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2007 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10

2007 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10

Stages in 2007

These are the profiles for the individual stages in the 2007 Tour de France, with the Prologue on 7 July, Stage 1 on 8 July, and Stage 10 on 18 July.

Prologue

;2007-07-07 — London (England) – 7.9 km (ITT)

On Saturday July 7, 2007, the Individual time trial started in Whitehall, London passing Westminster, then along Victoria Street and Buckingham Gate, past Buckingham Palace and looping through Hyde Park before finishing in The Mall. A distance of 7.9 km was covered by the riders. It was won by 's Fabian Cancellara, with a time of 8' 50".

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara8' 50"
2Andreas Klöden+ 13"
3George Hincapie+ 23"
4Bradley Wiggins+ 23"
5Vladimir Gusev+ 25"
6Vladimir Karpets+ 26"
7Alexander Vinokourov+ 30"
8Thomas Dekker+ 31"
9Manuel Quinziato+ 32"
10Benoît Vaugrenard+ 32"

| |General Classification after Prologue

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]] [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]8' 50"
2Andreas Klöden+ 13"
3George Hincapie+ 23"
4Bradley Wiggins+ 23"
5Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 25"
6Vladimir Karpets+ 26"
7Alexander Vinokourov+ 30"
8Thomas Dekker+ 31"
9Manuel Quinziato+ 32"
10Benoît Vaugrenard+ 32"

|}

Stage 1

;2007-07-08 — London (England) – Canterbury (England), 203 km

Tour de France: The race begins in earnest}}

This 203 km stage of the race started in London and headed through Westminster, Greenwich, Woolwich, Erith and into Kent, to Dartford, Gravesend, with an intermediate sprint for the points classification in Medway. The route headed south to Maidstone and another sprint, Tonbridge and then the first King of the Mountains climb before reaching Royal Tunbridge Wells, then the second climb at Goudhurst, another sprint in Tenterden, to Ashford and the final climb before finishing in Canterbury. All the climbs were Category 4. It was won by Robbie McEwen, who sprinted from the back of the field to claim a surprise win. This was after an extended breakaway from British cyclist David Millar.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Robbie McEwen4h 39' 01"
2Thor Hushovds.t.
3Tom Boonens.t.
4Sébastien Chavanels.t.
5Romain FeilluAgritubels.t.
6Robert Försters.t.
7Óscar Freires.t.
8Marcus Burghardts.t.
9Francisco Ventosos.t.
10Tomas Vaitkuss.t.

| |General classification after stage 1

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]4h 47' 51"
2Andreas Klöden+ 13"
3David Millar [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxalt=Polka-dot jersey]]+ 21"
4George Hincapie+ 23"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 23"
6Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 25"
7Vladimir Karpets+ 26"
8Thor Hushovd+ 29"
9Alexander Vinokourov+ 30"
10Thomas Dekker+ 31"

|}

Stage 2

;2007-07-09 — Dunkirk – Ghent (Belgium), 168.5 km The second stage marked the return of the Tour to the land of cycling, along the roads of the great Flanders classics: Tour of Flanders, Het Volk, etc. It was anticipated that the race should start to get more serious during this stage, with the wind and the risk of hitting the kerbs definitely playing an important role. It was fairly short at 168.5 km in length and with no categorized climbs.

The riders Marcel Sieberg, Rubén Pérez and Cédric Herve at the head of the second stage.<br />Credit: Lieven Gekiere

There was a breakaway during the stage by Marcel Sieberg, Cedric Herve and Rubén Pérez who shared the bonuses available at the three sprints: however, this never stretched beyond 6 minutes ahead of the peloton and they were caught some 3 km from the finish.

Within the last 2 km, a rider fell sideways causing others to fall. Around 20 riders fell blocking the entire road and leaving approximately 30 riders to sprint for the victory, eventually taken by Gert Steegmans in his home country ahead of his compatriot and team-mate Tom Boonen, who took over the green jersey by coming second in the stage.

