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2009 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11

2009 Tour de France, Stage 1 to Stage 11

Overview of the stages

These are the individual stages of the 2009 Tour de France, with Stage 1 on July 4 and Stage 11 on July 15.

Stages

Stage 1

4 July 2009 — Monaco, 15.5 km (ITT)

The 2009 Tour began, as have many in the past, with an individual time trial, but instead of a very brief prologue, this 15 kilometer ride saw the race's overall favorites show themselves on day one. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100717022957/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/100/etape_par_etape.html | archive-date = 2010-07-17 | url-status = dead The favourite for the stage, Fabian Cancellara, won with Alberto Contador coming in second. Time-trial specialist Bradley Wiggins came third.

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara******19' 33"
2Alberto Contador+ 18"
3Bradley Wiggins+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden+ 22"
5Cadel Evans+ 23"
6Levi Leipheimer+ 30"
7Roman Kreuziger+ 32"
8Tony Martin+ 33"
9Vincenzo Nibali+ 37"
DSQLance Armstrong+ 40"

|| |General classification after stage 1

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]] [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the green jersey as points classification leader after this stage]]****19' 33"
2Alberto Contador [[File:Jersey polkadot.svg20pxContador was awarded the polkadot jersey as mountains classification leader after this stage]][[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 18"
3Bradley Wiggins+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 22"
5Cadel Evans+ 23"
6Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 30"
7Roman Kreuziger [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxKreuziger was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 32"
8Tony Martin+ 33"
9Vincenzo Nibali+ 37"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 40"

|}

Stage 2

Stage 2 riding profile

5 July 2009 — Monaco to Brignoles, 182 km

This stage was largely flat, but had one third category, and three fourth category, climbs in its first 129 km, and most of the last 15 km was downhill. A four-man breakaway (Stéphane Augé, Stef Clement, Cyril Dessel and Jussi Veikkanen) held a maximum advantage of some 5 minutes, but they were caught with 10 km remaining, initially by Mikhail Ignatiev, and shortly after by the rest of the peloton. Ignatiev was caught with 5 km left, and some of the cyclists shaping to contest the sprint were disrupted by a crash and a missed turn in the last kilometre, allowing Mark Cavendish a clear win. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090707085548/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/200/etape_par_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-07 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Mark Cavendish******4h 30' 02"
2Tyler Farrars.t.
3Romain Feillus.t.
4Thor Hushovds.t.
5Yukiya Arashiros.t.
6Gerald Cioleks.t.
7William Bonnets.t.
8Nicolas Roches.t.
9Koen de Korts.t.
10Lloyd Mondorys.t.

|| |General classification after stage 2

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****4h 49' 34"
2Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 18"
3Bradley Wiggins+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 22"
5Cadel Evans+ 23"
6Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 30"
7Roman Kreuziger [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxKreuziger was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 32"
8Tony Martin+ 33"
9Vincenzo Nibali+ 37"
10Lance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 40"

|}

Stage 3

Stage 3: Samuel Dumoulin, Koen de Kort, Rubén Pérez and Maxime Bouet in [[Arles

6 July 2009 — Marseille to La Grande-Motte, 196 km Stage 3 was another flat stage, with a finish on the waterfront at La Grande-Motte. Like in stage 2, a four-man breakaway formed, this time consisting of Maxime Bouet, Koen de Kort, Samuel Dumoulin and Rubén Pérez. They held a maximum advantage of about 13 minutes and were caught with a little less than 30 kilometres to go by a first group who had separated themselves from the rest of the peloton as a result of accelerating in the presence of strong winds near the coastline. The group contained 28 riders, including leader Fabian Cancellara, 7-time winner Lance Armstrong and the whole Team Columbia–HTC. After a sprint, Mark Cavendish finished first. Several of the favorites and riders classified in the top 10, such as Alberto Contador, Cadel Evans, Carlos Sastre, the Schleck brothers, Levi Leipheimer and Bradley Wiggins, were not present in this group and were 41 seconds behind at the finish. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090707210349/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/300/etape_par_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-07 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Mark Cavendish** [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxCavendish wore green jersey as points classification leader during this stage]]****5h 01' 24"
2Thor Hushovds.t.
3Cyril Lemoines.t.
4Samuel Dumoulins.t.
5Jérôme Pineaus.t.
6Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara wore the yellow jersey as general classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
7Fabian Wegmanns.t.
8Fumiyuki Beppus.t.
9Maxime Bouets.t.
10Linus Gerdemanns.t.

