Stage 9
Stage 9 is the stage most feared by non-climbers. It's not only the 5 categorized Pyrénées-cols and the 4185 height metres, but the fact that the stage is only 112 kilometres short. Expect a lot of riders finishing outside the timelimit!
93km to go
A stage this short, stacked with cols, that is an attackers walhalla. So it is expected that riders as JoaquÃm RodrÃguez, Sylvain Chavanel, Johnny Hoogerland, Nick Nuyens and Rigoberto Uran are present in the BOTD, joined by Pirazzi, Castroviejo and Burghardt. RodrÃguez is the first to arrive at the summit of the Col du Peyresourde. Thomas Voeckler, who missed the original attack and is now trying to bridge the gap, follows at 1'52, with the peloton taking it slowly at 5'16.
51km to go
The race stays calm until the peloton starts to ascend the Col d'Aspin. Voeckler has joined the BOTD, and they have a margin of 5 minutes to the peloton. Then 3 pretty dangerous riders attack out of the peloton: Chris Anker Sorensen (BMC), Eros Capecchi (Lampre) and Richie Porte (Saxo Bank). A little later also Juan José Cobo tries to counter. Consequently, the pace of the peloton increases and the worse climbers start to get dropped "arrière de la course".
43km to go
RodrÃguez is also the first to arrive at the summit of the Aspin, followed by Chavanel, Hoogerland, Voeckler, Urán, Pirazzi and Castroviejo. The group Capecchi-Cobo-Porte-Sorensen follows at 2'00, with the thinning-out peloton at 4'25.
30km to go
The penultimate climb of the day, the Hourquette d'Ancizan is done. The first 2 groups have emerged, so Porte-Voeckler-Capecchi-Sorensen-RodrÃguez-Cobo-Hoogerland-Chavanel-Uran can start the long descend towards Saint-Lary-Soulan.
Janez Brajkovic and Pierre Rolland have attacked out of the peloton and follow at 1'52. The peloton, with
Thomas Dekker & Rob Ruijgh doing the pace, follows at 3'24.
13km to go
Thanks to some excellent work by
Dekker & Ruijgh, the first peloton arrives at the foot of the Col de Portet with a small margin of 1'36. Te final climb is 12.9 kilometres long at an average gradient of 9.4%. The last 6 kilometres are at unpaved roads.
10km to go
Jelle Vanendert takes over, and he decreases the margin to only 30 seconds in 3 kilometres time. When the 10km banner is in sight, Thibaut Pinot (GC 9) attacks, getting countered by Fränk Schleck (GC 7). This is also the sign for riders in the leading group to attack.
9km to go
Eros Capecchi attacks out of the leading group and is followed by Sorensen and Cobo at '10 and Porte at '32. Pinot and F. Schleck get caught due to the high pace set by
Vanendert. With 9km to go ('51 behind Capecchi), Simon Spilak (GC 5th) attacks, and he is followed by Andy Schleck! Yes, last years winner seems to be recovered from his bowel infection.
6km to go
Due to the attack by Spilak and A. Schleck, the leaders get caught. But also Spilak and Andy can't create a gap, again due to
Vanendert. When the group of favourites (20 riders) switches the tarmac for the gravel road, his work is done.
5km to go
Then, with 5km to go,
Robert Gesink launches a fierce attack and nobody is able to counter! He quickly creates a gap of 20-30 seconds. Alberto Contador recognizes the danger and takes over the pace of the chasing group.
3km to go
Contador looks behind and asks Nibali if he is willing to do some work in the chase. But the Italian refuses, what can mean that the Dutch rider is gone. But when Andy Schleck attacks again, Contador realizes that this is the springboard he needs to close the gap again to
Gesink, that is now 31 seconds.
2km to go
When Contador steps on the paddles, the margin to
Gesink starts to melt as snow to the sun. 2km to go, and it's only '16. Nibali tries to follow the maillot jaune, but he cracks and has to let the wheel go. The Schleck-brothers and Spilak follow at '32.