Tom Boonen (blue outfit, centre) during the race.<br />Credit: Lieven Gekiere
RankRiderTeamTime
1Gert Steegmans3h 48' 22"
2Tom Boonens.t.
3Filippo Pozzatos.t.
4Robert Hunters.t.
5Romain FeilluAgritubels.t.
6Robbie McEwen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]s.t.
7Erik Zabels.t.
8Heinrich Hausslers.t.
9Óscar Freires.t.
10Sébastien Chavanels.t.

| |General classification after stage 2

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]8h 36' 13"
2Andreas Klöden+ 13"
3David Millar [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxalt=Polka-dot jersey]]+ 21"
4George Hincapie+ 23"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 23"
6Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 25"
7Tom Boonen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]+ 26"
8Vladimir Karpets+ 26"
9Thor Hushovd+ 29"
10Alexander Vinokourov+ 30"

|}

Stage 3

;2007-07-10 — Waregem (Belgium) – Compiègne, 236 km

Fabian Cancellara in his yellow jersey and the peloton just after the start of the 3rd stage in Waregem, Belgium.<br />Credit: Johan Vandamme
Fabian Cancellara winning the sprint of the 3rd stage of the 2007 Tour de France.

At 236 km, this is the longest stage in this year's Tour. After Flanders, the peloton returned to France along some of the roads used for the Paris–Roubaix race, to finish in the town where that race starts. Nicolas Vogondy and Mathieu Ladagnous broke away from the field within the first 10 km, and were joined after 42 km by Stéphane Augé and Frederik Willems. By leading the breakaway group over the only classified climb of the day, the Cote de Blerancourt, Auge gained the polka dot shirt. The group was caught by race leader Fabian Cancellara, and by the rest of the peloton, some 500 meters from the finish. Cancellara held off the sprinters to win the stage and to gain time bonuses that extended his lead in the general classification.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]6h 36' 15"
2Erik Zabels.t.
3Danilo Napolitanos.t.
4Tom Boonen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]s.t.
5Robert Hunters.t.
6Robert Försters.t.
7Robbie McEwens.t.
8Bernhard Eisels.t.
9Mark Cavendishs.t.
10Heinrich Hausslers.t.

| |General classification after stage 3

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]15h 12' 08"
2Andreas Klöden+ 33"
3David Millar+ 41"
4George Hincapie+ 43"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 43"
6Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 45"
7Tom Boonen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]+ 46"
8Vladimir Karpets+ 46"
9Thor Hushovd+ 49"
10Mikel Astarloza+ 49"

|}

Stage 4

;2007-07-11 — Villers-Cotterêts – Joigny, 193 km This stage headed virtually due south, with four category 4 climbs, passing through the Champagne region and the plains of Brie, before crossing the valleys in the Yonne department along its 193 km course. Injuries received in the race for points on the first hill, forced Xabier Zandio's immediate withdrawal, and caused Rémy Di Gregorio to finish almost 8 minutes behind the leaders and rendered him unfit to resume the race the next day. The main breakaway was initiated by Matthieu Sprick and he was joined by Sylvain Chavanel (whose time bonuses gained at intermediate sprints and hills lifted him into the top 10 in the general classification), Gorka Verdugo, Juan Antonio Flecha and Christian Knees; the lead over the peloton was never more than four minutes, and they were caught with just under 5 km remaining. In the first clean sprint of this year's race, Thor Hushovd won from Robert Hunter and earned time bonuses that moved him into second place overall.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Thor Hushovd4h 37' 47"
2Robert Hunters.t.
3Óscar Freires.t.
4Erik Zabels.t.
5Danilo Napolitanos.t.
6Gert Steegmanss.t.
7Robert Försters.t.
8Tom Boonen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]s.t.
9Sébastien Chavanels.t.
10Mark Cavendishs.t.

| |General classification after stage 4

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]19h 49' 55"
2Thor Hushovd+ 29"
3Andreas Klöden+ 33"
4David Millar+ 41"
5George Hincapie+ 43"
6Bradley Wiggins+ 43"
7Sylvain Chavanel+ 44"
8Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 45"
9Tom Boonen [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]+ 46"
10Vladimir Karpets+ 46"

|}

Stage 5

;2007-07-12 — Chablis – Autun, 182.5 km The fifth stage featured eight climbs, including one Category 2 climb. Many of the sprinters lost contact with the peloton, but all of the major contenders finished together, apart from Alexander Vinokourov. Vinokourov crashed before the final climb, and ended up losing more than a minute to the rest of the field. The stage was won by Filippo Pozzato.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Filippo Pozzato4h 39' 01"
2Óscar Freires.t.
3Daniele Bennatis.t.
4Kim Kirchens.t.
5Erik Zabels.t.
6George Hincapies.t.
7Cristian Morenis.t.
8Stefan Schumachers.t.
9Bram Tankinks.t.
10Jérôme Pineaus.t.