|| |General classification after stage 3

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****9h 50' 58"
2Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 33"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 40"
4Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 59"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 1' 00"
6Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 03"
7Linus Gerdemann+ 1' 03"
8Cadel Evans+ 1' 04"
9Maxime Monfort+ 1' 10"
10Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 11"

|}

Stage 4

7 July 2009 — Montpellier, 38 km (TTT)

After the race, some riders complained that the course was too dangerous and that this course was unworthy of a major race like this. During the race several riders had indeed crashed, amongst them Denis Menchov, Alessandro Ballan, Bingen Fernández, Jurgen Van den Broeck, 4 riders of and also Piet Rooijakkers. Rooijakkers fractured his arm and was rushed off to a hospital, ending his tour. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090707211446/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/400/etape_par_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-07 | url-status = dead

RankTeamTime
**1****** [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders wore the yellow numbers as team classification leader during this stage]]46' 29"
2+ 18"
3+ 40"
4+ 58"
5+ 59"
6+ 1' 23"
7+ 1' 29"
8+ 1' 37"
9+ 1' 48"
10+ 2' 09"

|| |General classification after stage 4

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****10h 38' 07"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 0"
3Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 23"
5Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 31"
6Bradley Wiggins+ 38"
7Haimar Zubeldia[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded the yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 51"
8Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 52"
9David Zabriskie+ 1' 06"
10David Millar+ 1' 07"

|}

Stage 5

8 July 2009 — Le Cap d'Agde to Perpignan, 197 km

The Tour visited Cap d'Agde for only the second time ever, as the early Tour flat stages continued. Perpignan, on the other hand, is a traditional city for the Tour to visit, thought to symbolically indicate the Tour's entrance to (or exit from, in "counter-clockwise" years) the Pyrenees. A six rider breakaway, consisting of Anthony Geslin, Yauheni Hutarovich, Mikhail Ignatiev, Marcin Sapa, Albert Timmer and Thomas Voeckler, formed within the first kilometre, and achieved a maximum lead of more than nine and a half minutes. Attacks by Ignatiev in the last 10 km had reduced the escape group to four, until with 5 km Voeckler made what proved to be the decisive break. Ignatiev finished second just in front of Cavendish and the rest of the pack.

During the race, the peloton had split into several groups as a result of the wind, as had happened two days before. Among the absentees in the first group of the peloton were Denis Menchov and Tom Boonen, but they and their group managed to return to the main group after several kilometres of chasing. Robert Gesink, who had crashed just before the windy passage along the coastline started, eventually had to let the peloton go and finished more than nine minutes behind with what in the end proved to be a broken wrist. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130513004941/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/COURSE/us/500/etape_par_etape.html | archive-date = 2013-05-13 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Thomas Voeckler******4h 29' 35"
2Mikhail Ignatiev+ 7"
3Mark Cavendish [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxCavendish wore green jersey as points classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
4Tyler Farrars.t.
5Gerald Cioleks.t.
6Danilo Napolitanos.t.
7José Joaquín Rojass.t.
8Lloyd Mondorys.t.
9Óscar Freires.t.
10Thor Hushovds.t.

