The Race
Before race start i placed myself very near to the front, in case people wanted to slip away early. It proved to be a good idea. After a few kilometres Geschke and Paolini went off and made the gap, but they were soon followed by Martin, Jeannesson and nobody else but myself.
We quickly caught Geschke and Paolini and built up a fine gap to the pack. But we couldn't stay away by ourself, since four riders broke away from the bunch and caught us. The frontgroup now consisted of 9 riders.
Astana wasn't very happy to let so many riders get away and worked hard to minimize the gap. They held on for quite some time, but ended up realizing that it was a waste of energy trying to reel us back in.
Jeannesson was the best placed rider in the general classification, 8'08 behind Nibali, so the breakaway wasn't really any threat to the gc. The full list of riders now heard: L. Paolini, S. Geschke, A. Jeannesson,
T. Martin, S. Puccio, C. Sarmiento, A. Malori, M. Bouet and G. Izagirre.
Astana still held onto the front of the bunch, but the gap to the front group grew bigger every kilometre. Near the first sprint, with about 160 kilometres to go, the gap was already more than five minutes.
Izagirre and Bouet fought hard for the mountain points and had several battles in the front group. Bouet though got out as the main winner, since he had one more point than Izagirre by the end of the stage.
I'm in really good shape, and in the last days i've been feeling quite good on the climbs. But i knew that some of the guys in the breakaway were very good climbers, so i was a little nervous and rode quite cautious when we first hit the main climb of the day.
At the very top, Bouet and Izagirre rode for the mountain points, but Jeannesson actually went after them. Fortunately he was only interested in the mountain points as well. Quite peculiar to start so late...
The gap had reached its maximum with 80 kilometres to go. 9 minutes was apparently too much for Movistar to overcome. They sent the whole team to the front, eyeing to protect Costa and Visconti's top 10 spots.
About 25 kilometres from the finishline, the most unthinkable and feared scenario happened. Roche crashed!
The Irishman quickly got help from a neutral service car, and luckily looked allright to get back on his bike again.
Every teammate, except Trentin and Boasson, immediately fell back to help Roche back into the pack. He had already lost about a minute on the pack, and unfortunately the pace up front was now near its highest.
At the same time, with 20 kilometres left, Martin, Jeannesson and Sarmiento got away from the front group. With Martin up front, i knew i had to catch them quickly if they shouldn't make the final cut. Therefore i closed the gap on my own and just managed to get into Sarmiento's wheel, with Izagirre getting a free ticket just behind myself.
Leaving Paolini and Geschke behind ourselves seemed like a dream scenario. But still it seemed as if only Martin and myself were willing to take turns in the front. The gap therefore didn't grew much.
When we turned left onto the beachside of Nice with 10 kilometres to go, everything was united again. It was only a question of time before the first contra move would settle in. We had more than four minutes to the pack, so the stage victory was to be decided in this group!
Roche and the guys had just caught the pack with a huge effort from the boys, helping Roche up again without causing him any unnecessary pain. But then hell arrived...
Two Lampre riders crashed in front of Cataldo, who had Roche just behind himself. There were no time to avoid anything. Cataldo went down, and so did Roche! They were both in pain, and Cataldo was almost ready to abandon the race. Roche was riding on sheer adrenaline now and desperately carried on, on his own...
While there was panic in the back of the pack, I was fighting my own battle up front. With about 6 kilometres to go, Jeannesson and Sarmiento attacked from the front group, while crossing the Paillon river.
It took quite a while before Roche had any teammates to help him back. Therefore he had to do all the hard work on his own, while being potentially injuried from his two horrible crashes. This was not quite the prelude he wanted for tomorrow's decisive mountain time trial.
There was some confusion in the frontgroup, on who had to ride Jeannesson and Sarmiento back. I knew we didn't have time for waiting, so i felt it necessary to take the front by myself...
Going into the final 3 kilometres, Jeannesson and Sarmiento were reeled back into the 9 man group. Unfortunately i used quite some energy at the front, with only a very little amount of help from Geschke.
No one wanted to take the front from there, and to avoid any contra moves, the pace had to be quite steady. I had faith in my sprint, but really didn't have the best starting position, with my possibly biggest opponents Paolini and Geschke in my wheel. The sprint had started!
Paolini quickly came at high speed on the inside near the banner. Two Italians side by side. One old, one young. Who was strongest?
We were so close to the finish, and yet nothing was decided yet. Paolini and myself were at the front, but also Geschke and Jeannesson was quite close to us. Did we start too early?
I slowly began to lose speed when nearing the finishline, while Paolini seemed to get the gap. Did i lose the victory?
Hands in the sky for Paolini! The old Italian outran me both tactical and by strength. Luckily i managed to keep Jeannesson behind me, but i would really have liked to see myself riding over that finishline in first...
A little more than 3 minutes after Paolini, Sagan rode past the finishline in front of Degenkolb and Edvald. With no points at tomorrow's mountain time trial (except for the winner), this settles the points classification in Sagan's favor. Edvald got close, but it was not enough in the end.
I lost the stage victory and Edvald lost the points classification, but the saddest thing today was Roche's big time loss. 4 minutes and 13 seconds did he lose to race leader Nibali! He really fought to minimize his loss, but his two crashes really took the strength out of him. Also Cataldo who was in 8th ahead of the stage, lost an overwhelming 16'36 to Nibali...