| |General classification after stage 5

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]24h 28' 56"
2Andreas Klöden+ 33"
3Filippo Pozzato+ 35"
4David Millar+ 41"
5George Hincapie+ 43"
6Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 45"
7Vladimir Karpets+ 46"
8Mikel Astarloza+ 49"
9Thomas Dekker+ 51"
10Benoît Vaugrenard+ 52"

|}

Stage 6

;2007-07-13 — Semur-en-Auxois – Bourg-en-Bresse, 199.5 km This stage is relatively flat, with only two category 4 climbs, and was the last opportunity for the sprinters to shine before the race went into the mountains. On the 40th anniversary of the death of Tom Simpson, rider Bradley Wiggins led from the two kilometre mark and at one stage was 18 minutes clear, but riding alone took its toll and with seven kilometres left he was reeled in. That left Tom Boonen to beat Óscar Freire and Erik Zabel in a sprint finish for his first Tour stage win in two years. After the stage Wiggins revealed his lone breakaway was a gift to his wife on her birthday, with Wiggins only finding out about the date's significance after the race.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Tom Boonen5h 20' 59"
2Óscar Freires.t.
3Erik Zabel [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]s.t.
4Sébastien Chavanels.t.
5Thor Hushovds.t.
6Daniele Bennatis.t.
7Robert Försters.t.
8Robert Hunters.t.
9Romain FeilluAgritubels.t.
10Murilo Fischers.t.

| |General classification after stage 6

RankRiderTeamTime
1Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]29h 49' 55"
2Andreas Klöden+ 33"
3Filippo Pozzato+ 35"
4David Millar+ 41"
5George Hincapie+ 43"
6Óscar Freire+ 43"
7Vladimir Gusev [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 45"
8Vladimir Karpets+ 46"
9Erik Zabel+ 48"
10Mikel Astarloza+ 49"

|}

Stage 7

;2007-07-14 — Bourg-en-Bresse – Le Grand-Bornand, 197.5 km

Stage 7 layout.

This was the first mountain stage and the start of the real difficulties for many of the riders. The first kilometres, with three smaller climbs, were a gradual introduction for the riders, before they tackled the Alps and the first real mountain pass of the Tour, the Col de la Colombière (16 km at 6.7%), lying 15 kilometres from the finish line.

Linus Gerdemann was in a 15-man break for much of the 197.5 km stage but the T-Mobile rider went it alone over the Col de la Colombière, finishing 40 seconds clear of Iñigo Landaluze, to take the yellow jersey from Fabian Cancellara.

Injured race favourites Alexander Vinokourov and Andreas Klöden finished in a group 3'38" behind, as did fellow big names Cadel Evans, Alejandro Valverde and Levi Leipheimer.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Linus Gerdemann4h 53' 13"
2Iñigo Landaluze+ 40"
3David de la Fuente+ 1' 39"
4Mauricio Soler+ 2' 14"
5Laurent Lefèvre+ 2' 21"
6Fabian Wegmann+ 3' 32"
7Juan Manuel Gárate+ 3' 38"
8Xavier Florencio+ 3' 38"
9Christophe Moreau+ 3' 38"
10Alejandro Valverde+ 3' 38"

| |General classification after stage 7

RankRiderTeamTime
1Linus Gerdemann [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]] [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]34h 43' 40"
2Iñigo Landaluze+ 1' 24"
3David de la Fuente+ 2' 45"
4Laurent Lefèvre+ 2' 55"
5Mauricio Soler+ 3' 05"
6Andreas Klöden+ 3' 39"
7Vladimir Gusev+ 3' 51"
8Vladimir Karpets+ 3' 52"
9Mikel Astarloza+ 3' 55"
10Thomas Dekker+ 3' 57"

|}

Stage 8

;2007-07-15 — Le Grand-Bornand – Tignes, 165 km

Stage 8 layout.

This was the shortest road stage, but was very tough. The climbing started from the outset, with two small climbs in the first 25 km before, from 75 kilometres out, tackling the Cormet de Roselend (19 km at 6%), the Montée d'Hauteville – the start of the Col du Petit Saint-Bernard – and the climb up to Tignes (18 km at 5.5%) for a very difficult finish at a height of 2068 m.

Denmark's Michael Rasmussen went it alone for victory in Tignes to secure the Tour de France Yellow jersey. Rasmussen, who began the day 39th overall, was part of a breakaway halfway through the 165 km eighth stage. He went solo on the last climb to finish two minutes and 47 seconds ahead of Iban Mayo and 5:04 clear of Linus Gerdemann, now second overall.