|| |General classification after stage 5

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****15h 07' 49"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 0"
3Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 23"
5Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 31"
6Bradley Wiggins+ 38"
7Haimar Zubeldia[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers jersey as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 51"
8Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 52"
9David Zabriskie+ 1' 06"
10David Millar+ 1' 07"

|}

Stage 6

9 July 2009 — Girona (Spain) to Barcelona (Spain), 175 km

This last flat stage before the 2009 Tour entered the Pyrenees took place entirely within Spain, on a course that is frequently used in the Tour of Catalonia. The main break of the day was instigated by David Millar after 46 km, and he was joined by Stéphane Augé, who took the King of the Mountains leadership, and Sylvain Chavanel, and eventually by Amets Txurruka. Millar, 10th at the beginning of the stage, was virtual leader of the tour for much of the day, as the lead extended to 3'45", and he attacked and left behind his fellow escapees with 29 km remaining. The uphill approach to the finish on Montjuïc did not suit some of the sprinters, but there was a group of about 60 at the head of the field when Millar was caught near the 1 km red flag, and with some GC contenders and climbers contesting the finish, Thor Hushovd emerged as stage winner. The day was marked by numerous rain showers, and a number of falls, with Michael Rogers the main overall contender to lose considerable time.

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Thor Hushovd******4h 21' 33"
2Óscar Freires.t.
3José Joaquín Rojass.t.
4Gerald Cioleks.t.
DSQFranco Pellizottis.t.
5Filippo Pozzatos.t.
6Alessandro Ballans.t.
7Rinaldo Nocentinis.t.
8Cadel Evanss.t.
9Fabian Cancellara [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara wore yellow jersey as general classification leader during this stage]]s.t.

|| |General classification after stage 6

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Fabian Cancellara** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxCancellara was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****19h 29' 22"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 0"
3Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 19"
4Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 23"
5Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 31"
6Bradley Wiggins+ 38"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 52"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 16"
9Gustav Larsson+ 1' 22"
10Maxime Monfort+ 1' 29"

|}

Stage 7

10 July 2009 — Barcelona (Spain) to Andorra-Arcalis (Andorra)- 224 km

This second stage in a row that did not visit French soil was both the longest stage, and the highest finish of this year's tour. The first key break of the day comprised three riders, and escaped after 8 km of cycling, but it was joined by a six-man chase group shortly after the first of the day's minor climbs, but this was the day on which the race reached the high mountains. The escapees stretched their advantage to more than 14 minutes before reaching the major climbs, but as they included Rinaldo Nocentini, who was 32nd in the general classification and only 3'13" behind the yellow jersey, the peloton, driven by the Astana squad, made a chase. Although the lead was greatly reduced, all but one of the escapees finished before the elite riders, and Nocentini retained a big enough advantage to take over the race leadership. Brice Feillu attacked the other four escapees who were at the head of the field with 5.5 km remaining, and stayed away to claim his first professional win in his first Tour de France. After an attempted attack on the other contenders for the Tour victory by Cadel Evans, 2007 winner Alberto Contador made a successful attack on the elite group with 3 km to go, beating them to the line by 21 seconds, and taking second place overall, while after five days in the yellow jersey, Cancellara finished more than nine minutes behind the stage winner, having been dropped on the final climb.

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Brice Feillu******6h 11' 31"
2Christophe Kern+ 5"
3Johannes Fröhlinger+ 25"
4Rinaldo Nocentini+ 26"
5Egoi Martínez+ 45"
6Christophe Riblon+ 1' 05"
7Jérôme Pineau+ 2' 32"
8Iván Gutiérrez+ 3' 14"
9Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders wore yellow numbers as team classification leader during this stage]]+ 3' 26"
10Cadel Evans+ 3' 47"

|| |General classification after stage 7

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Rinaldo Nocentini** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxNocentini was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]****25h 44' 32"
2Alberto Contador[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 6"
DSQLance Armstrong[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 8"
4Levi Leipheimer[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 39"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 46"
6Andreas Klöden[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAstana riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]+ 54"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 00"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 24"
9Andy Schleck+ 1' 49"
10Vincenzo Nibali+ 1' 54"

