage ten of the Tour de France, the first since the rest day and finishing after a shallow 20km climb to an Alpine altiport, could easily have turned into a snooze fest, with the peloton keeping one eye on bigger tests, including the fearsome Col du Galibier, Col du Granon, and Alpe d’Huez, in the days to come.
It was anything but, however, as the Tour descended into anarchy, both in a racing and non-racing sense. The day started with the news of three positive Covid tests, two of which saw Luke Durbridge and George Bennett sent home, while Bennett’s UAE Team Emirates colleague Rafał Majka was allowed to stay, due, apparently, to the low chances of the Polish climber infecting others with the virus.
Perhaps the rest of the peloton were doing their best to avoid coming into contact with Majka, such was the ferocity of the opening hour of today’s stage to Megève.
Once a strong 25 rider group went clear, the peloton did eventually down tools – and then so did everyone, as a group of climate change protesters did what they set out to do: disrupt the race and focus the world’s attention on the state of the planet.
After the race got back up and running, and Tour-winning foots were removed from mouths, all hell broke loose in the break. The climb to the altiport in Megève is long and shallow – far removed from the gradients the riders will face tomorrow and Thursday – and thus allowed for a far more open, attacking contest with a broader range of potential winners.
Image: A.S.O., Pauline Ballet
With EF Education-EasyPost’s Alberto Bettiol – who showcased some impressive bike handling skills to avoid the demonstrators posing as road furniture – up the road on his own, Bahrain Victorious went to work. First, the impressive British classics rider Fred Wright powered a three-rider group across to the Italian; after some toing and froing, his teammate Luis León Sánchez attacked.
Behind the veteran Spaniard, Wright expertly patrolled attacks from Magnus Cort and the twitchy Lennard Kämna, who at one point looked likely to pull on the yellow jersey, such was the gap to the cruising peloton (a fact that may have played into the German’s uncharacteristic lack of assertion or confidence in a break that was watching his every move).
Finally, attacks from Movistar’s American hope Matteo Jorgenson and Nick Schultz (BikeExhange-Jayco) ultimately did for Wright. The duo, and then Dylan van Baarle, caught the fading Sanchez, and looked set to sprint for the win.
However, that long, long seemingly endless drag on the altiport completely reshaped proceedings once again. While a ten-rider group coalesced in the final 500 metres, Sanchez and Schultz remained the strongest, and sprinted clear again towards the line.
So, crucially, did Cort. The Dane, who wore the King of the Mountains jersey for most of this Tour's opening week, finally proved it on top of a real mountain, overcoming Schultz in the dying metres to cap a wonderful first ten days for the enigmatic and popular 29-year-old.
Cort’s win also capped a rather dramatic day for his EF Education-EasyPost team. As well as Bettiol’s brief encounter with local activists (which resulted in the Italian giving a statement at a local police station after the stage), the American squad’s massive pink bus caused a traffic jam at the stage start in Morzine after getting stuck while making a tight turn, and then a bird relieved itself onto DS Tom Southam’s head.
Maybe that was just the luck they needed…
Image: A.S.O., Pauline Ballet
Almost nine minutes after Cort’s battling win, race leader Tadej Pogačar continued to do his best to avoid any need for luck, sprinting for any glimpse of daylight, his perpetual shadow Jonas Vingegaard mere bike lengths behind.
The peloton’s fast finish didn’t really change anything in the race for overall victory, but it did result in Kämna missing out on yellow by just 11 seconds. Ouch.
“At first we didn't want to lose it then we were going to lose it kind of, but in the end it all worked out like it did and I'm happy I'm still in the yellow jersey,” Pogačar said at the finish.
Simple really.
Things, however, will get more complicated tomorrow, as the peloton takes on the first truly epic mountain stage of the Tour, covering the legendary Col du Galibier (via the Col du Télégraphe) before finishing atop the 11.3km, 9.3 percent average Col du Granon, making its first appearance at the Tour since Greg LeMond and Bernard Hinault went head-to-head in 1986.
On that day, the dominant Frenchman – aiming for his sixth Tour win – cracked, and his younger teammate, and rival, LeMond went into yellow.
Will history repeat itself tomorrow?
Main image: A.S.O., Pauline Ballet