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Tour de France Stage 8: Movistar's Costa wins as Hushovd holds onto yellow

Vinokourov attacks and seems poised to take mailot jaune, but Kazakh fades in the finale

Movistar's Rui Costa, who had slipped into an early break, just held on to win Stage 8 of the Tour de France in Super Besse this afternoon as Omega Pharma-Lotto's Philippe Gilbert and BMC's Cadel Evans led the chasing peloton, respectively finishing second and third. Garmin-Cervelo's Thor Hushovd keeps the race leader's yellow jersey after somehow hanging on to finish in the same group as Evans, who began the day one second behind him in the GC.

It's the biggest career win to date for the 24-year-old Portuguese rider, who has previously given signs of his promise through results including a second place overall in the Tour de l'Avenir in 2008 and a stage win in the Tour de Suisse last year.

The rider joned Movistar, previously Caisse d'Epargne, in January this year after serving a five month ban, reduced on appeal from a year, after testing positive for the banned substance methylhexanamine last year.

Until today, his biggest impact on the Tour de France came in last year's race when he was involved in a handbags - or, more accurately, front wheels - at ten paces dust-up with Carlos Barredo.

This afternoon, as Costa entered the final 2 kilometres, it was touch and go whether he would hold off the challenge of the rapidly gaining Alexander Vinokourov of Astana.

The Kazakh, thrown out of the Tour de France in 2007 and subsequently banned for two years for blood doping, had attacked on the day's penultimate climb and the yellow jersey, if not the stage win, seemed within his grasp, but he faded badly inside the closing kilometre.

Vinokourov's team mate Paolo Tiralongo had been the first rider to attack on that climb, the Col de la Croix Saint-Robert, the first Category 2 ascent of this year’s race. The Sicilian had got his first win in 12 years as a pro during May’s Giro d’Italia, but as would become apparent, he wasn’t riding for personal glory today but as part of a team plan aimed at getting Vinokourov, riding his final Tour de France, into the maillot jaune for the first ever time.

The Kazakh’s ambitions became transparent 2 kilometres from the summit of the climb when he launched himself off the front of the peloton, catching his rivals unaware. Lying just 32 seconds off the top of the GC this morning, his intention was clear.

The 37-year-old quickly bridged across to a group including not only Tiralongo and some of the riders involved in an earlier nine-man breakaway, but also mountains classification leader Jonny Hoogerland and Team Sky’s Juan Antonio Flecha. That pair had themselves attacked from the peloton in between the two Astana riders making their moves.

Ahead, HTC-Highroad’s Tejay Van Garderen led Costa over the climb, and the pair were joined on the descent by AG2R’s Christophe Riblon and Cyril Gauthier of Europcar.

On the final climb up to Super Besses Sancy, it only seemed to be a matter of time before Vinokourov bridged across, the Astana man now accompanied only by Flecha as Tiralongo fell back, his work done.

Costa was digging in deep at the head of the race, with Van Garderen pushing hard to keep him in sight, but approaching the 3km to go banner, with Flecha now dropped, Vinokourov caught and passed the young American from HTC-Highroad and seemed to be on his way to getting the maillot jaune.

He wouldn't be able to catch the Movistar rider, however, and inside the final kilometre was swallowed back up into the main group as their pace quickened ahead of the finale, which unfolded at the same ski resort in the Massif Central where Riccardo Ricco had claimed one of his two stage wins in 2008 before testing positive for EPO.

Defending champion Alberto Contador of Saxo Bank-SunGard repeatedly attacked to try and gain some of the time he has lost on his GC rivals, but Evans and Andy Schleck marked his every move and the Spaniard is increasingly looking well below par and nothing like the man who dominated the Giro in May.

Instead, it was Philippe Gilbert of Omega Pharma Lotto who came out of the bunch to secure second place behind Costa. The Belgian had led the bunch across the day's intermediate sprint, a clear statement of his intent to contest the points classification, and this evening he has the green jersey back from Movistar's Juan Joaquin Rojas.

Prior to Tiralongo and Vinokourov making their two-pronged attack, it had been BMC Racing, working on behalf of Evans, that had towed the peloton along as they sought to put him in the yellow jersey.

Yesterday evening, Hushovd had indicated that Garmin-Cervelo weren't going to seek to defend it today, but as things played out, he stays top of the GC and retains the coveted garment he's worn since Sunday's team time trial, a fantastic achievement given a tough opening week.

The nine man breakaway that got away early in the stage included Team Sky's Xabier Zandio. With Bradley Wiggins forced out of the race yesterday after breaking his collarbone, Team Principal Dave Brailsford promised that the team would now target breaks and stage wins, and today was the first time a rider from the British outfit has got into a breakaway in this year's race.

Another rider caught up in that crash yesterday, Astana's Roman Kreuziger, was among those who struggled today. The Czech was dropped off the back of the main group and was subsequently joined by Rabobank’s Robert Gesink who took the best young rider’s white jersey from Team Sky’s Geraint Thomas yesterday but is himself likely to still be suffering from the after-effects of a crash on Wednesday.

RadioShack’s Chris Horner, winner of the Tour of California in May, did not start today’s stage after also getting caught up in the crash that ended Wiggins’ race, hitting his head hard and somehow managing to finish the stage despite suffering severe concussion.

Horner is the second RadioShack rider to have been forced out of this year’s race through injury, after Janez Brajkovic crashed out on Wednesday. Levi Leipheimer has also been in the wars, getting caught up in a number of crashes during the Tour’s opening week.

Tour de France Stage 8 Result 
1  COSTA Rui               MOVISTAR                 4h 36' 46"
2  GILBERT Philippe        OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO      + 00' 12"
3  EVANS Cadel             BMC RACING                + 00' 15"
4  SANCHEZ Samuel          EUSKALTEL - EUSKADI   All at same time
5  VELITS Peter            HTC - HIGHROAD
6  DEVENYNS Dries          QUICK STEP
7  CUNEGO Damiano          LAMPRE - ISD
8  CONTADOR Alberto        SAXO BANK SUNGARD
9  SCHLECK Andy            LEOPARD-TREK
10 SCHLECK Frank           LEOPARD-TREK
11 URAN Rigoberto          SKY PROCYCLING
12 VAN DEN BROECK Jurgen   OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO
13 KLÖDEN Andréas          RADIOSHACK
14 BASSO Ivan              LIQUIGAS-CANNONDALE
15 VANDE VELDE Christian   GARMIN - CERVELO
16 HUSHOVD Thor            GARMIN - CERVELO
17 DANIELSON Tom           GARMIN - CERVELO
18 FUGLSANG Jakob          LEOPARD-TREK
19 ROCHE Nicolas           AG2R LA MONDIALE
20 MARTIN Tony             HTC - HIGHROAD

Tour de France Overall Standings after Stage 8 
1  HUSHOVD Thor            GARMIN - CERVELO       33h 06' 28"
2  EVANS Cadel             BMC RACING               + 00' 01"
3  SCHLECK Frank           LEOPARD-TREK             + 00' 04"
4  KLÖDEN Andréas          RADIOSHACK               + 00' 10"
5  FUGLSANG Jakob          LEOPARD-TREK             + 00' 12"
6  SCHLECK Andy            LEOPARD-TREK             + 00' 12"
7  MARTIN Tony             HTC - HIGHROAD           + 00' 13"
8  VELITS Peter            HTC - HIGHROAD           + 00' 13"
9  MILLAR David	           GARMIN - CERVELO	    + 00' 19"
10 GILBERT Philippe	   OMEGA PHARMA - LOTTO	    + 00' 30"
 

 

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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