|}

Stage 8

11 July 2009 — Andorra la Vella (Andorra) to Saint-Girons, 176 km

The Tour returned to France in the second of three Pyrenean stages, which featured three categorized climbs, including the imposing Port d'Envalira at just over 2,400 meters, before a steep descent. A number of early breakaways, including one featuring Cadel Evans, and one that enabled Thor Hushovd to take sufficient points in intermediate sprints to claim the green jersey, came to nothing, and by the top of the final climb three riders, Mikel Astarloza (later suspended for EPO use), Vladimir Efimkin and Luis León Sánchez, were at the front of the race, with an array of chasers and struggling former members of breakaways between them and a group that included all the GC contenders and the yellow jersey wearer, Nocentini, who was part of a group, also including Denis Menchov, that had recovered a 30-second deficit on the elite group shortly before the top of the climb. Meanwhile, leader and 2006 Tour winner, Óscar Pereiro, became the highest profile rider to abandon the race. On the 42 km descent, Sandy Casar caught the three leaders, and this group of four maintained a comfortable lead over the peloton, and the race among these riders was triggered when Efimkin broke clear with 4 km remaining, a move that at one stage looked as though it might succeed, but he was caught by the other three escapees just before the red kite, and Sánchez won the sprint from Casar. There was no change to the position of the race favorites. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090707025814/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/LIVE/us/800/journal_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-07 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Luis León Sánchez******4h 31' 50"
2Sandy Casars.t.
DSQMikel Astarlozas.t.
3Vladimir Efimkin+ 3"
4José Joaquín Rojas+ 1' 54"
5Christophe Riblon [[File:Jersey red number.svg20pxRiblon was awarded the red number as the previous day's winner of the combativity award]]s.t.
6Peter Velitss.t.
7Sébastien Minards.t.
8Jérémy Roys.t.
9Thomas Voecklers.t.

|| |General classification after stage 8

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Rinaldo Nocentini** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxNocentini was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]**** [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]30h 18' 16"
2Alberto Contador+ 6"
DSQLance Armstrong+ 8"
4Levi Leipheimer+ 39"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 46"
6Andreas Klöden+ 54"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 00"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 24"
9Andy Schleck+ 1' 49"
10Vincenzo Nibali+ 1' 54"

|}

Stage 9

12 July 2009 — Saint-Gaudens to Tarbes, 160 km

The Pyrenees portion of the 2009 Tour ended with this stage which had two categorized climbs, the Col d'Aspin and the Col de Tourmalet and, as the previous day, a lengthy flat stretch before the finish, essentially neutralising the stage in terms of challenges relevant to the overall classification. An early break of twelve riders became thirteen after extensive effort by the squad to get Franco Pellizotti across the divide. After not much more than half an hour, the escape group was reduced to four: Pellizotti, Jens Voigt, Pierrick Fédrigo and Leonardo Duque, who was dropped on the climb of the Col d'Apsin, while a chase group of 9 riders formed behind, including Egoi Martínez, who was to gain enough points over the cols to take the polkadot jersey at the end of the day. By the top of that mountain, the leading trio held an advantage of 2'45 over the counter-attack and 3'30 over the peloton; at the top of the Tourmalet only Pellizotti and Fédrigo remained at the front, with seven surviving chasers at 2'40 and the peloton at 5'05. The descent and flat run in saw all the escapees except the two leaders reeled in, as and sought to engineer an opportunity for their sprinters, but Pellizotti and Fédrigo held on to contest the stage win between themselves, the Frenchman emerging as victor. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090706220318/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/LIVE/us/900/journal_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-06 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Pierrick Fédrigo******4h 05' 31"
DSQFranco Pellizottis.t.
2Óscar Freire+ 34"
3Serguei Ivanovs.t.
4Peter Velitss.t.
5José Joaquín Rojass.t.
6Greg Van Avermaets.t.
7Geoffroy Lequatres.t.
8Alessandro Ballans.t.
9Nicolas Roche[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders wore yellow numbers as team classification leader during this stage]]s.t.

|| |General classification after stage 9

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Rinaldo Nocentini** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxNocentini was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]**** [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]34h 24' 21"
2Alberto Contador+ 6"
DSQLance Armstrong+ 8"
4Levi Leipheimer+ 39"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 46"
6Andreas Klöden+ 54"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 00"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 24"
9Andy Schleck+ 1' 49"
10Vincenzo Nibali+ 1' 54"

|}

Rest day

13 July 2009 — Limoges

After a lengthy transfer, the rest day was spent at the site of the beginning of the next day's stage.