Alexander Vinokourov and Andreas Klöden both lost 4:29 while Michael Rogers crashed out of the race. T-Mobile leader Rogers was in the same group as Rasmussen – and the race leader on the road – on the descent of the Cormet de Roselend when he hit a roadside barrier. He bravely carried on before being forced to pull up later with a dislocated shoulder.

Levi Leipheimer sustained a ten-second penalty for slipstreaming behind his team car after sustaining a mechanical issue which necessitated a bike change. Had this not occurred, Leipheimer would have finished 2nd overall in the general classification, 2 seconds in front of Cadel Evans.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Michael Rasmussen4h 49' 40"
2Iban Mayo+ 2' 47"
3Alejandro Valverde+ 3' 12"
4Christophe Moreau+ 3' 13"
5Fränk Schleck+ 3' 13"
6Cadel Evans+ 3' 13"
7Andrey Kashechkin+ 3' 13"
8Alberto Contador+ 3' 31"
9Denis Menchov+ 3' 35"
10Carlos Sastre+ 3' 35"

| |General Classification After Stage 8

RankRiderTeamTime
1Michael Rasmussen [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]] [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxalt=Polka-dot jersey]]39h 37' 42"
2Linus Gerdemann [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 43"
3Iban Mayo+ 2' 39"
4Alejandro Valverde+ 2' 51"
5Andrey Kashechkin+ 2' 52"
6Cadel Evans+ 2' 53"
7Christophe Moreau+ 3' 06"
8Alberto Contador+ 3' 10"
9Fränk Schleck+ 3' 14"
10Denis Menchov+ 3' 19"

|}

Stage 9

;2007-07-17 — Val-d'Isère – Briançon, 159.5 km

Stage 9 layout.

The riders made a cold start to the hors catégorie climb up to the Col de l'Iseran (15 km at 6%), followed by the Col du Télégraphe and the Col du Galibier (12 km at 6.7% and 17.5 km at 7%) with a 37 km downhill finish in Briançon.

After joining with a breakaway, Colombian Mauricio Soler made a strong move over the Col du Télégraphe, and stayed away through the descent of the Col du Galibier to claim the first-ever Tour de France stage win for the wild-card team.

Speculation ensued after the race, as Alberto Contador had a flat tire while chasing Soler. Many believed that he would have caught Soler had this not happened.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Mauricio Soler4h 14' 24"
2Alejandro Valverde+ 38"
3Cadel Evans+ 38"
4Alberto Contador+ 40"
5Iban Mayo+ 42"
6Michael Rasmussen [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]]+ 42"
DSQLevi Leipheimer+ 42"
7Kim Kirchen+ 46"
8Andreas Klöden+ 46"
9Carlos Sastre+ 46"

| |General Classification After Stage 9

RankRiderTeamTime
1Michael Rasmussen [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]] [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxalt=Polka-dot jersey]]43h 52' 48"
2Alejandro Valverde+ 2' 35"
3Iban Mayo+ 2' 39"
4Cadel Evans+ 2' 41"
5Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 3' 08"
6Christophe Moreau+ 3' 18"
7Carlos Sastre+ 3' 39"
8Andreas Klöden+ 3' 50"
9Levi Leipheimer+ 3' 53"
10Kim Kirchen+ 5' 06"

|}

Stage 10

;2007-07-18 — Tallard – Marseille, 229.5 km This was a long, mostly downhill stage finishing in Marseille. While most expected a group sprint, a five-man breakaway survived to the end, with Cédric Vasseur winning in the small sprint.

RankRiderTeamTime
1Cédric Vasseur5h 20' 24"
2Sandy Casars.t.
3Michael Albasinis.t.
4Patrice Halgands.t.
5Jens Voigts.t.
6Staf Scheirlinckx+ 36"
7Paolo Bossoni+ 36"
8Marcus Burghardt+ 1' 01"
9Aleksandr Kuschynski+ 2' 34"
10Juan Antonio Flecha+ 2' 34"

| |General classification after stage 10

RankRiderTeamTime
1Michael Rasmussen [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxalt=Yellow jersey]] [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxalt=Polka-dot jersey]]49h 23' 48"
2Alejandro Valverde+ 2' 35"
3Iban Mayo+ 2' 39"
4Cadel Evans+ 2' 41"
5Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxalt=White jersey]]+ 3' 08"
6Christophe Moreau+ 3' 18"
7Carlos Sastre+ 3' 39"
8Andreas Klöden+ 3' 50"
9Levi Leipheimer+ 3' 53"
10Kim Kirchen+ 5' 06"

|}

References

References

  1. Decaluwé, Brecht. (12 July 2007). "Wiggins' long day".
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