Finish
Contador closes the gap, and with the finish line coming closer and closer, he is riding side by side. The 2 start sprinting for the win, and it's El Pistolero who pushes his front wheel a few inches earlier over the finish line.............. So close for
Robert Gesink, but he knows he jumps to the 2nd place in the GC.
Nibali finishes in 3rd at '20, the Schlecks and Spilak at '32 and a group with Van den Broeck, Kiserlovski, Antón and Pinot at '58. Ryder Hesjedal (GC's number 4) finishes at 2'08, and Bradley Wiggins looses 43 seconds more.
The big shock comes when the gruppetto crosses the finish, 1 minute outside the timelimit. The race directors know no mercy, and send 85 (yes, eightyfive!!!!) home. Among them points-leader Langeveld and a lot of strong sprinters as Farrar (together with 5 team mates), Boonen, Nizzolo, Guardini, Greipel, Ciolek, Degenkolb, Van Avermaet and Cavendish. Also all 9 Rabobank-riders have to go home, what must be an even worse day for the team since the Rasmussen-case..... Fortunately for us,
Niki Terpstra is the last rider to finish inside the time limit, so we'll continue with 9 riders.
Results
| 1 | Alberto Contador | Movistar Team | 3h48'20 |
| 2 | Robert Gesink | Petronas - Monster Energy | s.t. |
| 3 | Vincenzo Nibali | Radio Shack - Nissan | + 20 |
| 4 | Andy Schleck | Sky ProCycling | + 32 |
| 5 | Simon Spilak | Lampre - Alitalia | s.t. |
| 6 | Fränk Schleck | Omega Pharma - Quick·Step | s.t. |
| 7 | Jurgen Van den Broeck | BMC Racing Team | + 58 |
| 8 | Robert Kiserlovski | Pro Team Astana | s.t. |
| 9 | Igor Antón | Euskaltel - Euskadi | s.t. |
| 10 | Thibaut Pinot | AG2R La Mondiale | s.t. |
GC
| 1 | Alberto Contador | Movistar Team | 35h25'41 |
| 2 | Robert Gesink | Petronas - Monster Energy | + 37 |
| 3 | Vincenzo Nibali | Radio Shack - Nissan | + 46 |
| 4 | Simon Spilak | Lampre - Alitalia | + 1'30 |
| 5 | Fränk Schleck | Omega Pharma - Quick·Step | + 1'32 |
| 6 | Igor Antón | Euskaltel - Euskadi | + 1'57 |
| 7 | Thibaut Pinot | AG2R La Mondiale | + 2'10 |
| 8 | Robert Kiserlovski | Pro Team Astana | + 2'12 |
| 9 | Ryder Hesjedal | Saxo Bank SunGard | + 2'54 |
| 10 | Damiano Cunego | Radio Shack - Nissan | + 3'22 |
Points
| 1 | Thomas Voeckler | Vacansoleil - DCM Pro Cycling Team | 143 |
| 2 | José JoaquÃn Rojas | Movistar Team | 112 |
| 3 | Marcel Kittel | Petronas - Monster Energy | 109 |
| 4 | Mickaël Delage | Team Europcar | 101 |
| 5 | Heinrich Haussler | Radio Shack - Nissan | 98 |
KOTM
| 1 | Alberto Contador | Movistar Team | 60 |
| 2 | Vincenzo Nibali | Radio Shack - Nissan | 40 |
| 3 | Robert Gesink | Petronas - Monster Energy | 40 |
| 4 | JoaquÃm RodrÃguez | Katusha Team | 24 |
| 5 | Sylvain Chavanel | Garmin - Barracuda | 22 |
Today's Winner
Word from the DS
Too bad, Gesink was so close to winning the stage. But Contador is very, very strong. And 85 riders forced to abandon, even before the rest day, wow.... Tomorrow is the rest day, the day after the Tourmalet.