Stage 10

14 July 2009 — Limoges to Issoudun, 193 km

The Bastille Day stage, one of two stages on which it was intended riders will not be in radio contact with their team cars, was flat, heading to Issoudun for the first time on the Tour de France.{{cite web | access-date = 2009-07-18| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090621224314/http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/two-tour-stages-to-be-run-without-radios| archive-date= 21 June 2009 | url-status= live}} The day's break was initiated by Thierry Hupond in the second kilometre, and he was joined by Mikhail Ignatiev and Benoît Vaugrenard, and after a hold-up at a level crossing, by Samuel Dumoulin. The group's lead never reached four minutes, but over the latter stages the peloton found the gap slow to close. The catch was finally made with a little over 1½ km left, Hupond being the last member of the breakaway to yield to the chasers, and 's train again delivered Mark Cavendish for a win in the sprint, ahead of Thor Hushovd, who retained the green jersey. It was initially announced that a split in the field meant that most of the peloton, including Levi Leipheimer and Bradley Wiggins, two of the top five in the overall classification at the beginning of the day, lost 15 seconds to the first 52 finishers, but this was rescinded the following day.

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Mark Cavendish******4h 46' 43"
2Thor Hushovd [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxHushovd wore the green jersey as points classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
3Tyler Farrars.t.
4Leonardo Duques.t.
5José Joaquín Rojass.t.
6Lloyd Mondory[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders wore yellow numbers as team classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
7Kenny van Hummels.t.
8William Bonnets.t.
9Daniele Bennatis.t.
10Saïd Haddous.t.

|| |General classification after stage 10

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Rinaldo Nocentini** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxNocentini was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]**** [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]**39h 11' 04"**
2Alberto Contador+ 6"
DSQLance Armstrong+ 8"
4Levi Leipheimer+ 39"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 46"
6Andreas Klöden+ 54"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 00"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 24"
9Andy Schleck+ 1' 49"
10Vincenzo Nibali+ 1' 54"

|}

Stage 11

15 July 2009 — Vatan to Saint-Fargeau, 192 km

This was another flat stage, with a two-man breakaway, consisting of Johan Van Summeren and Marcin Sapa, which reached its largest advantage of 4'45" after 45 km and was caught with 5 km remaining. Mark Cavendish again dominated the sprint, taking his fourth stage of the tour and regaining the green jersey. | access-date = 2009-07-06 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090707083159/http://www.letour.fr/2009/TDF/LIVE/us/1100/journal_etape.html | archive-date = 2009-07-07 | url-status = dead

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Mark Cavendish******4h 17' 55"
2Tyler Farrars.t.
3Yauheni Hutarovichs.t.
4Óscar Freires.t.
5Thor Hushovd [[File:Jersey green.svg20pxHushovd wore the green jersey as points classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
6Leonardo Duques.t.
7Gerald Cioleks.t.
8Lloyd Mondory[[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders wore yellow numbers as team classification leader during this stage]]s.t.
9William Bonnets.t.
10Nikolay Trusovs.t.

|| |General classification after stage 11

RankRiderTeamTime
**1****Rinaldo Nocentini** [[File:Jersey yellow.svg20pxNocentini was awarded the yellow jersey as general classification leader after this stage]]**** [[File:Jersey yellow number.svg20pxAg2r–La Mondiale riders were awarded yellow numbers as team classification leader after this stage]]**43h 28' 59"**
2Alberto Contador+ 6"
DSQLance Armstrong+ 8"
4Levi Leipheimer+ 39"
5Bradley Wiggins+ 46"
6Andreas Klöden+ 54"
7Tony Martin [[File:Jersey white.svg20pxMartin was awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader after this stage]]+ 1' 00"
8Christian Vande Velde+ 1' 24"
9Andy Schleck+ 1' 49"
10Vincenzo Nibali+ 1' 54"

|}

References

References

  1. (2009-07-04). "Tour de France 2009".
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